The Star Malaysia

Thai festival visitors on a high

Locals enthusiast­ic over marijuana law despite implementa­tion lag

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BURIRAM: A Buddhist monk fishes out a vial of cannabis oil from his robe and puts a drop under his tongue – one of many flocking to a weed festival in northeaste­rn Thailand, where excitement is building over a medical marijuana boom.

Thailand became the first country in South-East Asia to legalise marijuana for medicinal purposes last year, joining a growing list of government­s including Canada, Australia, Israel and more than half the US states.

The global market is forecast to reach tens of billions in under a decade, but slow-moving implementa­tion of the Thai law has lagged behind a wave of local enthusiasm.

A political party has endorsed the plant’s benefits while marijuana-themed conference­s and panels have sprung up across Thailand, with the three-day festival in Buriram town being the latest showcase for the drug’s uses.

The “Pan Buriram” (Buriram Strain) festival, ending today, is a first for the sleepy town located about five hours northeast of Bangkok and known mainly for its football and motorsport­s competitio­ns.

Monk Chaivisit Visitvekin, 67, was one of thousands who showed up and stood in line to file documents with the Ministry of Health as part of an amnesty for those already using cannabis for pain relief.

He said he was taking it for shoulder pain among other ailments.

“I used it before and had no side effects,” he said.

The atmosphere on the festival’s opening day reflected the mix of caution and excitement over the legalisati­on of medical marijuana in junta-run Thailand.

Armed police lingered as Bob Marley songs pumped out over stereos, vendors sold rolling papers and pipes, and the pungent whiff of marijuana filled the outer fringes of the grounds.

Lecturers addressed attendees on everything from “the four cannabis varieties” to “quality control” in air-conditione­d tents that displayed large marijuana plants.

Vendors also showed off fertiliser­s as well as lighting and greenhouse equipment for those seeking to grow the plant.

Recent graduate Surrerat Ruangnoy said she used marijuana to help treat migraines, adding that she hoped the traditiona­l stigma surroundin­g the drug would ease as a result of such events.

“At the festival I saw old people and I took pictures and I will show them to my parents,” the 26-year-old said.

Buriram is the northeaste­rn stronghold of the Bhumjaitha­i Party, which ran in last month’s election on a platform of legalising marijuana and allowing households to grow six plants each.

The mega-wealthy Newin Chidchob, a founding member of Bhumjaitha­i who remains influentia­l in the party and runs the town’s sporting empire, presided over the festival.

He said yesterday that the purpose of the event is to help Thais “understand and get access to the benefits of cannabis”.

Bhumjaitha­i is seen as a key coalition partner in the next government after the March 24 vote in which both the junta-backed party and its main rival claimed victory.

Full election results are expected by May 9, but Bhumjaitha­i has said it will not join any government that does not support its policies.

Though Thai authoritie­s plan to tightly regulate the marijuana sector for the first five years, Newin predicted the next government would speed up the process.

The secretary-general of The Union of Thai Traditiona­l Medicine Society attended the festival and said he joined Bhumjaitha­i about a year ago because of its pro-marijuanas­tance.

“It (cannabis-infused medicine) has been used since Buddha’s era,” Sukasom Amratisha said. AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Enjoying the festivitie­s: A man wearing a First Nations-inspired costume during the first day of the inaugural Pan Ram weed festival in the Thai northeaste­rn province of Buriram.
— AFP Enjoying the festivitie­s: A man wearing a First Nations-inspired costume during the first day of the inaugural Pan Ram weed festival in the Thai northeaste­rn province of Buriram.

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