The Supreme Court of Mexico issued two rulings on Wednesday that effectively overturn the country’s ban on the recreational use of marijuana.
The rulings follow similar decisions in three previous cases, going back to 2015. Under Mexican law, five such decisions set a binding precedent nationally.
“This
5th judgement means that, while the cannabis prohibition law nominally
remains in place for now (and arrests remain possible), all judges
nationally are now bound by the Supreme Court judgement as a defense in
the (now much less likely) scenario of prosecutions being brought,” according to Transform,
a think tank that was part of the effort to overturn the ban. “The
legalisation of cannabis for adult personal use, possession, private
cultivation and sharing is therefore currently de facto (in practical effect), rather than de jure (formalised in law/legislation).”
In a news release translated by Transform, the court said that “the
fundamental right to the free development of the personality allows the
persons of legal age to decide — without any interference — what kind
of recreational activities they wish to carry out and protect all the
actions necessary to materialize that choice."
The right to the free development of the personality is a concept from the country’s constitution,
amounting to something like a right to self-determination. As in
previous cases, the court ruled this week that preventing individuals
from using the drug violates their individual autonomy, particularly
because marijuana use does not present enough risk to users or to others
to justify keeping it outlawed. “The effects caused by marijuana do not
justify an absolute prohibition on its consumption,” the court said.
The
Mexican Congress now has 90 days to rewrite the nation’s drug laws to
comply with the rulings, “at which point the reform will assume de jure
status,” according to Transform. It remains unclear what Congress will
do in response to the ruling. While it could set up a system involving
taxation and commercial sales, it could also adopt a more limited
approach that would make marijuana possession and use legal but not sales. That’s similar to the regulatory situation in Vermont and the District of Columbia.
The
ruling in Mexico means that there is now a continuous line of
legalization jurisdictions along the western coast of North America,
running from north of the Arctic Circle to south of the Tropic of
Cancer. Voters in North Dakota and Michigan will decide whether to legalize recreational marijuana next week, while lawmakers in New Jersey hope to legalize marijuana through the state legislature by the year’s end. .
No comments:
Post a Comment