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Netherlands: Many Dutch coffee shops close as liberal policies change

Earthtimes

Thursday 26 Apr 2007

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Enschede, the Netherlands- Dense smoke and a slightly sweet smell are in
the air in the De Molen coffee shop, home to a porcelain Buddha with a
"joint" in its hand that sits in a corner next to the bar. In this
coffee shop in the Dutch city of Enschede, located only a few kilometres
west of the German border, soft drugs such as hashish and marihuana are
sold openly, attracting drug tourists mainly from Germany.

But the boundlessly liberal drug policy in the Netherlands is on the
ropes, and many coffee shops have already had to close.

In Enschede, which counts about 155,000 residents, the number of shops
fell from 17 in 1999 to 9 in 2007. The cities of Maastricht and Arnheim
also reported decreases.

"Many Germans come to visit Enschede just because of our coffee shops -
that is a fact," says Enschede city spokesman Michael Haase.

This becomes obvious when once takes a look at the location of these shops.

"Three-hundred metres beyond the tollgate is the first coffee shop,"
says Franziskus Siegers, head of the drug counselling centre in the
German border town of Gronau in the state of Westphalia.

This situation however does not serve the interests of the town councils
and the Dutch government.

The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs has published a brochure
complaining that shops located along the border that are visited by drug
tourists "frequently" led to trouble.

Haase also knows of cases where passers-by have been harassed in Enschede.

This is why the number of coffee shops had to be reduced. Since 1999
Dutch local politicians have had the right to shut down shops even if
there were no reports of trouble or disturbances.

"As far as the drug policy is concerned, there is a consensus amongst
all political parties," Haase says.

Christoph Boenig, spokesman of cross-border network Euregio, confirms
this, saying "Dutch local politicians have watched the drug tourism
critically and have tightened the reins."

This development is reflected in the decreasing number of Dutch coffee
shops, which, according to a study of the Utrecht Trimbos- Institute,
has been reduced from 1179 in 1997 to 737 in 2004.

De Molen coffee shop has so far survived the wave of closures and
currently sells seven varieties of marihuana.

The cheapest is called "Ketama," 0.8 grammes are purchasable at the
price of five euros (about 7 dollars). "You can choose from many
different flavours and strengths," a saleswoman explains.

Fifty customers are normally served in the shop per day, the number
rising to 100 on public holidays, with the number of Germans and Dutch
about equal.

Each customer is allowed to buy up to five grammes of soft drugs
including the cannabis products marihuana and hashish. Coffee shops may
store a maximum of 500 grammes.

But as their effectiveness has increased over the past years, the term
"soft drugs" is misleading. The content of tetrahydrocannabinol in the
cannabis is critical, "having risen from 10 to up to 25 per cent," says
Heinrich Rabe, head of the customs authority in the German city of
Nordhorn, just across the border from Enschede.

In addition, the drugs are diluted with other chemicals, leading to
potentially dangerous mixtures. "Sometimes even rat poison is added,"
Ulrich Schulze of the customs investigation in Essen, Germany, says.

None of these problems seem to have had an impact on De Molen. As the
shop gets busier towards the end of the work day, the saleswoman passes
to customers one after another little bags imprinted with cannabis plants.

A reduction in the number of coffee shops has not necessarily resulted
in a decrease in drug consumption and drug tourism.

A legal curiosity has also survived the change of policy. Shops are
barred from transporting drugs to their stores. "How the stuff gets
there remains a mystery," customs officer Schulze says.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/55898.html

 

 

 

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