Canada's marijuana legalization plan flouts 3 UN drug conventions

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
'Canada cannot pick and choose which international laws to follow,' says authors in CMAJ commentary

The federal government's plan to legalize marijuana contravenes Canada's pledge to adhere to existing drug-control conventions set forth by the UN, according to a commentary published Monday in the CMAJ medical journal.

Canada is legally obligated to follow three international treaties that control or prohibit the access to drugs like marijuana, says the commentary's authors — Steven Hoffman and Roojin Habibi of the Global Strategy Lab at the University of Ottawa's Centre for Health Law, Policy and Ethics.

Those treaties are the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, the 1971 Convention on Psychotropic Substances and the 1988 Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances.

Countries that adopted the 1961 convention, including Canada, agreed to recognize "addiction to narcotic drugs constitutes a serious evil for the individual and is fraught with social and economic danger" and be "conscious of their duty to prevent and combat this evil."

Canada would join other jurisdictions that have legalized marijuana in ways that violate such treaties, like Uruguay — the first country to pass legislation in favour of legalizing marijuana for commercial and recreational purposes in 2013 — and U.S. states Colorado and Washington.


Sean Azzariti prepares to make the first legal recreational marijuana purchase in Colorado on Jan. 1, 2014, in Denver. The state's cannabis legalization is in violation of UN conventions. (Theo Stroomer/Getty Images)

The authors warn flouting the treaties would undermine the spirit and meaning of other conventions.

"Canadians may be less concerned with international laws when they are about drugs, but they probably do care when these laws govern genocide, nuclear disarmament or human rights," write Hoffman and Habibi. "Canada cannot pick and choose which international laws to follow without encouraging other countries to do the same."

Canada has three legal options in which it can continue its cannabis "policy direction" and still be in line with UN conventions, says the authors. They include:

  • Changing its constitution. Countries like Portugal still enforce drug laws but replaced prison sentences with educational courses as punitive measures, while the Netherlands continues to keep the drug illegal but does not enforce its laws on those caught with small quantities.
  • Convincing other countries to allow Canada an exemption from drug control treaties, or to revise them altogether.
  • Formally withdrawing from the treaties.

A woman smokes during last month's rally to celebrate National Marijuana Day on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. Canada will take steps in 2017 to legalize marijuana, Health Minister Jane Philpott has told the UN. (Chris Roussakis/AFP/Getty Images)

Hoffman and Habibi believe the third option is the most feasible.

"The federal government should immediately take proactive steps to seek a reservation to the marijuana provisions of these treaties and/or to initiate their renegotiation in light of its legalization plans," write the authors. "If these diplomatic efforts fail, Canada must formally withdraw from these treaties to avoid undermining international law and compromising its global position."

New pot laws to be introduced in 2017
Health Minister Jane Philpott told the UN at a special session of the General Assembly in New York last month that Canada will begin the process of legalizing cannabis in 2017.

Former Toronto police chief Bill Blair was tapped to be the parliamentary secretary to the justice minister and serves as Canada's point man on the legalization legislation.

Police have admitted that until the legislation is enacted, law enforcement officers will find themselves in an awkward position, especially in instances of simple possession.






Pot legalization legislation coming in 20178:29

In 2014, the most recent year for which data is available, there were 57,314 marijuana possession-related "incidents" reported by police nationwide, according to Statistics Canada. More than 24,540 people were charged as a result. The year before that, 25,819 Canadians faced charges.

A recent CBC News analysis found that where you live is a significant factor. For example, you're almost 23 times more likely to face a possession charge in Kelowna, B.C., than in St. John's.

A C.D. Howe Institute report published in April found that pardoning Canadians convicted of simple possession and throwing out any outstanding charges would free up substantial financial resources, which could defray some of the costs of legalization.
 
As an American in a non-medical/non-legal state, I am interested to see how this plays out next year. Momentum is clearly in favor of legalization across all of North America and IMHO, cannabis and all things related to it are the next economic boom.
 

GroErr

Well-Known Member
Something the treaty also says is that Canada can withdraw from it with no penalties or sanctions. I guess if they mentioned that it would have fucked up their argument. Like the "save the children" rant, if they keep saying it enough uninformed people start to believe the lies...
Agreed, anyone using that argument is either a ditz (aka Ambrose) or trying to put something over on the uneducated masses. It's all just noise to me. I'm more concerned with important things right now like getting a med license if the program has reasonable rules, my GF and I both qualify so even relatively low counts wouldn't be an issue. But I can't find anything pointing me in the direction of whether my cat qualifies for a license. Cat's name is Pablo so I think it may be disqualified right out of the gate ;)
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Agreed, anyone using that argument is either a ditz (aka Ambrose) or trying to put something over on the uneducated masses. It's all just noise to me. I'm more concerned with important things right now like getting a med license if the program has reasonable rules, my GF and I both qualify so even relatively low counts wouldn't be an issue. But I can't find anything pointing me in the direction of whether my cat qualifies for a license. Cat's name is Pablo so I think it may be disqualified right out of the gate ;)
MEOW-scobar!
 

Gquebed

Well-Known Member
What a bunch of crap. These treaties and conventions are a dime a dozen. World leaders get together for some chit chat and they sign treaties that are meaningless just for the photo op. Then those treaties are completely fogotten minutes later.

And flouting this isnt going to damage say.... a nuclear non-proliferation treaty. And to suggest so is just absolute stupidity.

If this is what the arguement on the con side is coming to then the argument against legal weed is OVER.

So just shut the fuck up and let it happen.
 

doingdishes

Well-Known Member
Agreed, anyone using that argument is either a ditz (aka Ambrose) or trying to put something over on the uneducated masses. It's all just noise to me. I'm more concerned with important things right now like getting a med license if the program has reasonable rules, my GF and I both qualify so even relatively low counts wouldn't be an issue. But I can't find anything pointing me in the direction of whether my cat qualifies for a license. Cat's name is Pablo so I think it may be disqualified right out of the gate ;)
i believe there is meds for pets so that's not too far out there.
after saying that, how legal is it to give your animal MMJ? if the animal is not a "patient" or even human, how would you get a license?
would you as the owner be the DG or could you get a DG for your pet??
 

GroErr

Well-Known Member
i believe there is meds for pets so that's not too far out there.
after saying that, how legal is it to give your animal MMJ? if the animal is not a "patient" or even human, how would you get a license?
would you as the owner be the DG or could you get a DG for your pet??
lol, I doubt they qualify as patients, but if there's a clause somewhere...
 

CalyxCrusher

Well-Known Member
One last kick at the can using the tired same old rhetoric they always turn to. The US faced none of this when their states legalized. It's all chest pounding in a failed attempt to try and use scare tactics. Too bad they didn't get the memo, your own government has stated it's intentions about legalization.

How the fine print looks remains to be seen. These anti cannabis fanatics need to just swallow the bitter pill that is that they lost. Plain and simple. Quit kicking and screaming about it in an attempt to hopefully draw attention to your failed logic and reasoning in one last death knell.
 
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