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			 Uruguay 
			says legal marijuana to be good and cheap 
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            [May 08, 2014] By 
			Malena Castaldi 
			
            MONTEVIDEO (Reuters) 
			— Uruguayans will be allowed to buy enough marijuana to roll 
			about 20 joints a week at a price well below the black market rate, 
			the government said on Tuesday as it detailed a new law legalizing 
			the cannabis trade. | 
        
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			 Congress in December approved a law allowing the 
			cultivation and sale of marijuana, making Uruguay the first country 
			to do so, with the aim of wresting the business from criminals. 
 Leftist President Jose Mujica signed a decree outlining the fine 
			print of the new policy on Tuesday. It says Uruguayans will be able 
			to buy up to 10 grams of marijuana a week at between $0.85 and $1 
			dollar a gram, a low price designed to compete with black market 
			cannabis that mostly comes from Paraguay.
 
 Activists who have backed the measure said legalized marijuana would 
			be high-grade and affordable.
 
 "You can't compare a flower that is quality-controlled by the Public 
			Health Ministry ... with Paraguayan (stuff) which is absolutely 
			harmful because it has external substances," said Bruno Calleros of 
			the Cannabis Liberation Movement.
 
 He said legal marijuana would cost roughly 20 percent of the current 
			market price for similar high-quality marijuana.
 
			 Each Uruguayan will also be allowed to grow up to six marijuana 
			plants or the equivalent of 480 grams (about 17 ounces) for personal 
			use and form smoking clubs of 15 to 45 members that can grow up to 
			99 plants per year.
 
 A sleepy agricultural country of 3.3 million people, Uruguay has 
			come under the spotlight for the marijuana law championed by Mujica, 
			a 78-year-old former Marxist guerrilla whose modest lifestyle and 
			philosophical musings have made him a leftist darling abroad.
 
 Uruguay has gone further than countries that have decriminalized 
			possession or, like the Netherlands, tolerate the sale of marijuana 
			in "coffee shops". The U.S. states of Washington and Colorado have 
			legalized the sale of cannabis under license, but federal laws still 
			prohibit it.
 
 Uruguay's experiment is being keenly watched by Latin American peers 
			at a time when the U.S.-led war on drugs faces mounting criticism. 
			Success in Uruguay could fuel momentum for legalization elsewhere.
 
			While relatively prosperous Uruguay has low crime rates, a third of 
			prisoners are behind bars on drug charges. 
            [to top of second column] | 
 Advocates of legalization argue that criminalization fuels 
			violence and corruption in developing countries where the drugs are 
			produced or transported. But critics warn that Uruguay's law could 
			pave the way for harder drugs and lure addicts to Montevideo.
 In a bid to avoid becoming a drug hot spot, Uruguay will only allow 
			marijuana to be available to Uruguayan residents who are registered 
			in a confidential database. Still, Mujica has said the country could 
			backpedal if the law fails to work out as planned.
 
 "We're looking to hurt drug trafficking by snatching part of its 
			market," Mujica said on Friday, stressing that the law does not seek 
			to foment drug use. "No addiction is good ... The only one I 
			recommend to young people is love."
 
 Marijuana legalization underlines a profound shift in social 
			policies in Uruguay, which was ruled by a military dictatorship from 
			1973 to 1985. It has since become one of Latin America's most 
			liberal countries and has also legalized gay marriage and abortion.
 
 (Writing by Alexandra Ulmer; Editing by Kieran Murray, Tom Brown and 
			Ken Wills)
 
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