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Heavily armed police in Mexico. Getty Images
Heavily armed police in Mexico. Getty Images

Mexico moves to legalize cannabis use, a modest step toward de-escalating drug war

Mexico moves to legalize cannabis use, a modest step toward de-escalating drug war

Mexico’s militarized war on drugs – and, often, drug users – has killed at least 150,000 people over the past 15 years.

Mexico’s lower house of Congress in March . The is now with the Senate, where it is likely to pass, as Mexican senators have .

If that happens, Mexico will join and in allowing people to use cannabis recreationally, albeit in more limited fashion.

would not outright legalize cannabis; it would raise the country’s existing threshold of nonpunishable personal possession from 5 grams to 28 grams. Possession of 29 to 200 grams of cannabis would result in a fine. After that, prison would still be a possibility.

Selling cannabis will still be a crime, meaning peasant farmers in the states of who make a pittance growing cannabis can still end up in jail.

However modest, marijuana legalization would be a symbolic milestone for Mexico, a country immersed in an unforgiving drug war.

Man holding box of Kinder candies wears a marijuana leaf-shaped mask and gives a thumbs-up
A chocolate seller celebrates the Senate’s vote to legalize cannabis in Mexico back in November 2019.

 

Modest advances

According to , Mexican cartels made up to $US2 trillion from cannabis sales in the U.S. – between 15% and 26% of their total income. However, as more U.S. states – most recently, – the drug’s importance to the cartels has .

Yet the criminalization of cannabis keeps Mexico’s penitentiary system bloated. , 37,701 adults and 3,072 teenagers were accused of “narcomenudeo” – low-level drug dealing. Of those indicted on that charge, 60% of adults and 94% of teenagers – not caught in the act of selling.

Even under current , these people should not have been detained unless they had committed other crimes or behaved violently.

The legalization bill should finally end that type of arrest. But it contains several provisions that undermine its intended effect of protecting vulnerable consumers and small-scale growers, as congresswomen and explained when citiquing the new bill.

For example, it authorizes individuals to grow cannabis for their own consumption – up to six plants per adult, or eight per household. However, growers must obtain a permit from the National Council on Addictions.

Riojas, when she offered a rolled joint to Mexico’s new interior minister, said that rule .

The bill also grants officials authority, without a warrant, to enter the residence of a cannabis grower to verify compliance with the law. That may lead some people who currently grow cannabis illegally at home to avoid registering, preferring their clandestine tranquility over invasive home inspections.

An underground marijuana greenhouse in Mexico City in 2015.

 

SMART litigation

Such provisions have tempered the celebrations of the activists and academics who have for years legislators to end Mexico’s cannabis ban for human rights reasons.

In 2013, four challenged before the Mexican Supreme Court. The plaintiffs claimed that Mexico’s cannabis ban violated their , including the right to make decisions about their personal health.

Filing what’s known as an “amparo” – a Mexican legal mechanism that allows citizens to defend their own constitutional rights – they argued in court that adults should be able to grow marijuana at home, and use it appropriately.

In 2015, the Supreme Court agreed, ruling that Mexico’s total cannabis ban was unconstitutional. Justice Arturo Zaldívar Lelo de Larrea that the Mexican Constitution “does not impose an ideal of human excellence” but “allows each individual to choose their own life plan … as long as it does not affect others.”

The members of Mexico United Against Crime explain the court’s ruling in their favor at a press conference in 2015.

 

Because the outcome of an amparo trial , nobody beyond the handful of SMART members could grow marijuana or possess over 5 grams of weed at home. But the decision led to a groundswell of similar amparo cases, and the courts .

Finally, in 2018, the Supreme Court to end the “unconstitutional” prohibition of cannabis.

Given the complexity of this matter and the COVID-19 pandemic, the Supreme Court has granted Congress several extensions to comply with this mandate, but the court’s final deadline . That means Mexico’s cannabis ban will be annulled on that date, even if the new regulation law has not taken effect.

Small transformation

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador the cannabis bill as a victory of his political party, Morena.

But López Obrador’s views on cannabis have been ambiguous and erratic. Over his long political career, he has frequently voiced his willingness to “debate” legalization but .

López Obrador who would “transform” and “pacify” Mexico, including by . But as recently as February 2020, he declared he would , not recreational.

López Obrador has also largely continued the drug war of his predecessors. In 2006, former Mexican president Felipe Calderón to quell the drug trade. Unbridled violence followed as soldiers battled the cartels and, increasingly, – including people who use drugs.

López Obrador recently .

Over the past 15 years, drug cartels and organized crime in Mexico have killed an estimated , representing during that period. Another .

Ultimately, this bloody history gave rise to cannabis legalization in Mexico – a small yet meaningful step toward de-escalating its war on drugs.The Conversation

 

, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. 

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