Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Italian Medicines Agency (Agenzia italiana del farmaco, AIFA) is the public institution responsible for the regulatory activity of pharmaceuticals in Italy.
In fact, cannabis is the most frequently confiscated narcotic in Italy as a result of the consistently high demand, for a total of 67.7 t (66.6 long tons) in 2021, which by itself represents more than two-thirds of the 91 t (89.6 long tons) of drugs confiscated overall by law enforcement officials in the same year. [28]
Over-the-counter drugs are paid out-of-pocket. Both prescription and over-the-counter drugs used to be sold only in licensed shops (farmacia), although a 2006 law decree liberalised the sale of over-the-counter drugs in supermarkets and other shops (parafarmacia). In a sample of 13 developed countries, Italy was sixth in its population-weighted ...
The drug was in a ship from Colombia and direct to the Calabrian mafia called 'Ndrangheta. On 1 July 2020, a world record in drugs was seized by the Italian Guardia di Finanza in Naples: 14 tons of amphetamines, and 84 million tablets with logo "captagon" produced in Syria by ISIS/Daesh to finance terrorism. More than 1 billion euro market value.
In the Czech Republic the law prohibits possession of amount of a drug, which is "larger than small". The Government mandates which amount is regarded as "larger than small". Nowadays possession of up to 2 grams of Methamphetamine is considered to be a misdemeanour rather than a crime and such possession can be fined up to 15,000 CZK ...
Italian drug traffickers (21 P) Italian pharmacists (1 C, 13 P) P. Pharmaceutical companies of Italy (12 P) S. Drugs in Sardinia (1 C) T. Tobacco companies of Italy ...
Italian regulators said they told OpenAI that its ChatGPT artificial intelligence chatbot has violated European Union’s stringent data privacy rules. The country's data protection authority ...
In Italian law, the main regulatory body for criminal law is the Italian penal code, which is one of the sources of Italian criminal law together with the Constitution and special laws. [25] The Italian penal code was approved with Royal decree no. 1,398 of 19 October 1930, entered into force on 1 July 1931 [ 26 ] and has been amended several ...