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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: We're Champion Potheads
Title:Canada: We're Champion Potheads
Published On:2007-07-10
Source:Province, The (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-08-16 22:35:32
WE'RE CHAMPION POTHEADS

Canadian Use Highest in the Industrialized World

OTTAWA -- Marijuana use in Canada is the highest in the industrialized
world, far higher than in the Netherlands where it's legal, and more
than four times the global rate, a report by the United Nations has
found.

The report also says cannabis use around the world appears to have
stabilized and appears to be declining in North America.

The world drug-use study by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime said that
16.8 per cent of Canadians aged 15 to 64 smoked marijuana or used
other cannabis products in 2004, the most recent year for which
statistics were cited.

Marijuana possession remains illegal in Canada, despite years of
recommendations by parliamentarians to decriminalize it.

The study estimated that 3.8 per cent of the world's population aged
15 to 64 used cannabis in 2005. That was about 159 million people,
down slightly from 162 million the previous year.

The data show Canadian usage fifth after Zambia (17.7 per cent in
2003), Ghana (21.5 per cent in 1998) and Papua New Guinea and
Micronesia tied for first place at 29 per cent each in 1995.

The Canadian statistics compared to 2005 rates of 8.7 per cent in
England and Wales, 12.6 per cent in the U.S., 8.5 per cent in Israel
and 6.1 per cent in the Netherlands (2001), where it is legal to buy
pot for personal use.

In some countries in East and Southeast Asia, such as Korea and
Singapore, and in the Middle East, such as Oman and Qatar, cannabis
use is negligible.

The report said cannabis comprises, by far, the largest illicit drug
market on the planet.

The study also noted a 38-per-cent decline in cannabis use among U.S.
12th graders between 1979, when marijuana use peaked, and 2006. A
19-per-cent drop in use by Ontario high school students between 2003
and 2005 was also noted.

The report also said there was slightly less trafficking of cannabis
from Canada into the U.S. in 2005.

Forty per cent of Canadian cannabis is produced in B.C., the report
noted.
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