Jamaica’s looser marijuana laws go into full effect
The new law applies to tourists too: Foreigners who are prescribed medical marijuana abroad can get a permit to legally buy up to 2 ounces of local weed during their stay.
Published: Apr 15, 2015, 4:26 pm
By David McFadden, Associated Press
KINGSTON, Jamaica — Drug law amendments that partially decriminalize small amounts of pot and pave the way for a lawful medical marijuana sector went into effect Wednesday in Jamaica, a country where the drug has long been culturally entrenched.
Justice Minister Mark Golding described the reforms as “long overdue” on the Caribbean island, where the drug is revered by members of Jamaica’s Rastafari movement and used regularly by many ordinary Jamaicans. Jamaica’s Parliament gave the amendments final approval in February.
The act makes possession of up to 2 ounces (56 grams) of marijuana, or “ganja” as it’s known locally, a petty offense that could result in a roughly $5 ticket but not in an arrest or a criminal record.
Cultivation of five or fewer plants by any household is allowed. And Rastafari adults are now permitted to use marijuana for sacramental purposes for the first time since the homegrown spiritual movement was founded in the 1930s.
In the late reggae icon Bob Marley’s old neighborhood of Trench Town, a dreadlocked Rastafarian adherent known as Nature enjoyed a pipe stuffed full of “wisdom weed” during a Wednesday morning smoking session. He said Jamaican police, frequently criticized for heavy-handed behavior when dealing with young men smoking marijuana, will have to learn restraint.
“The Babylon police used to abuse the Rastaman for smoking the herb. But the times are changing and the agitation has to stop,” Nature said in the Trench Town Culture Yard, where tree trunks are painted in the black, yellow, red and green of Rastafari, a movement that reveres Ethiopia’s late Emperor Haile Selassi as a god and considers black people living outside Africa as captives.
Jamaican authorities have become emboldened by changes to pot laws in U.S. states and numerous countries, and they hope the island can become a player in the burgeoning medical marijuana industry, health tourism and the development of weed-derived products. The new amendments allow possession of marijuana for certified scientific research.
A new “cannabis licensing authority” is supposed to regulate the cultivation and distribution of marijuana for legal purposes. However, it’s not clear when a regulated and taxed medical marijuana sector will get off the ground in Jamaica.
The changes will also affect some tourists. Foreigners who are prescribed medical marijuana abroad will be able to pay for Health Ministry permits authorizing them to legally buy up to 2 ounces of local weed for medical or therapeutic purposes during their stay.
Peter Bunting, the island’s national security minister, has assured that the new law “does not create a free-for-all in the growing, transporting, dealing or exporting of ganja.
“The security forces will continue to rigorously enforce Jamaican law consistent with our international treaty obligations,” he said earlier this year.
Jamaican cannabis crusaders said there’s still a lot of confusion about the changes.
“Lots of people are unclear about what decriminalization really means … Nonetheless, we are happy about the progress made so far as it’s a major step forward,” said Delano Seiveright, director of the island’s Cannabis Commercial and Medicinal Taskforce.
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