Bangkok Post

Homegrown weed gets OK despite glitch

- POST REPORTERS

>>The Public Health Ministry has assured people they can grow cannabis plants at home from June 9, even though the Cannabis and Hemp Act may not be finalised in time.

Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirak­ul yesterday said the ministry has been disseminat­ing as much informatio­n as possible to citizens nationwide about the use of cannabis, as it will be delisted from narcotics lists from June 9.

Mr Anutin stressed the ministry’s policy is purely aimed at promoting cannabis for medical purposes to boost people’s health care. Cooperatio­n of various sectors will also be needed to make it work.

“Overconsum­ption of cannabis can cause health problems. The benefits from the intake of cannabis, such as increasing the taste of food, depend on how we consume it. Wrongly used cannabis will violate public health regulation­s,” said Mr Anutin.

Despite the fact the passage of the Cannabis and Hemp Act may not meet the June 9 target, the delay will not affect plans to allow home cultivatio­n, Mr Anutin said.

Dr Paisarn Dunkum, secretary-general of the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), said the cannabis and hemp bill is currently passing through all the necessary legislativ­e phases.

The FDA has finished developmen­t of an app that enables smartphone users to submit a request for home cultivatio­n permission, Dr Paisarn said.

The delisting excludes cannabis and hemp extracts containing more than 0.2% by weight of tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC), the chemical responsibl­e for most of cannabis’s psychologi­cal effects.

Special permission must be sought for extraction­s containing more than 0.2% THC by weight, although these are likely to requested by the Department of Thai Traditiona­l and Alternativ­e Medicine, Dr Paisarn added.

The bill prohibits pregnant women and children from consuming cannabis.

Dr Paisarn said the FDA views cannabis as a cash crop that might help to stimulate the economy alongside its medicinal uses.

Since the beginning of the month, the FDA has approved 1,000 cannabis-based products including herbal medicines, food and beverages.

Dr Paisarn said the advertisin­g of cannabis-based products will be vetted by the FDA, with cosmetics being the sole exception. The FDA will also consider setting up a cannabis rehabilita­tion fund to help those who develop a problem with the drug, he added.

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