Pubdate: Mon, 28 Apr 2003
Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON)
Copyright: 2003, Canoe Limited Partnership
Contact:  http://www.fyiottawa.com/ottsun.shtml
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329
Author: Jason Botchford, Toronto Sun
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular)

DUTCH TREAT

AMSTERDAM -- It takes about a five-minute walk after arriving at Central 
Station to realize you've just landed on Fantasy Island.

With working girls shaking their things and beckoning for business in bay 
windows, shopping that has an eye-opening amount of pornography and the 
tangy smell of marijuana wafting out every time a coffee-shop door is 
opened, the anything-goes fantasy is not for everyone.

Touring the Red Light District, the lovely canals that run through it and 
the historic architecture, is akin to studying the brain of an aging rock 
star who was blessed with a prodigious sense of taste.

It's just one small part of one city in the Netherlands, but it has become 
a flashpoint for the international marijuana debate, a legendary tourist 
stop which deals pot as regularly as Las Vegas dealers blackjack.

It's a city and a country where people can wander into cafes and buy a 
small amount of cannabis without fearing arrest or prosecution: A drug 
policy some say is the most effective in the world.

"In Holland, we believe you can do what you want as long as you don't 
bother anyone else," says Wernard Bruining, who was one of the first to 
have a coffee shop licensed to sell pot in the 1970s.

In 1972, the founder of the Mellow Yellow Coffeeshop had no idea he was 
part of a revolution which would be watched and studied by the rest of the 
world.

"Marijuana won't go away," Bruining says. "I think that one day all of 
Europe will be like Holland."

It's already happening as Britain, Belgium and Switzerland, as well as 
other countries, are moving toward more liberal treatment of marijuana.

In the Netherlands, marijuana is not legal, although it would be hard to 
tell after walking by many of the roughly 300 Amsterdam coffee shops which 
sell pot.

'Coffee shop' in Holland means a place which sells weed.

Grass is treated separately from hard drugs and is "de-penalized" -- 
essentially a national tolerance policy which allows people to carry up to 
30 grams. Coffee shops can sell customers no more than five grams at a time.

It has created an indifferent view of pot from the nation's 15 million 
people, who have one of the lowest weed-smoking rates in the industrialized 
world.

The latest UN study on global drug trends shows that the Netherlands 
wouldn't even crack the Top 50 in marijuana consumption. The annual 
percentage of people older than 15 who smoke pot is 4.1%. In Canada, it's 8.9%.

LOST 'TABOO FEEL'

"Marijuana is just no big deal here," says Henk Lokhorst, who lives just 
outside Amsterdam. "It's lost that taboo feel. Most of my friends don't 
smoke, it's just not a part of their lives and not something you think 
about. In Canada, there is still that allure, that idea of a forbidden fruit.

"The Dutch don't have these coffee shops because they want to smoke pot. 
They have them for two reasons: One, the system seems to work and two, 
people are making a lot of money."

The coffee shops are a big draw for tourists, as are prostitutes and 
Vincent van Gogh.

The shops are busiest on weekend nights, when young people from all over 
the world gather to smoke spliffs and test their intellect and pickup lines.

Stacy and Lynn are 18 years old and from Ontario. They'd rather their 
mother not know what they were up to on vacation. To them, Amsterdam is Oz.

"You get a strange feeling when you walk into a coffee shop in Amsterdam," 
says Stacy in the Green House, a famed, award-winning coffee house.

"You're intimidated. For a moment you think you're doing something dirty. 
And then it goes away and soon it's just part of the culture. You look 
around and I guarantee you will think: 'What is wrong with this? Why does 
this upset so many people?' "

The girls are boggled by the menus they've sifted through: Haze Skunk, Maui 
Mist, Red Dawn, White Widow, Blueberry Bubblegum, Silver Haze and the Super 
Skunk.

"And here I thought pot was just pot," Lynn says.

The girls spend 15 euros -- about $25 Cdn -- on some recommended Maui Mist 
and are set for the night.

Coffee-shop owners estimate that for every 20 euros tourists pay for 
marijuana, they'll spend 200 euros on food and lodging in the city.

The goal of Holland's drug policy was to emphatically distinguish soft 
drugs, such as marijuana, from hard drugs like heroin, cocaine and 
amphetamines.

The coffee shops are designed to be the conduit of that policy. They can 
only sell to people over 18 years old, are rarely licensed to sell alcohol, 
can't advertise and can't sell hard drugs.

'EXPERIENCED HITTER'

At the Green House, as is the case in most good coffee shops, the pot is 
strong.

On the menu, a brand called AK-47 is nicknamed "The Killer." Its 
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) level is 18-22%, or about three times higher 
than the average pot you'll find in Canada. THC is the major active 
chemical in cannabis.

"I wanted the strongest stuff they had and they sold me this for 12 euros," 
American tourist Eddie Ponika says. "I'm an experienced hitter and this 
stuff nearly knocked me out. Wow! I'd like to take this home."

Maybe not quite the desired effect Green House proprietor Arjan was going 
for, but close enough.

"The growing of stronger and different varieties of marijuana was the base 
in the plan for keeping a lot of people from using hard drugs," Arjan says.

"The lack of good cannabis is the start for some people to use hard drugs."

Coffee shops are an eclectic mix of bar-like atmospheres, as well as 
Jamaican and eastern-Asian themed rooms.

On a recent visit to the Mellow Yellow, five people are there, one a 
professional reading a local newspaper, a couple on a date and two 
20-something tourists, coughing as they roll cone after cone. On the walls 
are images of Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and Bob Weir.

"Marijuana is the only drug I would touch and that's just once a week," 
says Gries van der Lingen, an Amsterdam salesman. "It's just a peaceful 
getaway from my workday."

Popular coffee shops can make as much as $2 million a year. A gram of 
marijuana costs $13-$25.

There are also other "Smart Shops" throughout Amsterdam where you can 
legally buy magic mushrooms and herbal pills like ephedra and "natural 
ecstasy."

In the Red Light District, tourists can't walk half a block without being 
asked to buy cocaine or ecstasy.

The dealers work near cops, half-heartedly trying to conceal what they're 
doing, but the cops don't care, understanding it would be pointless to take 
these people to jail.

"They sell the hard drugs here to prey on the tourists, that's where the 
market is," says police officer Adriaan Simonszoon.

What seems like an abundance of hard drugs and addicts is deceiving because 
it's concentrated in the Red Light District.

A study by the Ministry of Health in the Netherlands comparing drug use 
between its country and the U.S. shows 10.5% of Americans have used 
cocaine, five times more than in the Netherlands.

Among the 13 member states of the European Union, the Netherlands ranks 
11th in terms of hard-drug addicts.

CONSERVATIVE CHANGES

"The vast majority of Dutch cannabis users do not try hard drugs," says 
Dirk J. Korf, a drug researcher at the University of Amsterdam.

Although the coffee-shop system has been effective, there are many in 
Holland who would like to see them closed.

It's clear there will be changes as a new coalition government -- led by 
the Christian Democratic Appeal, a conservative party -- takes charge.

The coalition has said it would like to shut down half of the 800 coffee 
shops in the country.

"It would be a sweet thing if we could eventually retract 
decriminalization," Piet-Hein Donner, the acting minister of justice, said 
recently.

But he admitted the government was stuck with a political reality of the 
current landscape and thought it best to give priority to tackling other 
forms of crime.

SMOKIN'

Annual prevalence of use as percentage of the population aged 15 and above.

Ireland 9.4%

U.K. 9.4

France 7.4

Switzerland 7.0

Spain 7.0

Germany 6.0

Denmark 4.4

Netherlands 4.1

Luxembourg 4.0

South Africa 18.4

New Zealand 18.0

Australia 17.9

Canada 8.9

USA 8.3
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom