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Fiji: Marijuana Crops Defended in Fiji Senate Hearing

DRCNet.org

Stopthedrugwar.org

Friday 25 Mar 2005

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http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/380/fijihearing.shtml


While pot production in the South Pacific island nation of Fiji may not be
a big deal in the global scheme of things -- neither the US State
Department nor the International Narcotics Control Board even mentions
Fijian marijuana cultivation -- it remains a controversial topic at home.
As DRCNet has previously noted, police and marijuana farmers in the Navosa
highlands clashed last fall during eradication campaigns, and the topic has
led to much public hand-wringing by politicians since then.

Now, the Fiji Times reported, a Fijian senate ad-hoc committee on drugs and
vice has held a public hearing on pot growing in the heart of the Navosa
region, and they got an earful from local residents. Marijuana cultivation
is traditional and should be excused, villagers told the committee chaired
by Sen. Viliame Navoka. People grow marijuana for understandable reasons,
villagers said, and by the end of the day it sounded like they had
convinced Navoka.

"For generations the villagers of Navosa have had to travel down
mountainous and rugged terrains to reach a road and a few hours more before
they can get to the market to sell their produce," Navoka said. "Some have
to cross rivers with water up to tire-level and, by the time they reach the
market, there is no guarantee their produce will all be sold. They are
still facing the same economic hardships their ancestors faced years ago.
Some of them said that is why they have no choice but to resort to
marijuana growing. The product is lighter, it has a steady market and is
economically viable," he said.

Navoka added that the committee was "impressed" with some of the large
homes and furniture apparently purchased with pot profits, but that
villagers were concerned about the impact of marijuana use on the youth,
"most of whom had become too lazy to farm." Villagers blamed modern human
rights law for making it difficult to enforce traditional customs frowning
on such activities. "The villagers emphasized that illegal drugs and social
problems could be controlled through the strict observance and preservation
of the Fijian culture and tradition," Navoka noted.


 

 

 

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