Thailand Cracks Down Harder on Vapes. Is There Hope?

    Thailand’s government recently ordered a crackdown on nicotine vapes under a national prohibition, resulting in numerous police raids. 

    Fears of youth vaping and adulterated products—fostered, ironically, by prohibition—are behind the latest enforcement efforts, along with a new report highlighting police corruption. But there is a sliver of hope for change in a newly formed committee, including members who vape, presenting its policy recommendations to parliament.

    A government spokesman said recent raids on a single day in two areas of Bangkok saw police seize more than 3,000 vaping products worth 2 million baht ($60,000). Nationwide, Royal Thai Police said that between February 26 and March 4, they arrested 690 suspects in 666 vape-related cases, seizing items worth over 41 million baht ($1.2 million), according to Tobacco Reporter. Thailand’s Digital Economy and Society Ministry has meanwhile blocked and shut down websites selling vapes, and sought to hamper internet searches.

    Thailand has long had one of the world’s harshest anti-vaping regimes, having implemented sweeping bans in 2014. Penalties for selling or importing these safer alternatives to cigarettes can include hefty fines and imprisonment. Sales of heated tobacco products, another harm reduction option, are also banned.

    The country’s smoking rate is around 19 percent—it’s almost double that among men—and an estimated 66,000 people in Thailand die of smoking-related causes each year.

    As Filter previously reported, there were hopes that the country’s 2023 election might result in the vape prohibition being overturned. The run-up saw a degree of political support for legalization or decriminalization.

    But the governing Pheu Thai Party is now further targeting illicit sales and vape use, through preventative efforts and heavier law enforcement.

    But recently, Saligupta said, more regular citizens—possessing perhaps just a single vape—have been targeted by law enforcement.

    Asa Saligupta, director of the advocacy group ENDS Cigarette Smoking Thailand, described the recent moves as largely more of the same. “Thai prime ministers have repeatedly announced strict crackdowns,” he told Filter.

    But recently, he added, more regular citizens—possessing perhaps just a single vape—have been targeted by law enforcement. This is despite the fact, Saliguta said, that simple possession of vapes is not technically illegal. The climate in Thailand has led to widespread confusion on this point, with many international sources stating that possession is illegal. Police harassment of people who vape occurs regardless.

    The latest enforcement surge, Saligupta explained, has been sparked by media stories of “zombie cigarettes” adulterated with other drugs, and fears of youth using them.

    This led to government advisor and spokesperson Jirayu Huangsap proposing a new “Doraemon Task Force” to combat vape use. Doraemon is a children’s character—a robotic cat—and the suggested name alludes to vapes being produced in toy-like designs to appeal to minors.

    Regulation with age restrictions would be the rational way to protect consumers, as Saligupta is well aware.

    “Since e-cigarettes are illegal in Thailand, they are sold on the black market without any quality control,” he pointed out. “This creates a risk of tampering, contamination, or the sale of counterfeit products.” However, “The anti-tobacco network continues to use political pressure to push against legalization.”

    Saligupta called the latest evidence of police corruption an “unintended consequence” of the Thai government’s vapes stance.

    “While there have been cases where individuals suffered health issues due to vaping illicit, poor-quality products, the media coverage has often been exaggerated,” Saligupta also noted.”This kind of emotional reporting has long been a problem in Thailand, where the focus is more on creating fear rather than presenting a balanced view that allows the public to make informed decisions.”

    Thailand is far from alone in that.

    Huangsap also pointed to a new confidential report on the vape trade and associated police corruption, noting that some vendors have been openly trading. “This has led to suspicions that some law enforcement officers may be complicit in allowing these shops to operate unchecked,” he said.

    As Filter previously reported, police extortion around vapes has been a related problem in the kingdom, with both Thais and foreigners in possession of vapes having to pay bribes when threatened by law enforcement.

    Saligupta called the latest evidence of police corruption an “unintended consequence” of the Thai government’s vapes stance. “This proves that the ban has been a failed policy,” he said.

    Though the ban and the crackdowns continue, tobacco harm reduction advocates do have some reason to be hopeful of a better future for those people in Thailand who vape despite everything—and for the millions who smoke.

    “The hope is that the government will listen to the voices of all involved stakeholders, rather than just the opponents.”

    In 2024, the government created a committee tasked with studying regulatory measures. It comprises 35 members, including doctors, politicians, relevant officials and people with experience of vapes.

    Saligupata, who is a member of the committee, called it “the most positive thing to happen” in Thailand in the last 10 years. “Finally, they have decided to listen to the voice of vapers.”

    On March 20, the committee presented the Thai parliament with a comprehensive report outlining three possible approaches.

    Of the three options the committee evaluated, maintaining and strengthening the existing ban on vapes and heated tobacco products received only seven votes from committee members. The second approach, lifting the ban only for heated tobacco products, got five votes. Twenty-two members voted for the third option: ending the prohibition of both vapes and heated tobacco products. 

    “The hope,” Saligupata said, “is that the government will thoroughly consider the proposed approaches and listen to the voices of all involved stakeholders, rather than just the opponents” of legalization.

     


     

    Photograph of police in Bangkok by Adirach Toumlamoon via Wikimedia Commons/Creative Commons 4.0

    Correction, March 21: This article originally stated that simple possession of vapes is illegal in Thailand. It has been updated based on Asa Saligupta’s confirmation that this is not the case, although people have still been targeted by law enforcement for possession alone.

    • Kiran is a tobacco harm reduction fellow for Filter. She is a writer and journalist who has written for publications including the Guardian, the Telegraph, I Paper and the Times, among many others. Her book, I Can Hear the Cuckoo, was published by Gaia in 2023. She lives in Wales.

      Kiran’s fellowship was previously supported by an independently administered tobacco harm reduction scholarship from Knowledge-Action-Change—an organization that has separately provided restricted grants and donations to Filter.

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