The Star Malaysia

Online sales of alcohol will be prohibited in a clampdown on underage drinking after rise in sales during pandemic.

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THE nation said that it would prohibit online sales of alcohol in a clampdown on underage drinking after a rise in sales during the outbreak of the Covid-19 coronaviru­s.

The South-East Asian country scrapped a three-week ban on the sale of alcohol in shops in May when it lifted other restrictio­ns following progress in containing the coronaviru­s.

The legal drinking age is 20 and the sale of alcohol is prohibited in certain areas like schools and parks.

Thailand already limits the hours that stores can sell alcohol.

“Since the outbreak of Covid-19, the sale of beverages online has increased and there were promotions that did not regulate age and location, making it difficult to enforce existing laws,” Deputy Minister of Public Health Satit Pitutacha said in a statement.

The new regulation­s would come into effect this year and carry a maximum fine of 10,000 baht (RM1,370) and up to six months in prison.

Several grocery retailers in Thailand offer alcoholic products online.

“A more logical decision would be to enforce the checking of ages,” suggested Jerome Le Louer, the owner of Wishbeer, an online store retailing craft beer, wines and spirits.

“We check the ID of our customers when we deliver,” he said, adding that retailers could do similar checks online and that co-operation between regulators and businesses would be more effective than prohibitio­n.

Thailand reported six new coronaviru­s cases on Thursday, all imported from abroad, marking 38 successive days without any domestic transmissi­on.

Red-light districts in Thailand’s capital city – Bangkok – reopened on Wednesday after more than three months of shutdown. —

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