International Opium Convention
Encyclopedia : I : IN : INT : International Opium Convention
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| International Opium Convention | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Opened for signature | January 23, 1912 in The Hague | ||
| Entered into force | February 11, 1915 / June 28, 1919 | ||
| Conditions for entry into force | ??? | ||
| Parties | ??? | ||
The Convention was implemented in 1915 by the United States, Netherlands, China, Honduras, and Norway. It went into force globally in 1919 when it was incorporated into the Treaty of Versailles.
A revised International Opium Convention was signed on February 19, 1925, which went into effect on September 25, 1928[link]. It introduced a statistical control system to be supervised by a Permanent Central Opium Board, a body of the League of Nations. Egypt recommended that a prohibition on hashish be added to the Convention, and a sub-committee proposed the following text:
- The use of Indian hemp and the preparations derived therefrom may only be authorized for medical and scientific purposes. The raw resin (charas), however, which is extracted from the female tops of the cannabis sativa L, together with the various preparations (hashish, chira, esrar, diamba, etc.) of which it forms the basis, not being at present utilized for medical purposes and only being susceptible of utilisation for harmful purposes, in the same manner as other narcotics, may not be produced, sold, traded in, etc., under any circumstances whatsoever.
The Convention was superseded by the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs.
See also
References
- [The cannabis problem: A note on the problem and the history of international action], Bulletin on Narcotics, 1962.
- [The beginnings of international drug control], UN Chronicle, Summer, 1998.
- [International Opium Convention Signed at The Hague January 23, 1912].
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