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Canada: Martin committed to pot decriminalization

Canoe.ca

Wednesday 21 Jul 2004

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OTTAWA (CP) - The federal government is committed to marijuana
decriminalization and will reintroduce legislation to make it happen, Prime
Minister Paul Martin said in his first statement on the issue since winning
re-election.

The Liberal government will bring back a bill that died with the election
call and re-table it after Parliament resumes sitting in October, he said
Wednesday following a meeting of his new cabinet. "The legislation on
marijuana - the decriminalization of minor quantities of marijuana - that
legislation will be introduced."

According to the original bill, anyone caught with 15 grams of pot or less
would receive a ticket instead of criminal charges. But those caught
trafficking more than 15 grams would receive harsher penalties.

Critics say the bill could lead to more cases of intoxicated driving and
cause traffic snarls at the Canada-U.S. border while American customs
agents intensify their search for drugs.

They also bemoan the 15-gram ceiling for non-criminal use, calculating that
it would become legal for someone to carry more than 30 joints at a time.

Detractors have already successfully lobbied the government to drive down
the initial maximum amount from 30 grams. Some felt the original limit was
so high that it practically made drug-dealing legal.

Wednesday's announcement came on the same day as a study concluded that the
number of Canadians who have used marijuana or hashish nearly doubled in 13
years.

In 2002, an estimated 12.2 per cent of Canadians admitted to smoking
marijuana - up from 6.5 per cent in 1989, Statistics Canada reported
Wednesday.

But Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh, sworn into cabinet just one day earlier,
dismissed the suggestion that decriminalization would lead to greater use.

"I'm not so sure whether that argument has any validity. I don't know what
the correlation is," he said after attending his first federal cabinet
meeting.

"My view is that, if you make something illegal, some people are more
attracted to it. . .If you allow people to possess it in small quantities
for personal use, the allure kind of disappears for some people."

Martin had also said while campaigning for the June 28 election that he
planned to reintroduce the marijuana bill.


 

 

 

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