Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

SWAZILAND: Illegal cannabis could become legal 'Swazi Gold'

Reuters

Sunday 29 Oct 2006

---
A fundamental shift in Swaziland's attitude towards the cannabis plant,
or hemp, the country's most lucrative cash crop, could be on the
horizon. The government is set to allow small-scale production of hemp
to see if it has the potential to become an economically viable crop.

"In hemp we have an alternative to cotton, which has let us down badly
over the last few years. It has been because of marijuana that we have
found it difficult to talk about hemp, but that is changing, and we are
beginning to shape public opinion to its benefits," said Lufto Dlamini,
the Swazi Minister for Enterprise and Employment.

"The government is considering a proposal to grow hemp, and a decision
will be reached by the end of this month. But I expect it will be given
the go-ahead to grow for research purposes, and if that proves
successful then we will see," he told IRIN.

Falling global prices for sugar and cotton, Swaziland's traditional
crops, have led to cannabis, or 'dagga' as it is known locally, becoming
'Swazi Gold' for many of the country's impoverished population, most of
whom live on less than US$1 a day.

According to the government's Annual Vulnerability Monitoring Report
2005, cotton prices have fallen steadily over the past few years as a
result of international competition and last year's price for cotton was
about 33 percent lower than the previous year.

A similar fate has befallen the sugar industry. The European Union plans
to slash its price to suppliers in African, Caribbean and Pacific Least
Developing Countries by 37 percent from the start of 2007 to bring it in
line with the global price, causing the profits of Swazi producers to
shrink significantly.

The ongoing decline of these major contributors to the agriculture
sector, which is faltering as a whole, have led to widespread job losses
and left many Swazis with no means of putting food on the table other
than subsistence farming, including cannabis growing.

Swaziland's climate and soil are conducive to growing cannabis and the
plant has been grown for many centuries, either for export or for use
locally as a stimulant.

In the past four years an increasing number of entrepreneurs have
suggested that the large-scale production of hemp would go a long way to
counteracting poverty.

Dr Ben Dlamini, 70, a former education administrator in the Swazi
Department of Education, was one of the first people to talk about the
potential benefits of hemp production.

"The major emphasis on cannabis in Swaziland has always been on smoking
it and getting a 'high', but if we were to grow hemp commercially it
would solve a lot of problems. It can be used to manufacture fuels,
textiles, healthy oils and lotions," he pointed out.

"People are getting the idea that hemp can be used for purposes other
than smoking, but the process of understanding this is very slow."

Simon Mavimbela, 21, and Justice Dlamini, 26, have lived all their lives
in Hhohho, in the north of the country, the main area for cultivating
cannabis, where many people risk growing the illegal plant rather than
other cash crops like maize or peanuts.

While both young men insisted that they did not grow cannabis
themselves, they admitted that friends and members of their families had
grown the plant for generations.

"People here will get around R80 [about US$11] for a 10kg bag of maize
when they sell it at the market, but they will get R3,000 [about $405]
for a 10kg bag of cannabis if they can sell it to someone who is going
to take it outside of Swaziland," Dlamini explained.

"A person can grow 30 10kg bags in a year up in the hills here, and they
use the money to buy cows, furniture, send their children to school. We
are in a good situation because our fathers grew dagga, so we could
afford to go to school, have clothes and other benefits."

According to Dlamini, the only difference between growing cannabis and
any other crop is that they have to avoid detection by the police by
locating the plantations in inaccessible areas.

"If they are lucky, people from South Africa come and give them the
money to start up, and then come back and buy the cannabis after it has
been harvested. They then take the stuff through holes in the boarder
fence into South Africa. You have to be very careful, though, because
the police are always around - people do all their crop-work early in
the mornings, so that the police will not see what they are up to."

In 2005 the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime estimated that the
global illegal trade in cannabis was worth $142bn and listed Swaziland
as one of the major producers in southern and eastern Africa.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/42a0f5ad13dcdb60edb317bf57ee49e0.htm

--
WebBooks Amazing Amazon Store: http://astore.amazon.co.uk/webbooks05

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!