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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Drugs Adviser Says Sorry Over Ecstasy Article
Title:UK: Drugs Adviser Says Sorry Over Ecstasy Article
Published On:2009-02-10
Source:Guardian, The (UK)
Fetched On:2009-02-11 20:26:53
DRUGS ADVISER SAYS SORRY OVER ECSTASY ARTICLE

The government's drugs adviser last night apologised for saying that
the risk in taking ecstasy was no worse than in riding a horse. Home
secretary Jacqui Smith had yesterday carpeted Dr David Nutt over
comments that emerged 48 hours before his committee was expected to
recommend downgrading the drug.

She demanded an apology and told the professor that his comments went
beyond the scientific advice she expected from him. "I've spoken to
him. I've told him that I was surprised and profoundly disappointed,"
Smith told MPs yesterday. She said they made light of a serious
problem, trivialised the dangers of drugs, showed insensitivity to
the families of victims, and sent the wrong message to young people.

Smith's attack on Nutt, the new chairman of the Advisory Council on
the Misuse of Drugs, comes when this week it will publish a report
expected to recommend downgrading ecstasy from class A to class B.
Smith has made clear she will veto the council's view as she rejected
its advice last year not to reclassify cannabis.

Lib Dem MP Evan Harris complained to the Speaker at Smith's attack,
describing Nutt as a "distinguished scientist" unable to answer back
in parliament for what was set out in a scientific publication. His
article in the Journal of Psychopharmacology was written before he
became chairman, but picked up in the weekend press.

Ecstasy is the UK's third most popular illicit drug with an estimated
470,000 people using it last year, including 5% of 16- to
24-year-olds. Last night, Nutt apologised saying he had "no intention
of trivialising the dangers of ecstasy".

"I am sorry to those who may have been offended by my article. I
would like to apologise to those who have lost friends and family due
to ecstasy use," he said.

The article, "Equasy", [sic] ironically argued "equine addiction
syndrome" accounted for 100 deaths a year, as against 30 a year for ecstasy use.
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