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Swiss Hemp Activist Freed After International Outcry

www.DRCNet.org

The Week Online

Friday 01 Feb 2002

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http://www.drcnet.org/wol/222.html#rappazfreed


DRCNet reported two weeks ago on the case of Bernard Rappaz, a
Swiss cannabis activist and grower who had been on hunger strike
since his arrest in November
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/220.html#rappaz). Rappaz, the owner of
the Valchanze cannabis company, was arrested November 14 for
possession of 51 metric tons of cannabis and 110 pounds of
hashish, but his supporters told DRCNet he was arrested because of
his activism surrounding the medical use of cannabis.

Switzerland currently tolerates the open sale of cannabis
products, including the smokeable flowers, under the pretense that
people are buying bags of buds as "potpourri." Pretense is
scheduled to melt away later this year when, in a move already
approved by the Swiss government, parliament is set to legalize
use and possession and allow for its sale under limited conditions
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/177.html#swissdecrim).

A judge in Sion ordered Rappaz released on January 25, as the
grower and cannabis exponent entered the seventy-third day of his
hunger strike in the prison wing of Geneva hospital, where he was
transferred on January 3. His lawyer told the Associated Press
last week that he was on the verge on death.

The Swiss court insisted that Rappaz' hunger strike and
deteriorating condition had nothing to do with his release,
instead saying that he was freed because he no longer posed a
danger of interfering in a money laundering investigation of his
well-known, well-established business. Rappaz' bank accounts have
been seized and his company, which employed at least 20 growers,
has been bankrupted. A hunger strike "is not a reason for
releasing anybody," the court noted.

But maybe international pressure is. As DRCNet reported, Rappaz's
supporters organized rotating solidarity fasts in Australia,
Switzerland, France, and Belgium, and organized a global web-based
petition demanding his release. DRCNet is aware of at least one
call to the Swiss embassy in Washington, as well. (We made it.)

The Swiss Federation of Cannabis Consumers has a complete account
of la affaire Valchanvre (in French), including photos of a gaunt,
bedridden but determined Rappaz, at
http://www.multimania.com/fdcc/homepage.htm online.

 

 

 

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