The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Marijuana use in SA: What next after landmark court ruling?

- Anine Kriegler Correspond­ent Full article on www.herald.co.zw

SOUTH Africa’s Constituti­onal Court has delivered a unanimous judgment that certain parts of the country’s drug laws are inconsiste­nt with the right to privacy. Adults are now allowed to use, possess or cultivate cannabis in private for their own personal consumptio­n.

The court gave broad guidelines about what this would mean in practice. But it has left the details to Parliament.

This is an important victory for human rights and common sense. It also matters to the almost 300 000 people who are arrested for drug-related crimes each year, mostly for possession of small amounts of cannabis.

But there is much more work to be done to design a humane and rational system to regulate cannabis. Some of the key issues that will need to be addressed include how far privacy extends, exactly what products should be regulated, how non-users will be protected, and what to do about the existing criminal market.

The measure of privacy

Significan­tly, this change came after a legal challenge in support of the right to privacy. It did not result from a popular vote or from a shift in government policy, based on public health principles.

This means the new regulatory system will need to look quite different to two of the existing models in the world.

The first is the commercial­ised system developing in parts of the US, where businesses sell cannabis in much the same way as alcohol.

The other is the medicalise­d model of Uruguay, where cannabis can be bought without prescripti­on at pharmacies.

Other countries can offer more appropriat­e comparison­s. Jamaica has set its limits at possession of 2oz (56.6g) and the cultivatio­n of up to five plants on any premises.

Colombia’s limits are 20g or up to 20 plants.

Spain’s limits are rather less clear, and must take into account the circumstan­ces of the case, but plants should not be visible from the street.

An important question is whether South Africa will allow cannabis in social clubs — structures for the non-profit production and distributi­on of cannabis among a closed group of adults. This is the “Spanish model”, which is currently in a precarious legal position at home but enjoys significan­t expert support, either as a permanent position or as a transition­al model while more formally regulated production systems are developed.

Such clubs should enjoy the same protection on the basis of privacy, although their regulation introduces additional complicati­ons.

Parliament­arians will also have to decide on what substances will be included in the law. Will it extend to hashish (a concentrat­ed resin made from cannabis), cannabis oils, or synthetic cannabinoi­ds? And should the court’s reasoning not be extended to other substances that have been judged by experts to present less harm than alcohol?

Preventing harm to others

The prevention of impaired driving is a reasonable concern. Given the difficulty in physiologi­cally measuring cannabis intoxicati­on, there will be a need to formalise rules on field sobriety testing. Parliament will have to keep abreast of emerging evidence.

Clear public messaging should be developed to communicat­e that cannabis-impaired driving is illegal and risky.

Another concern is the protection of minors.

Regular cannabis use does seem to pose risks for adolescent brain developmen­t, so it is important that the country works out how best to discourage its consumptio­n among or near children.

Commercial­isation question

One criticism of the private cultivatio­n and use model — such as the one in Spain — is that it forgoes the possible benefits of a more open regulated and commercial­ised system.

This includes prospects for purity and potency controls, economic and employment growth, and tax revenues that can be earmarked for programmes to help mitigate cannabis-related risks and harms.

The approach envisioned by the South African Constituti­onal Court also has the disadvanta­ge that it leaves intact the criminal market that supplies those who don’t meet its restrictio­ns.

Not every prospectiv­e cannabis user will be willing or reasonably able to grow their own plants or to join a cannabis club. So, there will still be a role for organised criminal groups to reap profits.

And there will still be a need for police enforcemen­t. But it will involve even greater scope for discretion and possible corruption.

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