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‘Make space in the prisons’: Thailand’s cannabis entrepreneurs defiant as relisting looms

  • Activists fear a ‘big cannabis monopolisation’ will emerge instead of carefully constructed laws to regulate use and allow domestic businesses to grow

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A marijuana enthusiast writes on a sign with a big message reading “Don’t take marijuana back to being a drug”, as they attend a demonstration over government’s plan to recriminalise cannabis, outside the UN Building in Bangkok, Thailand, on May 28.  Photo: EPA-EFE

Two years after Thailand decriminalised cannabis in a giddy plume of publicity, businesses and free weed advocates say their dreams are about to go up in smoke, with the government poised to reclassify the plant as a narcotic by year-end.

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Worse still, Thailand’s cannabis community fears the motivation is less based on legitimate concerns for public health, than appeasing big players eyeing domination of a sector potentially worth hundreds of millions a year once the law is changed.

On June 9 – the anniversary of decriminalisation – cannabis activists will rally near Government House in a “Return Cannabis Rights to the People” demonstration against what they say is a law reversal which will kick smaller businesses out of the industry.

“This move is driven by the ability to create exclusive regulations allowing only certain groups to cultivate cannabis, leading to a market value of tens of billions of baht,” said Kitty Chopaka, a leading Thai leading cannabis advocate, in an Instagram post on Friday.

There is a fear that “big cannabis monopolisation” will emerge, the post added.

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Instead, activists want of a carefully constructed Cannabis Act to regulate use, protect young people and other groups from accessing weed and allow domestic businesses to grow.

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