Daily Dispatch

Nod for use of dagga in the home

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THE Western Cape High Court has ruled it is an infringeme­nt to ban the use of dagga at home.

Rastafaria­n lawyer Garreth Prince‚ the Dagga Party and several others brought the issue before the high court‚ arguing that cannabis should not be a prohibited substance listed in the Drugs and Traffickin­g Act.

Yesterday, a full ruled in their favour. bench

News24 reported that the ruling yesterday allows for the possession‚ cultivatio­n and use of dagga at home.

“It has also ruled that parliament must change sections of the Drug Traffickin­g Act‚ as well as the Medicines Control Act‚’’ the report read.

The Anti-drug Alliance believes the ruling was “a win” for drug addicts.

The alliance’s coastal director Andrew Stoller said dagga could now be used as an “exit drug” in rehabilita­tion programmes.

“The argument has been used that it is a gateway drug but we have found that it can also be used as an exit drug‚” Stoller said.

He said that in their experience in working with alcoholics, dagga was used to effectivel­y remedy addiction.

He said the judgment also meant that medical companies could start testing the plant’s medicinal effectiven­ess.

Judge Dennis Davis ruled in favour of Dagga Party leader Jeremy Acton who brought an applicatio­n to decriminal­ise the private use of dagga and growing the plant. Davis declared the limitation­s on private use of dagga “unjustifia­ble” in terms of people’s constituti­onal right to privacy.

“I smoked about 10 joints‚ went into my heart and made my plea statement. I listened to the cannabis and used it to express my truth‚” said Acton outside the court in Cape Town where a crowd of about 50 pro-dagga activists sang – some even lit dagga pipes. “Cannabis won this case tod I was just the vehicle‚” Acton said. — TMG

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