Malaysia Looking At Thai Policy On Medical Use Of Cannabis
Thailand was the first Asian nation to decriminalise cultivation of marijuana and its consumption in food and drink.BANGKOK: Malaysia plans to learn from the cannabis policy of neighbouring Thailand in its effort to legalise usage of the drug for medical purposes, a health ministry official said.
The comments came after Thai health minister Anutin Charnvirakul said he would meet his Malaysian counterpart, Khairy Jamaluddin, during a meeting of Apec health ministers next week where Thailand will showcase its work in legalising medicinal marijuana.
With a tradition of using cannabis to calm pain and fatigue, Thailand legalised medicinal marijuana in 2018, becoming the first Asian nation to decriminalise cultivation of marijuana and its consumption in food and drink.
“We are developing our own framework for the usage of cannabis for medical purposes, and want to learn from Thailand,” the Malaysian official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
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The Malaysian government was interested in learning from Thailand’s framework for medical use, he added.
The cultivation and recreational use of marijuana is now illegal in Malaysia, and possession of more than 200gm of the drug entails a mandatory death sentence.
But Khairy has said the import and use of medicinal marijuana under a doctor’s prescription would be permissible if it was registered and licensed with the Drug Control Authority.
In April, he said the government welcomed clinical studies for the medical use of cannabidiol, a chemical in cannabis that does not impart a “high” to users.
Last month, state news agency Bernama said the health ministry aimed to start registering some cannabidiol products next year after studying their safety, although approval for cultivation was still far off.
There was no immediate comment from Malaysia’s law minister, Wan Junaidi Tuanku Jaafar.
Charnvirakul, the main driver behind Thailand’s legalisation of cannabis for medical purposes, estimated the industry could be worth more than US$3 billion (RM13.41 billion) within five years.
“Topics of discussion will be on how to jointly move forward this kind of policy in order to create benefits, economically and medically,” he told a news conference here today.
“We want everyone to recognise the property of this cannabis plant,” he said. “The more people are interested in this field, the more development and research (it) will create.”
Thailand has said its cannabis policy covers medical and health purposes but not recreational use, although hastily issued laws have created space for such uses. - FMT
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