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Ghanaian lawyer, Maurice Kwabena Ampaw, has said some Christian pastors
and court judges in the country are in the habit of smoking marijuana,
though smoking or possessing the substance is a criminal and
non-bailable offence under Ghana’s laws.
Mr Ampaw did not mention
the names of specific pastors or judges but said he has information
that they hide to smoke the illegal substance, also known as ‘ganja’ or
‘weed’, behind closed doors.
“When a pastor smokes weed before
preaching to his congregation, that is between the pastor and God, if
the weed is his source of inspiration. Some do it in secret. There are
some pastors who smoke before preaching. They go into their bedrooms to
hide and inhale one or two puffs of weed. So when he (the pastor) stands
before his congregation to preach, he does not get tired. Some of them
do it but they do not do it openly,” Lawyer Ampaw told Kwame Nkrumah
Tikese on Okay 101.7 FM Tuesday morning.
He continued: “Lawyers
are not God. If even pastors are smoking weed, how much more lawyers and
judges. Some smoke in secrete. What I am saying is a secret thing and
not done publicly. They hide to smoke it and then put on lavender or put
something in their mouth to hide the scent. When you meet them, they
look very gentle but you never know they have smoked weed.”
Mr
Ampaw was expressing his legal opinion on the arrest and prosecution of
hiplife artiste Kwaw Kesse for possessing and smoking a substance
suspected to be marijuana.
“I feel a lot of pity over the Kwaw
Kesse case because his offense is a non-bailable one. The two weeks
remand in police custody the judge gave him was just to allow for
investigations…And if he is found guilty, the least he can get is ten
years, unless he really begs and he gets people saying it was not
intentional and that he did not know or they really say something,” Mr
Ampaw added.
When asked his opinion on the school of thought that
marijuana should be decriminalised in Ghana, Lawyer Ampaw said though
smoking marijuana has its benefits, decriminalising its usage would lead
to an avoidable abuse.
“Weed has its benefits. Smoking it has
its own benefits but the abuse of it is the problem, not the smoking of
the weed per se… If it is legalised, it would be abused and you would
have pastors smoking openly in church, or students smoking openly in the
examination hall. But the debate must go on though if it is legalised,
the effect on the nation would be too much,” Mr Ampaw noted. |
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