Some Arab governments are rethinking harsh cannabis laws
Others use them to lock up restless young men

“WHEN we think about our future, our dreams, we have nothing,” says a young man in Sidi Bouzid. Life in the Tunisian town that launched the Arab spring has barely changed since the country’s old dictator, Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, was ousted in 2011. Unemployment is even higher nationally than before the uprising. Young people are worst-off, which helps explain why an alarming number join jihadist groups. The frustration drives others, including this young man, to use zatla, the local name for cannabis.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Puff, puff, prison”
Middle East & Africa
April 15th 2017- America and Iran are jostling for influence over Iraq
- Why Christians are leaving the Middle East
- Some Arab governments are rethinking harsh cannabis laws
- The reformist president of Iran faces a tough re-election
- Plans for a weirdly unfinished highway in Cape Town
- African universities recruit too many students

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