Saturday Star

Dismay over contradict­ions about legality in cannabis bill

- ZELDA VENTER zelda.venter@inl.co.za

“CONSTITUTI­ONAL defects” in the Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill have still not been rectifed, 44 months after the government cleared the way for this be done.

The Southern Africa Agricultur­al Initiative (Saai), an organisati­on that protects the rights and interests of family farmers, said the delay undermined the rule of law and encouraged users to smoke more.

Saai said it promoted a legalised, regulated cannabis industry that boosted economic growth while curbing harm.

In September 2018, the Constituti­onal Court made room for Parliament to rectify “constituti­onal defects” in 24 months, but that still had not been done.

The bill criminalis­es practicall­y all commercial activities while “authorisin­g” general “commercial activities” related to cannabis. This contradict­ion creates confusion that undermines the rule of law, said the organisati­on’s CEO, Francois Rossouw.

While recreation­al use, consumptio­n, and cultivatio­n of cannabis by adults in private have been legalised under the right to privacy, practicall­y all private cannabis trade is prohibited by the cannabis bill. The organisati­on said this was irrational. “If the public is allowed to eat pork, the farmer must be allowed to sell bacon,” said Rossouw.

He said the bill as it stands encouraged the abuse of cannabis regularly in high quantities rather than permitting simple purchases.

The Constituti­onal Court highlighte­d medical evidence that showed it was safe for adults to smoke “one joint of dagga” occasional­ly but dangerous to do so heavily and regularly.

Someone who would like to smoke “one joint of dagga” a month must grow an entire plant that could produce 500 “joints of dagga” every harvest. This was as irrational as the law would be to allow alcohol consumptio­n, but only if individual­s brew their own “mampoer” in 100-litre barrels, the organisati­on said.

The organisati­on said the contradict­ory regulation­s must be understood in the context of South Africans’ twin troubles – unemployme­nt and corruption. “The more contradict­ory the law, the more discretion­ary powers are given to officials; the more slow-footed the progressio­n to simple legislatio­n, the more opportunit­y there is for government employees to extort businesses for licences and for businesses to circumvent the acquisitio­n of licences,” said Rossouw.

According to the organisati­on, to avoid this, the bill must be amended to allow legal trade without delay.

“Officials should be kept at arm’s length, and laboratori­es should be independen­tly used by growers to test products against toxicity.”

It also reasoned that a major benefit of straightfo­rward legislatio­n is that resources wasted on policing adults who buy “one joint of dagga” can be diverted to stopping cannabis from getting into the hands of minors and other serious crimes.

“With more than 12 million jobless adults, the South African unemployme­nt line could stretch from Cape Town to Cairo. Unemployme­nt is especially problemati­c in rural areas. The government’s promise of 130 000 legitimate jobs in the local cannabis industry is probably overestima­ted.

“If the bill is amended as we suggest, tens of thousands of jobs can realistica­lly develop, especially at the family-business level and among traditiona­l growers. Job growth must be a priority,” said Rossouw.

He said cannabis, like tobacco and alcohol, is not for everyone. But once consumptio­n has been decriminal­ised, the next step has to be making the market work. The law must allow farmers to combine soil, seed, sunshine and labour into a product some adults enjoy privately and responsibl­y.

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