Planet Wrap: Australia, Canada, Netherlands, South Korea, Tanzania

AUSTRALIA

Title: Even Australia’s Medical Marijuana Poster Boy Can’t Get the Drug

Author: New York Times

Date: 11 February 2018

URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/11/world/australia/medical-marijuana-cannabis-lindsay-carter.html

Extract: 

Australia legalized medical marijuana in 2016, and the country’s health minister said this January that he wanted the nation to become the world’s leading supplier of the drug.

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But in a cruel paradox, people like Mr. Carter — who has been told he has a brain tumor and epilepsy — find it hard to get the drug in their country. Bureaucracy and regulation, uninformed doctors, limited supply and high costs make what in some cases could be a lifesaving drug nearly impossible to obtain.

Dr. Bastian Seidel, president of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, called the country’s distribution system “fragmented” and “not transparent.”

“We don’t have a consistent, regulatory framework that is either efficient or timely,” he said, “and this is what makes it so frustrating for medical practitioners and for patients who are clearly in need of medical treatment.”

 

Title: Prominent medicinal cannabis supplier set for government showdown in South Australia court

Author: 9 News

Date: 12 February 2018

URL: https://www.9news.com.au/health/2018/02/12/12/03/jenny-hallam-medicinal-cannabis-supplier-set-for-government-showdown-in-south-australia-court

Extract: 

One of Australia’s highest-profile medicinal cannabis suppliers is prepared to face nine-years’ jail in a court case that could set a national legal precedent.

Adelaide woman Jenny Hallam, 45, was raided by police in January last year, halting the supply of her cannabis oil to almost 300 Australians suffering from a range of medical conditions.

Some of Ms Hallam’s clients, who she said all received the medicinal cannabis for free, may now appear in court to help her try to avoid a jail term similar in length faced by convicted ice manufacturers.

Ms Hallam told Nine.com.au she had witnesses prepared to bring their medical records into a South Australian court and tell a jury how medicinal cannabis had improved their quality of life and explain why the current system was “broken”.

 

CANADA

Big US tobacco company buys stakes in Canadian cannabis growers, American hemp firm

NETHERLANDS

Title:  Could the Netherlands become the first EU country to legalize cannabis?

Author: CGTN

Date: 10 February 2018

URL: https://america.cgtn.com/2018/02/10/could-the-netherlands-become-the-first-eu-country-to-legalize-cannabis

Extract: 

“There’s a difference the Dutch model and the U.S. model,” Floor van Bakkum from Jellinek Addiction Care says. “In the U.S. it’s all commercialized, and health is not the top priority. You can see that people are convincing others to start using cannabis. But we should always be careful with that.”

Cannabis legalization may not be round the corner in the Netherlands. But this year, a handful of local councils will take part in trials to regulate cannabis production by supplying coffee shops directly.

 

SOUTH KOREA

South Korean lawmaker introduces bill to legalize medical cannabis

 

TANZANIA

Title:  Tanzania clamps down on cannabis

Author: News 24

Date: 11 February 2018

URL: https://m.news24.com/Africa/News/tanzania-clamps-down-on-cannabis-20180211?mc_cid=989618c9ec&mc_eid=178dec0b63

Extract:

Nairobi – Tanzanian authorities have stepped up an escalating war on cannabis by destroying 14 hectares (35 acres) of the crop in the northern province of Arusha in recent days.

Saturday alone saw eight hectares laid waste at the Meru forest reserve following another six acres earlier in the week in operation overseen by Interior Minister Mwigulu Nchemba.

Tanzania is one of the world’s largest cannabis producers.

“We have decided to put a stop to the cannabis culture,” Arumeru administrative secretary Timotheo Mzava said during Saturday’s operation.

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“Some local officials are themselves complicit (in the trade) and we cannot accept that,” Mzava said, noting that three such officials were on the run.

“The government will carry out this operation in all corners of the country. We are going to arrest all persons implicated and nationalise all vehicles found to be carrying even the smallest quantity of cannabis,” the minister vowed this week.

Tanzania sits on a clutch of major east African drugs routes with Arusha a key cannabis-producing area.

Much of its crop is well hidden in the country’s vast swathes of natural forest.

Although the drug is illegal, a combination of corruption and limited resources mean the authorities have struggled to stamp out the trade.

In contrast, neighbouring states including Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Uganda have seen eradication campaigns enjoy some success.

In 2010, total seizures of the plant totalled 279.5 tons, behind only Mexico and the United States.

 

 

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