Opinion – Cannabis Inc.: Marijuana March honors drug war victims

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This Saturday (11), the Marijuana March takes place in São Paulo. This is a demonstration in favor of changes in the laws in favor of the legalization of cannabisregulation of trade and recreational and medicinal use.

The march is scheduled to leave the opening of the Masp (Museu de Arte de São Paulo), on Avenida Paulista, at 2:20 pm. Then, head towards Rua da Consolação, where a tribute is planned to the lives interrupted by the war on drugs and the dead of Covid.

Protesters plan to turn on cell phone flashlights, in addition to observing a minute of silence, when they arrive in front of Consolação Cemetery. The call came from Cultive, a patient association founded by Maria Aparecida Carvalho from São Paulo, better known as Cidinha, mother of Clarian, a girl who suffered from a rare syndrome and was saved by drops of cannabis medicinal.

The Marijuana march involves several entities, such as the Brazilian Platform on Drug Policy, the National Coordination of Black Entities and the Anti-Prohibition Movement, among others, in addition to doctors, sociologists, activists, patients and family members. This march, in particular, draws attention to two extremely important social issues: mass incarceration and the issuance of court injunctions for domestic cultivation.

Imprisonment for drug possession seems anachronistic in a country that already generates R$ 130 million in drug trade. cannabis medicinal. From 2006, the year the Drug Law went into effect, until July 2020, the population arrested for drugs jumped from 31,529 to 207,487, according to Infopen. Despite so many arrests, there was no reduction in trafficking. Of every 10 women incarcerated, six are there because of drugs, and the vast majority, after being released, are unable to be reintroduced into society.

At the other extreme, patients who need cannabis to take care of their health resort to justice because they do not have the financial means to buy medicinal oil. They file lawsuits to acquire the right to plant to produce their own medicine. Currently, it is estimated that around 600 Habeas Corpus have already been issued in the country for domestic and medicinal planting.

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