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September 2005

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Subject:
From:
Michele Rotunda <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Alcohol and Drugs History Society <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 22 Sep 2005 14:04:57 -0400
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I found this story extremely interesting - thought I'd share for those of
you who haven't seen it.

Michele Rotunda


Dutch TV Host to Take Heroin on Air
Sep 21, 9:11 AM EST

The Associated Press

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands -- A television presenter on a new Dutch talk show
plans to take heroin and other illegal drugs on air in a program intended
to reach young audiences on topics that touch their lives, producers said
Wednesday.

The show, scheduled to premier on late-night television Oct. 10, is called
"Spuiten & Slikken," or the "Shoot Up and Swallow" show.

Even in the liberal Netherlands, where marijuana is sold and used openly,
the proposed action by presenter Filemon Wesselink is illegal, and the
idea was met with dismay by the governing center-right Christian Democrat
party.

"This is dangerous and it sets a bad example," party spokesman Pieter
Heerma said. "We're going to ask the justice minister for his view on what
the law says about this, and his view on the dangers and risks involved."

Justice Ministry spokesman Ivo Hommes said it was not immediately clear
whether Wesselink could be prosecuted. Possession of any amount of heroin
is illegal, but in practice police usually do not have resources to chase
after people with less than a half a gram of the highly addictive
narcotic.

"The actual taking of drugs is a health problem, not a criminal act,
though it's obviously hard to take drugs without possessing them first,"
Hommes said. "In any case it's not something we endorse, and doing it on
television is undesirable."

The "Shoot Up & Swallow" show's main hostess will interview guests about
drug use and abuse, while Wesselink and another presenter will carry out
in-the-field experiments with sex and drugs.

Wesselink, 26, plans to smoke a heroin pill, said Ingrid Timmer, a
spokeswoman for the show's producer BNN.

"It's not our intention to create an outcry. We just want to talk about
subjects that are part of young people's lives," Timmer said.

In other segments of the show, Wesselink plans to go on a drinking binge
in a series of pubs. He also plans to take the hallucinogenic drug LSD —
on his couch under the supervision of his mother.

The Netherlands is known for its marijuana policy, where sale and use of
the drug in small quantities are not prosecuted even though technically
illegal.

Other drugs, including LSD, cocaine, Ecstasy and heroin are outlawed and
dealers are prosecuted. The legal age for the consumption of alcohol and
tobacco is 16.

According to information from the Netherlands' Trimbos Institute, which
monitors international drug use, the Dutch are about average. The
institute says 6 percent of Dutch have used marijuana recently, compared
with 8 percent in the United States, 9 percent in Britain and 9 percent in
France. For cocaine, it was 1.1 percent in Holland — and rising quickly —
compared to 1.3 percent in the United States, 1.5. percent in Britain and
0.3 percent in France. Comparable data for heroin use were not available.

BNN has drawn viewer complaints for programs in the past, including a sex
education program called "This Is How You Screw." One segment discussed
how to have sex in a nightclub and featured life-size mannequins with sex
organs.

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