Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

3 Asian Nations Warn Citizens Not To Use Marijuana In Canada

The Canadian Press, 30 Oct, 2018 12:37 PM
    BEIJING — Marijuana may be legal now in Canada but at least three Asian governments are warning their citizens to avoid it, including the spectre of possible arrest for Japanese and South Koreans.
     
     
    China, the latest to weigh in, didn't go that far. Its consulate in Toronto issued a statement dated Friday reminding Chinese in its jurisdiction — and students in particular — "to avoid contact with and use of marijuana for the sake of ensuring your own physical and mental health."
     
     
    Canada legalized the sale of recreational marijuana on Oct. 17.
     
     
    The Chinese statement, posted on the consulate's website, included a long explanation of the Canadian and provincial laws, advising them to read it carefully to avoid running afoul of the new regulations.
     
     
    Both Japan and South Korea warned their citizens in Canada ahead of the legalization.
     
     
    The Japanese consulate in Vancouver warned on its website that Japanese laws outlawing the possession and sale of marijuana may be applied to actions taken abroad.
     
     
    "Japanese residents and travellers should take ample care to stay away from marijuana, including food and beverages that include marijuana," the statement read in part.
     
     
    South Korea held information sessions in Canada and used a government website and TV broadcasts to lay down the law for its citizens.
     
     
    "Even in a place where marijuana is legalized, if our citizens smoke, purchase, possess or deliver marijuana, it's a criminal act, so they will be punished," the embassy in Canada tweeted. "Please be careful."
     
     
    Neither statement from Japan and South Korea explained how they might attempt to enforce their laws against smoking marijuana while abroad. Police and customs officials in South Korea did not answer calls seeking comment.
     
     
    Both South Korea and Japan have very strict anti-drug laws. In Korea, smoking, buying, possessing or delivering marijuana is punishable by up to five years in prison or a fine of up to 50 million won ($44,000).

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman And Her Dog Are Missing After Hike Near British Columbia’s Jumbo Pass

    A woman and her dog have disappeared during a hike in Jumbo Pass in British Columbia's southeast.

    Woman And Her Dog Are Missing After Hike Near British Columbia’s Jumbo Pass

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake
    ANMORE, B.C. — Mounties say a man in his 40s drowned in Buntzen Lake in Metro Vancouver on Tuesday.

    RCMP To Search For Body After Man In His 40S Drowns In B.C.'s Buntzen Lake

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police
    A Victoria police officer is nursing injuries after a collision early Tuesday between a police van and another vehicle.

    Victoria Officer Hurt In Vehicle Crash Involving Alleged Impaired Driver: Police

    Victoria Police Say Explicit Phone Calls Aimed At Women Provincewide

    Victoria Police Say Explicit Phone Calls Aimed At Women Provincewide
    Police in Victoria say they have received more than 50 reports of unwanted sexually explicit phone calls aimed at female employees of local businesses.

    Victoria Police Say Explicit Phone Calls Aimed At Women Provincewide

    Plaque Replacing Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Defaced, Victoria Keeping Monument

    Plaque Replacing Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Defaced, Victoria Keeping Monument
    VICTORIA — An offer from Ontario to find a new home for a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald has been declined by the city of Victoria.

    Plaque Replacing Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Defaced, Victoria Keeping Monument

    Homemade Explosive Device Behind A Blast At A Home In Coquitlam, Man Seriously Hurt

    Police say the explosion caused serious injuries to a man who lived at the home.

    Homemade Explosive Device Behind A Blast At A Home In Coquitlam, Man Seriously Hurt