This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Wednesday, 3 May 2017
Bob Marley, ganja and the green stuff – is selling Brand Jamaica just a pipe dream?
Decades of debt are pushing Jamaica to cash in on its most famous
exports, but small farmers fear losing out in the rush to market
medicinal marijuana
Kate Hodal
When Bob Marley
and the Wailers first performed Get Up, Stand Up to a restive 1970s
Jamaica, never could they have guessed that the government would be
cashing in on their lyrics, their Rastafarianism and even their spliffs
40 years later.
But decades of debt, coupled with a crippling austerity package
instituted by the International Monetary Fund, means that nearly
everything that makes Jamaica famous today – including Bob Marley, Peter
Tosh and ganja – is up for sale.
The government is aiming to recoup roughly $20bn (£15.4bn) per year
in potential lost revenue by capitalising on “Brand Jamaica” and the
culture associated with it. Taking California’s billion-dollar weed
market as inspiration, Jamaica has repealed draconian legislation and
punitive jail sentences in an effort to turn its thriving illegal ganja
industry into an internationally recognised, medicinal marijuana one.
“Green gold”, as politicians now term it, “is too valuable to go up in smoke”.
Yet, just like in Marley’s day, many fear it is the small man who
will lose out. Jamaica is home to more than 180,000 registered farmers
who grow traditional crops such as tomatoes, tobacco and bananas, and
research suggests nearly all of them grow marijuana on the side. Since
the country’s medical ganja scheme came into effect in 2015, however, only 25 applications have been made for marijuana cultivation licences.
“A lot of the subsistence farmers are sceptical of the claims of
‘higher profit’,” said Welsh academic Simon Jones, who has spent the
past two years researching the scheme. “There are fears it could become
just another extractive industry that gets exported abroad and then
imported back into Jamaica at a higher price.”
Under the new legislation, small farmers growing up to an acre of
marijuana would need to pay a $300 application fee, $2,000 annual
licence fee and $1,000 security bond. They are also required to carry
out major infrastructural changes to their farms such as installing
security fences, which cost nearly $10,000 to cover just one acre, added
Jones.
Rastafarians, herbalists and farmers’ associations have all expressed
dismay over the ganja scheme, which was pushed through by former
justice minister Mark Golding, and which critics claim is intended to
benefit big business.
“The
perception is that this is for the big man, and it is causing a big
problem in Jamaica,” said Basil Hylton, president of the Kingston and St
Andrew Ganja Growers and Producers Association. “They look at the
American model and intend to use that in Jamaica, and that is why the
farmers – who are the real ganja farmers – are not part of the process.
You can’t just go into the bush and plant anything and say it’s for
medicinal marijuana use: it has to be up to standard, and cost is one of
the big issues.”
Not one of the 2,000-plus farmers in Hylton’s association has signed
up to the deal. “To come on to the radar, they have to have land titles,
access to land, access to capital, and the cost is prohibitive,” added
Hylton. “I believe now the government are realising this is the problem,
because no one has applied.”
Small farmers would be more likely to engage with the scheme
if licensing fees were reduced and red tape diminished, said Indian, 45,
a subsistence farmer whose great-grandfather first brought marijuana
seeds from India to Jamaica in the 1850s for medicinal purposes.
“We started up a group and were going to get registered and try to
apply for the licence, because to be honest no one wants to do what is
against the law,” explained Indian, who grows illegal ganja among his
many other subsistence crops.
“But I did a costing, and for a small farmer like me to set up, apply
for the licence and other fees, then the 24-hour security, it would
cost well over a million Jamaican dollars, which is a lot here.
The
government’s not marketing it for us. Where do we get these products?
Who would we sell to? We’re not able to sell it abroad, so we plant it
and harvest it, and then it stays here?”
The lack of clarity over regulations – coupled with the fact that international cannabis growers have already become involved in research and development – has led many to fear a return to colonial farming days, added Indian.
“These
so-called big people who want to get involved, they don’t even know how
to plant or grow marijuana, and maybe they have a big pharmaceutical
company in America or Canada, and they want to set up here. Then they
employ us as small farmers on the minimum wage. People are getting
smarter and they don’t want to do that. They want to be happy and
independent of this kind of living.”
Kathie Lennon, a long-time Jamaican advocate and self-proclaimed “medical marijuana cultivation expert”,
is one of the few applicants for the ganja scheme. She says both
Jamaica’s government and its farmers need to be smarter about entering
the industry.
“What will make it work is if we open our minds to what Jamaica
really wants. This country is embedded with ganja, and the cannabis
industry is a big market. What will Jamaica do? What is achievable now?
Bob Marley and Peter Tosh are our biggest ambassadors of cannabis. We
can make money off this image, but we have to do the work.”
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