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Pubdate: Fri, 23 Apr 1999 Source: Associated Press Copyright: 1999 Associated Press SWISS RECOMMEND LEGALIZING CANNABIS BERN, Switzerland (AP) Switzerland should legalize the sale and use of marijuana but with controls to keep the nation from becoming a drug haven, a government-appointed panel urged Friday. The committee's recommendation to the Cabinet will be considered as part of an ongoing study to revise Switzerland's drug laws but would probably have to receive approval in a national referendum. The existing ban on marijuana hasn't worked and may even encourage its use among young people, the panel said. "Cannabis is a drug and the committee isn't intending to trivialize it or say that its consumption is without risk ... but consumption is rising, especially among young people," panel member Anne-Catherine Menetrey told Swiss radio. The committee said the popularity of the drug and varying attitudes of different states to consumption and low-level dealing mean the Swiss policy on drugs is suffering from a "growing loss of credibility." Under the recommendation, prospective marijuana sellers would have to pass a training course and be licensed. Purchasers would have to prove that they lived in Switzerland to prevent tourists from flocking to Switzerland to buy drugs, the panel said. Last November, some 74 percent of Swiss voters rejected a constitutional amendment to legalize the consumption, cultivation and acquisition of hard and soft drugs, including heroin, for personal use. Government ministers said the legalization plan was a health risk and would turn Switzerland into a haven for drug addicts from abroad. No other European nation, not even the relatively liberal Netherlands, has legalized the possession or sale of any drugs or has plans to do so. In 1997, the Swiss overwhelmingly voted in favor of state distribution of heroin to addicts. Government studies showed this cut crime associated with the drug scene. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck