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Charlotte Caldwell's medicinal cannabis oil for her epileptic son confiscated


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A mother who had cannabis oil taken from her as she arrived at Heathrow airport has vowed to "get more" to save her son.

Charlotte Caldwell was attempting to bring the drug into the UK for her severely epileptic child when she had it confiscated by customs officers in London after a flight from Canada.

She was not cautioned, and has vowed to repeat the attempt.

"We will not stop, we are not going to give up," she said after the medicine was seized. "We have love, hope, faith for our kids and we are going to continue."

Her son Billy, 12, was given a prescription for medicinal cannabis oil last year to help treat his epilepsy - the first time the drug had been prescribed by the NHS.

But the boy's doctor was told by Home Office drug enforcement teams to stop prescribing the medication, which Ms Caldwell credits with keeping her son's seizures at bay.

Billy, from County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, suffers serious fits and Ms Caldwell is worried the cycle of seizures "will eventually kill him".

She described the drug as "a small bottle of oil that's keeping my son alive".

On arriving at Heathrow on Monday she was given a letter from Home Office Minister Nick Hurd, inviting her to a meeting to discuss the status of the drug.

She said she would discuss with the MP "parent to parent" after making the 20-hour trip between Toronto and London with her son.

She told reporters that customs officers were "absolute gentlemen... really, really nice," and one even had tears in his eyes as they took the drug from her.

Earlier this year, Ms Caldwell said: "Medicinal cannabis has given me back my right to hope and try to live some kind of normal life. But most importantly it has given Billy the right to life."

"My child will not go without life-saving medication. How I get it remains to be seen. But I will."
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