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01/05/2004: Criminally Absurd Criminally Absurd

A Modest Proposal
from AlterNet

What if a poor African country could grow a plant that would fetch healthy prices in the U.S? What if the plant could be grown on small farms, encouraging democracy in this poor African country by putting cash into the hands of its poorest and most powerless people? What if such a plant could reduce the poor African country's dependence on the U.S. for aid?

Of course, the U.S. would cheer such a plant and the country that grows it. And President George Bush would be especially glad, since improving living standards in Africa is one of his key global objectives.

Such a plant does exist, and an African country is growing it in good measure. Yet President Bush isn't cheering. Worse, the Bush administration is fighting a war against the plant and the poor African country that grows it.

Guess what that plant is?


What if a poor African country could grow a plant that would fetch
healthy prices in the U.S? What if the plant could be grown on small
farms, encouraging democracy in this poor African country by putting
cash into the hands of its poorest and most powerless people? What if
such a plant could reduce the poor African country's dependence on the
U.S. for aid?

Of course, the U.S. would cheer such a plant and the country that grows
it. And President George Bush would be especially glad, since improving
living standards in Africa is one of his key global objectives.

Such a plant does exist, and an African country is growing it in good
measure. Yet President Bush isn't cheering. Worse, the Bush
administration is fighting a war against the plant and the poor African
country that grows it.

The country is Ghana, in West Africa, and the plant is cannabis or
"ganja," the term preferred by Ghanaians. Marijuana grown in Ghana is of
good quality, plentiful and relatively inexpensive. Twenty neatly rolled
sticks of pot, or about half an ounce, sell for about $3.

That's right, good pot sells for $6 an ounce in Ghana. Here is the
highest stage of capitalism – the free market – in action.

Ghana is one of the most peaceful countries in sub-Saharan Africa. The
country rarely sees any violence (a benefit of pot-smoking?), has a
democratically elected government and boasts one of the freest societies
in Africa. Pot has been grown and smoked in the country for decades,
drawing little comment. In Accra, the coastal capital of Ghana, people
smoke discreetly, to be sure, because the sale and possession of pot is
technically illegal. But pot is easy to purchase, arrests are rare, and
smoking is popular, especially among American and European aid workers
in the country.

For pot smokers, Accra is an African paradise. But like many a paradise
in Africa, Accra is threatened by a man-made disaster. The disaster,
funded by American tax dollars, is the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA).

I am no expert in the world's drug wars, or the DEA, but I spent the
better part of the past two years in Ghana and I never saw any signs of
pot ripping apart the fabric of Ghanaian life. There are no drug lords
in Accra, no gun-toting bodyguards or pot addicts strewn across the
city's derelict roads.

Just the opposite is occurring, actually. Pot is giving a people starved
for economic opportunity a chance to participate in the global economy.
Ghana is one of the losers in the world's experiment with widening
trade. Goods flood into Ghana from China, Brazil, Mexico, even the U.S.
And not just manufactured products either. Butter is imported from
France, pasta and canned tomatoes from Italy, rolled oats from Germany
and rice from the U.S. Because the cost of producing and shipping these
foods is subsidized by European, U.S. and Canadian governments, their
cost in Ghana is sometimes less than it is in the country of origin. And
even if it isn't, these imports ruin the lives of African food
producers. American rice, imported into Ghana, sells for substantially
less than rice grown in Ghana.

The burden of food imports would be less crushing if Ghana exported an
equal amount of goods, but the country doesn't. It hardly exports
anything. The country's two leading exports are cacao beans (the basic
ingredient in cocoa and chocolate) and gold. These exports are the
foundation of Ghana's economy – today and 100 years ago.

Ghana has low farm costs, making it an attractive place (in theory) to
grow fruits and vegetables. But because of deplorable "feeder" roads to
Ghana's cities and ports, roughly one-third to one-half of the country's
crop of delicious pineapples rots before reaching market. Nearly as many
of Ghana's plentiful bananas suffer the same fate.

Marijuana has a longer shelf life. For poor Ghana, it offers a lifeline
to a more diverse and durable economic future.

To achieve this does not require a revolution in world drug laws either.
European countries have eased their restrictions on marijuana, creating
a chance for African growers to tap the huge market in cities such as
Amsterdam, Stockholm and Copenhagen. After all, West Africa is a short
hop by sea or plane to Western Europe, giving Africans an edge over
producers elsewhere in the world.

Simply, then, by sticking to the gray area of the world's fuzzy pot
laws, Ghana could reap substantial benefits. Instead, the U.S. insists
that Ghana buy American rice and yet refuses to allow its citizens to
purchase Ghana's marijuana. Whatever the arrangement is, it is not free
trade.

To add to the injury, the Bush administration wants to fuel a drug war
in Ghana, where pot exporters are so sophisticated and nefarious that
their preferred method of transporting weed is to hide it in shipments
of yams bound for Europe.

Against this menace stands the DEA. About six months ago, the agency
privately persuaded the government of Ghana to accept its advice and
mount a campaign of resistance against pot production and distribution.
The DEA offered the carrot of "technical assistance" – jargon in
foreign-aid speak for equipment and cash that African police, who are
woefully underpaid, long for.

For now the DEA-inspired move against Ghana's pot growers has resulted
in publicized destruction of fields, some arrests – and more aid for
Ghana from a grateful U.S. government.

G. Pascal Zachary served in 2003 as Ghana director for Journalists for
Human Rights, a media training group based in Toronto.