Several British lawmakers lent their support to a cannabis
tea party on the lawns outside parliament on Tuesday, protesting against
legislation that criminalizes use of the drug for medical purposes.
Three
Members of Parliament and dozens of patients sat down at a table laid
out with cakes and scones laced with the drug, as hemp plants swayed
against a Westminster backdrop.
The tea party
was held to draw attention to a motion being submitted later in the day
by veteran lawmaker Paul Flynn of the opposition Labour Party that aims
to change legislation around medical cannabis use.
Earlier in the year, Flynn
called on people who could face imprisonment for taking cannabis for
medical reasons to break the law.
Patients
suffering from chronic conditions such as arthritis and multiple
sclerosis face up to 14 years in prison under British drugs law for
using cannabis to treat their pain.
Sitting
in a wheelchair with a cannabis joint in hand and a second rolled up in
his pocket, Christopher Hobday, 41, said he suffers from an autoimmune
disease which leaves him in constant pain and has lost him the use of
his right leg. Consuming cannabis alleviated the pain.
“It is life-changing for me. It means that I actually have a life,” Hobday said.
Faye
Jones, a 33-year-old executive assistant and an organizer of the tea
party, was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis five years ago.
Tuesday’s protest was arranged by the United Patients Alliance, a group that has campaigned for many years on the issue.
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