LONDON: Britain’s interior minister used an exceptional power yesterday to release medicinal cannabis oil that had been confiscated from an epileptic boy who was later admitted to hospital suffering from seizures.
Billy Caldwell, 12, had travelled to Canada with his mother, Charlotte, to get the cannabis oil after Billy’s doctor was ordered to stop prescribing it, but when they flew back into London on Monday customs officials confiscated their supplies .
The boy was admitted to hospital on Friday after suffering several seizures.
His case has stirred debate on the therapeutic use of cannabis, with politicians from different parties backing the family and campaigners calling for changes to the law.
“This morning, I’ve used an exceptional power as Home Secretary to urgently issue a licence to allow Billy Caldwell to be treated with cannabis oil,” the minister, Sajid Javid, said in a statement. “My decision is based on the advice of senior clinicians who have made clear this is a medical emergency.”
Charlotte Caldwell, who says Billy was free of seizures when he was using the cannabis oil, made a statement to reporters outside Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, where her son was being treated. She called for the law to be changed.
“No other family should have to go through this sort of ordeal, travelling halfway around the world to get medication which should be freely available to our desperately ill children,” she said.
“This is a wake-up call for our country. In the 21st century we need to have a more humane policy, not panic measures. I hope the government reflects upon what happened and what they’ve put our family through these last few days.”