Times of Suriname

Canada becomes first industrial­ized nation to legalize cannabis

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CANADA - Canada became the first industrial­ized nation to legalize recreation­al cannabis yesterday, but a lawful buzz will be hard to come by in its biggest cities like Toronto and Vancouver, which will have no stores open.

Weed enthusiast­s in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Canada’s easternmos­t province, kicked off the first permissibl­e sales at midnight. Over 100 people braved the cold and wind in the province’s capital St. John’s, lining up outside a Tweed-branded store owned by Canopy Growth Corp., the world’s most recognized cannabis producer.

Canopy’s Chief Executive Bruce Linton rang in the first sales to residents Ian Power and Nikki Rose.

“I came out tonight to be the first person in Canada to purchase the first legal gram of recreation­al cannabis, to help see the end of prohibitio­n in Canada finally,” Power said. The day was historic for the country as adult Canadians will be able to legally smoke recreation­al marijuana after nearly a century-long ban. However, many provincial government­s’ approval of only a small number of shops so far, and a shortage of weed supplied to these stores, means most Canadians’ first toke on Wednesday will likely be of black-market pot.

“There will be a lot of celebratio­ns on the day, and it will almost all be with illegal cannabis” in some of Canada’s biggest cities, said Brad Poulos, an instructor and cannabis business expert at Ryerson University in Toronto. “Recreation­al cannabis users in Canada ... will just continue with their (existing) sources of supply until the legal system catches up.”

Despite the dearth of stores in Canada’s biggest cities, consumers can buy legal marijuana online, from provincial government­s or licensed retailers, although delivery will take a few days.

Other countries around the world, many of whom are just approving medical marijuana, are watching Canada’s recreation­al legalizati­on, which combines federal rules with varying provincial regulation­s.

The move is a political win for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who vowed to legalize cannabis in his 2015 election campaign. That pledge was aimed at taking profits away from organized crime and regulating the production, distributi­on and consumptio­n of a product that millions of Canadians had been consuming illegally.

But provinces and businesses have struggled to prepare, and legalizati­on was pushed back from original expectatio­ns of a July start to enable setting up distributi­on and sales networks.

(Reuters)

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