Pubdate: Sun, 08 Nov 2015 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2015 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.utsandiego.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. Author: Sandra Dibble MEXICO SUPREME COURT'S POT RULING STIRS DEBATE... TIJUANA - A Mexican Supreme Court ruling permitting marijuana use for recreational purposes has sparked a sensitive debate in Mexico about the country's drug laws, involving health advocates, scholars, law enforcement officials, and business and political leaders. Wednesday's 4-1 decision applies only to four members of an advocacy group seeking to decriminalize marijuana, granting them the right to consume and produce for their own personal use. Still, the issue has touched a nerve for many in Mexico, opening a wide-ranging discussion about the country's drug policies. In Tijuana, the issue has led newscasts, dominated headlines and become fodder for radio programs. Baja California has long been located on a lucrative smuggling route for marijuana and other drugs destined for U.S. consumers, and the issue has hit home for many residents who have seen first-hand the effects of drug-related violence and consumption. The day after after the Supreme Court ruling, Baja California Gov. Francisco Vega de Lamadrid, a member of Mexico's National Action Party, or PAN, spoke of his support for legalizing medical marijuana, and urged that more be done to combat addiction. Tijuana's Mayor Jorge Astiazaran, a member of the country's ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, said governments must work closely with civil society, "not just to prevent the use of drugs, and other kinds of addictions, but also to treat those who are already afflicted." The ruling "opens the debate, so that all levels, including municipal governments, members of Congress, health agencies, senators find themselves forced to discuss the issue," said Omar Sarabia, a Tijuana city councilman who belongs to Mexico's leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution, the PRD, which has long advocated liberalized marijuana laws. "Today, we have a before and an after in the democratic life of Mexico." In Baja California and in the rest of Mexico, members of the party's youth arm, Juventudes de Izquierda, in recent weeks have been passing around petitions calling for the decriminalization of marijuana, increased drug treatment programs, and licenses to groups of citizens who grow marijuana for their own use. The groups' members, who have adopted the hashtag #RegulacionYA, or regulation now, is now preparing to submit 32 petitions to the Supreme Court, seeking the same right granted to the four petitioners who prevailed in last week's decision. While nothing is changing immediately for most Mexicans, "this is a huge step," said Fernando Benitez, a Tijuana criminal defense attorney who supports decriminalizing all drugs. The current policies unjustly target the young and the poor, he said. "We're just telling ourselves that we're so hard on crime, but we're just undermining our youth," he said. "I've been doing this for 23 years, and the war on drugs is b.s. We're never going to win it. ... It's terrifying to see the power that the drug barons yield. The way to change that is to mess with their cash." But many in Mexico continue to oppose legalization, saying it would open the door to increased drug use. The Centros de Integracion Juvenil, a government-supported nonprofit group with addiction treatment centers in Tijuana and across Mexico, states on its website that "from a public health point of view, we cannot find any sustenance for the legalization of marijuana." In Tijuana last week, the Roman Catholic archbishop, Rafael Romo Munoz, spoke out against the Supreme Court's ruling, telling the newspaper El Sol that legalization for recreational purposes "would contribute to greater deterioration of society." Such attitudes have for years pervaded the public discussion. "Most Mexicans are far more conservative than people in the United States," said David Shirk, a political science professor who heads of the Justice in Mexico Project at the University of San Diego. "The large majority of Mexicans believe marijuana should not be legal and have not used drugs in their life." Figures released last month by the Gallup poll show 58 percent of American adults believe that marijuana should be legal in the United States. By contrast, the Mexican public opinion firm Parametria reported that that 77 percent of Mexicans oppose legalization of marijuana. Despite Mexico's more conservative attitudes on marijuana use, the country's rules on marijuana possession are more permissive than in the United States. A 2009 law decriminalized the personal use of small amounts of drugs, including marijuana, heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine. The law eliminates sanctions for those carrying up to five grams of marijuana for personal use. Though drug use in Mexico has been rising, experts say rates remain far below those in the United States. The Centros de Integracion Juvenil figures show that Mexico has some of the lowest rates of marijuana use in the Americas, below Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Colombia, while the United States has the highest. For many, the Supreme Court's ruling gives immediacy to a public discussion that has largely taken place out of the mainstream, and many public opinion leaders still are grappling with the question. "If it were true that legalizing consumption would hit the finances of drug traffickers, then, well, it would be worth it," said Humberto Jaramillo, head of the Tijuana Business Coordinating Council, an influential umbrella group. "But I am not so sure. Would this permissiveness not lead our youth to choose to use more drugs?" Gilberto Leyva, president of the Tijuana Chamber of Commerce, said he supports legalization, with government regulation. "The trade exists, people are consuming, people always gravitate to what's prohibited," he said. "Perhaps if we stop prohibiting it, there would be fewer consumers." Gaston Luken Garza, a businessman who hopes to be on next year's Tijuana mayoral ballot as an independent candidate, said, "I find myself leaning in favor of legalizing" marijuana. "It needs to be mostly approached as a health issue and not as a security or safety issue." The Supreme Court ruling "is but a small step, but it's a signal that things are changing," said Vicente Sanchez, a researcher in public administration at the Tijuana-based Colegio de la Frontera Norte. "For now, the debate will continue." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom