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Law South Africa

Baron23

Well-Known Member
Yes, South Africa indeed. Little dated article, but better late than never.

Cannabis Was Just Legalised in South Africa For Personal Use

South Africa March 31, 2017
Cannabis Was Just Legalised in South Africa For Personal Use


The Western Cape High Court has just ruled that Cannabis prohibition in South Africa is “unconstitutional”, and that adults have the right to use, grow or possess cannabis in the privacy of their homes. This was today’s verdict of the Jeremy Acton, leader of The Dagga Party, and Ras Gareth Prince’s multiple year long constitutional court case.

All three judges of the Cape Town High Court unanimously declared the laws regarding Cannabis to be unconstitutional and ruled that the South African government had 24 months to amend these laws in favour of legalisation. The court ordered that all cultivation, possession and personal use on private property be immediately permitted. You can read the full 66 page ruling here.

This is a huge victory for the South African cannabis culture, and hopefully paves the way for an almost certain victory in the Dagga Couple’s case later this year.

Can I still get arrested for weed in South Africa?
Yes, you probably can. The judges decided that the right to personally use, grow or possess dagga in the privacy of one’s home can be used as a “defence to a charge”. You can’t be charged without being arrested.

Jenny Evans from News24 states that: “The order does not specify whether the defence must be presented in court, or at the point of arrest, saying only “a charge”.

What this means is that ultimately you won’t go to jail for growing at home for personal use, if you can prove it. Whether or not police will focus on other crimes remains to be seen. What is clear is that the ruling is not a free for all, but a great step towards some form of legalisation.

The details of a legal distribution and retail framework were not ruled on in this judgement. This essentially means that while personal use and growing is now legally permitted, the selling of cannabis products is not and thus the current laws regarding cannabis fall somewhere between decriminalisation and legalisation.

It’s still unclear what will happen with citizens who were previously arrested on cannabis related charges.

The state still might try to appeal this ruling.
The next step is that parliament needs to within the next 2 years formulate detailed rules and policies to formally deal with a legal cannabis market.

Here is part of parliaments official response:

Parliament is in the process of obtaining the judgment to study exactly what it says.
If the two laws mentioned have been found to be unconstitutional, then the Constitutional Court would have to confirm the judgment before Parliament can act. The state could also appeal the judgment.

Once the constitutional court confirms the judgement, parliament has a few options they could do to ammend the law:

– Dealing with the defects in terms of the Medical Innovation Bill, currently before Parliament
– Parliament introducing a new bill
– The Executive introducing a new bill
 
Parliament is in the process of obtaining the judgment to study exactly what it says.
I'm sorry... this is a wonderful thing for South Africa. But when I read this I couldn't help thinking of that classic phrase, "
But we have to pass the bill so you can find out what is in it...."
 
The Trial of the Plant: South Africa’s Attempt to Legalize Cannabis

By Jon Hiltz on August 11th, 2017 at 2:00 pm | Updated: August 11th, 2017 at 1:42 pm

While much of the marijuana world looks toward societies already in the process of cannabis reform, a major battle for the legalization of pot is happening in South Africa’s justice system.

Lanseria residents Jules Stobbs and Myrtle Clarke, also known as “the Dagga (marijuana) Couple,” have brought a constitutional challenge to the Pretoria High Court stating that jailing people for marijuana use is against South Africans’ right to dignity. The trial that began on July 31st is expected to take 19 days.

No less than seven government ministers are being called to defend South Africa’s position on keeping cannabis prohibition in place. Armed with the usual outdated arguments that cannabis causes psychological harm and addiction, the bureaucrats are hoping the court will side with the status quo.

But the Dagga Couple invited some experts of their own, including the Chair of Neuropsychopharmacology at London’s Imperial College to testify that marijuana is not the dangerous drug the world has been falsely led to believe.

The trial is so pivotal and engaging to South Africans that it has been live streamed for all to see.

Arguments in the defense of cannabis have included everything from how the sale of pot can improve the economy, to showing how countries that have enacted cannabis reform handle issues such as impaired driving and quality control.

If the court sides with the Dagga Couple, it will be a landmark decision in South Africa for cannabis, which has been illegal since 1903.
 

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