Most nations
have rejected drug legalization. As drug use levels in the United
States have dropped in recent years, particularly marijuana use
among young people, rates in European nations with less restrictive
drugs laws have increased. Some European drug prevention experts,
such as David Raynes (National Drug Prevention Alliance in Great
Britain ) reject legalization after seeing the impact it has had
on the Netherlands. “No country alone, (as the Dutch
have found to their cost) can operate a policy which is substantially
more liberal than neighbours, without suffering from “drug tourism”
or, as in the Dutch situation, a larger pool of drugs-linked criminality
than it would otherwise have.there is the big lie that legalising
drugs will take the criminality out of supply. What nonsense. Illegal
traders who pay no taxes of any sort can always undercut legitimate
traders.”
• The
Dutch experience : After allowing marijuana to
be sold in certain cafes, the Government of the Netherlands
reconsidered
its legalization policy. Consumption of marijuana had nearly tripled
from 15 to 44% among 18-20 year olds. Despite the Dutch Government’s
policy to provide “medical” marijuana to patients through
pharmacies, many individuals have chosen to obtain their marijuana
through cafes. Part of the problem with the Dutch policy is that
the price of pharmaceutical grade marijuana is prohibitive. According
to Bas Kuik, spokesman for the Bureau of Medical Cannabis, another
possible problem with the policy is that the pharmaceutical marijuana
is made to be infused and drunk like tea or inhaled in a steam
treatment, not for smoking. “Maybe that is a disappointment
for people expecting to smoke but of course the Ministry of Health
cannot encourage smoking.”
(“Dutch Prefer Cannabis Cafes to Pharmacies.” Deutsche
Welle. 7 February 2005.)
After years of support for cannabis cafes, the Dutch Government
is having second thoughts. The number of Dutch marijuana
coffeehouses dropped from 1179 in 1997 to 782 in 2002—decreasing
34% in five years. And 73% of Dutch towns do not allow cannabis
cafes.
The Government of the Netherlands is rethinking its position on cannabis cafes, and is limiting the growth of this program. READ MORE
Mayor of Maastricht Pushes Cannabis Cafes to Edge of City: According to a New York Times article (August 20, 2006), “The mayor (of Maastricht) wants to move most of the city's 16 licensed cannabis clubs to the edge of town, preferably close to the border” (with Belgium and Germany). Mayor Gerd Leers is reacting to growing concerns among residents who “complain of traffic problems, petty crime, loitering and public urination. There have been shootings between Balkan gangs. Maastricht's small police force…is already spending one-third of its time on drug-related problems.” Cannabis clubs have drawn “pushers of hard drugs from Amsterdam, who often harass people on the streets.” According to a police spokesman, the clubs have also attracted people looking to buy marijuana in quantity. Piet Tans, the police spokesman also stated that “People who come from far away don't just come for the five grams you can buy legally over the counter…They think pounds and kilos; they go to the dealers who operate in the shadows.”
In an interview with Radio Netherlands in the spring of 2005, Dutch Minister Han Hoogervorst said that “doctors and not very positive about prescribing cannabis to patients and patients prefer to buy marijuana from coffee shops where it is a lot cheaper.” In another interview with expatica news service Hoogervorst also “stressed that the medicinal properties of cannabis have never been proven. He also said that the use of cannabis also has had side effect such as psychoses. “I think that’s an enormous problem,” the Minister said.” (from expatica news, March 18, 2005).
• The Swiss Experiment: Tolerant drug policies
in Switzerland have resulted in an influx of drug users. In 1987,
the Swiss Government permitted drug use and sales in a part of
Zurich called Platzspitz, or “Needle Park.” By 1992, over 20,000
drug users congregated in the park, and the surrounding areas were
overrun with crime. The park has been shut down and the experiment
has been terminated.
• The Canadian Experiment: The aggressive
decriminalization effort in Canada has resulted in the highest
levels of pot use in 25 years. The Canadian Government released
a report indicating that marijuana usage had increased to the same
levels as the late 1970's. Kids were getting mixed messages about
the dangers of marijuana during the 1990's when the decriminalization
discussion was going on. According to the November 24, 2004 Canada
Addiction Survey, marijuana use among Canadians has doubled since
1994. A decade earlier, 7.4% of respondents indicated they had
used marijuana; usage levels are currently 14%. The study also
indicates that there has been an increase in the number of Canadians
using an injectable drug: the number rose from 132,000 in 1994
to 269,000 in 2004.
In Ireland, the number of children treated for mental disorders caused by smoking cannabis has quadrupled since the government downgraded the legal status of the drug, according to an article in the Sunday Times (September 18, 2005). Addaction, an Irish drug charity, told the Times that “three months after police stopped arresting anyone found in possession of small amounts of the drug, the overall number of users treated for such conditions rose 42%.”
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