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Canada Scraps Plans to Legalize Marijuana

ABC News

Monday 03 Apr 2006

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Canada's New Conservative Party PM Says Legislation to Legalize
Marijuana Won't Be Reintroduced

OTTAWA Apr 3, 2006 (AP)— Canada's new Conservative Party Prime Minister
Stephen Harper said Monday that Ottawa does not intend to reintroduce
legislation to legalize small amounts of marijuana.

Speaking to the Canadian Professional Police Association, Harper
received applause when he reiterated that the legislation drawn up by
the previous Liberal Party government would not be reintroduced when the
new Parliament sits Monday.

The bill, which had alarmed law enforcement officials in Canada and the
United States, died on the floor of the House of Commons after the
Liberal Party lost elections in January.

Under the bill, getting caught with about half an ounce or less of
marijuana would have brought a citation akin to a traffic ticket, not a
criminal record. While possession of marijuana would have remained
illegal, the bill was intended to prevent young people from being
saddled with a lifelong criminal record.

U.S. authorities worried the legislation would have weakened their
efforts to curb marijuana exports from Canada, which has numerous
marijuana farms, particularly in the lush western province of British
Columbia.

Canadian marijuana activist Marc Emery of Vancouver, known as "the
prince of pot" and recently profiled by the CBS' "60 Minutes," is under
U.S. indictment targeting his multimillion-dollar marijuana seed
business. He claims to make $3 million a year from selling marijuana
seeds on line and by mail, mostly to buyers south of the border.

Harper, who was to later address the first Conservative-led Parliament
in 13 years, told the police association that fighting crime was one of
his top five priorities.

He vowed to keep his campaign pledge to demand tougher sentences for gun
and drug offenses.

He also won prolonged applause for his campaign promises to crack down
on parole and do away with mandatory supervision, the practice of
releasing most convicts after two-thirds of their sentences.

"We are going to hold criminals to account," said Harper. "This
government will send a strong message to criminals: If you do a serious
crime, you're going to start doing serious time."

 

 

 

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