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    Vendredi, 05 Septembre 2008 15:25
    Rastas can use cannabis, Italian court rules
    Peter Popham

    The Independent
    Saturday 12 Jul 2008

    Rastafarians have always regarded Ethiopia as the promised land, but
    Italy could rank a close second after its Supreme Court ruled that
    smoking or possessing cannabis is not a criminal offence but a religious
    act when the person doing it is a Rastafarian.

    Last year, the same court declared that cultivating even a single
    cannabis plant was a punishable offence. But now Italy's Court of
    Cassation has said Rastafarians use marijuana "not only as a medical but
    also as a meditative herb. And, as such [it is] a possible bearer of the
    psychophysical state to contemplation and prayer".

    Release, the London-based drugs information service, said that the
    ruling was a European first.

    The case was brought by a man in his forties from Perugia who was
    sentenced to 16 months in jail plus a €4,000 (£3,000) fine in 2004 for
    possession of 97g of marijuana. The Supreme Court said the court of
    first appeal had failed to consider that the man, a Rastafarian, smoked
    marijuana according to the precepts of his religion, which, the judges
    said, permits the smoking of 10g per day. Rastafarians smoke the drug,
    said the court, "with the memory and in the belief that the sacred plant
    grew on the tomb of King Solomon".

    The government is livid. The judgment "shatters the laws which forbid
    and proscribe penal sanctions for" the use of illegal drugs, an Interior
    Ministry spokesman said.

    Right-wing politicians were scathing. Senator Maurizio Gasparri said:
    "Today we learn a Rasta is free to go around with drugs. If somebody
    belonged to a religion which permitted them to eat their children, would
    they give them the go-ahead, too?"

    But the verdict was received with joy at Rototom Sunsplash, Europe's
    biggest festival of reggae music, near Udine, in north-east Italy.
    "Finally the principle of religious pluralism is beginning to make
    headway," Filippo Giunta, president of the festival, said. "This
    judgment ... underlines again the difference between this substance and
    so-called 'hard' drugs, alcohol included."

    http://www.independent.co.uk/