Dubai Telegraph - Revellers on cloud nine at cannabis festival as Thailand relaxes law

EUR -
AED 4.287595
AFN 75.307338
ALL 95.295962
AMD 438.411188
ANG 2.089697
AOA 1070.586386
ARS 1618.639958
AUD 1.663541
AWG 2.101478
AZN 1.981682
BAM 1.946526
BBD 2.347913
BDT 143.217639
BGN 1.956102
BHD 0.439705
BIF 3465.090563
BMD 1.167488
BND 1.485423
BOB 8.055619
BRL 5.84467
BSD 1.165746
BTN 108.143749
BWP 15.650433
BYN 3.345859
BYR 22882.755029
BZD 2.344529
CAD 1.62004
CDF 2685.22136
CHF 0.925438
CLF 0.026547
CLP 1044.831437
CNY 7.971594
CNH 7.985574
COP 4256.028987
CRC 539.52941
CUC 1.167488
CUP 30.938419
CVE 109.742133
CZK 24.370777
DJF 207.590932
DKK 7.472218
DOP 70.195553
DZD 154.396378
EGP 62.295935
ERN 17.512313
ETB 182.921769
FJD 2.581898
FKP 0.867366
GBP 0.872055
GEL 3.140674
GGP 0.867366
GHS 12.828877
GIP 0.867366
GMD 85.807567
GNF 10228.267382
GTQ 8.917512
GYD 243.887995
HKD 9.14448
HNL 30.960489
HRK 7.535431
HTG 152.851737
HUF 368.539641
IDR 19952.361401
ILS 3.542402
IMP 0.867366
INR 110.367555
IQD 1527.124012
IRR 1536559.487581
ISK 142.725211
JEP 0.867366
JMD 184.311846
JOD 0.827729
JPY 186.528343
KES 150.851388
KGS 102.096508
KHR 4666.76518
KMF 490.345007
KPW 1050.736624
KRW 1747.845642
KWD 0.360391
KYD 0.971471
KZT 550.885305
LAK 25707.516443
LBP 104396.402953
LKR 367.897153
LRD 214.498023
LSL 19.126173
LTL 3.447287
LVL 0.706201
LYD 7.410692
MAD 10.835275
MDL 20.085303
MGA 4837.949571
MKD 61.352685
MMK 2452.614927
MNT 4172.607512
MOP 9.404194
MRU 46.594998
MUR 54.311157
MVR 18.048785
MWK 2021.369179
MXN 20.357944
MYR 4.636674
MZN 74.672686
NAD 19.126173
NGN 1585.844776
NIO 42.895624
NOK 11.136751
NPR 173.0296
NZD 2.011605
OMR 0.44905
PAB 1.165746
PEN 3.934355
PGK 5.045959
PHP 69.976913
PKR 325.152211
PLN 4.257249
PYG 7539.080025
QAR 4.249951
RON 5.089314
RSD 116.813442
RUB 90.36555
RWF 1702.388962
SAR 4.37605
SBD 9.407788
SCR 17.728532
SDG 701.660042
SEK 10.899581
SGD 1.491716
SHP 0.871647
SLE 28.749384
SLL 24481.624028
SOS 666.225765
SRD 43.721276
STD 24164.634133
STN 24.383823
SVC 10.2004
SYP 129.043015
SZL 19.130851
THB 37.733192
TJS 11.080308
TMT 4.092044
TND 3.40637
TOP 2.81103
TRY 52.192504
TTD 7.911307
TWD 37.105099
TZS 3033.19563
UAH 50.648187
UGX 4313.448558
USD 1.167488
UYU 47.035897
UZS 14175.460964
VES 555.534681
VND 30746.950839
VUV 137.671878
WST 3.192482
XAF 652.84651
XAG 0.015826
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.155194
XCG 2.10099
XDR 0.811932
XOF 652.84651
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.869169
ZAR 19.361723
ZMK 10508.788893
ZMW 22.178331
ZWL 375.930499
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.63

    +0.18%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    98.26

    +1.15%

  • NGG

    -0.0300

    90.29

    -0.03%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    16.96

    -1.59%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    15.69

    -1.02%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    58.21

    -0.26%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.3

    -0.12%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    58.81

    -0.07%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.43

    +0.18%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.35

    -2.31%

  • BCC

    -0.4100

    80.17

    -0.51%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    204.03

    -0.47%

  • BP

    0.5400

    46.44

    +1.16%

Revellers on cloud nine at cannabis festival as Thailand relaxes law
Revellers on cloud nine at cannabis festival as Thailand relaxes law / Photo: Lillian SUWANRUMPHA - AFP

Revellers on cloud nine at cannabis festival as Thailand relaxes law

The pungent smell of smoke was unmistakable as revellers celebrated under the stars at a major Thai cannabis festival following the kingdom's decision to begin relaxing the laws around the drug.

Text size:

Thailand has long been known for its tough drug laws, but the government has steadily liberalised them in recent years and on Thursday the plant came off the banned narcotics list, decriminalising cultivation and possession.

While the changes stop short of Canada and Uruguay's decisions to fully legalise recreational use, Thailand hopes to cash in on the growing global market -- already worth billions of dollars -- for legal cannabis products, particularly in food and medicine.

At a festival organised by marijuana advocacy group Highland Network, several thousand happy attendees made the most of the newly relaxed rules.

"As soon as we got through to the other side, we sparked up," said Steve Cannon, 62, who came with a group of friends.

"Since then people have been handing me joints all afternoon and I couldn't tell you what a fair number was now, but I have been smoking all afternoon," said the American jazz musician, who has lived in Bangkok for the past 15 years.

- Multibillion-dollar market -

Roughly 3,000 attendees made the journey to White Sands Beach in Nakhon Pathom province, east of Bangkok, where stalls hawking everything from T-shirts and bongs to marijuana buds and hash brownies jostled with stages and bamboo palisades around an idyllic lake.

"We have been waiting for this time for so long," said Victor Zheng, owner of weed dispensary Nature Masters.

He gave advice to customers on his products including enriched soil for cultivation and buds and flowers for consumption.

"You see the people, they are coming and they are so happy," he said. "Not just us, the customers have been waiting for this time."

In 2018 Thailand legalised medicinal cannabis -- a landmark move by a country in Southeast Asia, where anti-drugs laws are notoriously harsh -- and the government has invested in the extraction, distillation and marketing of oils from the plant.

Analyst reports suggest that over the coming decade the legal cannabis market could be worth anything from $50 billion to $200 billion as countries relax laws around personal and medical use.

Thai businesses are moving to cash in on the liberalisation, including Charoen Pokphand Foods -- the food and farming subsidiary of giant conglomerate CP Group.

Last month the company announced plans to develop food and beverage products infused with CBD, a cannabis derivative, stressing Thailand's favourable climate for growing the plants and reputation for high-quality agricultural produce.

- 'People are free' -

The new rules leave recreational use in a grey area -- smoking it outside your home could still get you arrested, though under "public nuisance" laws rather than drugs legislation.

Offenders potentially face a 25,000 baht ($780) fine, as well as up to three months in jail.

And cannabis products with more than 0.2 percent concentration of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) -- the psychoactive compound that produces the drug's "high" -- remain illegal.

But while there was a police presence at the festival, officers appeared more curious than censorious.

Festival co-owner Arun "Max" Avery, 35, said he had no worries following the law's implementation and the publicity surrounding it.

Thais had cooked, created and medicated with cannabis long before prohibition, he said, so "to have their native plant back into their hands is just amazing".

"People are free to do whatever they want with it," he added.

And people at the festival were certainly enjoying themselves.

Joey, who only gave his first name, giggled as he puffed and chatted with friends, gently swaying.

"It is so relaxing. My stress is released," he said. "Smoking puts a smile on my face."

D.Naveed--DT