Switzerland, which pioneered prescription heroin and safe injection sites decades ago, is now experimenting with decriminalizing recreational cannabis, with the drug now available in some Basel pharmacies.
“This is 1,000 times better,” said Paul, a 42-year-old resident of the northern Swiss city, as he picked up a package of cannabis from his local pharmacy.
After buying his drug of choice on the street from “weird people or criminals” for the past 25 years, Paul, who asked that his surname not be published, is taking part in a pilot program allowing him to acquire it over the counter.
Photo: AFP
“People are happy, since they for the first time can buy it legally,” pharmacist Lucas Meister said, showing off a stash of colorful packages containing various dried cannabis flowers and hashish-based products.
His is one of nine pharmacies that have been chosen to take part in the two-year pilot for the legal sale of recreational cannabis.
Thousands of people applied to take part in the trial, but Paul, who mainly uses the drug to treat his depression, was among just 400 chosen.
Cannabis is legal for medical use in the wealthy Alpine nation, but only in extreme cases, such as pain relief for cancer patients.
Low-potency cannabis can also be purchased legally for non-medical use, but only when it contains less than 1 percent tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) — the component that gets recreational users high — and while more potent cannabis is illegal, carrying up to 10g of more potent cannabis for one’s own consumption is not punishable by law.
However, while there are already a few ways to consume the drug without risking run-ins with the police, pressure has been mounting for legalization.
In 2021, about 70 percent of the population favored liberalizing the laws, up from 58 percent three years earlier, Swiss Federal Office of Public Health data showed.
“We have to get out of the illicit cannabis framework, but ensure strict regulation,” said Barbara Broers, vice president of a federal commission on issues surrounding addiction. “It is important that people have access to controlled and regulated products, but we are proposing to ban advertising and to have plain packaging, as with cigarettes in some countries. This is not about encouraging consumption.”
The Swiss government has opted for a small-steps approach and authorized trials to take place over the coming decade.
In Basel, participants are aged 18 to 76, and the aim is to study “the effects of regulated cannabis sale ... on mental health and on consumption behavior,” said Marc Walter, a psychiatry professor at the University of Basel and head of the study.
So far, participants have been especially drawn to “products with a very high level of THC,” he said.
The 5g packs that Meister keeps in his pharmacy safe contain products with THC levels ranging from 4.5 to 20 percent. They are priced from 8 to 12 Swiss francs (US$8.73 to US$13.09) per gram, depending on the THC level, in line with black-market pricing.
The pricing level was very deliberate, said Marc Brungger, an executive at the Swiss company Pure Production, which is producing cannabis for the Basel trial.
“If prices are too low, people would try to resell the product, and if they are too high, they would turn to the black market,” he said.
Other major Swiss cities, including Zurich, Geneva and Lausanne, are planning to launch similar trials.
In Basel, Paul said he is thrilled to leave street dealers behind and to finally know with certainty what he is getting: “Pure and organic cannabis,” grown in Switzerland and quality-guaranteed by the Swiss authorities.
“I want to consume cannabis, not chemicals made in China,” he said, voicing horror at the arrival on the street of synthetic cannabinoids — laboratory-made molecules that mimic the THC effect.
The marketing specialist said it was a shame Switzerland had not taken a more direct route to legalization, as in some US states, Canada and Uruguay, but Walter said he was happy “Switzerland has chosen another route.”
“As a scientist, I prefer that,” he said.
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