Cannabiz Africa with Sunday World
24/08/01, 10:00
Vikizitha Mlotshwa took over as Okhahlamba sheriff after the 2021 municipal elections and has embarked on an ambitious plan to bring traditional cannabis growers into the mainstream. He has the financial backing of the KZN government which has a provincial cannabis ‘master plan’ based on a community development model
The KwaZulu Natal Cannabis Master Plan is coalescing around the Drakensberg’s Okhahlamba (Bergville) municipality which has raised R40 million to develop a low-THC cannabis industry. According to Sunday World, this is believed to be South Africa’s first officially backed community-based cannabis project, incorporating traditional growers from the area.
Vikizitha Mlotshwa, who founded the political party, the African People’s Movement, became the Okhahlamba sheriff after a new coalition came to power in the 2021 municipal elections. He’s embarked on an aggressive cannabis cultivation programme whereby villagers under different tribal authorities are planting the crop for commercial purposes. The community members band themselves into cooperatives with the municipality -taking the responsibility to apply for cannabis production and hemp permits.
A pilot project was started last year with the amaKhosi clan in the district.
“The plan is long overdue and we aim to make this small town on the peripheries of the province the economic heartbeat” he said.
“The focus of the project is producing cannabis with low Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol. Last year we set ourselves a target of cloning and planting 3 100 Europa strains plants, and this has been achieved,” he told Sunday World.
Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol is a crystalline and medicinal compound that is the active ingredient of cannabis. It is mainly used to manage and treat chemotherapy.
According to market research company Straits Research, the global medical cannabis market size was valued at $33.84-billion in 2023 and is expected to reach $235.58-billion by 2032.
READ: Deputy Minister Wants to Nudge Bergville into Producing More Cannabis
Medical cannabis herbal pro-ducts are used to treat conditions such as cancer, chronic pain and mental disorders.
“We are partnering with community organisations, amakhosi and the private sector. This is a big project and we have put people on the municipality’s payroll to manage our various cannabis nurseries. Members of the community are responsible for cannabis farms,” Mlotshwa said.
Through partnerships with the private sector and key government agencies, it will manufacture cannabis and hemp products ready for local consumption and export market.
According to Mlotshwa, the move will turn Okhahlamba, as Bergville is commonly known, into the KwaZulu-Natal headquarters of cannabis cultivation, manufacturing and processing and pumping billions of rand into the local economy.
For Mlotshwa and other villagers in Bergville, the plant has sentimental value. More than 60 years ago, 22 Bergville community members who made a living by trading in marijuana, were executed by the apartheid government.
Through the KwaZulu-Natal Cannabis Master Plan, the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Land Reform committed more than R40-million into cannabis project.
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