söndag 13 december 2020

Expats hailed! Foreigners living in Thailand called "heroes" for leading the way in Thai tourism recovery - Thai Visa

Expats hailed! Foreigners living in Thailand called "heroes" for leading the way in Thai tourism recovery

 

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Image: Reuters

 

Channel 3 recognised the role of foreigners living in Thailand for helping lead the way in the recovery of Thai tourism.

 

Along with Thai domestic tourists they recognised expats as "heroes" in their print headline on a story about a year since Covid struck.

 

They also quoted TAT governor Yutthasak Suphasorn as recognising the role played by both groups of people in what he called the "restart" of tourism after the lowest income in years was experienced in 2020.

 

The media reported that tourism worldwide - 10% of the world economy - had been devastated since the world first learned of the coronavirus, that they said started on December 8th 2019.

 

A 52 trillion baht worldwide industry had been devastated, they said. 

 

But in an upbeat assessment of the future they said that Thailand in particular and Asia in general would recover faster than elsewhere in the world. 

 

They said that Thailand was still a "magnet" for tourism and that Thai investment in building new attractions would bring a new group of tourists.

 

They said that Thailand is recognized as one of the places in the world where the Covid-19 situation has been best handled.

 

Source: Channel 3

 

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Thais want vaccination when ready - Bangkok Post

Thais want vaccination when ready
Sharing is caring: Health officials attend to tourists near the famous Mon Bridge in Kanchanaburi yesterday.
Sharing is caring: Health officials attend to tourists near the famous Mon Bridge in Kanchanaburi yesterday.

Most people want to be vaccinated against the novel coronavirus, according to a public opinion survey by the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA).

A total of 724 people were surveyed from Monday to Friday to determine if members of the public want to be inoculated against Covid-19 when a vaccine is available in Thailand.

A total of 68.9% of respondents expressed their desire to be vaccinated, while 15.2% said they weren't sure. A total of 8.8% of respondents said they had no opinion, while 5.2% said they were certain they would not want to be injected with a vaccine.

A recent Bangkok Poll study surveyed 1,082 people, and most were concerned about the discovery of recent Covid-19 infections brought by citizens who slipped back into the country without undergoing quarantine, referring to recent returnees from Tachileik, a border town in neighbouring Myanmar.

They were also concerned the problem would lead to a new outbreak in the kingdom and subsequently a new lockdown, the poll said.

According to Bangkok Poll, respondents want the government to step up immigration checks along the border and patrol natural corridors often used by people to illegally enter Thailand.

Meanwhile, the Public Health Ministry has revealed the coronavirus strain carried by Thai returnees from Tachileik is the same strain found in India. This particular strain is believed to be easier to transmit. However, the ministry said the spread in Thailand is contained.

Opas Karnkawinpong, director-general of the Department of Disease Control (DDC), said genetic sequencing of samples taken from the infected returnees shows the strain is the same as that found in India but has spread to Myanmar's Tachileik and Thailand.

According to Dr Opas, the novel coronavirus has mutated into a G-strain, which accounts for 80% of Covid-19 infections worldwide.

Analyses suggest the strain can be more easily transmitted than the original one found in China's Wuhan last year.

Dr Opas said that even though the coronavirus mutates, the phenomenon is unlikely to affect the development of vaccines or their effectiveness when given to the public.

"The result of vaccine trials in areas shows that candidate vaccines are more than 70% effective, so the strain is unlikely to make them less effective," he said.

Dr Opas insisted the spread of Covid-19 in the northern region is contained.

He said the number of Covid-19 patients associated with the Tachileik cluster stood at 49 as of yesterday, which indicates efficiency in the stepped-up disease control measures.

These 49 cases are scattered in seven provinces: 37 in Chiang Rai, five in Chiang Mai, three in Bangkok and one each in Phayao, Phichit, Ratchaburi and Sing Buri.

Among them is a group of nightclub workers found to be infected after illegally entering the country late last month.

The issue has prompted Thai authorities to ask Myanmar officials to help arrange the repatriation of Thai nationals there.

Dr Opas said 107 people had crossed the border after arrangements were made, and everyone was tested for Covid-19 before departing.

Of this, five tested positive and were admitted to hospital as they arrived in Thailand.

The rest went straight to quarantine venues, where four tested positive while under isolation, he said.

"The patients have very mild symptoms. The government is prepared to take care of Thais overseas and it is recommended that they return legally for the sake of public health," he said.

Dr Sopon Iamsirithaworn, director of the division of communicable diseases, said yesterday no new local case has turned up following reports about an infection at a Bangkok condominium.

He said the case involved a sixth nurse who contracted the virus and the case had been already reported by the CCSA. 

lördag 12 december 2020

Thai students ‘encouraged’ to be more MODEST - Bangkok Jack

Thai students 'encouraged' to be more MODEST
Thai students (Library image)

Until recently, phasin — a long fabric which is often wrapped around the waist like a skirt — was considered outdated.

It was seen more as a relic from the past, a piece of cultural heritage that belonged in the museum as a part of an anthropological exhibit rather than daily life.

Back when phasin was still widely worn, people used to weave their own clothes with their own patterns to wear.

While this D-I-Y approach to fashion managed to last for centuries even after the arrival of modern fabrics and technologies, today phasin is generally seen as a novelty.

Not any more — at least in the lower northeastern provinces of Nakhon Ratchasima, Buri Ram and Surin.

Female students and staff at some universities and government offices have been encouraged to start wearing phasin to classes and work, especially on special occasions.

The push is a part of the government's initiative to promote local cultural heritages as a part of daily life.

University students are seen wearing 'phasin' as they walk to their classes. Many students have taken to experimenting with phasin as a uniform, which is gaining popularity in universities in the lower Northeast. Phitsanu Thepthong

In Buri Ram and Surin, some villages have even become famous for weaving exquisitely-patterned phasin.

Here, a well-made and beautifully patterned cotton phasin can fetch many thousands of baht.

The premium version made of silk may go for over 50,000 baht per piece, especially if they were woven by a famous traditional craftsman.

Akradej Deeoom, 37, a lecturer of Western University, Buri Ram Campus, told the Bangkok Post the government's push has been well-received by the public.

"It's practical. Plus, students are only required to wear them once a week and on special occasions," he said. – Bangkok Post


Phuket officials target arrivals from Myanmar as fears of COVID spread rise - Phuket News

Phuket officials target arrivals from Myanmar as fears of COVID spread rise
Police at the Phuket Check Point, the only entry by road onto Phuket, check Myanmar nationals for any new arrivals from their home country looking to land on the island. Photo: Phuket Provincial Police

PHUKET: Local officials have ramped up their efforts to locate any new arrivals from Myanmar who may have arrived on the island without passing any COVID-19 checks on entering the country. The crackdown comes amid fears that new arrivals from Myanmar may be infected, and start a second wave of infections in Phuket.

The move follows a Myanmar woman being found in Phuket last weekafter avoiding a COVID-19 test in Phang Nga, the province immediately north of Phuket.

The woman had been staying in Phuket and working at a local market. 

Officials later announced that the woman, who had confessed to entering the country illegally, had tested negative for the virus. 

The move also comes as efforts are ramped up in Phang Nga, the province immediately north of Phuket, and at all border crossings with Myanmar following the Tachilek scare that has so far resulted in at least 49 infections being found in Thailand associated with people returning from the Myanmar town and thousands of people tested for COVID-19.

In announcing that the Myanmar woman found in Phuket testing negative for the virus, Phuket Vice Governor Phichet Panaphong noted that the announcement was made in order to calm fears on the island that the woman is infected with the virus, V/Gov Phichet explained.

"I share this statement to help relieve people's fears in Phuket and please do not panic," he said.

"At this time, Phuket Province has set measures to find any immigrants from neighboring countries who illegally pass a disease-scanning process so that we can prevent the spread of COVID-19."

However, by that time the woman's arrival in Phuket unchecked had raised serious concerns about the current protection measures in place. She had fled Takua Pa Hospital in Phang Nga, boarded a bus to Phuket and disembarked near the Phuket Technology College in Thalang at about 9am on Dec 2.

That information was released by Phang Nga health officials, not officials in Phuket.

The woman's arrival also occurred despite Phuket Provincial Police Commander Maj Gen Pornsak Nuannoo telling The Phuket News on Monday (Dec 7) that his officers had ramped up their efforts to check all Myanmar nationals at the Phuket Check Point to ensure they were fully legal.

Maj Gen Pornsak said his officers had increased their checks since Dec 1, the day that Phuket Vice Governor Phichet first gave the order for officials to ramp up their efforts.

In handing down the order on Dec 1, V/Gov Phichet clearly explained that the provincial order followed a direct order from Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha for all provinces to increase virus protection measures, especially for new arrivals from Myanmar.

Maj Gen Pornsak also admitted that as of Monday there were still no health officers at the Phuket Check Point to conduct any tests on Myanmar nationals arriving on the island.

"I am waiting for the Phuket Governor to order health officials to cooperate [sic] and have the correct equipment [assigned] to scan migrants entering at the Phuket Check Point in Tha Chatchai," he said.

"I don't know when the Phuket Governor will order this. I hope it is soon," he added.

Maj Gen Pornsak also admitted that the Myanmar woman passing through the checkpoint unchecked was a 'shortcoming' of police stationed at the checkpoint. "We are working the best we can," he said.

MACNELS SHIPPING PHUKET

Phuket Public Health Office (PPHO) Chief Dr Thanit Sermkaew explained to The Phuket News on Monday that having no health officers stationed full time at the Phuket Check Point was intentional.

"Health officers will respond immediately if any officers there report a suspicious case. While the health official is on the way to the scene, officers already there can control the situation," he said.

"I want people to be confident in health officials' procedures, which have been prepared to deal with cases of returnees and to prevent a second wave of COVID-19. We have experience and a working plan already," Dr Thanit said.

Meanwhile, officers from the Phuket Provincial Employment Office have been conducting checks of Myanmar workers across the island, to confirm they are COVID-free and to check for illegal migrant workers – again, in accordance with the order handed down by V/Gov Phichet on Dec 1.

"Phuket has about 59,000 migrant workers, especially Myanmar nationals, which comprise about 80% of all the migrant workers in the province," V/Gov Phichet said.

"I want local officials to intensively keep eyes on Myanmar workers in Phuket and search for illegal workers," he added.

"Officers from the Phuket Public Health Office must coordinate with other relevant officers to check workers in entertainment venues and other workplaces," V/Gov Phichet noted.

PPEO Chief Santi Nantasuwan told The Phuket News on Monday that his officers had launched their campaign to check Myanmar workers on the island, noting that on Dec 4 alone his officers checked 39 Myanmar workers at nine workplaces, which included restaurants and retail shops.

"Most of them actually live and stay in Phuket. They have not left the country since the COVID-19 outbreak began," he added.

In line with an order from Phuket Governor Narong Woonciew issued last Friday, the PPEO had met with some 100 employers and "urged" them to report any illegal migrant workers they are aware of, Mr Santi confirmed.

"They all raised their hands to show their full cooperation to prevent COVID-19 from spreading in Phuket," he said.

"We knew people are scared because of the news. Please do not be worried because we are doing our job as we are cooperating with employers, health officials and immigration officials already," Mr Santi said.

Mr Santi made no mention of what legal ramifications awaited any employers found illegally hiring a migrant worker.

However, Phuket health chief Dr Thanit said he was confident that the Myanmar community itself would report any illegal new arrivals.

"Remember, we must be confident in this process and be united to protect Phuket from COVID-19," he said.


Neo Pattaya: Popular resort undergoes rebrand - focus on "High Quality, High Value, High Spending" - Thai Visa

Neo Pattaya: Popular resort undergoes rebrand - focus on "High Quality, High Value, High Spending"
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Every Covid patient in Thailand accounted for, confirms Disease Control Dept chief - The Nation

 Every Covid patient in Thailand accounted for, confirms Disease Control Dept chief

Dec 11. 2020

By THE NATION

There are no unaccounted for Covid-19 cases in the seven provinces where newly infected persons travelled, Dr Opas Karnkawinpong, director-general of the Disease Control Department said on Friday.

"So far, 49 cases have been found to be related to the people who crossed the border illegally from Myanmar. Of them, 30 have tested positive for Covid-19 in local state quarantine facilities, while the 17 who travelled to seven provinces before testing positive have infected two others so far.

"Health officials in the seven provinces, namely Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Phayao, Phichit, Ratchaburi, Singburi and Tak traced and tested more than 6,000 persons suspected of having close contact with the infected. Other than the two who contracted Covid-19 from the Tachilek arrivals, there are no unaccounted for cases or infections resulting from an unknown origin.

"This means that the seven provinces are safe," Opas added. "No areas have been classified as risky, so people can travel locally without having to quarantine themselves when returning to their home province.

"However, people still need to use protect themselves by wearing face masks, washing their hands regularly, avoiding crowded areas and using the Thai Chana platform to record their movements."



North outbreak over, says govt - Bangkok Post

 North outbreak over, says govt

The Department of Disease Control has declared that all provinces in Thailand are free of Covid-19 and there is no longer any need for quarantines after internal travel.

Dr Opas Karnkawinpong, chief of the DDC, played down fears over recent cases in the North, saying that the department has tested 4,469 people in the region and found that only two from a high-risk group had contracted the virus. Widespread testing was carried out after a group of nightclub workers in the Myanmar town of Tachileik were found to be infected after illegally entering the country late last month.

"Aggressive action by public health staff and administrative officers in those provinces was very effective. All those who came into contact with the patients have been contained, so the outbreak will go no further," he said.

"Now those seven provinces are safe, people can travel anywhere. But don't forget to wear a mask at all times," he said.

According to the department, the infected illegal entrants from Tachileik stayed in Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Bangkok, Phayao, Pichit, Ratchaburi and Sing Buri provinces. There have been 49 positive tests among arrivals from Tachileik, with 30 found during quarantine, 17 among illegal border crossers and two cases of local infection.

A total of 107 Thais -- 28 men, 76 women and three children -- crossed the border into Mae Sai district yesterday afternoon as the exodus from Tachileik continued. Five of those who returned have reportedly tested positive for Covid-19.

The number of returnees was higher than Thai officials had been expecting. Their Myanmar counterparts had said earlier that only 59 Thais would be sent back.

Of the 107 people who crossed, only seven were returning legally. The others had crossed the border illegally to work at entertainment venues in Tachileik, which has since become a Covid-19 hotspot as Myanmar grapples with the rapid spread of the disease.

Dr Taweesilp Visanuyothin, spokesman for the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA), also insisted that the situation is under control, adding that the government has never advised those returning from visits to Chiang Mai or Chiang Rai to undergo quarantine after some companies mandated the procedure for employees.

"I understand the panic at first, but we must not overreact. There is no need for a 14-day quarantine. It would be better to continue to insist on the wearing of face masks at all times to prevent any further spread of the disease," he said.

Meanwhile, Sathit Pitutecha, deputy minister at the Ministry of Public Health who launched a "Big Cleaning" disinfection campaign in Chiang Mai yesterday, said that five infected people from Tachileik town are now under medical supervision and as long as there are no further cases of coronavirus, the alert level in the province would return to normal on Dec 14.

In a separate development, Finance Minister Arkhom Termpittayapaisith ruled out another 5,000-baht relief handout. However, he said the promotion of domestic tourism had helped the economy.

He told the media yesterday that the government had no plans for a "phase 2" handout and reports to the contrary were "fake news"

"There is no need to provide another cash handout. The government will continue to use existing measures to reboot the economy.

"And if the Covid-19 phase 2 happens, we believe our authorities and national security can handle the situation," he said.

The government expects eight million foreign tourists -- or one-fifth of last year's total -- to return in 2021, in addition to locals who are expected to make more trips thanks to the state Rao Thiew Duay Kan tourism stimulus package.

The finance minister projected that Thai tourists would generate 6% of GDP next year, helping offset the loss of revenue expected from the drop in foreign arrivals.

Additionally, he said the government plans to give loan guarantees of 175 billion baht to small and medium enterprises to boost their capital.

He added that the Kon La Krueng co-payment measure will also increase spending in shops and restaurants.



fredag 11 december 2020

Thai Airways Lists Two Airbus A380 Superjumbos For Sale - Simply Flying

 Thai Airways Lists Two Airbus A380 Superjumbos For Sale

In its next step towards emerging alive and a smaller airline on the other side of its restructuring, Thai Airways has listed two of its Airbus A380 superjumbos for sale. The chances of finding a buyer, however, are slim to non-existent.

Thai selling two A380
Thai Airways has put its two youngest A380s up for sale. Photo: Airbus

As Thai Airways continues its restructuring process to emerge a slimmer airline, it is once more searching for potential buyers for its aircraft. Previously having launched no less than 32 widebody aircraft, including all of its 747s, onto the second-hand market, now it is looking for someone to take two of its A380 superjumbos.

Thailand's borders closed until Q2 2021

The Thai domestic market, aided by a government stimulus package, is showing significant signs of recovery. However, long-haul traffic in and out of the country, which relies on tourism for 20% of its GDP, is still at abysmal levels. Earlier this month, Pipat Ratchakitprakan, Thailand's Minister for Sports and Tourism, announced that the country's borders would remain closed for tourists until the second quarter of next year.

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What's Happening With Thai Airways' Airbus A380 Fleet?

Thus, it makes sense that, in a bid to raise cash that has seen everything from cutlery to champagne leave the airline's stores, a struggling Thai Airways is looking to hand off its behemoths of aircraft.

Thai A380 sale
Thai Airways is hoping to raise more cash as the country's borders will remain close for up to six months more. Photo: Toshi Aoki – JP Spotters via Wikimedia Commons

Seven years old with 30,000 flight hours

The two A380s, HS-TUE and HS-TUF, were the last to join the fleet in October and November in 2013. They have both been put up for "a market survey to find potential buyers for the items listed" on a website called Thai Aircraft Trading. However,

"The actual sale will take place under the business reorganization plan and would require approvals of relevant stakeholders and the Bankruptcy Court."

HS-TUE has flown 3,691 flight cycles and just over 30,600 hours. HS-TUF is not far behind with 3,589 cycles and just under 30,000 hours. There is no initial asking price listed, but we can assume that as far as superjumbos go, it would be a bargain and far below the list price of $390 million.

So what are the chances of Thai actually making a successful sale of it? To be frank, close to non-existent. The only A380 to successfully transition to the second-hand market was the one that went from Singapore Airlines to Hi Fly in 2018, and even that is headed for retirement when the lease period is up. 

A380
The only A380 to successfully sell second-hand was the one that went to Hi Fly from Singapore Airlines. Photo: Getty Images

Not the only opportunity to own an A380

More than that, there is already an abundance of A380s out there that are waiting to be scrapped for parts, should they not find someone with a substantial amount of cash and oodles of optimism. Should you so desire, there is the opportunity to pick up one of Air France's retired A380s from the company Dr. Peters Group.

With airlines not even flying the aircraft they already have, unless someone very wealthy, quite eccentric, and with a burning wish for either an A380 of their own or an all-superjumbo start-up airline comes along, it is hard to imagine a successful sale.