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  Marijuana is All Things To All Men in Guinea
Posted by FoM on January 06, 2000 at 08:21:45 PT
It is openly smoked, in defiance of the law 
Source: Arabia Online 

cannabis Marijuana is all things to all men in Equatorial Guinea, and is openly smoked, in defiance of the law, by government ministers and civil servants as well as street children.

"It makes everybody happy," say the adepts of the weed, many of them dropouts from the recent oil boom here.


In this west African former Spanish colony, marijuana goes by the name of "sacred weed of the people" and was once used only in traditional ceremonies, but now it is everyone's tonic.

In the streets of this capital, a poor man's joint can be had for 100 CFA francs (about 20 US cents). Richer customers, such as Americans, buy larger quantities at a discount.

In living memory no one has been arrested for smoking or dealing, although both are illegal under the law.

The plants are grown locally between cassava plants or banana trees. According to its fans, marijuana invigorates and provides courage, imagination and inspiration.

According to Christina, a 21-year-old mixed-blood girl, young people use it "to survive constantly worsening poverty and injustice."

Silvano, 19, who sports a shaven head, dark glasses and scruffy jeans and sneakers, said that he and his two identically dressed companions "take refuge in marijuana. At least it helps us to take a less aggressive view of life."

The Sacred Weed:

The weed is also widely smoked in the administration, with some saying they use it to find the strength to start their day's work.

Valentino said "I also like alcohol, but it can be smelled on one's breath. So I use marijuana, it's clean and more effective."

Marijuana use is also widespread in the government. In 1997, on the eve of presidential elections which he believed his side would win, a minister, also the leader of a small opposition party, had smoked marijuana before killing his three-year-old son with a machete after a futile dispute.

In tears, he told flabbergasted police that he had lost his mind "as if guided by a strange force."

A senior Malabo police officer said that most of the young smokers "turn into dangerous delinquents.

Under the inflence of the sacred weed, they do not hesitate to use machetes, knives and guns to carry out armed robberies."

Published: January 6, 2000
© 1999 Arabia.On.Line.


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Comment #2 posted by kaptinemo on January 06, 2000 at 12:31:51 PT
Blames it on the weed, African style
During the Anslinger years, you heard exactly the same kind of crap from people hoping to avoid execution or incarceration for murder by pleading temporary insanity due to cannabis usage: 'The weed made me do it.'

People back then (the 1930's) had no idea what MJ was, save for the ludicroulsy distorted myths told to them by Anslinger & company. And now, in a West African country, it's happening again. But at least, with nearly everyone over there using, they'll take it for the lie it is.

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Comment #1 posted by Scott on January 06, 2000 at 10:28:16 PT:

REEFER MADNESS!
>A senior Malabo police officer said that most of the young >smokers "turn into dangerous delinquents.
>
>Under the inflence of the sacred weed, they do not hesitate >to use machetes, knives and guns to carry out armed >robberies."

We must also remember that this is Arabia, and doesn't exactly have a blossoming economy. Its not the marijuana that is making them do these crimes, it is the environment in which they are placed and the economy the live off of.


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