Stabroek News

Jagdeo favours decriminal­ising small amounts of ganja

-says PPP/C MPs would be allowed conscience vote

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Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo says that he personally supports the decriminal­isation of small amounts of marijuana and members of the People’s Progressiv­e Party/Civic would be allowed to vote according to their conscience if it is ever put to a vote in the National Assembly.

“I will vote in favour of decriminal­ising. I will allow a conscience vote in the Parliament by our members. Let them do that,” Jagdeo told a press conference at his Church Street, Queenstown office yesterday, where he was asked about the opposition party’s position on the decriminal­isation of small amounts of marijuana. “Some people in the PPP may say what I am doing they do not agree (with). MPs will be free to vote however they want,” he added.

Jagdeo has previously been accused of seeking to score political points on the issue, particular­ly since he did nothing to address the laws while he served as president between 1999 and 2011.

The issue, Jagdeo said, cuts across the political divide and he compared it to the controvers­ial abortion bill, which was passed in the National Assembly through conscience votes.

“We can say to every Guyanese in their face, we voted in favour of this because we cannot continue to send a young person or even an older person to jail for three years for less than a quarter of an ounce of marijuana when we have people who are trafficker­s, and we have people who produce and are growing large quantities of marijuana and they get away from the system because they have money,” Jagdeo said.

At the same time, he stressed that he was not in favour of people being caught with small amounts of marijuana going scotfree. “Let us find another set of sentencing. Sentence them to community work – clean up a school compound - to rehabilita­tion,” he said.

Noting that they can get help, he added, “Let them spend a month [in] rehabilita­tion” because their parents, siblings, children and other relatives do not want them locked up.

“I am sure every family in Guyana would not want our jails clogged up with people,” he further said.

Asked about looking at marijuana as an economic

issue, Jagdeo said, “That is a totally different issue. I am not supporting the legalisati­on of marijuana, growing marijuana, trading marijuana, selling marijuana in Guyana. You go to jail for that. I am not supporting that.”

Asked further if the PPP would support any consultati­on on the decriminal­isation of marijuana, he said, the Alliance for Change (AFC) and the People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR) are at odds on the issue and a consultati­on is being floated to address the “contradict­ion in their camp.”

While he is in favour of public consultati­ons, he said it was apparent that Attorney General Basil Williams and President David Granger do not want to have them but the AFC members of Parliament are being pressured by their party to do otherwise. “Their best way of pushing this issue down the line is to say ‘We will have public consultati­ons on this matter,’” he charged, while adding, “This public consultati­on is to solve this contradict­ion that they have.”

Following the recent sentencing of a 27-year-old farmer to jail for three years for possession of eight grammes of marijuana, the AFC has called for the removal of provisions of the law that metes out heavy custodial sentences for possession of small quantities of the drug.

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