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it may soon be legal to have small amounts of drugs in Mexico. including pot, coke, and smack
Original Article
Mexico Congress OKs small drug amounts
Mark Stevenson
Associated Press
Apr. 29, 2006 12:00 AM
MEXICO CITY - Mexico's Congress approved a bill Friday decriminalizing possession of small amounts of marijuana, ecstasy, cocaine and heroin for personal use, a measure sure to raise questions in Washington about Mexico's commitment to the war on drugs.
The only step remaining was the signature of the president, whose office indicated he would sign it.
Mexican officials hope the law will help police focus on large-scale trafficking operations rather than minor drug busts.
The bill also stiffens penalties for trafficking and possession of drugs - even small quantities - by government employees or near schools, and it maintains criminal penalties for drug sales.
The Bush administration had no immediate reaction.
The bill, passed by Mexico's Senate on a 53-26 vote with one abstention, had already been approved in the lower house of Congress and was sent to the desk of President Vicente Fox for his signature.
"This law gives police and prosecutors better legal tools to combat drug crimes that do so much damage to our youth and children," presidential spokesman Ruben Aguilar said.
The bill says criminal charges will no longer be brought for possession of up to 25 milligrams of heroin, five grams of marijuana (about one-fifth of an ounce, or about four joints), and half of a gram of cocaine (about half of the standard street-size quantity, which is enough for several lines of the drug).
"No charges will be brought against . . . addicts or consumers who are found in possession of any narcotic for personal use," according to the Senate bill, which also lays out allowable quantities for a large array of other drugs, including LSD, MDA, ecstasy (about two pills' worth) and amphetamines.
Some of the amounts are eye-popping: Mexicans would be allowed to possess 2.2 pounds of peyote, the button-size hallucinogenic cactus used in some native Indian religious ceremonies.
Mexican law now leaves open the possibility of dropping charges against people caught with drugs if they are considered addicts and if "the amount is the quantity necessary for personal use."
But the exemption isn't automatic.
The new bill drops the "addict" requirement, automatically allowing any "consumers" to have drugs, and it sets out specific allowable quantities.
Sale of all drugs would remain illegal under the proposed law, unlike in the Netherlands, where the sale of marijuana for medical use is legal and it can be bought with a prescription in pharmacies.
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