Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

CANNABIS CONFUSION – Legalising Before Setting The Boundaries

Featured Replies

  • Popular Post

image.jpeg

 

By Editor

 

Thailand is facing major issues after legalising cannabis before putting regulations in place with comments suggesting it won’t be easy to ‘put the genie back in the bottle.’

 

Marking a first for Asia, Thailand removed cannabis from its list of narcotics on June 9th, making its import, export, production, distribution, consumption and possession legal. Anyone can now grow the plant at home, after registering with the government via a mobile app, though commercial growers still need to apply for permits.

 

image.jpeg

 

Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who championed the plan, has tried to dissuade people from lighting up for fun, stressing the plant’s medical virtues and its potential as a cash crop. His ministry warns that anyone smoking cannabis in public can still be charged with causing a “nuisance,” and either fined or imprisoned for up to three months.

 

“Problems occur due to the abuse of cannabis. This is not the aim of liberalising the use of the plant; we want to promote medical use and boost the income of growers,” said Anutin.

 

But others in the government, and in his own ministry, say the move was premature.  Somsak Akksilp, who heads Thailand’s Medical Services Department under Anutin, said he worried that legalising cannabis without laws actually restricting it to medical use, and even then to adults only, could spur the recreational use he opposes.

 

image.jpeg

 

“That’s why I [have] said other authorities should try to issue the regulations as soon as possible [to] try to restrict the use of cannabis for medical cannabis,” he says.

 

“Because we know that there is two sides of the coin, the good and the bad,” he added. “We don’t know enough about cannabis, so we have to learn.”

 

In a June 14th, Mana Nimitmongkol, the head of the Thai government’s Anti-Corruption Organisation, complained of the move to legalise cannabis without any controls “other than word of mouth.”

 

Much of the concern has focused a coming tide of cannabis use among children and adolescents. The day after cannabis went legal, Thailand’s Royal College of Pediatricians issued an open letter urging the government to ban the use of cannabis and cannabis-laced products among those under 20 years of age without a physician’s approval.

 

Anutin has signed an order adding cannabis to Thailand’s Traditional Medical Wisdom Protection and Promotion Act, denying the plant to not only adolescents but also pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers.

 

The Ministry of Education has also issued regulations aimed at preventing abuse of cannabis and hemp among students and teaching staff.

 

Somsak said the piecemeal steps can help, to a degree.  “This is not through the law itself; it’s a kind of … canton regulation,” he said. “If you want it to be the full regulation by law, you have to issue [it] by the parliament.”

 

image.jpeg

 

A Cannabis and Hemp Bill meant to limit the plant’s use passed its first reading in parliament on June 8th but may have to wait weeks or months for the second and third readings it will need to become law.

 

The various rules agencies are imposing may help clear up what people now can and can’t do with cannabis. “But … it’s still confusing,” said Rasmon Kalayasiri, director of the Center for Addiction Studies at Thailand’s Chulalongkorn University.

 

By legalising cannabis use before legislating its boundaries, “it’s like we’re chasing the problem” instead of “preventing the problem,” she added.

 

Rasmon said her center’s own research suggests recreational cannabis use among 18 to 19-year-olds has doubled to about 2% of the age group since 2019. With the government now vigorously pushing the herb’s health benefits, she worries it will keep rising among adolescents and adults alike, and with it the health problems that afflict up to 1 in 10 habitual users, including addiction and psychosis.

 

“I think the public is very confused by this for sure,” Taopiphop Limjittrakorn, a lawmaker for the opposition Move Forward party, said of the government’s cannabis rollout.

 

image.jpeg

 

Taopiphop says he supports laws that would ban access to children and adolescents and force edible cannabis venders to display the doses of intoxicating tetrahydrocannabinol in their products. But he also favours recreational use, and doubts the government can now expect to rein it in having legalised cannabis before putting any strong checks in place. 

 

“If you release the tiger to the jungle, it’s hard [to make it] come back,” he said.

 

Source: https://royalcoastreview.com/2022/06/cannabis-confusion-legalising-before-setting-the-boundaries/

 

image.png

-- © Copyright Royal Coast Review 2022-06-24
 

- Cigna offers a range of visa-compliant plans that meet the minimum requirement of medical treatment, including COVID-19, up to THB 3m. For more information on all expat health insurance plans click here.

 

Easiest way to own or rent a car in Thailand - click here to find out more!

  • Popular Post

This government has had a full 2 years since grandiosely announcing that the country would legalize cannabis. That surely was more than enough time to deliberate on and set up a regulatory framework. Nothing was done. Instead, it simply was announced that cannabis would be fully legalized as per June 9. IF the intent was to legalize cannabis for medical purposes only... then why oh why wasn't this fleshed out?

 

It's reminiscent of me posting a notice at my gate saying, "My garden and swimming pool are open to everyone," then wondering why the entire neighborhood starts congregating and loitering in my backyard... when in fact I only wanted to invite my family and close friends with that notice.

 

Jeez, can these people EVER think ANYTHING through?!

 

Anutin, you are a construction business tycoon. Are you planning your mega-million construction projects as shoddily as you planned your "cannabis liberalization"?    

  

 

1 hour ago, webfact said:

Somsak Akksilp, who heads Thailand’s Medical Services Department under Anutin, said he worried that legalising cannabis without laws actually restricting it to medical use, and even then to adults only, could spur the recreational use he opposes.

So you want people to not have choice and be happy because it doesn’t fit YOUR archaic ideals? Listen to your boss and be a good little lemming, now!

  • Popular Post

Legalising means making it legal. So there should be very few boundaries except for those that would be applied to similar products ie. Nicotine and Alcohol.

  • Popular Post

Since when was Thailand Proactive in any situation apart from the constant suppression of Freedoms of Choice and Speech ?

 

In 99% of situations they wait for everything to go wrong before doing anything useful !

.....and they're still not sure as to how the fashionable fad requires itself to be. 

  • Popular Post
3 hours ago, webfact said:

“We don’t know enough about cannabis, so we have to learn.”

you might not know enough but the rest of the world does. 

 

 

  • Popular Post
3 hours ago, Misterwhisper said:

Jeez, can these people EVER think ANYTHING through?!

No. 

 

But they are quick to blame others for their own shortcomings.

4 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Kind of like getting a sign made without checking the spelling. ????

2 hours ago, daveAustin said:

So you want people to not have choice and be happy because it doesn’t fit YOUR archaic ideals? Listen to your boss and be a good little lemming, now!

Such tolerance of a differing view is not very good. Cant you understand, if not agreeing, with the other point of view?

Many online delivery services popping up some strong weed being offered and not inexpensive.

I truly think Auntin wants full recreational, but did not want the backlash.  Will be interesting to see what they do with people who are caught with it now.

image.jpeg

5 hours ago, webfact said:

“We don’t know enough about cannabis, so we have to learn.”

Off to a good start it seems...

Yes...most definitely Grasshopper.
As Buddha said...
From confusion and chaos comes clarity.
 

20 hours ago, webfact said:

Thailand is facing major issues after legalising cannabis before putting regulations in place with comments suggesting it won’t be easy to ‘put the genie back in the bottle.’

Thailand, the cart always comes before the horse.

This was Anutins plan all along... legalise the drug for the public to deflect bad news regarding Covid and the slump in economy.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.