Pubdate: Wed, 11 Dec 2013
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2013 Reuters
Contact:  http://www.baltimoresun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Authors: Malena Castaldii and Felipe Llambias

URUGUAY LEGALIZING POT TRADE FROM ROOT TO TOOT

1st-In-World Law Will Allow Growth, Sale of Marijuana

MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (Reuters) - Uruguay passed a law Tuesday allowing 
its citizens to grow, buy and smoke marijuana, becoming the first 
country in the world to legalize the full cycle, from cultivation and 
distribution to consumption of the drug.

The government-sponsored bill, approved 16-13 in the Senate, provides 
for regulation of the cultivation, distribution and consumption of 
marijuana and is aimed at wresting the business from criminals in the 
small South American nation.

Backers of the law, some smoking joints, gathered near Congress 
holding green balloons, Jamaican flags, in homage to Bob Marley, and 
a sign saying: "Cultivating freedom, Uruguay grows."

"We begin a new experience in April. It involves a big cultural 
change that focuses on public health and the fight against drug 
trafficking," Uruguay's first lady, Sen. Lucia Topolansky, said.

President Jose Mujica plans to sign it into law.

When the law is implemented in 120 days, Uruguayans will be able to 
grow six marijuana plants in their homes a year, or buy as much as 
480 grams, and form smoking clubs of 15 to 45 members that can grow 
up to 99 plants per year.

Uruguay's attempt to undo drug trafficking is being followed in Latin 
America, where the legalization of some narcotics is increasingly 
seen by regional leaders as a possible way to end the violence 
spawned by the cocaine trade.

Rich countries debating legalization of pot are also watching the 
bill, which American philanthropist George Soros has supported as an 
"experiment" that could provide an alternative to the failed U.S.led 
policies of the long "war on drugs."

Authorities will have 120 days to set up a drug control board that 
will regulate cultivation standards, fix the price and monitor consumption.

The use of marijuana is legal in Uruguay, a country of 3.3 million 
that is one of the most liberal in Latin America, but cultivation and 
sale of the drug are not.

Other countries have decriminalized marijuana possession, and the 
Netherlands allows its sale in coffee shops, but Uruguay will be the 
first to legalize the whole chain.

In the U.S., Colorado and Washington state last year passed ballot 
initiatives regulating the recreational use of marijuana.

But in Uruguay, such regulation is unpopular with the public and 
faced opposition from conservatives.

According to a recent opinion poll by Equipos Consultores, 58 percent 
of Uruguayans oppose legalizing pot, down from 68 percent in a 
previous survey in June.

Critics say legalization will not only increase consumption but open 
the door to the use of harder drugs than marijuana, which according 
to government statistics is used by 8 percent of Uruguayans on a regular basis.

"Competing with drug traffickers by offering marijuana at a lower 
price will just increase the market for a drug that has negative 
effects on public health," said Sen. Alfredo Solari of the 
conservative Colorado Party.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom