Thailand’s cannabis Bill dealt a blow after bigger parties demand changes

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Thai lawmakers forced the withdrawal of a Bill to regulate wider use of cannabis, saying the proposed legislation lacked enough provisions to prevent its misuse for recreation.

Lawmakers in the House of Representatives voted 198 to 136 to pull the Bill and send it back to the drafting committee for further revision late on Wednesday.

The cannabis and hemp Bill, which passed the first reading in June and was designed to give the government more control over the industry, may now be reintroduced in November.

The unexpected resistance to the Bill came from the largest opposition party Pheu Thai and Democrat party, a member of the ruling coalition.

They were following a public outcry over the mushrooming of outlets and cafes selling cannabis products in Bangkok and other cities within three months of the country becoming the first in Asia to decriminalise marijuana.

“The Bill doesn’t control cannabis but even promotes it, leaving room for its use to stray from medical to extremely recreational,” said Mr Sutin Klangsang, a lawmaker from Pheu Thai, the largest party in the Lower House. “We’re afraid that children and people will smoke it and become addicted.”

Since Thailand’s landmark decriminalisation, the government has repeatedly said the move was aimed at medical and commercial use and has frowned upon its use for recreational purposes.

Agencies

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