No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveGuatemalan president applauds Uruguayan pot legalization vote

Guatemalan president applauds Uruguayan pot legalization vote

GUATEMALA CITY – Guatemalan President Otto Pérez Molina has called last week’s approval by Uruguayan lawmakers in the lower house of the legalization of recreational marijuana an “important step” in the fight against international drug trafficking.

Pérez Molina said the initiative – which if passed by the Senate would task the Uruguayan government with the production and sale of marijuana – opens “a new space for discussion” on the merits of legalization of illicit drugs, a proposal put forward by Guatemala in February 2012, according to the state-run Guatemalan News Agency (AGN).

“We haven’t wished to provoke more discussion beyond what’s already been debated, because we want to make decisions as a region,” AGN quoted Pérez Molina as saying.

The controversial measure approved Wednesday in Uruguay was unveiled in June last year as part of a series of efforts to combat rising violence.

If the measure wins Senate approval, it would mark the first time a national government takes charge of production and distribution of legal marijuana.

Lawmakers argued for 14 hours before approving the text with 50 votes in favor of a total of 96.

“The regulation is not meant to promote consumption,” lawmaker Sebastian Sabini, who helped draft the legislation, said at the beginning of the session.

“Consumption already exists,” he said. Nongovernmental workers favoring regulation of legal marijuana had filed into the chamber’s visitors’ galleries as lawmakers emphasized that the drug business finances organized crime.

Marijuana use has doubled in the last 10 years in the small, mostly rural South American country of 3.4 million.

 For his part, the Guatemalan president took observers by surprise last year when he announced one month after taking office that regional governments should consider legalization as an alternative strategy to the drug war, which has claimed tens of thousands of lives in the past seven years.

Pérez Molina said the region desperately needs a change of course from the policy promoted by the United States for the past 40 years, which is a frontal “war” against international drug trafficking.

The U.S. is the principal market for cocaine, heroin and marijuana trafficked through Central America and Mexico.

Trending Now

Protesters Rally Outside U.S. Embassy in San José Against Venezuela Intervention

Protesters gathered outside the U.S. Embassy in San José on Saturday afternoon to voice opposition to recent American military actions in Venezuela. The demonstration...

United States Launches Strikes on Caracas, Captures Venezuelan President Maduro

United States forces bombed several sites in Caracas early this morning, leading to the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, according to an announcement...

Costa Rica Police warn of Rising Tourist Targeted Crimes After Violent Incident

Police in Guanacaste rescued four American tourists from a violent home invasion in Nuevo Arenal de Tilarán on Thursday evening. The confrontation with armed...

JetBlue’s New Year Airfare Sale to Costa Rica

Those still looking for a getaway to Costa Rica now have a new reason from JetBlue Airways. The airline rolled out a promotion offering...

Death of Foreign Activist Adds to Costa Rica’s Mounting Security Concerns

Authorities in Costa Rica continue to investigate the homicide of 36-year-old Francisco Ojeda Garcés, a Chilean environmentalist who had lived in the country for...

Honduran Lawmaker Survives Explosive Attack in Congress

A homemade explosive device struck Honduran lawmaker Gladis Aurora López inside the National Congress on January 8, causing injuries that sent her to the...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica