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A visitor smokes marijuana at a retreat in the mountains surrounding Kathmandu. Campaigners are seeking to legalise cannabis in Nepal. Photo: AP

Nepal activists push to legalise marijuana in the former hippie haven

  • In the 1960s and 70s, Nepal drew thousands of hippies and cannabis use was widely accepted until being criminalised
  • Supporters, including the health minister, have introduced a bill to legalise its farming, use and export, but debate has been delayed by political squabbling
Nepal
Widely available marijuana once drew thousands of hippies to Nepal, where its use was not only accepted but embedded in both the culture and religion.

But the country followed other nations in outlawing marijuana in the late 1970s and chased away the hippies who came on buses from Europe and United States.

Half a century later, campaigners are seeking to again legalise the farming, use and export of marijuana as more countries allow its medicinal and recreational use.

Supporters have introduced a bill in Parliament that would legalise marijuana, although debate has been delayed by continuing squabbles between political parties for power.

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“We are demanding the legalisation of marijuana in Nepal, firstly for medicinal purposes for patients who are dying,” Rajiv Kafle, a campaign leader, said at his “Hippie Hill” retreat in the mountains surrounding the capital, Kathmandu.

Kafle, who lives with HIV, said marijuana helped him cope with pain and kept him away from alcohol and other drugs.

Marijuana use is widely accepted in Nepal. It was freely farmed and attracted Western hippies in the 1960s and 1970s. However, pressure from Western governments made Nepal introduce laws making marijuana and other narcotics illegal.

Some portraits of the most revered Hindu god, Shiva, show him smoking marijuana. Devotees and Hindu holy men are often seen smoking in temples.

Nepal's legalise marijuana campaign leader Rajiv Kafle. Photo: AP

Marijuana plants often grow wild in villages, but police sometimes destroy plants grown on farms for sale.

It is not difficult to buy marijuana in cities, where there are thousands of users.

“You can see everyone smoking in Nepal from young kids to old people,” said Polish tourist Lukasz Walendziak.

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Kafle and a colleague at his retreat were detained last month by police and released on bail but face narcotic distribution charges.

Under the law, anyone possessing marijuana for personal use can be jailed for a month, but distribution and sales are punishable by up to 10 years’ imprisonment depending on the amount of marijuana seized.

A visitor prepares to smoke marijuana at “Hippie Hill” retreat in Nepal. Photo: AP

Kafle said legalisation of marijuana could benefit the country’s economy by attracting tourists, adding that it was the arrival of hippies that brought tourists to Nepal.

“With our low cost of production and the competitive edge we have in the global market for cannabis, we surely are going to win and this is going to change the country,” he said.

The campaigners have convinced some politicians of the benefits of legalising marijuana.

A marijuana campaigner holds a placard during a protest against the arrest of their leader Rajiv Kafle. Photo: AP

Health minister Birod Khatiwada, a powerful member of the governing coalition, has been lobbying for the proposed bill and has registered for debate in Parliament on the issue. He said about 9,000 people are currently in jail on marijuana-related charges.

“I am trying to make it a campaign and issue in Parliament because many countries including the most powerful and developed countries have allowed the use of marijuana,” Khatiwada said.

“The new law would ensure that the benefit is not going to go to one industrialist or small group of businesspeople but rather it will benefit the poor farmers who would use their small plots of land to grow it,” he said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Activists in Nepal seek marijuana legalisation
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