CANNAPARADE 2023 Paris

CANNAPARADE 2023 : La jeunesse marche pour revendiquer la légalisation du (…) – Cannabis Sans Frontières (cannabissansfrontieres.org)

CANNAPARADE 2023: Young people march to demand the legalisation of cannabis
A look back at the demonstration in Paris on 27 May 2023
Summary (below in images) of the CANNAPARADE 2023 in Paris

The Cannaparade went off smoothly, as always in good spirits and with no clashes or police provocations.

Behind the banner of “impatient patients”, with members of the associations Principes Actifs, NORML France, Cannabis Sans Frontières and Act up Paris leading the demonstration, entertained at the head of the procession by the Fanfare Funk Tarace Boulba, followed by the presence of the representative of the CIRC, Dominique Broc, who had come from Poitiers to provide the logistical convoy for the demonstration.

Around 1,000 people gathered along the route between the Place de la République and the Place de la Bastille. The mass of demonstrators gathered behind the speakers of the two sound system floats.

The first featured a performance by Wacko and BE Labeu, two of Etat2ND’s acolytes who, with DJ Dang, presented their compositions in an original hip hop style alternating with reggae, rap, grind and dubstep (a line-up that included Supamana and friends). On the other, a bevy of DJs providing the full Tekno mix for the KaoliSons sound system, like a free and block party atmosphere in the streets of Paris.

Since 2001, it’s clear that at this 22nd edition, as every year before, most of the demonstrators are young people, aged between 17 and 25.

As the Cannaparade set off from Place de la République, Françoise Dumont, Honorary President of the Ligue des Droits de l’Homme, spoke out in support of the demands made by the Cannaparade, first and foremost the decriminalisation of drug use and the reform of a law that does more damage to society than the drugs themselves.

All along the route, onlookers and astonished motorists, most of them honking their horns in support of the pro-cannabis demonstration, gave a surreal impression of a momentary space of new-found freedom.

The highlight of the day, unlike last year, was being able to make the most of the fine weather and the Arsenal esplanade, which featured 3 different kinds of music, including a speech by Fanny Fossier on behalf of Christophe Bex, chairman of the study group at the French National Assembly.

We look forward to seeing you at the next Cannaparade in Paris, on Saturday 25 May 2024.

FRANÇAIS

About Cannaparade (demonstration for cannabis legalization) in Paris (France). We were about 1000 people and everybody (even police representatives) enjoyed it and was asking for more action…

A BIG THANK YOU to SUDA-K te-ve

ENCOD GA 2023

ENCOD General Assembly 2023

Thanks very much to our dear friends Konopex, to help us with their invitation.
Konopex

GA ENCOD 2023, April 21st – 23rd, Ostrava, Czech Republic

https://konopex.cz/en/
Agenda
Hybrid : In a meeting room or on stage / Online via Zoom

Friday, April 21st
19:00 Stage at Conference space
Open fora “Cannabis and the EU: Ongoing regulations” / Public
Focussing on Cannabis Social Clubs (CSC) as a model for a legal non-profit market
International Organizations, their past and their future
[this event will be held in English with translation to Czech and vice versa] Unfortunately is limited to 30 minutes, but is the last presentation on Friday. As ENCOD is having its annual General Assembly during the fair we will be happy to continue the dicussion office@encod.org or let’s just sit down and discuss, all positive input welcome.

Saturday, April 22nd, half public
from 11 a.m. –
Country reports / Public – approx. 1 hour
– in a seperate room on floor 0
– we will put up signs and give exact directions as soon as available.

4:20 p.m.– 6 p.m.: Guest intervention – CSCs in Czech republic (with online presence/presentation of
German CSCD roof organisation, CatFAC Barcelona, ReLeaf Malta) – to be announced, most probably in room on floor 0 too
18:00: Encod Road map 2023 – 2025 / Public (1 hour approximately)

Sunday, April 23rd, private, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Presentation activity report 2022 – Vote
Presentation financial report 2022 – Vote
General debate / ENCOD situation
Election Executive Committee – Vote
Election Board – Vote

Screenshot_2021-02-25 Unhappy Birthday

The 100th anniversary of the Belgian “drug law”

The Belgian drug law is 100 years old. For that long, it has been there as a legal basis to stigmatise and punish people who use drugs. For that long, this law has had a negative impact on public health and human rights.

Now that this experiment has been going on for literally a century without producing any significant results, we are ready for a critical evaluation of Belgian drug policy.

The campaign Unhappy Birthday is an action of the civil movements SMART on Drugs and #STOP1921. This initiative advocates the decriminalisation of the possession of all illegal substances for personal use and the establishment of a parliamentary working group to review the drug policy with a human approach.

Check out the webpage of the campaign Unhappy Birthday.

 

IMG-20200218-WA0004

Historical momentum at the UN about Cannabis WHO scheduling recommendations vote

 

Summary: EU positions on voting are a little bit different than the USA position; UN Africa sub-regional group is taking the leadership of a “chimeric apparatus”. What will be the UN decisions on WHO recommendations next March, 4th 2020? ENCOD is releasing this note to ensure that more feedback is shared and more interest would rise up worldwide in this very historical momentum into drug policy control.

 

Last Monday, February 17th, the first intersession under the Pakistanese chair was very quick to achieve its agenda. In less than 45 minutes, M. Mansoor Ahmad Khan has read his declaration to end the agenda. As always and forever, CNDblog report is available CND Intersessional Meeting, 17 February 2020

Historical Cannabis paradigm shift or not?

What is historical is that for the first time ever WHO has scientifically assessed “Cannabis plant and some of its cannabinoids” dependence-producing properties and harm to health, to justify the current scheduling that is blocking access for patients and scientific researchers for pharmaceutical and clinical studies.

“The forty-first meeting of the WHO Expert Committee on Drug Dependence was held in Geneva from 12 to 16 November 2018. At that meeting, the Committee undertook critical reviews of cannabis and cannabis-related substances (cannabis plant and cannabis resin, extracts and tinctures of cannabis, delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-9-THC; dronabinol) and tetrahydrocannabinol (isomers of THC)) and evaluated their dependence-producing properties and harm to health.

At its sixty-second regular session, the Commission received a note by the Secretariat on the changes in the scope of control of substances: proposed scheduling recommendations by the World Health Organization on cannabis and cannabis-related substances”

Nota Bene : Read this historical official document E/CN.7/2019/12.

The 62nd CND decided to postpone the decision, in order to provide more time to Member States for considerations about its implementation.

During two intersessions (First thematic, Second thematic), delegations addressed their questions to WHO experts, INCB and UNODC officials who gave their insights within their mandates. In addition, all member states could send written questions. A big document has been amended four times and made publicly available, so that everyone can read it: Compilation of all questions and answers on the WHO recommendations on cannabis and cannabis-related substances raised during the fourth and fifth intersessional meeting of the Commission at its sixty-second session

But the CND has to decide and to make decisions at its 63rd session – since then an informal consultation process is underway (Wednesday, 19th) to develop a joint understanding on the way forward towards the vote. With regard to voting options and the possibility of simultaneous voting about the recommendations, the responses of the Office of the Legal Affairs have been disseminated among the Member States (Annex 1). At least, a pre-session consultations of the 63rd CND session, on February 28th is scheduled in Board-Room D, Vienna International Centre.

Five years of ongoing discussions, with finally some technical issues that are complicating a very simple political decision. As a way to help everybody to understand the technical aspects, UNODC published an eBook that they printed and made available copies on table for all attendees : Scheduling procedures under the international drug control conventions

The Pakistan Chair of the CND is working for consensus-driven decision ahead of the vote.

In the corridors some say with skeptical voices, this consensus could be reached by setting up a very unprecedented intergovernmental working group (Vienna-based, govt-led) during 2020 to handle the recommendations, in order to delay the voting decision and to ensure a broad consensus over the implication of the decisions. In detail, the EU is totally opposed to because of the lack of funding, also because it was not budgeted and it would create a harmful unprecedented outside of the conventions. The USA was trying to figure out this possibility, and Russia endorsed it and then pushed the UN Africa sub-regional group to hold it strongly.

Because, it is not only the technical aspects of the six WHO recommendations that are still hard to explore, but some political tensions are rising among the supporters of a vote, and those totally opposed to vote. The deadline for receiving comments from Member States was extended. The comments should be made available this week on Conference Room Paper.

We don’t know what position will be adopted, as well as there is still interferences between USA (Annex 2)  and EU, and we don’t know about the others: Only EU in a draft decision dated from December (Annex 3 + Critical analysis in Annex 4), expressed by HDG (Horizontal Working Party on Drugs/Horizontal Drug Group), European Union vote on WHO recommendations was casted as: Yes (1,2,3), delay (4,5), no (6). But even EU countries have extremely different positions on this “single vote” decision (Czech Republic and Ireland are fully in favor of voting for all recommendations).

Cannabis Scheduling & EU position – February 2020 – by Kenzi Riboulet-Zemouli

 

ENCOD Executive Committee Note

Enrico Fletzer, ENCOD chairman : “This long due process can’t fail now because too many interests are in the balance, not only the millions of patients who need to get access to medicine, but also their doctors who can´t prescribe it”.

Maja Kohek, ENCOD Head of research department : “For centuries the Cannabis plant was used for all its properties and especially for medicinal purposes. In less than a century of prohibition, it seems that we forgot most of what our ancestors knew about the plant, its use and its potential. What amazes me is that, on one hand, science is learning more every day about the potentials of cannabinoids and the role of the endocannabinoid system while, on the other hand, there is very little willingness to match policies with evidence.”

Gaby Kozar, ENCOD Head of Information department : “We, as ENCOD, are clearly standing for the reform of the UN treaties that are undermining Human rights and the right to Health which they are supposed to guarantee. Current policies still generate more suffering than the best standards for the people’s relief.”

Ana Afuera, ENCOD Head of advocacy / EU – Policy department : “Since 2003 BedroncanTM has developed and has been able to export cannabis as medicine to 8 countries. Another one, a pure CBD pharmaceutical compound has been patented as the first drug to treat epilepsies for which no treatment was known. Who can argue now that Cannabis is a dangerous drug to parents who know that it is the only medicine for their children?”

Farid Ghehiouèche, ENCOD Head of advocacy / UN – Policy Department : “The 63rd CND have to vote, and at least to vote on the first recommendation to deschedule Cannabis from schedule IV of the 1961 “single” Convention and I quote the Experts of the WHO committee who “concluded that the inclusion of cannabis and cannabis resin in Schedule IV is not consistent with the criteria for a drug to be placed in Schedule IV. The Committee then considered whether cannabis and cannabis resin were better placed in Schedule I or Schedule II of the 1961 Convention” . They have to vote if they don’t want to send a very negative message showing their commitments and still not base policies on evidence with the first ever WHO scientific assessment on Cannabis”.

 

Last minutes

On Monday, February 17th, M. Olivier Veran has been appointed as Minister of Health in France. This nomination might bring fresh air at HDG. He has been the rapporteur for drug consumption rooms, product analysis and healthcare workers protection in 2016, and on medical cannabis experimentation in 2019. In a public meeting on January 23rd the new appointed minister said in his opening speech, as a neurologist: “I experienced the benefits and the wellness that my patients testified to me.”