Pubdate: Sun, 27 Sep 1998 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Section: "Have Your Say", Page E5 Author: Robin Givens KHAT BAN RACIST, IGNORANT Feeble is only one description for the khat ban. How about racist? The khat law was passed specifically to target Somalis and East Africans in Canada for criminal punishment for continuing a harmless cultural tradition. Ignorant is another world for Canadian khat policy, because the effects of khat are not much different than the effects of the coffee beans to which so many millions of Canadians are addicted. Careful analysis of the World Health Organization report, "Chewing Khat," reveals that khat produces the same daily use patterns found in caffeine users and an honest appraisal indicates that khat use is far less dangerous than coffee. WHO tries to depict khat use on a par with amphetamine addiction, but the studies admit "medical problems (associated with khat) are infrequent." Certainly less common than with coffee, which causes well over 20,000 deaths annually in the U.S. and Canada because of coffee-induced ulcers, strokes and heart attacks. Coffee is also implicated in cancer and fetal injury. Most of the problems WHO blames on khat are far more a reflection of social conditions in East Africa (i.e. millions starving in Sudan) than the effects of any drug. The khat ban is typical of lunatic drug prohibition policies that waste billions in valuable resources trying to suppress substances that cause less trouble than it takes to enforce the laws against them. Robin Givens Mill Valley, Calif. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry