German 'cannabis clubs' on high as legalisation looms
Hanover's cannabis club started as a fringe outfit of nine members campaigning for the right to legally light up joints. Now the group, and others like it, are flourishing and mainstream as Germany gears up to legalise marijuana.
This month the government approved a draft law legalising the purchase and possession of cannabis for recreational use, despite fierce criticism.
At the heart of the plans, which must still go through parliament, are so-called "cannabis social clubs".
Under the proposals, each group can have up to 500 members and will be allowed to cultivate cannabis for their own use at a rate of up to three plants per person under the watchful eye of the authorities.
Each club member will be allowed to purchase up to 25 grams (0.9 ounces) a day from the club, up to a maximum of 50 grams a month.
For those aged 18 to 21, the amount is lower, up to a maximum of 30 grams a month.
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While members will still not be allowed to light up together at their meetings, the coming changes have led to the number of cannabis clubs in Germany rising sharply. There are now around 100.
Applications to join the Hanover group -- which started life in 2016 staging pro-cannabis demonstrations at Christmas markets and festivals -- have exploded.
"Over the past few months, we have been contacted by nearly 800 people," said founder Heinrich Wieker, a former electrical engineer aged 58.
For now, however, the group has accepted just 57 of the applicants.
"I want to get to know them. I have to integrate them into the team and assign them tasks," he told AFP, before opening one of the group's twice-weekly meetings in a co-working space.
Growing debate
Seven people took part in the meeting, but there was no cannabis smoke wafting through the room, which looked like a typical workplace, with desks, computers and a whiteboard.
On the agenda at the gathering were cultivation and preventing addiction.
"On Sunday, we went to see a place in Hanover where we could possibly cultivate (cannabis)," said Oliver W., a 48-year-old, retired electrician, who did not want to give his full name.
One option is to grow the plants in special cultivation boxes under artificial lights, said Wieker.
Another option is "to have a large plantation outside, which I personally prefer as it is a more sustainable method," added the founder, who was sporting orange sandals.
As well as the club, Wieker, who has previously worked in the pharmaceutical, chemical and car industries, also founded his own business making machines to harvest cannabis.
For now, club membership costs 20 euros ($22), plus a monthly fee of five euros.
But the price, which mainly covers the rental of premises, could rise if it includes the supply of the drug.
Wieker believes the best answer is to sell cannabis by the gram to members, with those who use the club a lot paying more than those who only use it rarely.
He believes the price should be between a highly competitive five and 15 euros a gram to cover production.
Contentious
The push to legalise cannabis in Europe's most populous country, a flagship project of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's centre-left-led coalition, has however proven controversial.
The proposals have run into strong opposition from conservative politicians, doctors and law enforcement officials.
But Health Minister Karl Lauterbach has argued the approach would crack down on the black market and drug-related crime, ease the burden on law enforcement and allow for safer consumption.
Safeguards have been included in the draft.
Cannabis use is banned for under-18s, and every club is required to have a member responsible for combating addiction.
In Wieker's club, a group has been set up comprised of members previously addicted to other substances, including alcohol and heroin, to be on the lookout for such problems.
"We are keeping a close eye on any problematic consumption," he said, adding the club was also in touch with an association that helps drug addicts.
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Source: AFP