Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Germany’s legal weed sparks calls to protect young people

An addiction therapist calls the law a disaster.

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BERLIN (AFP) — Smoking weed will soon be legal for over18s in Germany, but addiction experts are calling for more prevention efforts to ensure young people are protected from the dangers of cannabis use.

Under one of the most liberal drug laws in Europe, adults in Germany will from 1 April be allowed to carry up to 25 grams of dried cannabis on them and cultivate up to three marijuana plants at home.

“From our point of view, the law as it is written is a disaster,” Katja Seidel, a therapist at a drug addiction center in Berlin, told Agence France-Presse.

“Access to the product will be easier, its image will change and become more normalized, especially among young people,” Seidel said, adding that she expects to see an increase in cannabis use “at least initially.”

The government says decriminal­izing weed will hit the black market and reduce the spread of contaminat­ed cannabis.

Health Minister Karl Lauterbach, a physician himself, acknowledg­es cannabis can be “dangerous” especially for people under the age of 25 whose brains are still developing.

Medical experts say cannabis use among young people can affect the developmen­t of the central nervous system, leading to an increased risk of developing psychosis and schizophre­nia.

Lauterbach has promised a major campaign to educate youngsters about the health risks and boost prevention programs, but it remains unclear how much money the government plans to spend and how effective it will be.

The new legislatio­n has some safeguards to protect young people, including a ban on smoking cannabis within 100 meters of a school, kindergart­en, playground or sports center.

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