Pubdate: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 Source: Northern River Echo, The (Australia) Copyright: 2008 TAOW P/L Contact: http://www.echonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4736 Author: Terra Sword Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Nimbin LAST DRINKS FOR HEMP BAR The Nimbin HEMP Bar has closed indefinitely and the Nimbin Museum will only remain open if a new tenant can be found who is willing to manage the premises under a series of conditions set down by the landlord. After hearing the news of the Museum's imminent closure in New York, long-time Nimbin activist and artist Benny Zable has said he will remove his mural above the building in a show of solidarity and protest against the move. Police recently advised both landlords they would be applying to have the buildings declared 'restricted premises' under the Restricted Premises Act of 1943 if the landlords did not attempt to limit drug dealing. The declaration means the police can search or raid the premises at will. A volunteer from the Nimbin HEMP Bar said it closed Friday, August 29, after volunteers collectively decided to shut the shop rather than see the landlord, a Nimbin local, forced to comply or be the subject of further action. Museum curator Michael Balderstone, who has been a tenant of the building for more than 20 years, said the conditions are "ridiculous and virtually impossible" and he feels like it's a scene from Orwell's 1984 playing out, with the police citing a law created in World War II to close the tourist attraction, where drug dealing has become commonplace. Police deny they wanted to see either building close. The conditions imposed on the Nimbin Museum include finding a new tenant with no criminal record who agrees to house CCTV in and out of the shop with access by police at anytime or by video link. The new tenant must also make an undertaking to the landlord that they will not support and allow any illegal activity by staff or customers and will report any potential illegal activity to police unconditionally. "With these rules I have to phone the sarge every time I see a joint or a bong, or even each time I see someone pocket an empty orchy bottle suspiciously! I'll never be able to get off the phone," Mr Balderstone said, although police claim he doesn't fit the criteria for a new tenant anyway. "Young lads in Nimbin are tempted by drug dealing, but they're not bad kids and I'm not going to send them to jail. For years we've tried to manage the situation and minimise the harm to the community. "It's developed into a big game of cat and mouse -- the police know what's going but don't have the resources to be here to deal with it so they expect the community to do it, but we can't follow the letter of the law like that here. In our culture we don't dob on our brothers and sisters. "The bureaucracy has its head in the sand -- they are beating up the charge of supply as a serious crime when most of the street dealers are selling pot so they can afford a smoke.No one's getting rich. Nothing will stop the dealing, it will just continue somewhere else, unless we have some kind of trial of regulated supply, like in Amsterdam." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake