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Ramaphosa expected to sign cannabis Bill

Publish date: 04 March 2024
Issue Number: 1066
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: South Africa

Six years after dagga was decriminalised in SA, a Bill to clear up uncertainties in the industry is finally heading to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s desk, reports Fin24. The National Council of Provinces yesterday passed the Cannabis for Private Purposes Bill, which is set to introduce a new set of regulations to determine the legal usage, cultivation and transportation of dagga. There were 40 votes in favour of the Bill and only three against. The Bill was approved by the National Assembly in November last year. Following a 2018 Constitutional Court ruling, the personal and private cultivation, possession and use of dagga for adults was decriminalised in SA. But the ruling left huge question marks regarding what constitutes an offence; the amount of dagga that can be legally used or cultivated; and how the law should be enforced by authorities have blunted the industry. The Bill seeks to address some of these uncertainties by providing clearer definitions for terms, removing dagga as an offence in terms of the Drugs Act, and stipulating the consequences for offences such as dealing in cannabis, providing cannabis to a child and being in possession of excessive quantities of dagga without an appropriate permit. The amount of dagga that will be classified as being in violation of certain rules will be stipulated in further regulation. These limits will not apply to an entity that has acquired a licence or permit as may be provided for in other legislation.

Full Fin24 report

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