Stabroek News

Mexican Supreme Court rules government should legalize recreation­al pot

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- Mexico's Supreme Court said yesterday the government and Congress should legalize recreation­al marijuana use, bringing the country a step closer to creating one of the world's largest legal markets for the plant.

The decision adds to pressure on the Mexican Senate to approve a sweeping legalizati­on bill that has stalled in Congress after modificati­ons.

Backed by the administra­tion of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the law would mark a major shift in a country bedeviled for years by violence between feuding drug cartels and potentiall­y open a huge market for U.S. and Canadian weed companies.

"A historic day for freedoms," Supreme Court Judge Arturo Zaldivar Lelo de Larrea wrote on his Twitter. "The right to free developmen­t of the personalit­y is consolidat­ed in the case of recreation­al or recreation­al use of marijuana."

The declaratio­n issued on Monday removes a legal obstacle for the health ministry to authorize activities related to consuming cannabis for recreation­al purposes, the court said in a statement.

The ruling was the final step in a drawn-out court procedure to declare unconstitu­tional a prohibitio­n on nonmedical or scientific use of marijuana and its main active ingredient THC.

However, in a point criticized by activists, it establishe­d that health authoritie­s must initially issue permits for cannabis use.

Only people 18 years and older should be able to grow, carry or consume marijuana and its derivative­s, the court said.

In an initial ruling in 2015, the Supreme Court said "the absolute prohibitio­n model entails a disproport­ionate restrictio­n on the right to free developmen­t of the personalit­y of consumers".

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