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UK: 'Cannabis lollies' spark outrage

BBC Online

Friday 06 Feb 2004

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Police and trading standards officers are investigating the sale of sweets
called "cannabis lollies".

The green lollies, labelled as containing hemp extract, have been sent for
analysis after going on sale in shops in Leeds.

Trading standards chiefs were alerted by a mother who complained that the
sweets may lead children into drug use.

Angela Nichol, of New Farnley, Leeds, feared the lollipops glamorised drug
taking.


"I went into a local shop and saw them on the counter, I was stuck for
words," she said.

'Forbidden fruit'

"I mean, there's a big enough drug problem as it is. These lollies are
selling for 30p when ordinary lollies are about 10p, the kids are going to
think they're something special.

"It's like the forbidden fruit. There's all this in the news about cannabis
being downgraded, a child might eat a lolly and think cannabis tastes like
this and go on to bigger things."

The lollies, which come in a tub with a cannabis leaf motif on the front,
are thought to have been made in Germany and sold to retailers in the Leeds
area by a wholesaler in Bradford.

West Yorkshire's principal trading standards officer, Andrew Bibby, told
BBC News Online: "We have sent one to the West Yorkshire public analyst to
determine whether it contains any active ingredients.

"If it does then we will have legal powers to act to stop further sales.

Drug problems

"But even if it does not, we deplore any product that attracts children's
interest in harmful drugs.

"However, there is nothing in current legislation which would prevent the
sale of a harmless sugary lolly no matter how despicable its marketing image."

Tests on the lolly ingredients should be completed early next week, he said.

West Yorkshire Police said that although they had not received any
complaints about the sweets, the local community policing team were looking
into the matter.

Ailsa Mayers, who works for Community Neighbourhood Action in New Farnley,
said: "There are drug problems as it is and you don't need, even if there
is no cannabis in them, inciting people or encouraging young people to buy
lollies that are named cannabis."

Naheem Bashir, owner of N&N Stores in Armley, which sells the cannabis
lollies, said: "They contain a hemp extract and I am perfectly within my
rights to sell them."

He said he had sold almost 500 of the sweets in the last week alone, but
only allowed people aged over-18 to buy them.

 

 

 

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