Africa: Mozambique Official Rejects Calls
to Destroy Farmers' Marijuana Crops
4/21/06
Mozambique Attorney General Joaquim Madeira last week rejected
calls from parliament to destroy the marijuana fields planted
by peasant farmers, Angola Press reported. Instead, he said,
the peasants should be offered alternative crops.
Cannabis is a widespread cash crop for farmers
in the impoverished south African nation.
"Herbal cannabis for local consumption is produced
throughout the country, particularly in Tete, Manica, and
Zambezia provinces," said the US State Department in
its latest annual International Narcotics Control Strategy
Report. "Limited amounts are exported to neighboring
countries, particularly South Africa," the report added.
Madeira's remarks came during questioning from parliamentary
deputies during his annual report to the Assembly of the
Republic. The deputies were concerned about drug trafficking
and wanted to know why the government wasn't taking tougher
measures.
But Madeira said burning down the fields of "soruma,"
the local name for the weed, was no solution. Farmers needed
new cash crops to replace their marijuana crops, he insisted,
although he didn't specify what those may be.
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