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NETHERLANDS: Dutch take sober look at marijuana laws

Ken Dilanian

Monterey Herald

Friday 06 Jan 2006

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AMSTERDAM - Paul Wilhelm speaks about marijuana the way a vintner might
discuss wine. He talks of aroma, taste and texture, of flowering
periods, of the pros and cons of hydroponic cultivation.

Wilhelm's connoisseurship might earn him a long prison sentence in the
United States, but here in the Netherlands, he's just another taxpaying
businessman. He owns a long-established pot emporium - the Dutch call
them "coffee shops" - where customers can sidle up to the bar, peruse a
detailed menu, and choose from 22 variations of fragrant marijuana and
18 types of potent hash.

Business got even better after Wilhelm's shop, the Dampkring, was
featured earlier last year in the film "Ocean's Twelve."

And yet life is not as simple for Wilhelm as it is for the pub owner
down the street, thanks to the contradictory nature of Holland's
famously liberal drug laws. Though the business is duly licensed and
regulated, to run it properly he is forced to flout the law on a daily
basis. While the Netherlands allows the sale of small amounts of
marijuana in coffee shops, it is still illegal to grow marijuana, store
it, and transport it in the kind of quantities that any popular shop
requires.

Last month, the Dutch parliament began debating a proposal to change
that by launching a pilot project to regulate marijuana growing. It was
the brainchild of the mayor of Maastricht, a city near the German and
Belgian borders that is plagued by gangs of smugglers. Proponents argue
that legalizing growing will drive out most of the criminal element and
boost responsible purveyors.

"The current policy is schizophrenic," Wilhelm said. "Under the rules,
we can only keep 500 grams in the shop at any one time, so that means I
have to have more delivered every few hours. And if the delivery guy
gets stopped, they take everything, and he gets arrested."

For years, that odd state of affairs seemed to work well, because it
allowed the Dutch to tolerate marijuana without having to risk the
opprobrium that would come from legalizing it. But organized crime has
come to play an increasing role in production, the government has found.

A majority in parliament has come out in favor of the bill to
decriminalize growing, reflecting widespread Dutch comfort with a
liberal marijuana policy. But the ruling Christian Democratic Party,
which has increasingly tightened the rules on coffee shops, opposes it.
Analysts expect the government to block implementation even if the
measure passes.

"It won't solve anything," said Ivo Hommes, a spokesman for the justice
ministry. "You will still have a large amount of people that will grow
marijuana for illegal sales and for international export."

Though they consider the bill a good first step, Wilhelm and other
coffee-shop owners agree. What they really want is full legalization of
cannabis. Polls show that a majority of Dutch support that, but the
government says it would run afoul of the international narcotics
conventions that the Netherlands and most other nations have signed.

Whatever the fate of the legislation, the Dutch debate underscores a
schism in the developed world over how to deal with drug use.

Even as the United States continues to spend tens of billions of dollars
each year fighting a war on drugs that lately has included an increasing
number of marijuana arrests, much of Europe and Canada have instead
opted to treat drug use as a public-health problem.

While no country has gone as far as the Netherlands and allowed open
sales of marijuana, in most of Europe possession of small amounts of
cannabis, and even cocaine and heroin, merits only a fine. And penalties
for drug dealing are far lower than in the United States.

Rejecting the approach that has filled America's jails with nonviolent
drug offenders, Europeans and Canadians have embraced the concept of
"harm reduction," which argues that illegal drug use is impossible to
stamp out, and therefore the best public policy is to minimize the
damage to society.

A central tenet of this approach is giving out clean needles to drug
addicts to prevent the spread of HIV - something that remains
controversial in the United States but is common in Europe and Canada.

But it goes further: Several countries allow government-funded
"consumption rooms" for drug users, to provide them with social services
and dissuade them from using drugs on the street. And at least four
countries - Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands and Spain - have
programs under which the government gives heroin to hard-core addicts
and lets them inject themselves in a government-sponsored facility.

That idea is profoundly controversial, but the Swiss, who pioneered the
practice a decade ago, insist that it has dramatically reduced drug
deaths and street crime by addict participants, who no longer have to
steal or mug to feed their habits.

Antonio Costa, an Italian who heads the United Nations Office of Drugs
and Crime in Vienna, has little patience for Europe's tolerant stance,
which he believes is behind a recent upswing in cocaine use in the
region. While overall European drug use has never been as high as that
in the United States, American rates have been falling while European
rates have been rising.

Many other Europeans, though, shake their heads at what they consider a
moralistic, absolutist mind-set among America's drug warriors.

It's not that there is no common ground: Even the Dutch arrest drug
smugglers (including marijuana traffickers), and in July the Dutch
government signed a cooperation agreement with Washington.

But the Dutch coffee-shop policy is grounded in a belief that is
anathema to American drug enforcers: that cannabis is no more harmful
than alcohol. Dutch experts argue that this remains true even though
much of the marijuana grown these days is far more potent than the kind
smoked by the flower children of the 1960s.

American officials have long sought to discredit Europe's more liberal
drug policies, and the Dutch experience in particular - sometimes with a
selective use of statistics.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, for example, takes aim in an
anti-legalization paper on its Web site under a subheading, "Europe's
More Liberal Drug Policies Are Not the Right Model for America."

The agency points out that from 1984 to 1996, marijuana use doubled
among 18- to 25-year-olds in Holland. What it doesn't say is that
marijuana use in the Netherlands has been stable since then, and it
remains lower than in the United States, which has seen use rise from a
low in 1992.

Indeed, 30 years after the Netherlands began allowing open marijuana
sales, only about 3 percent of the Dutch population - or 408,000 people
- use marijuana in a given year, compared with 8.6 percent - or 25.5
million - Americans, according to the most authoritative surveys by both
governments.

Dutch health officials say there is no evidence that the country's
tolerant marijuana policy encourages use of harder drugs, which here is
about average compared with the rest of Europe, and far lower than in
the United States. To the contrary, proponents argue, the policy is
designed to separate hard drugs from soft, because coffee shops found
selling hard drugs are shut down.

In the United States, meanwhile, the war on drugs has increasingly
become a war on pot.

A study of FBI data released last year by a Washington-based think tank,
the Sentencing Project, found that between 1992 and 2002, marijuana
arrests rose from 28 percent of all drug arrests to 45 percent, while
the proportion of heroin and cocaine cases dropped from 55 percent of
all drug arrests to less than 30 percent.

The rationale behind such a crackdown mystifies Dutch cannabis
aficionados such as Wilhelm. He doesn't argue that marijuana is
harmless. But he sees every day that it can be enjoyed recreationally
and responsibly, just like alcohol.

"I've got three daughters, and I want to know that if they do try
marijuana, they're not going to get it where someone is going to offer
them some cocaine or an ecstasy pill," Wilhelm said. "I don't say that
marijuana is healthy, but it's there. You can't close your eyes and
think that if you lock everybody up, it's going to disappear."

http://www.montereyherald.com/mld/montereyherald/news/world/13564278.htm

 

 

 

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