Weather Tonight: 3°c Clear Night Morning: 9°c Sunny spells

Critics' Choice

Restaurants

Fay Maschler

quoteWith a single dessert and just two glasses of wine our bill was kept in check - but the effort of doing so was not much funquote

Fay Maschler Babbo Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quoteThis is a film with beautiful performances and a visual style that urges you towards reflectionquote

Andrew O'Hagan Bright Star Theatre

Henry Hitchings

quoteAlthough the first half of Kwei-Armah’s production is pacy, funny and intelligent, the energy level then drops offquote

Henry Hitchings Seize The Day

Reader reviews

Film

Squiz, Islington

quoteI loved this film from start to finish. Take the girlfriend, tell your mum - I'd see it again tomorrow and will buy the dvd.quote

An Education Theatre

Joe, London

quoteI saw this last night and can't remember the last time I was so moved in the theatre.quote

This Much Is True Restaurants

Hiroshi Sugiyama

quoteI have been to many of London's so-called best Japanese restaurants and none have been as good as the food that I've had at Aqua Kyotoquote

Aqua Kyoto

Allow athletes to use cannabis, says sports minister

Last updated at 16:07pm on 12.12.06

 Add your view

 

High idea? Richard Caborn stunned MPs by suggesting cannabis should be removed from the list of banned substances for competitors

Athletes at the London Olympics should be not banned for taking recreational drugs, the Sports Minister said today.

Richard Caborn stunned MPs by suggesting cannabis should be removed from the list of banned substances for competitors.

The real threat to the spirit of the 2012 Games, he said, comes from a new generation of performanceenhancing substances, such as growth hormones and genetic manipulation.

Giving evidence to the Commons Science and Technology Select Committee, the minister said the police should be left to deal with athletes caught using social drugs.

The banned from the World Anti-Doping Authority (Wada) includes cannabis, cocaine and other substances.

However, Mr Caborn suggested the list should reviewed. The Minister's intervention came despite a report from his own department and UK Sport detailing how the 2012 Olympics was under "significant threat" from designer drugs.

"We are not in the business of policing society. We are in the business of rooting out cheats in sport. That's what Wada's core function is about."

He said the anti-doping code was based on three principles: performance enhancement, harm to the athlete and harm to the sport.

"I would give far more weight to the performance enhancing of those three and I would also look very seriously at the list, to take off what I believe are some of the social drugs."

In his speech, the Sports Minister also ruled out introducing laws that would making doping at the London games a criminal offence.

Similar legislation has been introduced in Spain, Italy and Greece, but Mr Caborn said he was against it as it would be "disproportionate".

By contrast, Arne Ljungqvist, the head of the International Olympic Committee's medical commission, told the committee that Britain should follow the previous host city of Athens in 2004 by prosecuting athletes who fail drugs tests.

He said: "It sends a powerful message to an athlete that is of great benefit in the fight against doping."

The UK Sport study said it had identified "new threats" from the use of human growth hormones, genetic manipulation and blood doping. The report said: "There is potential for unscrupulous scientists to design new, undetectable substances specifically synthesised to beat the system'.

"By 2012 gene doping could be a very real threat... and, as it uses natural body systems and manipulates the host's DNA, it will be difficult to detect and prove."

The study highlighted the 2003 probe into the case of Dwain Chambers and the US laboratory that made the steroid for which he tested positive.


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (2)

 Add your view

As far as I know Cannabis is not a performance enhancing drug. I would have thought that strong coffee would have more of a stimulating effect.
Cannabis use is so widespread and 'socially acceptable' to many that athletes may have a hard time insulating themselves from it totally. It would be a shame if an athlete who inadvertently passively smoked some weed then tested positive and got disqualified. Equally it would seem not to be in the interests of sport to hound a recreational user who was also an athlete - unless of course cannabis can be scientifically proven to boost performance in which case it should stay banned. What does the scientific evidence show ?

- Ross Nockles, Norwich UK

Can anything a government minister utters be taken seriously?

- Stuart, New Malden


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 


 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Clear Night
3°c
Morning
Sunny spells
9°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & property | London jobs | FindaProperty.com | Primelocation.com | Educate London | Holiday Villas