Pubdate: Thu, 08 Nov 2012 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2012 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Bruce Cheadle Page: C1 Cited: Stop the Violence BC: http://stoptheviolencebc.org/ TOUGH POT SENTENCES TAKE FORCE IN CANADA OTTAWA The same day that voters in two U.S. states approved the legalization of marijuana, the Harper government in Ottawa was bringing into force tough new mandatory penalties for pot. The states of Washington and Colorado both voted in favour of ballot-box propositions Tuesday removing criminal penalties for the possession and sale of recreational marijuana, while a similar provision in Oregon went down to defeat. Tuesday was also the day that drug measures in the Conservative government's omnibus Safe Streets and Communities Act, passed last spring, came into full force and effect. Canada's new law provides a mandatory six-month jail term for growing as few as six marijuana plants. "Today our message is clear that if you are in the business of producing, importing or exporting of drugs, you'll now face jail time," Justice Minister Rob Nicholson said in a release Tuesday, well before the American polls closed. Nicholson was not available Wednesday to comment on the American state votes but a spokeswoman reiterated in an email that "our government does not support the decriminalization or the legalization of marijuana." Julie Di Mambro added that "the production and trafficking of illicit drugs is one of the single most significant sources of money for gangs and organized crime in Canada." Contrast that with Geoff Plant, a former British Columbia attorney general who supports the Stop the Violence BC coalition that's campaigning for legal changes. "The take-away for politicians is to realize voters on both sides of the border are increasingly wanting this change, and that should make politicians both nervous about what will happen if they don't listen to voters and also less nervous about the risk associated with change," said Plant. The disconnect highlights a hemisphere-wide debate that is challenging the decadeslong "war on drugs" that even the most staunch prohibitionist must concede has not succeeded in eradicating the illicit trade or use of drugs. Eugene Oscapella, who teaches drug policy and criminology at the University of Ottawa, said one of the biggest impacts of Tuesday's state legalization votes may be on Canadian perceptions. He noted 14 states have decriminalized pot, plus two that have now legalized. "People have begun increasingly to realize the current system, the use of the criminal law, imports terrible, terrible collateral harms - and it doesn't stop people from using drugs," Oscapella said. The federal Liberals are the only party with a legalization policy, which came after delegates to last January's party policy convention voted 77 per cent in favour of legalizing, regulating and taxing marijuana for personal use. A spokesman for the Liberal party's youth wing, David Valentin, said a policy group in B.C. is working to flesh out a fully developed proposal. Bob Rae, the interim Liberal leader, said the Conservative government is swimming against the tide. Legalization, he said, is "a direction the country needs to take and will take over time." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt