Pubdate: Sat, 06 Sep 2003 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2003 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Andrew Osborn, The Guardian Note: To read the news from The Netherlands in the Dutch language see MAP in The Netherlands http://www.mapinc.org/mapnl/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/area/Netherlands (The Netherlands) AMSTERDAM'S KEY STONED COPS FACE DRUG CAFE BAN Being drunk on duty is one thing, but the Dutch government is concerned that too many of its police officers are getting stoned on and off duty and is to ban them from "coffee shops", or drug cafes. The interior minister, Johan Remkes, fears that the spectacle of spliff-wielding police - in or out of uniform - is chipping away at the force's respectable public image. He also believes that the Netherlands' finest risk being accused of hypocrisy when they carry out spot checks for drugs if they are dabbling in the weed themselves. "A police officer has an exemplary role to fulfil and has to show some authority," he told De Telegraaf newspaper. "They could be in a difficult position if they have to stop and search people for drugs." Although the country's 1,500 "coffee shops" are tolerated by the authorities, the amount that pot lovers can buy is limited to five grams (a sixth of an ounce) at a time, and hard drugs are not allowed. Mr Remkes says he wants to ban police officers from frequenting coffee shops both on and off duty. And his VVD liberal party is pushing for a ban on other officials, such as mayors and government ministers. The government is under pressure to act after a television documentary revealed that senior officers in Amsterdam regularly used hard drugs and even dealt ecstasy and cocaine to colleagues. The documentary, the work of investigative crime journalist Peter de Vries, led to the sacking of 12 officers. Based on a leaked report from the police's internal affairs department, two of the 12 claimed that a quarter of the Beursstraat station's personnel (in central Amsterdam) used hard drugs. The investigation was launched after a detective saw a police brigadier popping ecstasy while on a stakeout. Witnesses described occasions when officers were so high on ecstasy that they could not even find Amsterdam's main shopping street, Kalverstraat, just two minutes away from the station. They also alleged that officers went on drug-fuelled holidays, where they would smash up holiday homes in a narcotic frenzy. The Dutch police union, the NPB, believes Mr Remkes is going too far. "Visits to coffee shops are not forbidden, so it is strange that police officers would be barred from going in their free time," said a spokesman. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake