Dutch judge upholds foreigner pot ban
Long famous for
"coffee shops" where joints and cappuccinos share the menu, the
Netherlands' famed tolerance for drugs could be going up in smoke.A judge on
Friday upheld a government plan to ban non-Dutch residents from buying
marijuana by introducing a "weed pass" available only to residents.The
new regulation reins in one of the country's most cherished symbols of
tolerance - its laissez-faire attitude to soft drugs - and reflects the drift
away from a long-held view of the Netherlands as a free-wheeling utopia.For
many tourists visiting Amsterdam the image endures - and smoking a joint in a
canal-side coffee shop ranks high on their to-do lists along with visiting
cultural highlights like the Van Gogh Museum.The city's left-leaning Mayor
Eberhard van der Laan is hoping to hammer out a compromise with the national
government.Coffee shops also have not given up the fight. A week ago they
mustered a few hundred patrons for a "smoke-in" in downtown Amsterdam
to protest the new restrictions.A lawyer for owners, Maurice Veldman, said he
would file an appeal against the ruling by a judge at The Hague District court,
which clears the way for the weed pass to be introduced in southern provinces
on May 1.The pass will roll out in the rest of the country - including
Amsterdam - next year. It will turn coffee shops into private clubs with
membership open only to Dutch residents and limited to 2 000 per shop.The most
recent figures from the government's statistics bureau says the country has
more than 650 coffee shops, 214 of them in Amsterdam. The number has been
steadily declining as municipalities have imposed tougher regulations, such as
shuttering ones close to schools.But the new membership rules are the most
significant rollback in years to the traditional Dutch tolerance of marijuana
use.The government argues that the move is justified as a way of cracking down
on so-called "drug tourists", effectively couriers who drive over the
border from neighboring Belgium and Germany to buy large amounts of marijuana
and take it home to resell. They cause traffic and public order problems in
towns along the Dutch border.Such issues do not exist in Amsterdam, where most
tourists walk or ride bikes and buy pot purely for their own consumption.The
weed pass "doesn't solve any problems we have here and it could create new
problems", said city spokesperson Tahira Limon.It is not just hardcore
potheads taking a toke in the city. Limon said four to five million tourists
visit Amsterdam each year and around 23% say they visit a coffee shop during
their stay.Amsterdam argues that the reasons coffee shops were first tolerated
decades ago are still relevant today - they are well-regulated havens where
people can buy soft drugs without coming into contact with dealers of hard
drugs like heroin and cocaine.Coffee shops also are banned from serving alcohol
and from selling drugs to people under 18.The government in The Hague said on
Friday there would be no exceptions to the new rules."Amsterdam will also
have to enforce this policy," said Job van de Sande, a spokespersonfor the
ministry of security and justice.The conservative Dutch government introduced
the new measures saying it wants to return the shops back to what they were
originally intended to be: small local stores selling to local people.However
the Dutch government collapsed this week and new elections are scheduled for
September. It is unclear whether the new administration will keep the new
measures in place.Coffee shop lawyer Veldman called Friday's court ruling a
political judgment."The judge completely fails to answer the principal
question: Can you discriminate against foreigners when there is no public order
issue at stake?" he asked.Coffee shop owners in the southern city of
Maastricht have said they plan to disregard the new measures, forcing the
government to prosecute one of them in a test case.
Syria accuses UN chief of encouraging militants
A Syrian
government newspaper says UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon is encouraging
militant attacks by focusing his criticism on the government.Saturday's
editorial in the state-run Tishrin daily comes a day after Ban said Syrian
President Bashar Assad's continued crackdown on protests has reached an
"intolerable stage".Tishrin says Ban has avoided talks about rebel
violence in favour of "outrageous" attacks on the Syrian government.The
Syrian capital was hit by four explosions on Friday that left at least 11 people
dead and dozens wounded.Assad's government blamed the blasts on
"terrorists", the term the government uses to describe opposition
forces that it says are carrying out a foreign conspiracy.
Israelis being fooled on Iran: ex-security chief
Israel's
former security chief Yuval Diskin on Saturday accused top ministers of
misleading the public about the chances any pre-emptive military action against
Iran's nuclear facilities succeeding.Diskin singled out Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak for criticism over their increasingly
bellicose comments in the standoff with Iran over its nuclear programme."My
major problem is that I have no faith in the current leadership, which must
lead us in an event on the scale of war with Iran or a regional war,"
Diskin said in comments carried by army radio and the Haaretz newspaper."I
don't believe in either the prime minister or the defence minister. I don't
believe in a leadership that makes decisions based on messianic feelings,"
he said."Believe me, I have observed them from up close ... They are not
people who I, on a personal level, trust to lead Israel to an event on that
scale and carry it off. These are not people who I would want to have holding
the wheel in such an event."They are misleading the public on the Iran issue. They tell the public that if
Israel acts, Iran won't have a nuclear bomb. This is
misleading. Actually, many experts say that an Israeli attack would accelerate
the Iranian nuclear race."Diskin, who stepped down as head of Israel's Shin Bet domestic security
service last year after six years in the post, was addressing a public meeting
in Kfar Saba in the Tel Aviv suburbs.In March, former Mossad chief Meir Dagan
also spoke out publicly against a military option on Iran. He told US network CBS an Israeli attack would
have "devastating" consequences for Israel and would, in any case, be unlikely
to put an end to the Iranian nuclear programme.On relations between Israeli
Jews and other groups, Diskin said: "Over the past 10-15 years, Israel has become more and more racist. All
of the studies point to this. This is racism toward Arabs and toward
foreigners, and we are also becoming a more belligerent society."Diskin
also said he believed another political assassination, like that of then prime
minister Yitzhak Rabin in 1995 by a Jewish extremist, could occur in the
future."Today there are extremist Jews, not just in the territories but
also inside the Green Line - dozens of them - who, in a situation in which
settlements are evacuated, would be willing to take up arms against their
Jewish brothers," he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment