Kenya's High Court rejects Rastafarian cannabis exemption, calls for national drug policy debate
Justice Bahati Mwamuye of Kenya's High Court dismissed a Rastafarian petition to legalise cannabis for religious use on July 15, finding Kenya's drug laws do not violate the community's constitutional rights, but separately urged the state to hold a national debate on drug policy; Rastafarians say they will appeal
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Summary
Kenya's High Court on July 15 dismissed a petition by the country's Rastafarian community seeking to legalise cannabis for religious use. Justice Bahati Mwamuye ruled that Kenya's drug laws do not violate the community's constitutional right to freedom of religion and that granting an exemption would require "a sound constitutional and legal foundation," per the Jamaica Gleaner's AP report. The petitioners had argued cannabis is central to Rastafarian worship and its prohibition violated rights to religion, privacy, and equality. Even so, Mwamuye separately called on the state to hold a national debate on drug policy, with Prism News reporting he described the current regime as possibly untenable. The Rastafarian community says it will appeal.
The split
Kenyan outlets (Kenya Times, Prism News) focus on the ruling's dual message: rejection of the exemption alongside the court's own note that Kenya's drug laws may need re-examination. South Africa's Citizen highlighted the community's appeal plans. Jamaica's Gleaner, running an AP dispatch with regional resonance for the Rastafarian diaspora, provided the fullest summary of the court's legal reasoning. Planet Today noted the challenge to Kenya's 1994 drug laws, which predate most contemporary drug-policy debates.
By the numbers
- 1994, the year Kenya's drug laws were enacted, which the court upheld
- 2 outcomes in the same ruling: exemption denied, national policy debate urged
Why it matters
The ruling sets the precedent that religious freedom does not automatically override drug prohibition in Kenya, a question courts in several African and Caribbean countries have faced. The judge's simultaneous call for a national debate signals the court's awareness that the 1994 law may not have public legitimacy, even if it remains constitutionally valid. An appeal will keep the question open.
What to watch
- The Rastafarian community's appeal and its legal grounds
- Whether Kenya's government launches the national drug policy debate the court called for
- Comparable rulings in other African jurisdictions facing similar Rastafarian petitions