Himachal forms committee to legalise cannabis cultivation
TCN Service/New Delhi
The Himachal Pradesh government is considering to legalise cannabis cultivation and has constituted a committee to study various aspects.
Cannabis cultivation can play a significant role in generating revenue for the state. Besides it can prove beneficial for the patients for its medicinal properties and can be used for industrial purposes, Chief Minister Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu said.
Sukhu said the state government is cautious about the potential increase in drug use and has formed a five-member committee of MLAs.
The Committee will conduct a thorough study about each and every aspects related to cannabis cultivation in the state. The committee will visit areas where illegal cultivation of cannabis takes place and submit a report in a month.
Only on the basis of the report submitted by the committee the Government will take any decision, the CM said.
“Even before Himachal Pradesh, cannabis cultivation has been kept under the legal purview in several states of the country.
The neighbouring state of Uttarakhand has become the first state in the country to legalize cannabis cultivation in the year 2017, while controlled cultivation of cannabis is also being done in some districts of Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh.
Similarly, controlled cultivation of cannabis has been permitted in several European Union countries including Uruguay, Canada, USA, Austria, Belgium and the Czech Republic,” he added.
The CM further said, “Indian Parliament defined cannabis in the NDPS Act in the year 1985, under which a complete ban has been imposed on extracting the resin and flowers from the cannabis plant.
But this law determines the method and extent of cultivation of cannabis for medicinal and scientific purposes. Section 10 (a) (iii) of the Act empowers the states to make rules regarding the cultivation of any cannabis plant, production, possession, transport, consumption, use and purchase and sale, consumption of cannabis (except charas).”
States are empowered to permit, by general or special order, the cultivation of hemp only for obtaining fibber or seeds or for horticultural purposes.”