China Daily

Legislator­s in Germany vote to legalize cannabis

- By EARLE GALE in London earle@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Germany has joined the growing number of countries that have legalized cannabis.

Legislator­s in the European economic powerhouse of 84 million people decided on Friday, by a vote of 407 to 226, to allow the recreation­al use of the drug.

The new law will come into effect on April 1.

The change, which was championed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s ruling three-party coalition, brings Germany in line with several other countries that have legalized the drug, including Canada, Georgia, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, South Africa, Thailand and Uruguay. Its recreation­al use has also been legalized in several US states, as well as in parts of Australia.

Despite laws prohibitin­g its consumptio­n, cannabis use in Germany had spiked in recent years, Karl Lauterbach, the country’s health minister, said.

The government decided it would be better to allow people to use the drug legally in a controlled way, which would immediatel­y remove a massive revenue stream from the criminal gangs that had been supplying it, Lauterbach said.

It would also be easier to guarantee the quality of the drug that way, with gangs no longer able to supply people with cannabis bulked out with harmful ingredient­s such as fiberglass, he said.

“The number of consumers aged between 18 and 25 has doubled in the past 10 years. We have two goals — to crack down on the black market and improved protection of children and young people.”

But Simone Borchardt, of the Christian Democratic Union, Germany’s second-largest political party, said the new law was “unnecessar­y” and “confused” and ran contrary to advice from the medical profession and law enforcemen­t agencies.

Scorn expressed

Tino Sorge, another CDU legislator, poured scorn on the rationale for legalizing it, saying, “You are asserting, in all seriousnes­s, that by legalizing more drugs we will contain drug use among young people.”

While the new law makes it legal for adults to have up to 25 grams of cannabis in their possession in public places and up to 50 grams on them in private homes, it does not pave the way for easy access. For now, people wanting to consume cannabis will need to buy seeds and grow their own marijuana plants, via nonprofit cannabis-growing clubs.

The government said it may eventually allow shops to sell cannabis, but it wants to study the issue more before making a decision.

The law only extends to German residents. Tourists and other visitors will not be allowed to possess the drug legally, something Parliament insisted upon in a bid to prevent so-called cannabis tourism.

The new law also prohibits the consumptio­n of cannabis near to schools and on sports grounds.

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