Quote:
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) said there was “insufficient evidence” that khat caused health problems. It was a sentiment echoed by Beka, a Somalian buying a £6 bunch of the stuff at the Al-aseel supermarket on London’s decidedly Arabian thoroughfare, Edgware Road,.
Many Americans in the deep south chewed tobacco which can also be described as a herbal; stimulant when used in this way. Much evidence exists that this is a prime cause of mouth and throat cancers.
Some interesting info on the wiki page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KhatQuote:
In 1980, the World Health Organization (WHO) classified it as a drug of abuse that can produce mild to moderate psychological dependence (less than tobacco or alcohol),
So the WHO sees it as a drug of abuse?
Quote:
Health
Immediate effects:
increased heart rate, blood pressure[2]
euphoria[2]
hyperactivity[25]
decreased appetite
Long-term effects:
depression[2]
infrequent hallucinations[2]
delayed response inhibition[30]
increased risk of myocardial infarction[31]
psychosis in extreme cases in the genetically predisposed[2]
oral cancer[32][33]
Indeterminate effects:
death and stroke following acute coronary syndrome (either from impaired insight into symptoms by the khat chewer, delay to care, or poorly understood pathophysiological mechanisms)
So a much increased dependence on the NHS in the years to come by the users of this stuff!!
The Government taxes alcohol and tobacco which of course do lead to long term health problems so the cost to the NHS is offset by those purchasing the product and using it.
Not so the case here!!
There is a list of the wiki page of the Countries which allow it (mostly middle east and the UK) and those who ban it (pretty much everywhere else in the developed World).
Clearly the recent decision by the The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) was made for political reasons and not public protection reasons. At the very least lets hope they move to tax it.
As for the spitting issue this is already illegal under existing bye laws. Why are the local authorities not clamping down on it? Parts of West London have in the past had the danger of a Tuberculosis outbreak, this is spread from infected phlegm ejected from the lungs.