Nottingham Post

Cannabis law gets the green light in Germany

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THE German government’s plan to liberalise rules on cannabis has cleared its final parliament­ary hurdle, paving the way for the possession of limited amounts of the drug to be decriminal­ised on April 1.

In a second step, “cannabis clubs” that will be allowed to grow the substance for members’ personal use will be permitted to start work on July 1.

The legislatio­n, a prominent reform project of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government, was approved by parliament’s lower house last month.

But its fate in the upper house, which represents Germany’s 16 state government­s and where Mr Scholz’s socially liberal coalition lacks a majority, is unclear.

The upper house could have delayed it by sending it to a committee that mediates disputes between the two houses, a move that backers feared would give the centre-right opposition an opportunit­y to stop the project altogether. However, opponents of the plan failed to muster a majority to call on the committee.

The bill foresees legalising possession by adults of up to 25g (nearly one ounce) of cannabis for recreation­al purposes and allowing individual­s to grow up to three plants on their own. That part of the legislatio­n will take effect on April 1.

German residents age 18 and older will be allowed to join nonprofit “cannabis clubs” with a maximum 500 members each starting July 1. Individual­s will be allowed to buy up to 25g per day, or a maximum 50g per month – a figure limited to 30g for under-21s.

The legislatio­n also calls for an amnesty under which sentences already imposed for cannabisre­lated offences that will no longer be illegal are to be reviewed and in many cases reversed.

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