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Dutch government sitting on
pile of marijuana it can't sell after unpopular prescription program
October 12th - 2:51 pm ET
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands —
There's a
whiff of crisis in the air at the Dutch Health Ministry: It's sitting
on a pile of pot that it just can't sell. The Netherlands rolled
out a program last year that allows patients to buy prescription
marijuana at any pharmacy. Some medical insurance policies cover
at least part of the cost, but often not enough to offset the pharmacy
price.
In a country where any adult can walk into a "coffee shop" and
smoke a joint for much less than the government price, many say the experiment
is a bust. "I think it's a shame that they
can't deliver a cannabis product a little bit cheaper than the
coffee shops," said
David Watson, head of Hortapharm, an Amsterdam-based company
licensed to research and develop cannabis for pharmaceutical use.
"Why
is it that a legal commodity is more expensive than an illegal commodity?" The
government says packaging and distribution push up its prices, and acknowledges
its program may be foundering.
Of some 450 pounds in anticipated sales,
only about 175 pounds have been sold, said Bas Kuik, spokesman
for the Office of Medicinal Cannabis, an arm of the Dutch Ministry of Health.
The government sells two varieties ranging from about $10 to $12 a gram — enough
for up to four joints. Coffee shops sell it for as little as $5 a gram,
with only the highest-quality weed fetching prices comparable to the government's.
Under the liberal Dutch approach dating to the 1970s, the law forbids
privately growing and selling marijuana, and has no tolerance for dealing
in hard drugs, but refrains from prosecuting the sale of small amounts.
The medicinal program allows pharmacies to sell standardized, quality-controlled
marijuana from authorized growers to sufferers of chronic or terminal diseases
such as multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS, neuralgia, cancer and Tourette's
syndrome.
The competition comes from hundreds of marijuana bars, thinly
disguised as "coffee shops" to maintain
the fiction of legality. Though patronized mostly by recreational
smokers and tourists, people in pain who find relief from cannabis are
also customers, paying less than they would to a pharmacy Erik Bosman,
manager of the Dampkring coffee shop, says many of his regulars are medical
patients, and he even used to offer discounts for people with prescriptions.
At midday in the Dampkring, off one of Amsterdam's busiest shopping streets,
dozens of mostly young people sit in a haze of smoke, sipping
soft drinks, smoking prepackaged joints or rolling their own. A scene was
shot here for the movie "Ocean's Twelve," and
pictures of George Clooney and Brad Pitt with the staff hang
on the wall. The menu, with 23 types of marijuana and 18 of hashish, carries
a "fair smoke" assurance
that the cannabis is organically grown. But many coffee shops
are dingy, unappealing hangouts that hardly inspire a feeling of pharmaceutical
confidence, and some seriously ill people will pay more for guaranteed
quality, especially if it's covered by insurance.
One of two legal marijuana
growers for the government program is James Burton, an American
who immigrated after spending a year in a U.S. prison for growing marijuana
to fight glaucoma. He founded the Stichting Institute of Medical Marijuana
in Rotterdam, and for more than a decade sold pot directly to as many as
1,500 patients. He estimates about 10,000 people in the Netherlands use
it for medical reasons. In 2001 he signed an exclusive contract to provide
the government program with cannabis. But the five-year agreement was terminated
prematurely after he talked about it on Dutch television and was accused
by the government of breaking a confidentiality clause. "I finally had to come out publicly," Burton
told The Associated Press. "The program's not working. They have less than
1,000 patients." he
suggested the conservative coalition, which replaced the more
liberal government that created the program, was not promoting it. "The
whole country is leaning to the right," he said. "I think a year from now
this program's gone." Kuik,
the official, confirmed the program is up for review early
next year.
MARIA LOKSHIN Associated Press
Writer
http://www.cannabisbureau.nl/eng/index.html
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