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A child wearing a marijuana leaf hat poses during a rally in support of cultivation of cannabis for medicinal purposes in Santiago in March.
A child wearing a marijuana leaf hat poses during a rally in support of cultivation of cannabis for medicinal purposes in Santiago in March. Photograph: Iván Alvarado/Reuters
A child wearing a marijuana leaf hat poses during a rally in support of cultivation of cannabis for medicinal purposes in Santiago in March. Photograph: Iván Alvarado/Reuters

Chile takes step toward cannabis decriminalisation

This article is more than 8 years old
  • Lower house of congress votes to decriminalise drug for personal use
  • If senate approves bill Chileans would be able to grow up to six plants

Chile has taken a step forward in decriminalising the use of cannabis after the lower house of congress approved by a wide margin a bill that seeks to change the law in the South American country.

Although socially conservative Chile is not following Uruguay’s lead on full legalisation, it is considering decriminalising it for personal use and cultivation.

To loud cheers from the public gallery, the lower house voted on Tuesday to push forward with the reform in general terms.

As it stands, the bill would allow the possession of up to 10 grammes (0.35 ounce) of cannabis and the growing of up to six plants.

But it still has some way to go to become law. A health committee will study the bill before the lower house votes again on each of the specific elements. It then passes to the senate.

Nonetheless, the vote was important, communist lawmaker Karol Cariola, who is part of President Michelle Bachelet’s leftist coalition, told reporters.

“It is a historic day for medicinal users who wish to stop being persecuted and be able to access a medicine that they can grow in their gardens,” she said.

Santiago, Chile’s capital, was the site of Latin America’s first medical marijuana farm earlier this year. The country watched the experimental project with interest.

Surveys indicate that cannabis consumption is higher in Chile than in the rest of the region, while support among Chileans for drug legalisation is increasing.

Since the repressive 1973-1990 dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, Chile has been considered one of Latin America’s most conservative countries.

With social attitudes changing, however, leftwing governments have taken baby steps in recent years towards a more liberal path, recently legalising gay and lesbian civil unions, for instance.

The changes have not been without controversy. A current bill aimed at reforming Chile’s abortion law, one of the strictest in the world, has faced fierce opposition from both the Catholic Church and politicians, including from within Bachelet’s own coalition.

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