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Dutch "coffee" shops survive new drug laws

Reuters

Friday 28 Nov 2003

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BRUSSELS: European Union justice ministers have agreed to tougher anti-drug
laws, but the Netherlands says its controversial "coffee" shops where
cannabis is openly sold and smoked will survive.

After more than two years of negotiations and a long-running dispute
between the Netherlands and Sweden and France, the EU ministers
provisionally backed harmonising national laws to make the bloc more
efficient in the fight against illegal drugs.

The laws cover all types of drug-dealing, ranging from local networks to
large-scale international operations.

However, Dutch Justice Minister Piet Hein Donner said his country's policy
of allowing the use and sale of cannabis in the strictly controlled coffee
shops would remain in place.

Under the agreed rules, offering, selling or producing drugs should be
sanctioned with maximum jail terms of at least one to three years. In cases
involving large-scale international drug trafficking sanctions should be at
least five to 10 years.

Friday's (NZT) agreement was held up because Paris and Stockholm wanted
tough jail terms for minor offences, a move opposed by Amsterdam because of
its policy of tolerating the use and sale of so-called "soft drugs" such as
cannabis.

Sweden also demanded the Netherlands close the coffee shops, where people
for over 30 years have been able to buy and smoke cannabis without fearing
repercussions from the police.

A compromise was reached after the Netherlands agreed to increase its
sanctions for the possession of small quantities to a year from one month.
Member states also agreed on a declaration stressing the importance of
fighting drug tourism.

Donner said the deal would not affect Dutch rules on coffee shops.

"We have a situation where in certain conditions we will not prosecute and
these conditions are kept very strictly," he told Reuters. "This decision
does not cover that policy."

Donner said his government was considering rules under which coffee shops
would only be allowed to sell soft drugs to Dutch residents to meet its
obligation to dissuade tourists from going to Amsterdam for drugs.

Drug use inside the EU has been stabilising after years of rising sharply,
according to surveys by the EU's drugs monitoring agency in Lisbon.

According to a report from 2002, about 25-30 percent of adults in Denmark
and Britain had used cannabis at least once. Amphetamines, cocaine and
ecstasy have been used by one to five percent of people in the countries
surveyed.

But in the 10 countries in central and Eastern Europe, joining the EU next
May, drug use has been increasing sharply, as they move from being only
transit areas for the shipment of drugs to the EU to becoming new lucrative
markets.

The EU's executive Commission was asked to evaluate the laws three years
after they come into force to ensure they are functioning as intended. The
laws enter into force 18 months after being formally approved by ministers.





 

 

 

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