By Gardenia Mendoza
For the last couple of years, Mexican legislator Fernando
Belaunzarán has watched as millions of Americans in 24 states across the
country have approved the legal use of marijuana – mostly as medicine
but also for recreational use in Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and
Washington.
As a deputy in the Congress, Belaunzarán has tried to get Mexico to
do the same, but the country has stuck to laws banning the drug,
although millions of tons of it is harvested in the country every year.
Only in recent months has the topic of legalization been taken up in
earnest, discussed in courtrooms, in the corridors of power and in the
mainstream media.
"We should have taken up [legalization] a while ago," Belaunzarán
told Fox News Latino. "Now we've done it poorly and late, while over [in
the U.S.], there's already an industry, companies that even send
marijuana to this country through our porous border."
He also said, “In Mexico the politicians are cowards, and, even now,
they accepted the debate only … because they had no other choice with
the legalizations in the United States.”
Mexico outlawed the cultivation of marijuana in the 1940s, bowing to
pressure from the United States, and, since then, the Mexican black
market for the drug has only grown, empowering the country's already
mighty criminal organizations.
Belauzarán was one of the first Mexican legislators to bring back the
legalization debate. For him, it was an imperative brought about by
the country's fight against drug cartels, which since 2006 has left some
53,000 dead, more than 26,000 disappeared and an unknown number
displaced.
Another legislator, Elsa Conde, has also tried to legalize the
industrial production of hemp – a fibre derived from marijuana plants
that can be used commercially in the production of rope, clothing and
construction material.
Like Belauzarán’s proposals, however, Conde has been frustrated by a lack of cooperation from her fellow federal deputies.
Despite that, the fight for marijuana legalization in Mexico is
gaining steam, with ordinary citizens taking up the fight to try to
force authorities to accept cannabis use.
Raúl Elizalde, father of an epileptic 8-year-old girl, Graciela,
convinced a federal judge last month that his daughter needed medical
marijuana to treat her condition.
It's now imported from California at $250 per dose.
Another case was brought by the founders of the group Josefina
Ricaño, Armando Santacruz and Juan Francisco Torres and has reached the
country's Supreme Court, where justices next week will discuss the right
to grow, consume and transport pot for personal consumption.
"What's at stake is the individual liberty of people," said Justice
Arturo Zaldívar, author of the opinion that, if approved by the rest of
the justices, would set a precedent in Mexico for the legalization of
pot, despite the opposition of many in the highest levels of government.
"We don't want to turn ‘Chapo’ Guzmán into an entrepreneur," said
Arturo Escobar y Vega, the subsecretary of the Interior Ministry, in a
recent interview with the newspaper, El Universal, when he was asked
about possible legalization.
Other powerful opponents include the Secretary of Health, Mercedes
Juan, and President Enrique Peña Nieto himself, who was waiting to take
over the presidency in November 2012 when Washington and Colorado became
the first U.S. states to vote to legalize recreational use of
marijuana.
Luis Videgaray, the chief of Peña Nieto’s transition team at the
time, pointed out that the votes complicated matters for the Mexican
government.
"Obviously we can't handle a product that is illegal in Mexico,
trying to stop its transfer to the United States, when in the United
States, at least in part of the United States, it now has a different
status," Videgaray told reporters
[http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2012/11/08/legalization-marijuana-in-two-us-states-forces-review-pot-fight-in-mexico/].
"I believe this obliges us to think the relationship in regards to
security ... This is an unforeseen element."
Among the official arguments against legalization, opponents point
out that Mexico has signed a number of international treaties pledging
to fight the trade in marijuana and other illegal drugs – treaties that
have been ignored by states in Mexico's northern neighbor.
Leopoldo Rivera – editor of the Mexican magazine Hemp, which launched
in May and is already under investigation by officials for "inciting
consumption" – told FNL, "We should do the same as Washington and
Colorado, which haven't taken into account international treaties. They
said, 'We live here, and we want this for ourselves.'"
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