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A young man lighting a joint in a Maastricht coffee shop ERMINDO ARMINO/AP/Press Association Images

Ban on tourists buying cannabis officially begins in Netherlands

But many coffee shops have already revealed plans to flout the legal measures.

A BAN ON foreign tourists buying marijuana finally went into effect in parts of the Netherlands today after long-running debate on the issue.

Attention has been focused on the southern city of Maastricht, where a cafe was warned over violating the ban and around 200 smokers marched in protest.

Weed is technically illegal in the Netherlands, but it has been sold openly for decades in small amounts in designated cafes known as “coffee shops” under the country’s famed tolerance policy.

Under a government policy change, as of May 1, only holders of a “weed pass” are supposed to be allowed to purchase the drug in three southern provinces. Non-residents aren’t eligible for the pass, which means tourists are effectively banned.

The policy isn’t supposed to go into effect in Amsterdam, home to around a third of the country’s coffee shops, until next year – and it may never be. The city opposes the idea and the conservative national government collapsed last week, raising questions about whether a new Cabinet will persevere with the policy change after elections are held in September.

Most attention Tuesday was on the city of Maastricht, which borders both Belgium and Germany and which has suffered the effects of a constant flow of traffic from more than a million non-Dutch Europeans driving to the city annually just to purchase as much cannabis as possible and drive back home.

Most shops in Maastricht plan to refuse to use the pass and kept their doors shut Tuesday.

There was one exception: the Easy Going shop of Marc Josemans, chairman of the coffee shop owners’ association, which remained open just long enough to provoke two legal conflicts he hopes may ultimately derail the policy.

‘Discrimination is never the right answer’

First Josemans turned away a group of foreigners who oppose the rule, and who went to the police to file a discrimination complaint. Then he started selling weed to anybody willing to buy, without checking for passes.

“The police paid me a visit about a half an hour later and warned me I was violating the new rules, and if I do it again, I’ll be closed down for a month,” he said in a telephone interview with the Associated Press.

Josemans said he planned to continue selling to all comers, and he fully expects to see his shop closed. His response to that would be to take his case to the European Court of Justice.

“Discrimination is never the right answer,” he said.

Around 200 protesters marched though Maastricht protesting the policy. The city’s mayor Onno Hoes said at a press conference that the coffee shops closing all at the same time was a “rude” move.

“They’re disrupting society like this,” he said.

More: Dutch uphold ban on foreigners buying cannabis>

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