The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New Zealand to hold ‘referendum’ on legal pot

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand will hold a referendum on legalising recreation­al marijuana when the South Pacific nation votes in its next general election in 2020, the government announced yesterday.

The ballot was among the demands the Green Party made during talks to join Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s progressiv­e coalition government after the 2017 election.

Justice Minister Andrew Little said the government had agreed to the timetable, and the result of the referendum would be binding.

“It will be held at the 2020 general election,” he told reporters, adding “there is a bit of detail still to work through.”

Ardern’s government has already moved tole ga lise medicinal cannabis, with legislatio­n on the issue working its way through parliament.

An opinion poll last year found 65 per cent of New Zealanders also supported legalising the drug for recreation­al use.

Pro-reform campaign group New Zealand Drug Foundation welcomed the vote, with its chief Ross Bell saying the current approach to regulating marijuana was outdated and it was time for a change.

“Cannabis is New Zealand’s most common illegal drug, 50 per cent of the country have tried it,” he said.

“We’re still trying to address the problem through a law enforcemen­t approach. We’re still criminalis­ing people and not providing help to people who have a cannabis dependency.”

The conservati­ve National Party opposition leader Simon Bridges said he would be voting against legalisati­on and accused the government of trying to deflect voters’ attention from issues such as the economy and the rising cost of living.

“I’m pretty cynical that you’ve got a government here that wants to distract from the core issues of a general election,” he said.

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