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Thailand
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Thai cannabis groups urge rethink of plan to re-criminalise marijuana: ‘don’t bring the people’s plant into the system’

  • Thai cannabis advocates urged the government to abandon plans to re-list marijuana as a narcotic, a week after a policy U-turn just 2 years after de-criminalising it
  • Thailand first legalised cannabis for research and medical use in 2018 and two years ago removed the plant from the national narcotics list

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A man smokes a joint in Bangkok. Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has ordered officials to press ahead with plans to recriminalise cannabis. Photo: AFP
Reuters

Dozens of Thai cannabis advocates urged the government on Thursday to abandon its plans to re-list marijuana as an illegal narcotic, a week after it announced its dramatic policy U-turn just two years after de-criminalising it.

Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has made a push to allow cannabis use only for medical purposes, promising a tough stand on illicit drugs that he said were causing addiction and destroying the future of young people.

Pro-cannabis groups met the health minister on Thursday and urged him to rethink the policy reversal.

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“Even as medical use, don’t bring the people’s plant into the system. It has been our recipe for hundreds of years. When you need licenses there is corruption,” said Prasitchai Nunual, secretary-general of Thailand’s Cannabis Future Network.

Thailand first legalised cannabis for research and medical use in 2018 and two years ago removed the plant from the national narcotics list, allowing people to grow, sell and consume cannabis.

Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has vowed to crack down on illegal drugs. Photo: AFP
Thai Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin has vowed to crack down on illegal drugs. Photo: AFP

That led to an explosion of recreational use, with thousands of cannabis cafes and dispensaries popping up nationwide, especially in tourist hotspots, in an industry projected to be worth up to US$1.2 billion by 2025.

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