The Asian Age

Thailand bets on pvt medical marijuana to lift economy BARCLAYS PROBED BY WATCHDOG FOR MONITORING STAFF

`68,000 cr loans released under discoms’ package

- NATNICHA CHUWIRUCH EDUARD GISMATULLI­N

As much as Rs 68,000 crore worth of loans under the Rs 90,000-crore liquidity package announced for the stressed power distributi­on utilities have been sanctioned so far. "Staterun non-banking finance firms REC and Power Finance Corporatio­n have sanctioned loans worth about Rs 68,000 crore so far under the Rs 90,000 crore liquidity infusion package for discoms announced in May," a source said.

Thailand's ailing economy, particular­ly its tourism and agricultur­e sectors, is poised to get a boost from new rules that ease the private cultivatio­n and sale of medical marijuana.

The cabinet amended the Narcotics Act on Aug. 4, pending parliament's approval, to allow private medical operators -- a category including some traditiona­l medicine practition­ers and farmers -- to grow and trade the crop including for both export and import. The move expands a cornerston­e policy of deputy prime minister and health minister Anutin Charnvirak­ul, who bet that the controlled legalisati­on of marijuana would boost the wellness, travel and agricultur­e sectors.

The latest plan will lift limits imposed when the country in 2018 became the first in Southeast Asia to legalise medicinal use of the herb. It also follows the opening in January of a medical-marijuana clinic in the health ministry facilities that offer free medicine to its patients. This does not include the 147 authorised clinics in the country that are currently able to prescribe it.

"Thailand is already a tourist destinatio­n for many foreigners, and marijuana will be another attraction for the country and for medical tourists," Marut Jirasratta­siri, director-general of the

Department of Thai Traditiona­l and Alternativ­e Medicine, said in an interview. Private medical practition­ers with licences will gain the right to "grow, produce and export marijuana," he said, adding that Thai farmers will gain "more options for income."

Priority will be given to Thai investors, Marut said.

"We want to use Thai money for now, especially collaborat­ion between the government and communitie­s to enhance knowledge, research and production," Marut said. "We don't want foreigners to come in and invest, then reap all the benefits."

The agricultur­e and tourism sectors are crucial to the local economy. About a third of Thais make their living from rice alone, according to the Thai Rice

Exporters Associatio­n. Meanwhile, the wellness tourism sector generated domestic expenditur­es of $12 billion in 2017, more than the combined amounts in Indonesia and Malaysia, according a report by the Global Wellness Institute.

Thailand's economy is likely to contract 8.5 per cent in 2020 amid the global coronaviru­s pandemic, the biggest decline projected in Asia.

"This will allow more patients to have access to medical marijuana for their ailments and to increase awareness of medical marijuana in Thailand," Traisuree Taisaranak­ul, a government spokeswoma­n, said in a statement.

Marijuana cultivatio­n and dispensing is currently done solely by government agencies or closely regulated organisati­ons. The plant remains a category-five drug, meaning recreation­al use is forbidden. Illegal possession could trigger a 10year prison sentence and "traffickin­g" is a crime punishable by life imprisonme­nt or the death penalty.

"In the next stages, both Thais and foreigners will have the opportunit­y to be treated with medical marijuana, but only after the Covid-19 pandemic has passed and inter-travel restrictio­ns lifted," Marut said. "Marijuana has always been Thailand's crop, and all the foreign countries love it."

— Bloomberg

Barclays Plc is being investigat­ed by the Informatio­n Commission­er's Office, a privacy watchdog, on allegation­s it spied on its workers through a computer monitoring software, the Telegraph reported. It said Barclays faces a maximum fine of 865 million pounds ($1.1 billion) if it's found to have broken data privacy laws.

The software allowed managers to measure the length of time employees were away from their desks or how long they took to finish tasks, the paper said. —Bloomberg

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