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Several countries in the West have taken steps in the recent past to move away from the criminalisation of cannabis use. Even in the US, which internationalised its form of drug prohibition, many states have decriminalised cannabis consumption, and others have legalised personal consumption of cannabis. Decriminalisation of marijuana has also played an integral part in shaping the discourse around the US presidential elections of 2020.
In India, decriminalisation of cannabis has been a topic of debate for years. A new study by the Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy looks at the extent of cannabis regulation in India, and situates the prohibition in its historical and regulatory context. It also examines the extent of cannabis consumption in India and analyses the effect of its criminalisation.
Given the continued extent of use of cannabis in India, we argue that India must recognise the origins of cannabis prohibition and how criminalisation is costing its own marginalised population dearly.
Cannabis use in India has been recorded to have started as early as 5000-4000 BC. The use of cannabis in Ayurveda, in construction and as a fibre made it one of the most commonly used plants in India. Use of cannabis for its psychoactive properties was and continues to be widely prevalent. This is made evident by the National Survey on Extent and Pattern of Substance Use in India by the Ministry of Social Justice, which estimates that India has over three crore cannabis users. Amongst psychoactive substances, cannabis is the second most-consumed in India after alcohol.
The US was a major force that drove the world towards a prohibitionist approach to drug use. The US internationalised its form of prohibition on drugs and worked through the United Nations to forge a prohibitionist drug regime across the globe. The 1961 Convention on Narcotic Drugs, which influenced the enactment of the NDPS Act, created international obligations to curb traffic, cultivation, use, etc of narcotic drugs, including cannabis. This led to India imposing severe regulations over cannabis cultivation and criminalisation of its use, unless medically prescribed.
As India succumbed to international pressure, it was forced to disregard the ‘racist’ origins of the US’s war on drugs. The US war on drugs started off as a patently ‘racist’ propaganda against the African-American and the Hispanic population. Harry Anslinger, called the architect of the modern war on drugs, argued that cannabis leads to insanity, criminality and death.
This racial bias in drug regulation has resulted in a disproportionate number of arrests of African Americans for cannabis consumption, which has become central to major policy reform in the US.
Despite the historical use of cannabis as a fibre, India contributes a mere 0.001 percent to the world market for hemp products, which is pegged at USD 4.7 billion today.
The prohibitionist environment created by the NDPS (Narcotics Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Act, 1985, prevents India from effectively contributing to the world hemp market. As the world cannabis market is estimated to go up to USD 15.8 billion by 2027, restrictive policies in India continue to act as barriers to economic gains.
After internationalising its form of drug prohibition, the US is slowly moving away from cannabis criminalisation. Now, at least 26 states in the US have decriminalised cannabis consumption, while 11 have legalised personal consumption of cannabis. Other countries across the world are following a similar trend and are moving away from the criminalisation of cannabis use.
The Sikkim Anti-Drugs Act, 2006 (‘SADA’) does not utilise deterrence to curb drug use, and rather, relies on a public health approach to protect the best interests of a drug user.
We recommend that India de-criminalise cannabis-use completely, and adopt a public health approach to address drug addiction and use.
(Neha Singhal and Naveed Ahmad are researchers at the Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy. This is an opinion piece, and the views expressed are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)
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