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NL: Dutch authorities oppose tighter drugs law

Anthony Deutsch

The Scotsman

Wednesday 28 Apr 2004

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PLANS to tighten up the Netherlands' famously liberal attitude towards
cannabis have met with strong resistance by local authorities across the
country.

The ruling conservative coalition drafted the new tougher drugs policy in
the face of evidence showing a sharp increase in the potency of marijuana
openly sold in many towns.

The prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende's cabinet proposed to reduce the
number of "coffee shops" where marijuana is sold and to ban sales of
cannabis to foreign tourists in border areas.

For nearly 30 years, small quantities of marijuana and hashish have been
sold at coffee shops.

Though the practice is tolerated, cannabis remains a controlled substance
and technically its sale and use is illegal.

But the policy has been met with opposition by the Association of
Netherlands Municipalities which said the move threatens to undermine years
of successful drugs control.

Lex Estveld, a policy adviser, said the government was trying to fix a
system that was not broken. "The entire Dutch drugs policy of controlling
and containing soft drugs has proven reasonably successful in recent
decades. If you ask me, we haven't done bad when you compare us to other
countries," he said yesterday.

In its policy statement to parliament, the cabinet called for research into
the health risks of higher potency cannabis amid concerns over a sharp
increase in the content of THC, the active chemical of the cannabis plant.

If tests indicate the more powerful cannabis is psychologically damaging,
it could be reclassified as a banned drug like cocaine and heroin, the
cabinet statement said.

The cabinet acknowledged the long-standing policy of toleration had not led
to higher rates of marijuana use. But it said "the strong increase in THC
content, and the link between cannabis users and psychological disorders,
is a reason for concern".

The average percentage of THC in Dutch marijuana called Nederwiet, the most
popular on the market, has doubled in three years to 18 per cent, said the
Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction. The most potent
hashish now has a THC content of up to 66 per cent, it said.

Under the government plan, the southern town Maastricht, bordering Germany
and Belgium, will conduct a trial of the policy barring the sale of
marijuana and hashish to tourists. It was not clear whether customers would
have to produce proof of Dutch nationality.

A joint statement issued by 483 municipalities said the proposed measures
would force the marijuana business underground.

"The tone of the letter is too influenced by foreign [opinions] and gives
insufficient credit to the successes of local coffee shop policies," said
the statement. "Concentrating the trade in soft drugs at coffee shops has
the clear benefit of making it transparent and controllable."

Roughly 780 coffee shops exist in the Netherlands, but half are in the
three big cities of Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague. About 80 per cent
of municipalities do not permit coffee shops. Government figures say the
number of people who have tried marijuana in the Netherlands ranks in the
middle of a range of EU countries, the United States and Australia.


 

 

 

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