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UK: Roll up, roll up at Britain's first cafe for dope smokers

Anthony Browne in Stockport

The Observer

Sunday 11 Nov 2001

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The directions from Stockport Tourist Information were enthusiastic.
'Turn left on to the A6, and walk across the open land. You can't miss
it,' said the telephonist.

Stockport, which has until now been famous only for its hat museum, has
never seen anything like it. Over the last two months hundreds, if not
thousands, of people have been making determined pilgrimages there from
London, Edinburgh, Carlisle and Milton Keynes. They come by train and
car in pursuit of news spreading by word of mouth and internet:
Stockport is home to Britain's first-ever Amsterdam-style coffee shop.

Tucked away in a quiet, cobbled retail centre, the innocuous-seeming
'Dutch Experience' is betrayed only by the sound of garrulous chatter
and the distinctive smell of marijuana wafting in the autumn air.
Outside, between the pictures of cannabis leaves, signs warn: 'Over 18
only, ID required' and 'No alcohol, or drunk and disorderly persons on
the premises'. Inside, alcohol is the last thing on people's minds.

From its opening at 10 in the morning to closing at 10 at night, the
Dutch Experience is packed with people rolling joints, inhaling deeply
and grinning peacefully. By lunchtime last Wednesday, there were at
least 50 people in its two rooms, by evening over 100. No one bothered
to hide this still illegal activity. It's all totally open.

Its founder, Colin Davies, a former carpenter, said the numbers
increased sharply after the Home Secretary, David Blunkett, announced
that cannabis possession will no longer be an arrestable offence, and
reckons he gets more than 500 visitors a day. 'I've created a monster,'
he laughs, as he sits on the bench, taking a puff. 'They're coming from
all over the country - the closest coffee shop is in Holland.'

His customers sit playing cards or table football, drinking coffee or
Coca-Cola, chatting and criticising each other's joint-rolling
abilities. 'I've never seen anyone take so long to roll a spliff,'
scolds one woman.

Some are nervous on their first visit, while others have been coming
every day since it opened on 15 September. Paul Cooper, 18, who this
week starts working for a government project on drug use, is one of the
regulars: 'It's such a calm, quiet atmosphere in here; there's never
been a raised voice. There's been no fights. It's not like a pub, where
you drink 10 pints of Stella, and it all gets very rowdy.'

Billy Roberts, 44, a bricklayer, comes as often as he can from Bolton.
'This place is brilliant - it's just like the ones in Holland. You know
what you are getting when you come here. Colin Davies is making history
- he's a real hero,' he puffed.

Davies became a cannabis activist after shattering his back in a fall
and finding that the illegal drug was the best one for relieving pain.
In 1996 he started the underground medical marijuana co-operative,
secretly growing cannabis as a painkiller for people suffering from
multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis, who had to provide a
doctor's certificate to prove eligibility. He was prosecuted twice by
police, but both times juries simply acquitted him because he was
helping sick people.

But it was the Conservative politician Peter Lilley who inadvertently
persuaded him to open the Dutch Experience. On a plane to visit a
coffee-shop owner in Amsterdam, Davies read about Lilley calling for the
legalisation of cannabis, and by the time he landed he thought the time
was right for coffee shops in Britain.

The purpose of the coffee shop is to use the money made from social
users of cannabis to provide it free - or at cost price - for medicinal
users. 'People in wheelchairs shouldn't have to pay for their medicine -
they should get it free, and that's what we're doing,' said Davies.

One woman, in her early forties, whose hands are crippled with
rheumatoid arthritis, was particularly appreciative: 'This stuff is much
better quality than what you get on the street - I've been sold Oxo
cubes so many times. It gets to my bones better - the pain relief is far
better than anything I can get from the doctor. And I get it for free -
I couldn't afford to buy it.'

Two weeks before opening, Davies and his Dutch partner Nol van Scheik
wrote to the police and the council setting out their plans. The police
raided on the day he opened, but they reopened a few hours later and
since then the police have left them alone. The council didn't reply to
the letter, but instead sent them a rates bill. 'That's the only licence
I will get from the council,' said Davies.

He stays on the right side of police tolerance by not selling cannabis
openly through a booth with a menu - he only plans to do that when he
feels the time is right. But he makes sure customers have no trouble
getting hold of either super-skunk grass or Lebanese gold resin.

The council has not had a single complaint from the public, and is
turning a blind eye. Its leader, Fred Ridley, said: 'This is not a
matter for the council, but for the police. If someone wants to test the
law - and that's the way the law has been changed before - they must
accept the consequences if the law of the land is enforced.'

Manchester Police said in a statement: 'We recognise there is ongoing
debate and research into the medical benefits or otherwise of cannabis.
The police, in appropriate cases, exercise discretion and judgment.'

The Dutch Experience has had open support from the local MEP, Chris
Davies, who has visited twice. 'I applaud it. It seems an excellent way
of meetings people's desire to try things other than alcohol without
leading them on to harder things,' he said.

Other cannabis campaigners are eyeing the Stockport trailblazer with
envy, and there are already plans to open them in Worthing, Taunton and
Brixton.

anthony.browne@observer.co.uk

 

 

 

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