Huddah Monroe has vowed to never touch marijuana/weed/cannabis sativa ever again. She never explained her reasons. Photo credit: Instagram/huddahthebosschick
Huddah Monroe has vowed to never touch marijuana/weed/cannabis sativa ever again. She never explained her reasons. Photo credit: Instagram/huddahthebosschick

Huddah Monroes vows to never touch marijuana ever again!

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2 mins read

Huddah Monroe has always been a fan of marijuana and she’s always stood by it even defending its medicinal use on social media when she can.

For whatever reason/s that she didn’t indulge into, she has vowed never to partake in marijuana ever again.

The magnetic socialite cume businesswoman and entrepreneur took to Instagram Stories to tell her million fans from all over the world that she’s done completely with marijuana and she doesn’t see herself taking it going forward.

This has come as a shock to many people who have been her stans forever since she’s been publicly praising the drug for years.

“I never wanna see weed again! I‘m done,” she wrote on her Instagram story yesterday on 16, November 2021.

There have always been a debate about the legalization of medicinal marijuana for the longest time especially in Africa but the late Kibra Member of Parliament(MP) Kenneth Okoth who died on July 26, 2019, proposed the Marijuana Control Bill 2018 to have marijuana legalized and regulated to ensure its safe usage.

“The proposed Bill seeks to ensure that there is regulation for growth and safe use of marijuana and hemp including the registration of growers of growers, producers, manufacturers and users with special focus on protection of children/minors from illicit use just as we do with tobacco and alcohol,” read the September 21, 2018 letter that he wrote to the National Assembly Speaker Justin Muturi.

The bill is yet to be debated on in the Kenyan parliament.

Lesotho became the very first African country to legalize marijuana to grant administrative licenses for commercial cultivation of marijuana for medical and scientific purposes.

Zimbabwe, South Africa, Malawi, Zambia, Uganda, Rwanda, and eSwatini have also followed suit.