Uruguay expected to pass marijuana law

Uruguay is set to vote on landmark legislation regarding the growth, sale and use of marijuana. Picture: Nick Adams

Uruguay is set to vote on landmark legislation regarding the growth, sale and use of marijuana. Picture: Nick Adams

Published Dec 10, 2013

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Montevideo - Uruguay's Senate is expected to pass a law on Tuesday making the small South American nation the world's first to allow its citizens to grow, buy and smoke marijuana.

The pioneering government-sponsored bill establishes state regulation of the cultivation, distribution and consumption of marijuana and is aimed at wresting the business from criminals.

Cannabis consumers would be allowed to buy a maximum of 40g each month from state-regulated pharmacies as long as they are over the age of 18 and registered on a government database that will monitor their monthly purchases.

Uruguayans would also be allowed to grow up to six plants of marijuana in their homes a year, or as much as 480g. They could also set up smoking clubs of 15 to 45 members that could grow up to 99 plants per year.

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

Rich countries debating legalisation of pot are also watching the bill, which philanthropist George Soros has supported as an “experiment” that could provide an alternative to the failed US-led policies of a long “war on drugs”.

The bill, which passed the lower chamber of Congress in July, gives authorities 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, one of the most liberal Latin American countries, but cultivation and sale of the drug are not.

Other countries have decriminalised marijuana possession and the Netherlands allows its sale in a coffee shop system, but Uruguay will be the first nation to legalise the whole chain from growing the plant to buying and selling its leaves.

Several countries such as Canada, the Netherlands and Israel have legal programs for the growth of medical cannabis, but do not allow cultivation of marijuana for recreational use.

Last year, the US states of Colorado and Washington passed ballot initiatives that legalise and regulate the recreational use of marijuana.

Uruguay's leftist President Jose Mujica defends his initiative as a bid to regulate and tax a market that already exists but is run by criminals.

“We've given this market as a gift to the drug traffickers and that is more destructive socially than the drug itself, because it rots the whole of society,” the 78-year-old former guerrilla fighter told Argentine news agency Telam.

Uruguay is one of the safest Latin American countries with little of the drug violence or other violence seen in countries such as Colombia and Mexico. Yet one third of Uruguay's prison inmates are serving time on charges related to narcotics trafficking.

Even though it is set to clear the Senate, the legislation faces fierce opposition from conservatives and Mujica has yet to convince a majority of Uruguayans that it is a good idea.

According to a recent opinion poll by Equipos Consultores, 58 percent of Uruguayans are opposed to the legalisation of pot, although that is down from 68 percent in a previous survey in June.

Critics say legalisation will not only increase consumption but open the doors 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 Senator Alfredo Solari, of the conservative Colorado party.

If it works, the legislation is expected to fuel momentum for wider legalisation of marijuana elsewhere, including the United States and in Europe. Decriminalisation of all drug possession by Portugal in 2001 is held up as a success for reducing drug violence while not increasing drug use.

“This development in Uruguay is of historic significance,” said Ethan Nadelmann, founder of Drug Policy Alliance, a leading sponsor of drug policy reform partially funded by Soros through his Open Society Foundation.

“Uruguay is presenting an innovative model for cannabis that will better protect public health and public safety than does the prohibitionist approach,” Nadelmann said. - Reuters

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