News (Media Awareness Project) - Japan: Japan Moves To Ban Magic Mushrooms |
Title: | Japan: Japan Moves To Ban Magic Mushrooms |
Published On: | 2002-05-27 |
Source: | Toronto Star (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 06:40:23 |
JAPAN MOVES TO BAN MAGIC MUSHROOMS
Strict Drug Laws Overlooked The Hallucinatory Fungi
TOKYO -- Enthusiasts admit it's not the taste that keeps them gobbling the
shrivelled brown mushrooms. They're so bitter, many can choke them down
only with orange juice or yogurt.
The allure is the hallucinogen within, so potent that the fungi are
outlawed in most countries.
"It doesn't taste good, but I like to get high," 19-year-old student Wataru
Kanbe said after eating a handful of "magic mushrooms" at a recent open-air
concert. Best of all, he added with a glassy-eyed stare, doing so is
completely legal.
Not much longer.
Alarmed by the soaring popularity of hallucinogenic mushrooms and their
sometimes toxic side effects, Japan's health ministry is finally plugging
the legal loophole that has allowed them to be sold openly and lawfully by
trendy shops, street vendors and mail-order companies advertising in magazines.
The crackdown -- which takes effect June 6 -- will carry a maximum
seven-year prison term for possessing magic mushrooms, on par with the
penalty for cocaine possession.
While the appeal of the mushrooms reflects changing Japanese attitudes
toward drugs, it also highlights the government's increasingly desperate
battle against them.
Japan has carefully nurtured its hardline reputation, from levelling life
sentences on heroin traffickers to arresting former Beatle Paul McCartney
in 1980 when he stepped off the plane in Tokyo with a bag of marijuana.
But a 1990 overhaul of the drug law overlooked one point. It banned the
psychoactive drugs psilocybin and psilocin, but not the mushrooms that
naturally produce them.
It didn't take long for entrepreneurs to start hawking the psychedelic
fungi to curious teens and rebellious hipsters in search of a legal high.
So-called headshops mushroomed overnight in trendy Tokyo entertainment
districts, selling packs for 1,800 to 3,000 yen ($13 to $23 U.S.) a pop.
They're all laid out in fancy glass display cases. Most are imported from
the Netherlands, where they are grown on farms. But even hand-picked, wild
"liberty cap" toadstools from Scotland turn up for $20 a gram.
"You can find them anywhere," said Hideo Eno of the health ministry's
narcotics division.
The ministry said there were at least 11 species of magic mushrooms --
technically classified as poisonous plants and not drugs -- being sold in
Japan. As long as they were not labelled as food, that was permitted.
Takahito Watanabe, manager of PsychoPompos, a closet-sized headshop
brazenly advertising itself with a marijuana-leaf signboard, said his
desiccated mushrooms were for display purposes only.
"Or use as good luck charms," he said.
The health ministry has no statistics on the size of the magic mushroom
market or how many Japanese use them. But their popularity is hinted at by
sales at a chain of three stores owned by mushroom magnate Muneo Ogishi. He
claims more than 3,000 people, mostly in their 20s, stock up every month.
The increase in use is also underlined by the increase in the number of
people hospitalized for overdosing, from one person in 1997 to 38 in 2000
- -- not huge numbers but enough to demand action, Eno said.
"Young people are curious. They say it's fun and safe. But really it
contains a dangerous narcotic."
Users say the effect of magic mushrooms is like being sealed in a cocoon of
euphoria where street lights look like prisms and neon blurs into rainbows.
But the mushrooms can also trigger nausea and sudden fits of paranoia or panic.
Mushrooms are not considered addictive, but government officials view them
as a gateway to experimentation with other drugs.
Narcotics use in Japan peaked during the economic boom of the 1980s, but
has been on the rise again.
Except for a dip in 1998, arrests for drug offences rose consistently from
1995 to 2000. Last year, police took in a record haul of recreational
drugs, seizing 795 kilograms of marijuana and confiscating 118,000 tablets
of ecstasy, a 40 per cent increase from the year before.
The changing mores were underlined in a recent government poll that said
nearly 20 per cent of high school students think it should be legal for
them to use drugs if they wish.
"Drug abuse is on the rise and legalized magic mushrooms aren't helping,"
said Chikashi Okutsu, director of Asia Pacific Addiction Institute, a Tokyo
drug abuse treatment centre.
He said mushrooms are particularly dangerous for inexperienced users "who
don't know what they're doing."
Strict Drug Laws Overlooked The Hallucinatory Fungi
TOKYO -- Enthusiasts admit it's not the taste that keeps them gobbling the
shrivelled brown mushrooms. They're so bitter, many can choke them down
only with orange juice or yogurt.
The allure is the hallucinogen within, so potent that the fungi are
outlawed in most countries.
"It doesn't taste good, but I like to get high," 19-year-old student Wataru
Kanbe said after eating a handful of "magic mushrooms" at a recent open-air
concert. Best of all, he added with a glassy-eyed stare, doing so is
completely legal.
Not much longer.
Alarmed by the soaring popularity of hallucinogenic mushrooms and their
sometimes toxic side effects, Japan's health ministry is finally plugging
the legal loophole that has allowed them to be sold openly and lawfully by
trendy shops, street vendors and mail-order companies advertising in magazines.
The crackdown -- which takes effect June 6 -- will carry a maximum
seven-year prison term for possessing magic mushrooms, on par with the
penalty for cocaine possession.
While the appeal of the mushrooms reflects changing Japanese attitudes
toward drugs, it also highlights the government's increasingly desperate
battle against them.
Japan has carefully nurtured its hardline reputation, from levelling life
sentences on heroin traffickers to arresting former Beatle Paul McCartney
in 1980 when he stepped off the plane in Tokyo with a bag of marijuana.
But a 1990 overhaul of the drug law overlooked one point. It banned the
psychoactive drugs psilocybin and psilocin, but not the mushrooms that
naturally produce them.
It didn't take long for entrepreneurs to start hawking the psychedelic
fungi to curious teens and rebellious hipsters in search of a legal high.
So-called headshops mushroomed overnight in trendy Tokyo entertainment
districts, selling packs for 1,800 to 3,000 yen ($13 to $23 U.S.) a pop.
They're all laid out in fancy glass display cases. Most are imported from
the Netherlands, where they are grown on farms. But even hand-picked, wild
"liberty cap" toadstools from Scotland turn up for $20 a gram.
"You can find them anywhere," said Hideo Eno of the health ministry's
narcotics division.
The ministry said there were at least 11 species of magic mushrooms --
technically classified as poisonous plants and not drugs -- being sold in
Japan. As long as they were not labelled as food, that was permitted.
Takahito Watanabe, manager of PsychoPompos, a closet-sized headshop
brazenly advertising itself with a marijuana-leaf signboard, said his
desiccated mushrooms were for display purposes only.
"Or use as good luck charms," he said.
The health ministry has no statistics on the size of the magic mushroom
market or how many Japanese use them. But their popularity is hinted at by
sales at a chain of three stores owned by mushroom magnate Muneo Ogishi. He
claims more than 3,000 people, mostly in their 20s, stock up every month.
The increase in use is also underlined by the increase in the number of
people hospitalized for overdosing, from one person in 1997 to 38 in 2000
- -- not huge numbers but enough to demand action, Eno said.
"Young people are curious. They say it's fun and safe. But really it
contains a dangerous narcotic."
Users say the effect of magic mushrooms is like being sealed in a cocoon of
euphoria where street lights look like prisms and neon blurs into rainbows.
But the mushrooms can also trigger nausea and sudden fits of paranoia or panic.
Mushrooms are not considered addictive, but government officials view them
as a gateway to experimentation with other drugs.
Narcotics use in Japan peaked during the economic boom of the 1980s, but
has been on the rise again.
Except for a dip in 1998, arrests for drug offences rose consistently from
1995 to 2000. Last year, police took in a record haul of recreational
drugs, seizing 795 kilograms of marijuana and confiscating 118,000 tablets
of ecstasy, a 40 per cent increase from the year before.
The changing mores were underlined in a recent government poll that said
nearly 20 per cent of high school students think it should be legal for
them to use drugs if they wish.
"Drug abuse is on the rise and legalized magic mushrooms aren't helping,"
said Chikashi Okutsu, director of Asia Pacific Addiction Institute, a Tokyo
drug abuse treatment centre.
He said mushrooms are particularly dangerous for inexperienced users "who
don't know what they're doing."
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