A Tokyo-based magazine that has repeatedly published issues referring to marijuana use and provided cultivation tips is drawing the ire of the Tokyo metropolitan government, according to a Japanese press report. The magazine is an irregular publication of Core Magazine, which also publishes a number of adult manga titles.
That earned the magazine the designation of a "harmful publication for juveniles" by the Tokyo metro government, which concluded that the article could lead readers to imitate the illustrated cultivation methods. That designation means that the magazine must be kept in a secure location in stores so minors can't see it.
At the time, the publishers played innocent, telling the metro government: "We failed to consider the content of the article. We'll be careful from now on."
But the mag came back with a December article detailing how to grow marijuana on balconies, and another DVD full of illustrative photos. Now it, too, has been designated a harmful publication, and the metro government has issued a "stern warning" to the publishers.
Again, the publishers acted apologetic. "The article was written by an outsider, and our check system dealt with it inadequately," they told the government. "We won't carry similar articles ever again."
While the magazine has been given a stern warning and seen its sale locations restricted, that is all the government can do under Japanese law, and that has officials grumbling. "It was extremely inappropriate for a magazine that juveniles can easily get hold of to carry such an article," said one official. "We took a countermeasure that we believed was best based on our ordinance. But we can't do anything further under the current Cannabis Control Law and our ordinances. All we can do for now is just trust the publisher's word, but that could be a cat-and-mouse game."
The Core magazine controversy comes as the number of marijuana charges being laid by Japanese police is hitting a new high. According to the National Police Agency, some 2,194 people were arrested for possession or cultivation from January through October of last year, putting the year on track for the highest number of pot arrests ever.
Among the arrested have been several sumo wrestlers, including Wakakirin, who got busted last Friday for possession. Police in that case said he told them: "I became interested [in cannabis] after reading about it in a magazine."
Comments
And what do you think 'kiseru' pipes are for?
They ain't just for tobacco, as any honest historian will tell you...
Wow...
less than 3,000 arrested people out of 75 trillion in japan. Sounds like an epidemic.
I'm surprised the Japanese are so intolerant of cannabis, which is essentially a natural theraputic herb. Must have been all than americanism we crammed down their throats after WWII, it's not like they could say no to us.
In reply to Wow... by Anonymous (not verified)
trillion!?!?
I looked it up. It is 127,000,000 That is million. Not billion Not trillion. Still is pretty low occurrence, wouldn't you say? That would make it 3 out of 127,000 or about .0024%. I wonder how much money they are spending to stop the latest drug scourge!
Add new comment