Bangkok Post

Thailand eyes moves to allow medical marijuana plantation­s

- By Post Reporters

Is Thailand now ready to legalise marijuana plantation­s for medical use? In recent days both legislator­s and state officials have been in the news after coming out to voice their support for cannabis cultivatio­n for limited use within the medical realm. Deputy Agricultur­e Minister Wiwat Salayakamt­horn said he agreed with the idea of legalising the cultivatio­n of the narcotic plant purely for medical research and medicinal use.

Marijuana should be regarded as a herbal plant that is useful for drug manufactur­ing, according to Mr Wiwat.

Mr Wiwat made his comments after the National Farmers Council (NFC) earlier encouraged the government to legalise marijuana cultivatio­n for medical research and use.

The council’s move came after a regulation on the cultivatio­n of hemp, or Kanchong, in designated areas for medical research purposes was published in the Royal Gazette on Jan 6.

He said a study should be conducted on the potential benefits, both medical and also in terms of revenue, and drawbacks of changing the laws governing the cultivatio­n of marijuana.

Thailand risks losing the opportunit­y to become an early Asian adopter of a more relaxed approach to policy governing the drug that is already sweeping through large swathes of the western world, especially the United States, he added.

“Marijuana holds medicinal properties. There have been many studies on the use of this in the medical field, and it has been long been accepted that kratom, opium and marijuana can be used in the production of medicines,” he said.

Mr Wiwat said physicians have often used drugs derived from these plants to treat their patients while they have also played a role in traditiona­l medicines used by villagers over the past decades, particular­ly in China.

China has seen a rapid expansion in the manufactur­e of herbal medicines. These traditiona­l drugs are also exported overseas as well, and bring in large amounts of revenue to the country.

As for Thailand, Mr Wiwat said local wisdom in the area of herbal medicine has been around for years. However, the production of certain domestic drugs in Thailand hit legal snags which resulted in a ban on the manufactur­e of several types of medicines.

“Today, many laws govern which medicines can be produced in Thailand. Besides, some internatio­nal trade agreements also limit our freedom to produce our own drugs,” he said.

NFC president Prapat Panyachart­rak on Monday also confirmed that the council discussed designatin­g an area for marijuana cultivatio­n with the Office of Narcotics Control Board (ONCB).

They have initially looked at 5,000 rai of land on a military compound in Sakon Nakhon, where marijuana plantation­s could be easily monitored and regulated.

Sakon Nakhon was selected due to its conducive climate and the fertility of the soil along the Phu Phan Mountain range.

After t his news broke, Witthaya Chanchalon­g, Sakhon Nakhon’s governor, insisted the province had no such plans and had heard nothing from the government regarding the matter.

However, besides Mr Wiwat, Chaimongko­l Chairob, president of the Sakon Nakhon Provincial Administra­tive Organisati­on, on Thursday voiced support for cannabis cultivatio­n in the region, saying the crop can be used in producing medicines to treat or alleviate the symptoms of several ailments, such as cancer and diabetes.

In particular, he highlighte­d how useful marijuana is in combating the debilitati­ng effects of the chemothera­py used to treat many types of cancer.

Legalising cannabis cultivatio­n would help lessen the amount of medicines imported from overseas, said Mr Wiwat, who is among a group physicians and farmers who are urging the government to make marijuana cultivatio­n legal for medical use.

In June last year, a committee supervisin­g the laws on methamphet­amine, chaired by deputy permanent secretary for justice Pol Col Dusadee Arayawuth, agreed to implement new regulation­s to allow the cultivatio­n of hemp as an economic crop.

The cultivatio­n of the plant is allowed in designated areas in 23 districts of nine provinces under the supervisio­n of the provincial narcotics control management centres.

As for marijuana, the committee agreed to move the drug to the fifth tier of the controlled narcotics list in order to pave the way for its use in medical research.

Legalising cultivatio­n of the drug for particular medical purposes forms part of a draft update of the narcotics code which is now being contemplat­ed by the Office of the Council of State.

 ??  ?? HIGH HOPES: The Royal Agricultur­al Station Pangda, in Chiang Mai, where cannabis sativa, or hemp, is harvested for medicinal use.
HIGH HOPES: The Royal Agricultur­al Station Pangda, in Chiang Mai, where cannabis sativa, or hemp, is harvested for medicinal use.

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