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The Narcotic Drugs Act 1967 (Cth) (the ND Act) establishes a regulatory framework with a dual purpose:
- to prevent the abuse and diversion of controlled narcotics
- to ensure that controlled narcotics are available for medicinal and research purposes within Australia.
The ND Act implements the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, 1961, as amended by the 1972 Protocol (the Single Convention), to which Australia is a party. The operation of the Single Convention is overseen by the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB).
Prior to 2016, the ND Act contained a basic framework for regulating narcotic drugs, principally through licensing the manufacture of narcotic drugs. The main application of the ND Act prior to 2016 was to control narcotic drugs obtained from the opium poppy and the manufacture of licit narcotics, such as morphine.
Other Commonwealth laws at the time regulated the import and export and manufacture of cannabinoids and cannabis raw material. State and Territory laws permitted the cultivation of cannabis plants in Australia for industrial and horticultural purposes. Beyond those limited arrangements, cannabis was generally treated as an illegal narcotic in Commonwealth, State and Territory laws.
The ND Act was amended in February 2016 to establish a national regime permitting the cultivation and production of cannabis and cannabis resin in Australia. The new medicinal cannabis scheme was tailored to the specific objective of making available within Australia a sustainable supply of medicinal cannabis products for therapeutic purposes, and to facilitate scientific research into medicinal cannabis. The existing provisions of the ND Act relating to the manufacture of narcotic drugs were updated to align with the new licence provisions permitting cannabis cultivation and production. New provisions dealt with potential criminal risks of medicinal cannabis products being diverted to unlawful purposes and to criminal infiltration of the industry. A central aim of the 2016 amendments was to ensure that Australia would remain compliant with its international treaty obligations under the Single Convention.
The 2016 amendments required the Minister to initiate a review of the operation of the ND Act as soon as possible after the second anniversary of the commencement of the 2016 amendments.[2] The report of the review is to be tabled in both houses of Parliament before the third anniversary - in effect, by 29 October 2019. The requirement for the review recognises that the new regulatory framework for the cultivation, production and manufacture of medicinal cannabis opened an important but untested field of regulation in Australia.
The Hon Greg Hunt MP, Australian Minister for Health (the Minister), appointed Professor John McMillan AO to conduct an independent review of the operation of the ND Act, commencing in January 2019. Professor McMillan is an Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University and has relevant professional experience in administrative and constitutional law, as a legal practitioner and as a Commonwealth and State agency head. He has held appointments as Australian Information Commissioner, Commonwealth Ombudsman, New South Wales Ombudsman (Acting), Integrity Commissioner for the Australian Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity (Acting) and member of the Australian Copyright Tribunal.