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Germany: Dope laws up in smoke

Expatica.com

Tuesday 14 Sep 2004

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Germany's cannabis laws could go up in smoke in the next few weeks as Berlin's
local assembly prepares to decriminalise pot. Ernest Gill reports on the
build-up to the change in the law, which could also set a precedent for other
parts of the country.

The city of Berlin is moving quickly to decriminalise possession of small
amounts of cannabis in what is called "bowing to reality", even as federal law
in Germany still outlaws production or sale of the drug.

The legislation to permit possession of up to 15 grams of pot or hashish "for
personal use" is backed by the overwhelming majority of lawmakers in the city
council chambers.

A broad coalition of civil libertarian Free Democrats favour the bill, along
with the city's ruling majority of leftist Social Democrats and Greens and
far-left Socialists, remnants of the one- time East German Communist Party.

While placing pressure on other Germany states to follow, when the law comes
into effect, possibly in a matter of weeks, it will put Berliners in the odd
position of living in a city where cannabis is legal, and in the capital of a
nation where it is not.

The centrist FDP is sponsoring the legislation, saying it is high time for the
government to get its nose out of the affairs of otherwise law-abiding people
when consumption of pot has not been proven to be more harmful that alcohol or
cigarettes.

That is the ostensible reason. The real reason is that authorities in Berlin
have given up trying to police the pot possession problem.

"The ban was based on a drug policy which has failed utterly," says FDP City
Senator Martin Lindner, who introduced the bill.

"We are not trying to play down this drug," he adds, "but are simply striving
to attain a more realistic approach to this drug."

To understand how cannabis is equated to alcohol and cigarettes in Berlin, one
must understand German attitudes toward alcohol and cigarettes and the fact
that beer, for one thing, is the national beverage.

Unlike many countries, where sales of alcoholic beverages are restricted to
certain licensed shops and restaurants, alcoholic beverages in Germany -
especially beer - are widely available for sale.

Beer is sold at fast-food outlets such as McDonald's and Burger King. Beer and
wine are sold at cinema snack bars. Many autobahn service stations make more
money selling beer than they do selling fuel.

Newsstands often sell beer, wine and schnapps - for those shoppers who cannot
wait to get to the nearest cafe, grocery, supermarket or department store.

In fact, liquor stores per se are rare in Germany. Shops devoted solely to the
sale of alcoholic beverages are not needed in a nation where even beverage
vending machines dispense not only Coca-Cola and Fanta but also beer, wine and
rum coolers.

And unlike English-speaking countries, cigarette consumption is still high in
Germany, particularly among the young. Statistics show upwards of 50 percent of
high-schoolers smoke. And in a nation where beer, wine and schnapps are
integral parts of family dining, young people learn to drink early.

Against that backdrop of widespread smoking and drinking, getting high on pot
increasingly is becoming socially acceptable, particularly in families headed
by Baby Boomers who toked up during the 1960s and 1970s.

Berlin is considered the marijuana and hashish capital of Germany, not just its
political capital. In just the past three years police have completely lost
track of the cannabis market in Berlin, according to a report in Berliner
Zeitung newspaper.

There is hardly a club or disco, a cafe or gallery opening where with-it
Berliners are not smoking joints. And that is just the public aspect of the
drug which is clearly obvious to all. Pot consumption at private parties is
ubiquitous.

"We'd need 1,000 additional officers just to begin to clamp down on the
cannabis trade," one drug-enforcement officer told the Berlin newspaper. But
budgetary cutbacks, compounded by a growing acceptance of pot as a socially
acceptable drug have made a drug-enforcement policeman's lot not a very happy
one.

Hashish reportedly is easily available at cafes and tobacco shops throughout
Berlin. That is in addition to the home-grown variety planted in balcony flower
pots, back gardens and rooftops across the city.

Police in Berlin have stopped making raids on private homes suspected of
harbouring a garden of pot plants.

"It's not worth it," the investigator told the paper. "We only roll if we get a
tip-off to a really big-time pot plantation. But we don't go out looking
through people's back gardens any more on the off chance of finding a marijuana
seedling."

In the past, much of the illicit cannabis came into Germany from Turkey or the
Mediterranean. Now though, many struggling farms in former East Germany have
hired out their barns for high-tech pot production facilities.

"The pot people in Berlin smoking generally comes from acreages closer to their
homes than the ones producing the fresh fruit and vegetables they eat," an
investigator said.


 

 

 

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