Rastafari Council calls for additional measures to allow marijuana use

With the President still to sign the Bill into law, the rastafarians are calling for a number of other amendments to be implemented with the laws. While protesting today outside the President's Office, the rastafarians said it is time for the President and his government to begin consulting them as part of One Guyana.

Rastafari Council calls for additional measures to allow marijuana use

Members of the Guyana Rastafari Council are dissatisfied with the recent removal of custodial sentences for possession of small amounts of marijuana. They want full legalisation of marijuana use.

With the President still to sign the Bill into law, the rastafarians are calling for a number of other amendments to be implemented with the laws. While protesting today outside the President’s Office, the rastafarians said it is time for the President and his government to begin consulting them as part of One Guyana.

President of the Guyana Rastafari Council said the rastafarian community simply want the rights enjoyed by other religious groups and citizens to be extended to them, and that includes the use of marijuana for relious and other official purposes.

“This is the decade of African descent and I stand this day to make sure that all African organisations and religious must be given equal rights in this time and I am here protesting for my sacramental use of the holy herbs”, he said.

Meanwhile, the General Secretary of the Guyana Rastafari Council Ras Kafra said the recent amendment to remove custodial sentences for small amounts of marijuana is simply not enough. He said the Rastafari Council had made a number of recommendations for the amendments, but it appears that all of those recommendations were disregarded.

He said “there must be respect for people’s religious rights and that is one of the main things that has been echoed throughout and the right to privacy and the right to health…people must have the right to medicate themselves however they see fit”.

Other members of the Rastafari faith who joined this morning’s protest said they hope that the President will find the time to directly hear their concerns and work with them to address all of them.

They said while they support the use of marijuana, they are completely against its abuse and overuse.

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