Pubdate: Mon, 23 Sep 2013 Source: Daily Nation (Barbados) Copyright: 2013, Nation Publishing Co. Limited Contact: http://www.nationnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2249 THE GREAT GANJA DEBATE CONTINUES IT IS NOT a new issue but one which we can no longer let dangle. From Kingston to Kingstown to Washington and Bridgetown, there is clearly momentum in the discussion on whether to decriminalize marijuana and what impact this will have on fighting illegal drugs in our region. It can best be described as the great ganja debate. The issue of decriminalization of marijuana is a discussion which will create clear divisions; strong support for its usage or total opposition. It is one which not only the politicians must weigh in on, but the judiciary, and the scientific community which must give of their expert opinions based on evidence from well-documented research. Law enforcement officials will also need to speak again to the issue, based on their experiences and knowledge of what has become a lucrative but also violent business controlled by criminals whose actions can undermine a country. We will also want to hear from those in our health facilities and drug treatment centres of their experiences with marijuana users. We are aware that the use of marijuana was commonplace in many countries before it was criminalized and deemed a dangerous drug. We also know that its usage, even if controversially so, for medicinal purposes, has been gaining support from leading researchers and doctors. Not so for purely recreational usage. The proponents of open marijuana usage would perhaps denounce the continued criminalization of cannabis as discriminatory and often point to the dangers associated with smoking tobacco, excessive use of alcoholic beverages and abuse of prescription drugs. These are viewed as issues which should be of greater concern to the entire society than that of marijuana. We in Barbados and indeed the wider Caribbean need to understand not only what is happening in terms of the debate but of the plans for the effective use and control of marijuana. We need to look to developments in North America, Israel and across Latin America, particularly Uruguay, to come to an informed opinion. We must be aware that in the scientific community there remains a divide about the benefits or detriments of marijuana; that the church remains firm in its opposition to the liberalization of drugs, and even the United Nations' International Narcotics Control Board does not want any breaches to international agreements, in any rush to change the laws relating to cannabis. There must be no quick change of the legal position in this country, or indeed the wider Caribbean, on the matter of marijuana. We need an agreed position, based on harmonized laws across the region. It can be achieved only through informed discussion and debate, led by facts, not by emotion. It is a matter which this region will have to resolve. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom