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Jamaica: Bill To Legalise Ganja For Private Use Soon, Says Nicholso

The Jamaica Observer

Sunday 30 Mar 2003

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ATTORNEY General A J Nicholson said yesterday that legislation is now
being prepared to give effect to the recommendation of a commission,
which sat two years ago, for the decriminalisation of marijuana when in
private use here.

Nicholson did not say when a Bill will reach Parliament and neither did
he give details of the drafting instructions, but stressed that
decriminalising marijuana -- called ganja here -- will be within a
limited scope.

"Yes, it will, for private use only," he told the Sunday Observer
yesterday.

Marijuana is widely used in Jamaica, and is said by Rastafarians to be
holy sacrament. But the use of the drug is illegal, for which a person
can be fined and, or, jailed.

Additionally, the island is one of the hemisphere's leading exporters of
marijuana to the United States, and the Americans have promoted
eradication and interdiction efforts in the island.

Earlier, in a speech to the Surrey Chapter of the Lay Magistrate's
Association, Nicholson sought to draw a distinction between the historic
use of marijuana in Jamaica and the country's more recent role as a
trans-shipment point for cocaine and the crime and violence that has
come in its wake.

"I am a 1942 model, which means I have been on planet earth for quite
sometime and I know that it is only recently that we are having the kind
of violent crimes that we are now experiencing," Nicholson told the lay
magistrates. "So it couldn't be caused from ganja. The illegal trade in
cocaine is what is tearing the heart out of Jamaica."

The Jamaican authorities insist that the country's high level of violent
crime is substantially driven by the drug trade, particularly cocaine,
because of the high stakes associated with the business.

US and Jamaican law enforcement officials estimate that up to 10 per
cent of the cocaine in Colombia, between 100 and 120 tonnes a year,
passes through Jamaica on its way to North America and Europe.

In a speech prepared for delivery in Fort Lauderdale, Florida 10 days
ago, the national security minister, Peter Phillips, noted that the
cocaine transshipped through Jamaica had a street value of between US$3
billion and $3.6 billion, representing between 40 and 50 per cent of
Jamaica's gross domestic product (GDP) for 2001.

"In terms of total merchandise trade for 2001, the value of the drug
trade was estimated between 65 per cent and 78 per cent of total
legitimate trade," Phillips said in his prepared text. "In other words,
the drug trade is valued at more than three-quarters of all imports and
exports for Jamaica in 2001."

This business, which generated tremendous resources, promoted a demand
for high-powered weaponry to protect itself during the transit of drugs
through Jamaica.

Clearly, marijuana doesn't carry nearly the same reputation in Jamaica
and has substantial folk appeal.

Nearly two years ago, a National Ganja Commission, appointed by Prime
Minister P J Patterson, recommended the decriminalisation of the drug,
which has deep cultural roots here.

The committee, which was headed by University of the West Indies
sociologist, Dr Barry Chevannes, also raised the possibility of the
expansion of the use of ganja in pharmacology and in industry.

For instance, in the late 1970s, two UWI researchers developed from
marijuana a drug called Canasol for the treatment of glaucoma. Hemp, a
type of marijuana plant has several industrial applications, including
in the manufacture of rope, cloth and other products.

At the same time, the Chevannes committee recommended that the state
start an intensive education drive, especially among young people, to
reduce the demand for the drug.

They suggested, too, that the Government attempt to influence the
international community to re-examine the status of marijuana and that
the police increase their vigilance in destroying large ganja
plantations and generally stem the trafficking of illegal drugs.


 

 

 

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