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to Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Index Indian
Hemp Drugs CommissionIntroductionby
Tod Mikuriya, M.D. The
Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report*, comprising some nine volumes and 3,698 pages,
is by far the most completed and systematic study of marijuana undertaken to date.
Because of the rarity and, perhaps, the formidable size of this document, the
wealth of information contained in it has not found its way into contemporary
writings on this subject. This is indeed unfortunate, as many of the issues concerning
marijuana being argued in the United States today were dealt with in the Indian
Hemp Drugs Commission Report. It
is both surprising and gratifying to note the timeless and lucid quality of the
writings of these British bureaucrats. It would be fortunate if studies undertaken
by contemporary commissions, task force committees and study groups could measure
up to the standards of thoroughness and general objectivity embodied in this report.
In the current context of violently polarized attitudes toward marijuana, the
prospect of a study of similar stature would be improbably if not impossible.
History of
British Involvement The
British government in India had substantial knowledge of intoxicants other than
alcohol because of their active involvement in regulation, taxation and actual
trafficking in these substances for over a hundred years prior to the Hemp Drugs
Commission investigation and report. In
1790 duties on alcohol and other intoxicant drugs were first levied by the British
on Landlords in India. The regulation of cannabis preparations was further specified
in 1793 in regulation XXXIV of that year: "No personal shall manufacture
or vend any such drugs (bhang* ganja**, charas*** and other intoxicating drugs)
without a license from the collector of the zillah_." This
system of regulation was instituted "with a view to check immoderation consumption,
and at the same time to augment the public revenue." In
1800 in a further modification of regulation, the manufacture and sale of charas
was prohibited as "being of a most noxious quality," while daily rates
of duty were declared as the basis for taxing procedures. Curiously, in 1824 the
restriction on charas was rescinded "as this drug was found on examination
to be not more prejudicial to health than ganja or other intoxicating drugs."
In 1849 limits
on retail sale of cannabis drugs were fixed "for better securing the abkari__
revenue of Calcutta," and later extended to the __________________________________________________________
* Leaves and
flowers of wild growing or inferior cultivated cannabis plants. **
Flowering tops of the cannabis plant ***
Resin from the mature cannabis plant _
A county-sized district or administrative division (India) __
Manufacture or sale of intoxicating Liquors or drugs; hence, an excise or internal
revenue tax on such manufacture of sale (India) [Abkar:
A wine seller; distiller. Also, one whose trade is subject to abkari tax]
whole of Bengal.
Four years later the daily tax method was abandoned and a fee charged on a per
weight basis, and in 1860 an additional set of dealers' fees imposed. It
should be noted, however, that the system of the state of Bengal was only one
of several schemes among the many provinces. Variations on this approach existed
in the other states, a function of the differing local administrations, reflecting
the degree of administrative and fiscal controls exerted by the Imperial government.
There had apparently
been controversies as to the possible noxious effects of cannabis drugs, at least
from the time of the inception of British controls on these products, unless we
assume that the initial stated reasons for regulation were merely cynical rationalizations
for obtaining additional sources of revenue. Within a country of several hundred
millions of inhabitants, divided into hundreds of regions, and with only rudimentary
"homogenizing" forces of effective transportation and mass media, it
is perhaps reasonable to infer that wide variations in opinions and beliefs would
be encountered. Formation
of the Commission On
2 March 1893 a question was raised in the British House of Commons concerning
the effects of the production and consumption of hemp drugs in the province of
Bengal, India. In response, the Government of India convened a seven-member commission
to look into these questions, 3 July 1893. Upon the suggestion of Lord Kimberley
the scope of the investigation was expanded to include all of India. Procedures
The Commission
actually met for the first time in Calcutta 3 August 1893. Between this date and
6 August of the following year, when the study was finished, the Commission received
evidence from 1,455 witness. Field trips were made to thirty cities in eight provinces
and Burma from the end of October 1893 through the latter part of April 1894.
Eighty-six meetings for examination of witnesses transpired during the inquiry.
Actual participation of the members of the Commission was duly noted and reported
-- a custom that it might be worthwhile to revive: The
following statement shows the attendance of the members of the Commission during
the period occupied in inquiry (3rd August 1893 to April 1894): Period
of Attendance with
the commission Number of meetings (a)
During the (b) during the for examination of Name
first tour second tour witnesses attended President
83 days 183 days 86 Mr.
Ommaney Ditto Ditto 85 Mr.
Fraser Ditto Ditto 85 Dr.
Warden Ditto Ditto 86 Raja
Soshi From 3rd August From 30th October 44 Sikhareswar
to 15th September to 24th January, Roy
44 days from 14th to 16th February, from
22nd to 24th February, and
from 7th to 25th March, 112
days Kanwar Harnam
Singh 83 days From 13th November 48 to
5th January, 22nd February
to 2nd April, and
from 12th to 25th April, 78
days Lala
Nihal Chand 3rd August to From 30th October to 18th 5 20th
September, November and from 17th to 49
days 25th April 29
days The attendance
of Raja Soshi Sikhareswar Roy was broken by occasional absence caused by ill-health
and other reasons. The
absence of Kanwar Harnam Singh during two short periods was due to ill-health.
The prolonged absence of Lala Nihal Chand was due to the fact that he suffered
from continued ill-health, and was able to be with the Commission only at Calcutta
at the first; then for some part of their preliminary tour, and at a few meetings
for the examination of witnesses during the second tour. All the members were
present at Simla during the preparation of the report. Witnesses
whose evidence was received by the Commission were divided into three categories:
(1) Official
witnesses able to give information regarding hemp drugs, based on their official
and local experience. (2)
Non-official witnesses of all ranks able to give information regarding the drugs
generally or in connection with certain classes of the people. (3)
Other persons or associations having facts or holding opinions which they desired
to communicated to the Commission. Civil
Officers 467 Medical
Officers 214 Private
Practitioners (European methods) 34 Private
Practitioners (Native methods) 87 Cultivators
144 Professional
men 55 Missionaries
34 Associations
24 Persons Engaged
in Trade 75 Others
59 1,455
228* Native states
189* Native states
* Supplementary
Volume - 1895 To
facilitate collection of information, seventy questions framed by the Commission
were given to witnesses. The written answers to these questions constituted the
bulk of the evidence before the Commission. Where appropriate, witnesses were
examined orally for further clarification or explanation. In addition, witnesses
who had not submitted written statements were examined orally. It was duly noted
in the record which forms of testimony had been provided by the individual witnesses.
The following
excerpts discusses evidence received in testimony and from other sources. Philosophic
premises concerning roles and responsibilities of the individual are outlined
as a prelude to discussing the practical issues of taxation, political policy,
public safety and health. In applying the principles of English Common Law to
peoples in a subcontinent whose beliefs and customs varied greatly from those
of Great Britain, the issues of feasibility and the common good were of prime
concern. If schemes of regulation of intoxicants followed this rationalistic model
today, the mistakes made then might not require repeating in each generation.
Current technologic advances do not produce progress in the area of human behavior;
they only help to magnify defects and frailties. |