Lisa Owen interviews Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne
On The Nation:
Lisa Owen interviews Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne and Matt Bowden from Stargate International
Matt
Bowden says he’s developing a safe legal high to be on the
shelves in NZ in two to three years. Says he plans to
crowd-fund the millions needed to pay for safety testing the
new product; investors will get at least 30% return on
investment. “It’s crowdsourcing for safety testing,
for all the different drugs that people want to see safety
tested, because we need to know which ones are safe and
which ones aren’t.” Says his company will run as a
not-for-profit and will only licence the products to clinics
who will assess all users before giving them legal
highs. Peter Dunne’s response: “I think it’s got a
degree of unreality about it at this stage” and he says
the timing is “incredibly optimistic” Minister says
the new psychoactive substances law is working, no products
are being manufactured or distributed legally in New
Zealand, public clamour has died down and “the situation
we have at the moment will continue for a considerable
period of time” It’ll be at least 3-5 years –
perhaps “many more” – before a testing regime robust
enough to prove products are “low risk” can be put in
place and no viable alternatives to animal testing on the
horizon Dunne acknowledges however Bowden is “right to
make the point which I think was implicit in what he’s
saying, that animal testing’s days are numbered
generally”
Bowden: “There's still a massive consumer
demand for these sorts of products, and it's being met
currently by the black market, the same as everywhere else
on the planet”. Dunne: New Zealand’s black market for
psychoactive substances is “comparatively small” and
“diminishing”. Says, “the police largely have that
under control”. His advice is that “it’s not
possible” to prove a “low risk” drug without animal
testing, but insists that doesn’t mean he’s created a de
facto ban on legal highs Has no intention of changing
existing cannabis laws
Lisa Owen:
I’m joined by Peter Dunne. Good morning to you,
Minister
Peter Dunne: Hello,
Lisa.
While on this programme a year ago, you
conceded that you should have perhaps done things
differently. Those products were withdrawn, so what’s
changed on the ground now?
Well, nothing
much has changed. The position that came into effect last
May continues. There are no products legally available for
sale, there are no products being manufactured or
distributed in New Zealand, and it’s interesting that a
lot of the public noise and clamour has died down as a
consequence. We’re working our way through the
implementation of the regulatory regime that was referred to
in Nicola’s track, and there are now opportunities for
people to apply for licences to manufacture products. As she
says, no one has done so to date. And the fact that we are
not able to test or use animal testing to be part of the
process means that it’s likely to be many, many years
before a testing regime that is robust enough to prove the
products are low-risk can be put in place. So essentially
the situation we have at the moment will continue for a
considerable period of time.
Okay, many years
exactly? Give us a more specific timeframe, Minister. What
do you think? Two to five? Five to 10?
I
can’t do that. I can’t do that, but I think it’s
somewhere, I would say, in at least the three to five range.
I’ve had some suggested advice that it might be longer
than that. But that’s because there needs to be, for the
point of view of the manufacturers, viable alternatives to
animal testing developed, and the specialist advice that I
receive constantly at the moment is there are no such viable
alternatives on the horizon.
Okay, well, as
you say, manufacturers can’t use animal tests, so you set
up— there’s a committee set up and you’ve got these
new guidelines that are now six months old, so is it even
possible at this point? Does the committee think it’s
possible at this point to prove a product is of low-risk
without testing on animals?
The advice that
I receive and have received constantly to that is no, it is
not possible. We made the call to remove animal testing
because it became clear to me around this time last year
that the inclusion of animal testing no longer enjoyed a
majority support in Parliament, so it was prudent to
withdraw it.
But isn’t that in essence—?
It’s a ban, then. If there’s no means to prove that
something is low-risk within the rules that you have set,
this is prohibition by stealth, isn’t
it?
No, it’s not, because whether it be
psychoactive substances or cosmetics or ultimately
pharmaceuticals, it’s pretty clear now that animal testing
is on the way out. Only last week, for instance,
Parliament— or the week before, Parliament unanimously
voted to prohibit animal testing on cosmetics, so the
pressure will go on manufacturers of pharmaceuticals,
cosmetics, synthetic highs, et cetera, to develop viable
alternatives over a period of years. I just don’t think
that’s going to be a static position. But the fact is that
from a regulator’s point of view, we need those standards
to give the assurance that whether it be pharmaceuticals,
cosmetics or synthetic drugs, et cetera, that there is a
standard of low-risk being achieved.
So you
accept that it’s just a matter of time before these drugs
are back?
Well, they’ve never gone away.
If you look around the world at the moment, they are
escalating at a huge rate. A number of countries have
introduced outright bans on substances or products or
chemicals, and when I was at the United Nations in Vienna
last month at a conference on this matter and spoke to the
leading officials there and said to them, ‘So they’ve
gone away?’ they all smiled at me wryly and said, ‘No,
they’ve gone underground.’ Now, what has happened in New
Zealand, because we’ve taken a different approach, is
while there has been some underground market, it’s
comparatively small. It’s largely a residual stockpiling,
and the police largely have that under control. So we’re
in a different position from others.
Really,
Minister? Really? It’s small? Because you’ve just told
us that you don’t think that it’s possible to get one of
these products back on the shelves maybe for five to 10
years. That in essence is a ban. People are telling us it
has driven this product underground, and there’s a booming
black market.
No, there has been some
evidence of some underground sales in some areas. The advice
that I’ve received that it’s comparatively small; it is
largely stockpiled product from prior to the legislation, so
it is diminishing. There has been some suggestion of some
new manufacture, but that’s been very limited. And as I
say, the advice I receive from the police and others is that
they have the situation under control.
Well,
no, the Drug Foundation tells us there’s also a resurgence
in other drugs, like Ecstasy is coming back, they’re
seeing more P around, and the City Mission has said that
people are huffing glue and solvents and people are using
synthetic cannabis, just under the
radar.
Well, as I say, the advice that
I’ve received is that the ‘under the radar’ aspect of
the problem with regard to the synthetics is pretty minimal.
There has been some transitioning, but, again, our
methamphetamine use is down considerably on what it was four
or five years ago as a result of our methamphetamine
strategy. Drugs like Ecstasy have never been a prominent
part of the drug market in New Zealand. Of course, there’s
going to be some transfer, but there’s also huge risk
involved in that for people from the point of view of
detection.
But, Minister, are you happy that a
law that you championed to regulate this industry is perhaps
driving people to other harder drugs?
No, I
don’t accept that proposition. I think there’s always
going to be a mix-and-match, if you like, because people
switch around. You see it in the alcohol market. People
still want to have homebrew and various other alternatives.
So I don’t think it’s as quite as tight a distinction as
you draw. I’m happy that the legislation is working as
intended. As I say, the introduction of the ban on animal
testing was a complication we did not foresee at the time
the legislation was being developed, but as you’ve seen,
that wave is starting to go right through all other areas
where animal testing is involved. And so everyone’s going
to have to face up to developing alternatives, and from the
New Zealand point of view, whether it be medicines or
whether it be synthetic drugs or whatever, there’s got to
be a standard achieved, and that is that those products are
of low risk.
Okay, well, let’s take the
premise that you’ve given us, which is basically these
products will come back on to shelves; it’s just a matter
of time. When one does come back, or when someone passes
that benchmark for the tests, what if there is another huge
round of public outrage? What will you do
then?
Well, I suspect that the level of
testing will mean that any products that come through will
be sufficiently benign, that there won’t be that impact,
but there is the capacity under the legislation to withdraw
products if they are found to be having adverse
effects.
The thing is it costs a lot of money.
It’s going to cost a lot of money for someone to meet this
testing regime. I think some estimates are about $2 million
to get it over the line. Is there a prospect that they could
pay that money, put the product out there and then you might
tweak the law again and they’ll be left with the carpet
pulled out from underneath them?
There’s
always that prospect, but if the testing regime is
sufficiently robust, the product that emerges at the other
end should be of low risk, which means that the likelihood
of it causing damage, of it causing community concern, et
cetera, et cetera, is minimal. If that is not the case,
then, as I say, there are powers under the act to act
accordingly.
So are you guaranteeing that this
law is in good faith and if somebody passes that, the
guidelines that are in place now, then that product will go
to the market, it will be sold, and unless there are any
incidents, they will be allowed to do that? Because they
don’t have that faith at the moment.
The
proposition has always— the proposition’s always been
that we put in place a testing regime that says if you can
prove your product is of low risk to end users, we’ll let
you sell it under certain regulated conditions. That
hasn’t changed. If that test is failed by anyone along the
way, then, as I say, there are powers in the act to act to
remove those products, and that hasn’t changed
either.
Given that you’ve said the big stick
in a law-and-order approach hasn’t worked before, what
about cannabis? What about natural cannabis? Is there a
move? Will you move to try and do something on that –
decriminalise?
No, no, that’s a completely
separate debate. We are currently reviewing our national
drug policy and within that some of the provisions of the
Misuse of Drugs Act. But you cannot use, and I’m not going
to get involved in using the synthetic cannabis debate as a
lever towards the legalisation of the real product. That’s
a completely separate issue, and we remain bound by the
international drug conventions and the current law remains
in place, and I’ve got no intention of changing
it.
All right, thank you very much for joining
me this morning, Minister.
Thank
you.
Lisa Owen: Welcome back. It was Matt
Bowden who introduced the legal party drug BZP to New
Zealand back in 2000. When that was banned, he switched to
synthetic cannabis. It all made him very rich. Nowadays, he
runs Stargate International, a company advocating for and
developing safer drugs. He joins me now. Good morning,
Matt.
Matt Bowden: Good
morning.
You have heard what Peter Dunne had
to say there. He claims that there is no significant black
market as a result of taking these products off the shelves.
Do you agree with him?
Well, I think it's
the odd thing about— you know, politicians can make laws,
but politicians can't make a law that goes against a natural
law. They can't make a law against gravity, and they can't
make a law against the laws of economics. The laws of supply
and demand are still there. There's still a massive consumer
demand for these sorts of products, and it's being met
currently by the black market, the same as everywhere else
on the planet.
What evidence have you got of
that?
We hear from retailers around the
country that they are seeing people that are moving more
towards methamphetamine, and we've also seen from— even
from television recently, we've seen tinnie houses sort of
selling these sorts of problems. Um...
And how
do retailers know that people are moving to meth,
though?
I guess they go to buy glass pipes
and so on and paraphernalia, plastic bags.
So
what about online? Because that's another issue that's been
raised. Is it still possible to get these drugs
online?
Absolutely, and I don't wanna go
into the how exactly it's done, but it's very easy for
anybody with a credit card to get hold of, um, large
quantities of synthetic drugs, um, across the border without
any way of being detected or caught.
So you're
telling me it's easy? Because you still—? I mean, it might
be easy to order online, but you've got to get it across the
border, as you say. Is it easy to get it past
Customs?
I don't wanna encourage people to
do this, so I don't wanna talk any more about how it's
done.
Not how it's done, but you're telling me
it's relatively easy?
I think it happens all
the time, and that's sort of the global phenomenon that's
going on.
Ok,well, what's happened to people
like you who were manufacturing legal highs? What are you
all doing now?
Most people have... I mean,
the government have really sort of cut the throat of the
local industry, and so for us, we've found it very, very
difficult. I mean, I have a lot of technical staff. We have
a lab which costs a lot of money to set up, where we design
hundreds and hundreds of different molecules, looking for
the optimal molecules which are gonna be safe enough. Um,
it's been very difficult, so, uh....
But you
still are? You're still researching and developing a product
that you think will get past these new
rules?
Yeah, I'm passionate about this. I
started this when we had a family member died of an Ecstasy
death. Another friend of mine commit suicide using a samurai
sword on methamphetamine. I got sick of going to funerals
when I was a little younger. It's been 17 years now. During
that time period, a testament to our safety record, 17
years, tens of millions of occasions, people have chosen to
use one of our products, zero of those occasions resulted in
a death. Zero lasting injury.
OK, but there's
new guidelines now, so you need to meet those guidelines. So
just to be clear — you think that you can make a legal
high that is not addictive, and it's not gonna be damaging
to people's health?
That's right, and if you
look at, um— the safety standards are pretty much the same
as medicines. There are a lot of medicines out there which
have, sort of, broadly similar effects, which do, uh, which
are... We're looking for something which is non-addictive,
doesn't cause brain damage, is unlikely to cause death and
overdose. With BZP, we had people making suicide attempts
— taking 40, 50 pills at once. And they weren't dying. Um,
and not toxic to any organ in the body. We want drugs that
are not gonna cause antisocial
behaviours.
Because the thing is, when we told
people you were coming on this show this morning, the amount
of scepticism around whether you can actually achieve this
is huge; through the roof on social media. And they're
saying, 'People... You know, surely another company, a huge
international pharmaceutical company, if this was possible,
they would have done it?'
And they're doing
it right now. So we are working with leading academics
around the world to develop alternatives to the more
dangerous drugs — your methamphetamine, alcohol, heroin.
The really dangerous drugs, as well as, um, sociabilisers
and, uh, drugs which people can take just to switch out of
work mode and into play mode for the weekend, which are
safer than alcohol, which kills two to three Kiwis every
day.
So let's assume that you can make such a
drug for the purpose of this exercise. How long before you
can prove that it's not harmful? Because you can't use
animal-testing to do that. So how are you going to prove
that it's not harmful?
OK, so again,
technology is moving very quickly, and it's being pushed
along by the trend towards, um, the legislation we developed
in NZ. When I said, like, 10, 15 years ago, we put these
regulations in place, we'd be leading the world in drug
policy, everyone, of course, told me that I was crazy. But
that's what happened, and that's what we're
doing.
Yeah, but Mr Dunne told us that he
thinks that's years away. Could be five to 10 years away.
How far away do you think?
So testing starts
in silica, which means computer modelling. Lot of the
pharmaceutical companies are using computer modelling
because there are so much we know. We've tested so many
millions of chemicals over the years, so there's a lot we
know about what makes it safe, what makes it dangerous. Then
it goes to in-vitro testing, so testing—
In
a tube?
In a tube. Yep, cell-cultured. And
then from there, um, if there's... Uh, overseas companies
will continue doing animal-testing. Animal-testing will then
presented to ethics committees at universities, and
human-testing will carry on. Also, the committee here in NZ,
the law says they are allowed to look at animal-testing if
they are wanting to, and they're allowed to use it to reject
a product. And so there's a binary output, and the process
where animal-testing, overseas companies who aren't limited
by laws will do animal-testing. They will present it to the
committee, and then they will either reject or they'll get
a, 'Yes, carry on.'
So you’re doing this
stuff in conjunction with overseas people, so you get to the
point where you can do human trials, conduct them overseas,
bring the information back here and get through the process
here. Is that what you’re saying?
I’m a
big believer in New Zealand and creating jobs here, so I
would go back to the government and the community, and say,
‘Do we want to do this here in New Zealand? Should we do
this through our universities, or are you going to send us
somewhere else?’
So when do you think you
can have a product on the shelves?
I think
it should happen within about three years’ time, and then,
what I’d like to do— The first misconception people are
thinking, ‘are those horrible addictive drugs that left
people in the streets coming back?’ Absolutely not. The
drugs that come back will be non-addictive. They won’t
mess people up. They won’t make people comatose. They
won’t cause any brain damage or organ damage. What I’m
going to is— I’ve always said we should have clinicians
at the point of sale. So I will only licence my products to
clinics. I’m going to set up not for profit clinics where
someone walks into the door, they will talk to a clinician
who will assess whether they are in a space where they are
addicted to something, to alcohol or some other drug,
whether they are a problem user or a responsible user. If
they are a responsible user, they get given a product, and
then the money that we’ve made— we’ve invested a lot
in addiction-breaking technology, cognitive restoration,
abstinence maintenance – things which help addicts get off
dangerous drugs and get their brains back together. We want
to provide that from our clinicians free of charge to the
community, subsidised by the sale of the legal high
product.
Well, that seems to be a
contradiction, doesn’t it? Because if this thing is
perfectly safe, as you tell me it is going to be, why do you
need a clinician to dispense it if it’s perfectly safe?
Shouldn’t you be able to buy it off the shelf in the
supermarket?
That’s a really good
question, and what it comes down to is the individual. You
probably know people who can use the toxic, lethal drug
alcohol in a responsible manner, and you probably also know
people who are in trouble with it, and so what we’re
saying is let’s have a clinician there. When you’re
going to purchase your drug, whether it’s alcohol or
something else, we can say, ‘You’ve been in here two or
three days in a row now, Lisa. Why don’t we talk about
what’s going on in your life? Have you had a relationship
breakdown? Has someone died nearby?’ And if you’re just
on the verge of moving into problem usage, then let’s have
you there in a relationship with a treatment professional
who can put you on a better path.
So this, in
essence, is a franchise; clinics out in the
community.
Not for profit. This is a
community asset.
Okay.
We want
to build just one in Auckland. The council can tell us where
they want it. And if we’ve got the same outcomes
performance indicators that the council have, they might
want more. We put them around the country, and then when
people look at New Zealand, they say this is the way
forward. We have a foundation—
This sounds
really expensive, really expensive, and we know developing
the drug is expensive, so where are you going to get the
money from?
Right at the moment I am doing
some crowd funding, and so if you go todrugsafetytesting.com and give us your
details, if people want to invest in what we’re doing, in
the safety testing, then not only are you investing in a
better future, but also we will give your money back when
the product hits the market.
So you’re
basically saying ‘give a little’ to get
high?
Give a little so that when you’re
children get high, they’re doing it with something
that’s not going to kill them.
And what are
they going to get out of this? Because you’re saying
it’s a business investment, so are you going to pay all
this money back? How will it work?
It’s
crowdsourcing for safety testing, for all the different
drugs that people want to see safety tested, because we need
to know which ones are safe and which ones aren’t. And
when money comes in—the difference with our crowdsourcing
is we’ll give the money back when the products hit the
market. And I think it’s very
reasonable.
What’s the return on the
investment going to be? I’ve had a look at some of your
documentation. You’re aiming pretty
high.
At least 30%. I think it’s pretty
easy. These sorts of products, they make millions and
millions of dollars, and I am uncomfortable taking money and
living off it in that manner. I actually want to do
something else, and I want to set this up so that it’s the
community that are having the wealth redistributed within
them, because we know 1% of people have got all the wealth,
and we need to turn that around.
So, just to
be clear, this grand idea, when do you think it’s going to
come to fruition? When will someone be able to walk in and
buy a product that you have produced?
I
think that we’ll have products back through safety testing
within two to three years.
All right. I want
to bring Peter Dunne back in on the conversation here. Mr
Dunne, you can hear there Matt Bowden thinks he’s going to
have a product back on the shelves within two to three
years. What do you think of that?
Peter
Dunne: Well, I’m fascinated by his plan. I think it’s
got a degree of unreality about it at this stage. He’s
right on one point, though, that the massive level of
development is continuing worldwide and this problem is
proliferating rather than reducing, which is why we need to
move towards a regulated market in New Zealand. But frankly,
I think his timings are incredibly
optimistic.
Is this what you imagined with
your legislation, that people would give a little, as I say,
to produce a product to get high on?
No, I
didn’t imagine that for one moment, and I think that’s
the fanciful side of what he’s talking about. The notion
that there were products available that were proven to be
low risk, low harm to people and potentially non-addictive
as he’s suggesting, that is really the space we want to
move into, because then it becomes a matter of public choice
as to whether you use them or not. I think, as I say, his
time frame is very optimistic. It’s certainly not
consistent with the advice that I’m
receiving.
But what about the means by which
he thinks he’s going to get through your regime, and the
testing and the animal testing. Do you think that’s
realistic?
Well, I think he’s right to
make the point which I think was implicit in what he’s
saying, that animal testing’s days are numbered generally,
and I acknowledged that in our talk earlier. What the
alternatives might be are still being developed worldwide,
whether it is computer-based modelling or other forms of
testing. They need to meet professional standards. We
don’t have answers on those points as of yet, which is why
I think his timing is very optimistic.
But,
basically, what you’re saying is it’s a pipe dream from
what you’re hearing.
Well, I think part
of it is. I think there is some reality in what he talks
about when he refers to the way in which the product market
is developing worldwide, but I think the point about where
testing regimes go to generally over the next few years are
still very unclear, not just in New Zealand, but elsewhere,
and that’s why I think he’s clinging to something that
may not come to pass in the time frame he’s talking
about.
Thanks, Mr Dunne. If I could come back
to you, Mr Bowden. You’re dreaming.
Matt
Bowden: Everybody has always told me that everything I set
out to achieve is impossible, including that I would get the
government to put sensible regulation in place, and that we
would take it to the United Nations and we would be well
received internationally. But I’m sure Mr Dunne will be
able to tell you that’s exactly what’s
happened.
All right, well, thanks for joining
us this morning, Matt Bowden.
Transcript
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ENDS