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Revelers on cloud nine at cannabis festival as Thailand relaxes law


NAKHON PATHOM, Thailand — The pungent smell of smoke was unmistakable as revelers celebrated under the stars at a major Thai cannabis festival following the kingdom's decision to begin relaxing the laws around the drug.

Thailand has long been known for its tough drug laws, but the government has steadily liberalized them in recent years and on Thursday the plant came off the banned narcotics list, decriminalizing cultivation and possession.

While the changes stop short of Canada and Uruguay's decisions to fully legalize recreational use, Thailand hopes to cash in on the growing global market—already worth billions of dollars—for legal cannabis products, particularly in food and medicine.

At a festival organized by marijuana advocacy group Highland Network, several thousand happy attendees made the most of the newly relaxed rules.

"As soon as we got through to the other side, we sparked up," said Steve Cannon, 62, who came with a group of friends.

"Since then people have been handing me joints all afternoon and I couldn't tell you what a fair number was now, but I have been smoking all afternoon," said the American jazz musician, who has lived in Bangkok for the past 15 years.

 

A vendor sells cannabis goods to celebrate the legalization of cannabis at the “Thailand: 420 Legalaew!” weekend festival hosted by Highland in Nakhon Pathom province on June 11, 2022. Lillian Suwanrumpha/ AFP
A vendor sells cannabis goods to celebrate the legalization of cannabis at the “Thailand: 420 Legalaew!” weekend festival hosted by Highland in Nakhon Pathom province on June 11, 2022. Lillian Suwanrumpha/ AFP

Multibillion-dollar market

Roughly 3,000 attendees made the journey to White Sands Beach in Nakhon Pathom province, east of Bangkok, where stalls hawking everything from T-shirts and bongs to marijuana buds and hash brownies jostled with stages and bamboo palisades around an idyllic lake.

"We have been waiting for this time for so long," said Victor Zheng, owner of weed dispensary Nature Masters.

He gave advice to customers on his products including enriched soil for cultivation and buds and flowers for consumption.

"You see the people, they are coming and they are so happy," he said. "Not just us, the customers have been waiting for this time."

In 2018 Thailand legalized medicinal cannabis—a landmark move by a country in Southeast Asia, where anti-drugs laws are notoriously harsh—and the government has invested in the extraction, distillation and marketing of oils from the plant.

Analyst reports suggest that over the coming decade the legal cannabis market could be worth anything from $50 billion to $200 billion as countries relax laws around personal and medical use.

Thai businesses are moving to cash in on the liberalization, including Charoen Pokphand Foods—the food and farming subsidiary of giant conglomerate CP Group.

Last month the company announced plans to develop food and beverage products infused with CBD, a cannabis derivative, stressing Thailand's favorable climate for growing the plants and reputation for high-quality agricultural produce.

 

Plants are displayed as people gather to celebrate the legalization of cannabis at the “Thailand: 420 Legalaew!” weekend festival hosted by Highland in Nakhon Pathom province on June 11, 2022. Lillian Suwanrumpha/ AFP
Plants are displayed as people gather to celebrate the legalization of cannabis at the “Thailand: 420 Legalaew!” weekend festival hosted by Highland in Nakhon Pathom province on June 11, 2022. Lillian Suwanrumpha/ AFP


'People are free'

The new rules leave recreational use in a grey area—smoking it outside your home could still get you arrested, though under "public nuisance" laws rather than drugs legislation.

Offenders potentially face a 25,000 baht ($780) fine, as well as up to three months in jail.

And cannabis products with more than 0.2 percent concentration of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)—the psychoactive compound that produces the drug's "high"—remain illegal.

But while there was a police presence at the festival, officers appeared more curious than censorious.

Festival co-owner Arun "Max" Avery, 35, said he had no worries following the law's implementation and the publicity surrounding it.

Thais had cooked, created and medicated with cannabis long before prohibition, he said, so "to have their native plant back into their hands is just amazing."

"People are free to do whatever they want with it," he added.

And people at the festival were certainly enjoying themselves.

Joey, who only gave his first name, giggled as he puffed and chatted with friends, gently swaying.

"It is so relaxing. My stress is released," he said. "Smoking puts a smile on my face." — AFP