NationThailand-Nov 18

Close to the grand conference center in Bangkok where world leaders are meeting this week, a plethora of marijuana shops – the Thai capital’s latest tourist draw – are bustling despite a controversy that threatens the growing sector.Shops selling homegrown and imported strains, pre-rolled joints and gummies have sprung up rapidly since Thailand decriminalized cannabis earlier this year. New cafes with names like MagicLeaf and High Society are located just minutes from the meetings of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit. But the proliferation of such businesses has sparked a backlash from politicians and doctors, who say legalization was pushed through in a regulatory vacuum and are now calling for tougher rules or even a return to prohibition. A cannabis regulation bill governing cultivation, sale, and consumption has been delayed in Parliament, causing confusion over what aspects of the herb will be legal. “We’re in a vacuum,” one senator, Somchai Sawangkarn, told a domestic broadcaster on Wednesday, adding that rules issued by the Health Ministry had not curbed recreational use. Southeast Asia has strict laws prohibiting the sale and use of most drugs, but Thailand became a major exception in June, when it dropped cannabis from its list of narcotics. The move was spearheaded by Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who framed marijuana as a cash crop for farmers and championed its medical use. Instead, recreational use exploded. Authorities then rushed through piecemeal updates to regulations, clarifying that cannabis could not be sold to children or near schools and temples. Recent weeks have brought a wave of news reports about hospitalisations and weed use by children. The chief of Thailand’s association of forensic physicians, Smith Srisont, asked a court last week to relist cannabis as a narcotic. Read more at: https://www.nationthailand.com/thailand/general/40022197