topics
tools
Expatica countries
Index Last Var.(%)
BEL 20 2117.66 -0.08
DAX 6323.19 -0.26
IBEX 30 6401.2 -2.17
CAC 40 3042.97 -0.16
FTSE 100 5356.34 0.09
AEX 292.76 0.00
DJIA 12454.83 -0.60
Nasdaq 2837.53 -0.07
FTSE MIB 13057.26 -0.74
TSX Composite 11566.15 -0.09
ASX 4108.1 -0.29
Hang seng 18800.99 0.47
Straits Times 2787.22 0.52
ISEQ 20 501.76 0.16
You are here: Home News Dutch News Court rejects border towns coffeeshops’ case
Enlarge font Decrease font Text size


16/09/2009Court rejects border towns coffeeshops’ case

Six coffeeshops in Roosendaal and Bergen-op-Zoom were closed Wednesday after their application to challenge the mayoral orders to ban soft drugs was dismissed.

Breda – Six Dutch cannabis-vending coffeeshops near the Belgian border, under mayoral orders to stop selling soft drugs, were closed Wednesday after losing a court challenge, their lawyer said.

The shops in the southern municipalities of Roosendaal and Bergen-op-Zoom "have left their shutters down," Harry Nieland told AFP.

A Dutch judge on Tuesday rejected an application by the coffeeshops from two southern towns against their mayors' plans to stop them selling soft drugs.

The case had wrongly been brought before a civil court and should instead have been taken to an administrative tribunal, said the judge in Breda in the southern Netherlands.

In 2008, the mayors of Roosendaal and Bergen-op-Zoom announced eight coffeeshops near the borders to stop selling cannabis from Wednesday in a bid to ward off some 25,000 marijuana-smoking tourists who flood their communities every week.

They could continue operating as ordinary bars, and violation would be punishable by a five-year closure.

On Friday, six of the eight shops – two in Roosendaal and four in Bergen-op-Zoom – took the mayors to court last week for an order preventing their closure in the event of transgression, but a judge rejected their application on Tuesday.

Of the other two, which did not take part in the court challenge, one remained open on Wednesday but assured AFP by telephone that it was selling "only coffee".

Nieland said his clients were considering different options for filing a new challenge to the mayors' decision with an administrative tribunal.

The consumption and possession of small amounts of cannabis has been decriminalised in The Netherlands since 1976, as is its sale in licensed coffeeshops. Its cultivation remains forbidden.

AFP / Expatica


0 reactions to this article

0 reactions to this article

Discussion Forums

Americans in the Netherlands

reporting birth abroad

Relocating to the Netherlands

Taxation on Rental Apartments!

Housing in the Netherlands

Taxation on Rental Appartments?

Discuss Dutch Culture

High-quality fake passports, driver's licenses, ID

English in the Netherlands

Moved to Hengelo

participate in the forums

Inside Expatica
Setting up home in the Netherlands

Setting up home in the Netherlands

A guide to telephone, internet and television along with utility services water, electricity and gas in the Netherlands.

Dutch immigration and residency regulations

Dutch immigration and residency regulations

Lost in the Dutch immigration system? Look no further than this guide compiled for our Survival Guide 2012.

A brief introduction to the Netherlands

A brief introduction to the Netherlands

Expatica offers a whistle-stop tour of life in the modern Netherlands.

Giving birth in the Netherlands

Giving birth in the Netherlands

The challenges and benefits of the maternity system in the Netherlands and how it differs to other countries.