Yahoo – AFP,
July 14, 2017
Montevideo (AFP) - Uruguay will allow pharmacies to sell marijuana starting next Wednesday, in the final phase of a law making the small South American country the first in the world to legalize and regulate pot from production to sale.
![]() |
| Uruguay is the world's first country to legalize production, sale and consumption of marijuana for recreational purposes (AFP Photo/Josh Edelson) |
Montevideo (AFP) - Uruguay will allow pharmacies to sell marijuana starting next Wednesday, in the final phase of a law making the small South American country the first in the world to legalize and regulate pot from production to sale.
Under
legislation approved in 2013, Uruguayans have been allowed to grow their own
pot and smoke it in clubs.
But working
out a timetable for pharmacies to sell it -- the third and last conduit called
for in the legislation -- proved more tricky. This has now been resolved, the
state agency regulating marijuana said in a statement Friday.
People have
to register to buy pot in pharmacies, and so far 4,700 have done so, most of
them in the 30 to 44 age group, according to government figures. Uruguay's
total population is 3.4 million.
Under the
first phase of the 2013 law, more than 6,600 people have registered to grow
weed at home, and 51 smokers' clubs have been authorized.
The state
Institute for the Regulation and Control of Cannabis (IRCC) has authorized the
sale of two types of marijuana, to be sold in packages of five and 10 grams.
Pharmacists
say they are not sure how profitable pot sales will be -- registered smokers
can buy no more than 40 grams a month, at $1.30 a gram -- and they have
expressed concern about training the employees who will handle pot, and
providing security against theft.
There have
also been questions about the quality and potency of the officially provided
weed, with some saying it is remarkably weak.
Only two
companies were authorized to produce marijuana for pharmacies -- under military
protection, and with no public access.
Government
officials insist they will prevent "cannabis tourism." Only
Uruguayans and legal residents will be allowed to partake.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.