This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

The mother of a boy who has up to 100 epileptic seizures a day has been told by a government minister that potentially life-saving cannabis oil confiscated from her at Heathrow will not be returned.



Charlotte Caldwell was not cautioned when she was stopped by customs officers trying to “openly smuggle” the substance into the UK from Toronto. She then went to the Home Office to meet the minister of state, Nick Hurd.

“We had an honest and genuine conversation,” she said. “I have asked him to give Billy back his medicines today – he said no. I’ve asked him to come up with a solution and have been assured I will receive a response by 5pm today [Monday].”

She has vowed to obtain more cannabis oil to help her 12-year-old son, Billy, for whom she said it has proved to be an effective treatment.

Last year, Billy became the first child to be prescribed medicinal cannabis oil on the NHS. He then reportedly went 250 days without a seizure. However, his GP was later ordered by the Home Office not to renew the prescription or face disbarment.

Speaking at the time, Dr Brendan O’Hare said there was an “ethical issue” with preventing Billy from accessing medicinal cannabis because “the reduction in his fit frequency is huge”.

Caldwell said she feared the seizures “would eventually kill” Billy. His next dose was due at 3.30pm on Monday, she said, and warned of the dangers of missing his first treatment in 19 months.

Doctors in Commons rally to overturn ban on medicinal cannabis Read more

Caldwell, from Castlederg in Northern Ireland, told reporters the customs officers were “absolute gentlemen … really, really nice”. One had tears in his eyes as they took the drug from her, she said.

“I’ll just go back to Canada and I’ll get more and I’ll bring it back again,” she said. She described the substance as “a small bottle of oil that’s keeping my son alive” and said “my son has a right to have his anti-epileptic medication in his country, in his own home”.

At a press conference, Caldwell said: “It’s Billy’s anti-epileptic medication that Nick Hurd has taken away. It’s not some sort of joint full of recreational cannabis.

Sky News (@SkyNews) Mother Charlotte Caldwell "absolutely horrified" as customs officers at Heathrow Airport confiscate cannabis oil she uses to treat her son's epilepsy pic.twitter.com/qWONj5h7jC

“We are not going to stop, we are not going to give up; we have love, hope, faith for our kids and we are going to continue.”

MPs and experts condemned the move and said it highlighted the deep injustices people face due to Britain’s outdated drug policy.

Caroline Lucas, a vice-chairwoman of the all-party parliamentary group for drug policy reform, said: “Rather than cracking down on parents who are trying to help alleviate the suffering of their children, we should be legislating according to the evidence and giving people the treatments they need.

“There’s swathes of evidence to show that cannabis products can help treat epilepsy, and continuing to criminalise people for using it is both deeply cruel and an absurd waste of police resources.”

David Nutt, a former government chief drugs adviser, who has advocated for the legalisation of medicinal cannabis, said Caldwell had proved cannabis oil effectively cured her child and could save his life.

“Cannabis is a medicine in 20 other countries and was a medicine in the UK until 1971,” he said. “Why not make it a medicine again? We have a politically, not medically, based cannabis policy in the UK and this is why people like Billy Caldwell have to go through this torture.”

A Home Office spokesperson said: “The Home Office is sympathetic to the difficult and rare situation that Billy and his family are faced with.

“Whilst we recognise that people with debilitating illnesses are looking to alleviate their symptoms, Border Force has a duty to stop banned substances from entering the UK. The policing minister will meet Ms Caldwell this afternoon.”

It emerged last year that the UK is the world’s largest producer and exporter of cannabis for medical and scientific use. It provides the majority of the world’s medicinal cannabis exports, 67.6%, mainly to countries with more liberal usage laws.

The World Health Organization’s expert committee on drug dependence has committed to reviewing the scheduling of cannabis under the UN 1961 single convention on narcotic drugs.