The Mercury News

Amsterdam to ban smoking pot on the streets of red-light district

- By Jenny Gross

Amsterdam will soon ban the smoking of marijuana on the streets of its popular red-light district, according to rules introduced on Thursday that are aimed at cracking down on the noisy tourists that local residents have long complained about.

“This should reduce the nuisance caused by drug use in public spaces, particular­ly by tourists,” Mayor Femke Halsema of Amsterdam said in a statement. The rules, which will further limit alcohol sales in the area, are set to go into effect in mid-May.

The mayor's statement said residents of the red-light district, a hub for legal prostituti­on in Amsterdam, have been “excessivel­y bothered” by crowds and nuisance caused by mass tourism and substance abuse on public streets. The atmosphere in the old city has become especially grim at night, when drunken tourists, loitering in the streets, compromise the safety and the ability of residents to live there undisturbe­d, the statement said.

Amsterdam, like other European capitals, has struggled with how to make itself a vibrant hub for internatio­nal tourists while also being safe and quiet for residents.

Under the package of rules introduced on Thursday, prostituti­on businesses must shut at 3 a.m., three hours earlier than the previous closing time. Cafes and restaurant­s must also close earlier, at 2 a.m.

If the ban on marijuana smoking does not reduce disruption­s, local authoritie­s will also consider extending the ban to the terraces of businesses, known as coffee shops, which are allowed to sell marijuana, the statement said. (Shops in Amsterdam that sell actual coffee are called cafes.)

The new rules are the latest in a series of steps that Amsterdam has taken to discourage certain types of tourists.

 ?? ILVY NJIOKIKTJI­EN — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The red-light district in Amsterdam in 2021. New rules coming to Amsterdam in May will target crowding, disruptive behavior and noise in the city's most famous district.
ILVY NJIOKIKTJI­EN — THE NEW YORK TIMES The red-light district in Amsterdam in 2021. New rules coming to Amsterdam in May will target crowding, disruptive behavior and noise in the city's most famous district.

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