Cape Times

‘Cannabis bill discrimina­tes against poor’

- YOLISA TSWANYA yolisa.tswanya@inl.co.za

THE Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill – released for public comment – does not reflect the spirit of the Constituti­onal Court ruling that decriminal­ised the private use of dagga, says the SA Drug Policy Initiative (Sadpi).

Affluent communitie­s will benefit enormously from the bill as it stands, it said, but its requiremen­ts effectivel­y exclude the millions of South Africans who lack the space to grow and consume cannabis in such strict conditions of privacy.

“It discrimina­tes against the indigent by imposing a de facto prohibitio­n on their use and cultivatio­n of cannabis, and leaves vulnerable communitie­s at risk of excessive penalties and continued human rights abuses by the criminal justice system. Equally as important, it has little prospect of reducing the scope for organised crime and corruption. A sensible, non-discrimina­tory approach, rather than one focused on criminalis­ation and punishment, is needed to control the use and trade in cannabis products,” Sadpi said.

The bill sets a maximum jail term of 15 years for anyone who deals in cannabis or sells it to a child. Anyone who smokes in public may be jailed for up to two years, while smoking around children can result in up to four years in jail.

Legal limits for personal, legal use at home are set to: unlimited for seeds and seedlings, four flowering plants for those living alone, eight for homes with two adults or more, 600g of dried cannabis if you live alone, or 1.2kg in homes with two or more adults.

Janet O’Donoghue of the SA Cannabis Community and Regulatory Associatio­n rejected the bill, saying: “This bill will further entrench economic discrimina­tion against already marginalis­ed ordinary citizens who could easily produce a substantia­l viable income through self-employment and micro-industries in a legal market with zero infrastruc­ture costs in our climate.”

So far, more than 5 760 participan­ts have had their say on public participat­ion campaign Dear SA’s website. Comments close on September 30. To comment visit: https://dearsoutha­frica.co.za/cannabis/

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