A Dutch court has refused to punish two cannabis growers, criticising a government policy that criminalises the drug's production while allowing its sale in coffee shops.
"The court finds the suspects guilty," the court in northern city Groningen said in its judgment, but "no punishment will be applied".
Owners of the Netherlands' hundreds of coffee shops, where you can buy up to five grams of marijuana over the counter, frequently criticise what they say is hypocritical legislation that forces them to buy the drug wholesale from criminals.
"Given that the sale of soft drugs in coffee shops is tolerated, this means that these coffee shops must supply themselves and so cultivation must be done to satisfy these demands," the Groningen court said.
"The law does not state how this supply should be done," it said.
Justice Minister Ivo Opstelten said he was "surprised" at the ruling, which the public prosecution service said it would examine.
Although cannabis is technically still illegal in the Netherlands, the country in 1976 decriminalised possession of small amounts and it is widely available.
However, growing and selling any quantity over five grams is illegal, meaning the cultivation and sale of large amounts of cannabis is in the hands of organised crime.
Between 2009 and 2014, police seized more than 2000 cannabis plants from the Groningen growers, but judges found that the cultivation was done in the spirit of the law on soft drugs, namely "in the interests of public health and so as not to disturb public order".
The Groningen growers were always open with the police about their activities, always declared their cannabis income to the government and paid tax on it and were not claiming any benefits, the judges said.
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