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Dutch ban Segway scooters from public roads

Dutch police banned scooters made by Segway from all public roads, bike paths and walkways in the Netherlands as of Jan. 1, the nation's official importer confirmed Tuesday.

Dutch police banned scooters made by Segway from all public roads, bike paths and walkways in the Netherlands as of Jan. 1, the nation's official importer confirmed Tuesday.

Segway Nederland director Piet Kruijt said the company was "completely ambushed" by the decision, first announced by national police on Nov. 27, 2006.

"We're working on all fronts to get this resolved," Kruijt said. He estimated that "a number of hundreds" of Segways have been sold in the Netherlands. For the time being, they are only legal on private property.

Police said that with no approval of the vehicles in sight by the country's Royal Traffic Agency, they could not be allowed to continue using public streets.

The two-wheeled, self-balancing Segway "is a motorized vehicle, and according to Dutch law, a mo-ped," a police statement said.

But because the traffic agency hasn't approved the vehicle, the police statement said, it can't be issued licence plates.

"It's a nice vehicle, I've ridden one myself," said Hans van Geenhuizen, a spokesman from the traffic agency, which is responsible for licensing.

But he said the agency cannot license the Segway under current law. "It doesn't have a brake, you brake by leaning back, and that's clearly not permissible," he said.

The traffic agency is part of the Transport Ministry, but that ministry referred questions to the Justice Ministry.

Bureaucratic tangle

Leo Maats, a spokesman for the traffic enforcement division of the national prosecutor's office, confirmed the rule would be enforced, but with so few Segways in operation it may take some time for the message to trickle down.

Kruijt said the mess was a bureaucratic tangle that would eventually be resolved but it was difficult to get politicians to notice the problem while the Dutch government is in a caretaker phase after Nov. 22 elections. Coalition talks to form a new government are just beginning.

In neighbouring Germany and Belgium, new laws have been drafted to govern Segway use.

"This is definitely not the end of the Segway in the Netherlands," said Hans de Jong, a distributor. He pointed out that the Segway would help the Dutch government meet environmental goals and some government arms are using them in pilot projects: notably military police at Schiphol Airport which is private property.

He conceded that it may be a while before government regulations on Segways are resolved, and at the moment it is not even clear whether police are issuing tickets. "It's Jan. 2. I have no idea what my clients are doing," he said.

An Amsterdam police spokeswoman said she was not aware of the policy change or what a Segway is.

A spokesman for Amsterdam Segway Tours said the business was closed until March due to ice, which makes it difficult to operate Segways.

It hasn't frozen in Amsterdam yet this winter, the warmest in the Netherlands in 300 years of recorded history.

"That could change at any moment," the spokesman said.