URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v16/n274/a07.html
Newshawk: http://www.drugsense.org/donate.htm
Votes: 0
Pubdate: Sun, 24 Apr 2016
Source: Seattle Times (WA)
Copyright: 2016 The Seattle Times Company
Contact:
Website: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/409
Author: Joshua Partlow, the Washington Post
THE AMERICAS REFLECT AN ABOUT-FACE ON POT
Shift to Legalization
Big Change in Area That Includes Big Producers of Marijuana, Opium
MEXICO CITY - With a swipe of his pen last week, Mexican President
Enrique Pena Nieto proposed that Mexican citizens could legally
possess up to an ounce of pot.
The day before, Canada's health minister stood at a United Nations
podium and said her country would introduce new federal legislation
to make cannabis legal by next year.
Already, people are free to smoke marijuana in four U.S. states,
including Washington, and the District of Columbia, and medical
marijuana is allowed in almost half the country. Uruguay has fully
legalized weed for sale. And a large chunk of South and Central
America, including Brazil, Peru, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Costa
Rica, has made marijuana more available in varying ways, whether it
is for medicinal or recreational use.
In the shift toward legalization of marijuana, the Americas have
emerged as a leader. This is a remarkable shift for a region that
includes some of the world's leading producers of marijuana, coca and
opium poppy, and where the U.S. government has spearheaded a
decades-long campaign against cultivation of the substances.
"It's undeniable that the terms of the debate about drugs are
changing in Mexico and in the world," Pena Nieto said during a speech
Thursday announcing his new legislative proposal. "Fortunately, a new
world consensus is gradually emerging in favor of reform."
For many Mexicans, the prospect of such a change seemed unimaginable
just a few years back. Using illegal drugs has long been taboo in the
conservative, predominantly Roman Catholic country - as is true in
many other Latin American nations. Drug-trafficking groups have
inflicted horrific violence on the country, with an estimated 100,000
people dying in the past decade as the cartels have battled for
control of shipping lanes to the United States. Polls have shown that
a majority of Mexicans oppose legalizing drugs, fearing it would
increase addiction and crime.
To have a Mexican president come out publicly in favor of loosening
drug laws struck many people as historic.
"This was the breaking point," said Jorge Diaz Cuervo, a Mexican
economist and politician who recently published a book on the
prospect of legalizing marijuana. "There is now a before and after."
Pena Nieto's initiative would make it legal for anyone to own up to
28 grams of marijuana - or 1 ounce - as long as it was intended for
personal use. It would also permit the use of marijuana for medicinal
purposes and make it easier to free prisoners being held on minor
drug charges. The move came after five public forums held across
Mexico this year to solicit public opinion and expert testimony on
the prospect of changing drug laws. Mexicans were previously allowed
to possess up to 5 grams.
Pena Nieto spoke last week at a U.N. General Assembly special session
on narcotics that had been scheduled at the request of Mexico,
Colombia and Guatemala, the first such gathering in nearly 20 years.
In his speech, he said the policy of prohibition of drugs has failed
and countries needed to look for an alternative.
His initiative would need legislative approval, although with
presidential support many expect it has a good chance. The proposal
was seen by legalization advocates as a welcome first step, although
some argued that it was important to pass additional measures, such
as allowing Mexican farmers to grow marijuana so that the medicinal
industry could succeed.
Zara Snapp, a drug-policy expert from Mexico, said it was important
to "move drugs out of the security realm and into the health and
human-rights space."
But opposition still is formidable in Mexico for blanket legalization
of marijuana and other drugs.
And critics of Pena Nieto's plan say that increasing the quantity of
marijuana that adults can smoke will simply lead to more consumption
and will not significantly reduce the business of drug cartels, which
make money in diverse ways, including extortion, human trafficking
and the trafficking of cocaine and heroin.
Elias Octavio Iniguez Mejia of the right-leaning National Action
Party, who serves as president of the health commission in the lower
house of the National Congress, said he would consider medicinal use
of marijuana, as long as studies on its effects were done in Mexico
by Mexican institutions. But he remains firmly opposed to recreational use.
"It's not a panacea, nor is it going to decrease crime," he said. He
predicted Mexico "will enter a dynamic where our children, who are a
vulnerable group, will see consumption as a normal thing."
Alejandro Gertz Manero, a former Mexico City police chief and
ex-federal secretary of public security, said the only thing that
would come from the proposed reforms is "narcos are going to become
respectable businessmen."
"This is a veritable circle of contradictions, of scandalous
affirmations, of evasion of responsibilities," he said. "We should
diagnose and find solutions, but what's happening now is the height
of ridiculousness."
Past legislative efforts to decriminalize marijuana use in Mexico have failed.
Pena Nieto is considered a conservative on the drug issue, so his
announcement surprised some Mexicans. But in recent months, the
debate has changed. Last fall, the Supreme Court ruled that a group
of activists could legally grow and sell marijuana. The Senate is
also considering legislation to have a state-regulated marijuana industry.
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom
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