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UK: Cannabis smokers protest after arrest of cafe owner

Ian Herbert

The Independent

Monday 17 Sep 2001

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The reefers were being passed around again outside Britain's first cannabis
cafe yesterday, 24 hours after its proprietor was arrested and marched
away by police.

A handful of people smoked joints outside the "Dutch Experience" in
Stockport, Greater Manchester, and at least 15 gathered inside again with
44-year-old Colin Davies, who criticised police officers for moving in on
Saturday to arrest him before the ribbon across the cafe's threshold had
even been cut.

"It's a disgrace, treating ill people like this and forcing them out," said
Mr Davies, who has smoked cannabis to relieve pain since he broke his spine
four years ago and insists his aim is to make medicinal cannabis available
to all those who need it.

The immaculate lay-out of the premises includes furniture shipped in from
Amsterdam's own founding cannabis cafe.

Mr Davies was released on bail by Greater Manchester Police in the early
hours of yesterday, pending the scientific examination of several ounces of
cannabis found in the cafe, his flat and a Dutch-registered car. He has
already admitted the plant was in his possession.

Five other people, including four Dutch nationals, were questioned on
suspicion of being concerned with the supply of a Class B drug and bailed.

Lawyers and friends of Mr Davies, who handed the Queen a cannabis bouquet
12 months ago, complained that Greater Manchester Police had, by moving in
at the opening to arrest him, reneged on promises to allow him the chance
"to open up and make his point".

Kate Bradley, of Telford, Shropshire, a former officer with the West
Midlands police force, has smoked cannabis since 1991 when she was
diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. "I'm here because cannabis is the only
drug that helps my pain," she said.

Mrs Bradley added that she was surprised by the police action. "I thought,
I honestly thought they had just agreed to monitor the situation," she said.

Mr Davies' frustrations will not be helped if, as has been rumoured,
discretionary use of cannabis is permitted by David Blunkett, the Home
Secretary, in neighbouring Manchester under an extension of a Brixton pilot
project in which police issue warnings, not prosecutions, to users.

Within an hour of the Dutch Experience being searched and closed, at least
three protesters repaired, uninhibited, to another Stockport cafe, where
they lit up without ceremony.

 

 

 

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