cannabisnews.com: Police Smoke Out Cross-Border Marijuana Trade





Police Smoke Out Cross-Border Marijuana Trade
Posted by CN Staff on April 11, 2003 at 09:10:38 PT
By Karin Kamp
Source: Swissinfo.org
Police in canton Ticino have launched a major crackdown against cannabis growers and distributors to curb the cross-border trade of the drug between Switzerland and Italy. Officers confiscated cannabis - much of it destined for Italy - with an estimated street value of about SFr25 million ($18 million). In a series of raids over the past few weeks, Swiss police seized more than 400 kilogrammes of cannabis and 130,000 plants.
Police said the one of the main aims of “Operation Indoors” was to grab plants grown indoors before they could be moved outside following the onset of warmer weather.The authorities arrested a number of people and closed eight hemp shops in the canton.Police revealed that lawyers and financial agents had also been pulled in for questioning in connection with offences including money laundering.  Crackdown Officers also targeted Italians travelling to canton Ticino to take advantage of Switzerland’s more relaxed attitude to cannabis and the canton’s 75 hemps shops.In the past five years, the number of hemp shops in the canton has more than quadrupled.“What we found out during this operation is that people are not just smuggling in small amounts, such as five to ten grams for personal use.” Orlando Gnosca, who heads up the canton's drugs unit, told swissinfo.“There are a lot of smugglers bringing in ten, 20 or 50 kilos of marijuana illegally into Italy.”According to police, many of the smugglers sneak over the border on foot to avoid the customs guards at the border.“They use the old smugglers routes - paths that cross the border - that were used during the second world war for cigarettes, food and illegal immigrants,” added Gnosca. “There are a lot of smugglers bringing in ten, 20 or 50 kilos of marijuana illegally across the border into Italy.” Orlando Gnosca, head of Ticino's drugs unit  Legal “high”  At present, only hemp with less than 0.3 per cent of tetrahydrocanabinol (THC) - the chemical that gives the “high” when consumed - is permitted under Swiss law.Police said that the amount of THC in the confiscated plants was on average between ten and 20 per cent.To date the consumption of cannabis in Switzerland is illegal, but the hemp plant can be grown for non-drug use, for example to make pasta, beer or soap.A parliamentary commission is currently debating the decriminalisation of cannabis. The Senate has already come out in favour of such a move.Gnosca said police in Ticino plan to continue the crackdown which was launched in response to public outcry over the burgeoning cannabis trade.“The Swiss people are pressuring us to do something about this problem,” Orlando Gnosca, senior police official who heads up canton Ticino’s anti-drugs department, told swissinfo. Key Facts * Cannabis use is currently illegal in Switzerland, but the authorities have adopted a “tolerant” attitude towards it. * Under Swiss proposals to liberalise cannabis, possession and production of the drug cannabis for personal use would be allowed, as well as a limited trade. * But it would remain illegal to import or export cannabis and advertising would be banned.  In Brief  Swiss police have confiscated over 400 kilogrammes of cannabis and 130,000 plants.The estimated street value of the drugs seized was about SFr25 million ($18 million).Most of Ticino's 75 hemp shops are located close to the Italian border.Some smugglers bring in up to 50 kilogrammes of cannabis illegally into Italy. Source: Swissinfo.orgAuthor: Karin KampPublished: April 11, 2003Copyright: swissinfo SRIContact: info swissinfo.chWebsite: http://www.swissinfo.org/Related Articles:Swiss Move Closer To Decriminalisation http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread15507.shtmlSwiss Stand Firm Over Cannabis Law http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread13573.shtml
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Comment #3 posted by FoM on April 11, 2003 at 19:17:49 PT
ekim
Thank you. I guess I really am not up on many of these different plants. 
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Comment #2 posted by ekim on April 11, 2003 at 18:16:54 PT
south of Kalamazoo in Schoolcraft MI
Much wormwood is grown and mashed and run thru a stil I have heard that is is used in obsorbean jr. grows close to the ground thats all I have heard. 
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Comment #1 posted by FoM on April 11, 2003 at 12:04:30 PT
What is Absinthe?
The Return of the Green Fairy: Absinthe Makes a Comeback, Minus the Hallucinations Tom Baker Daily Yomiuri Staff Writer This crime strengthened existing temperance and anti-absinthe movements, and the drink was banned in most of Europe for most of the 20th century. "No drink, not even gin in (satirical artist William) Hogarth's London, has ever had such a bad reputation," Baker writes. Today's absinthe is possibly a bit tamer than the stuff poets and painters--and scandalous female absintheuses--drank at their Parisian cafes. Pernod, its leading manufacturer in the 1800s, began importing a modern version to Japan earlier this year. The high alcohol content remains, but the levels of supposedly vision-inducing wormwood have been reduced. Complete Article: http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20030412woc1.htm
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