Pubdate: Sat, 20 Nov 2004
Source: Jamaica Observer (Jamaica)
Copyright: 2004 The Jamaica Observer Ltd,
Contact:  http://www.jamaicaobserver.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1127
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

EU DRUGS CLAMPDOWN COULD SPELL TROUBLE FOR DUTCH MARIJUANA 'COFFEE SHOPS'

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - Dutch Justice Minister Piet Hein Donner announced 
yesterday that access to popular Dutch 'coffee shops' to smoke marijuana 
could be cut for foreigners - including other EU citizens - as part of a 
new European Union drugs control policy.

Donner, whose country holds the EU presidency, said a meeting of EU justice 
and interior ministers agreed on guidelines for setting up an eight-year 
drugs action plan in the 25-nation bloc.

Under the strategy, EU countries would coordinate efforts to cut supplies 
of soft and hard drugs, as well as demand, through prevention programs and 
police enforcement.

Donner said his country - where hundreds of thousands of tourists head to 
benefit from the famously relaxed policy on soft drugs like marijuana - 
would have to "draw consequences" from an expected stricter EU drugs policy.

"Drugs tourism should be fought," Donner said, adding that access to cafes 
selling joints could be barred for nonresidents of the Netherlands, 
including other EU citizens. "That's an idea where we should be headed," 
Donner said. He did not elaborate how this could be enforced.

Dutch officials said the government is setting up a pilot project in 
Maastricht where entry into coffee shops would be restricted to those with 
special passes only.

The Dutch government has drafted tougher cannabis laws in an effort to 
reduce the number of coffee shops where marijuana is sold and to ban sales 
of cannabis to tourists in border areas.

There are around 780 coffee shops in the Netherlands, but half of them are 
in the three big cities of Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague. About 80 per 
cent of municipalities do not permit coffee shops.

Despite heavy pressure and criticism from countries like France and Sweden 
against the relaxed drugs policy in the Netherlands, Dutch officials argue 
their policy has not resulted in a rise of users.

A government-funded study in May found the use of marijuana among Dutch 
youth declined somewhat in recent years.

The sale of small quantities of marijuana and hashish is tolerated and is 
sold at coffee shops like shots of whiskey at bars. The soft drugs, 
however, remain a controlled substance under Dutch law and technically its 
sale and use is illegal.

Government figures say the number of people who tried marijuana in the 
Netherlands ranks in the middle of a range of EU countries, the United 
States and Australia. The Netherlands has taken a hard line against drugs 
like cocaine and Ecstasy however, where possession is prosecuted.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager