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Krabi police seize drugs, cache of weapons

Krabi police seize drugs, cache of weapons

KRABI — 20 March 2026, Police in Krabi have arrested members of a drug trafficking network and seized a large cache of firearms, including military-style weapons, during a province-wide crackdown, officials said on Friday.

The arrests were part of “Operation Eagle 154: Protect Krabi”, conducted between 1 and 20 March to combat drug-related crime and improve public safety.

Authorities displayed the seized items at a press conference led by Krabi governor Angkoon Silathevakul and Police Major General Sukkasem Nakornwilai, chief of Krabi provincial police. Among the weapons confiscated were 17 firearms, including a modified M16 rifle fitted with a suppressor and shell-catching net, a submachine gun, shotguns and handguns. More than 200 rounds of ammunition were also recovered.

Police also seized 26,127 methamphetamine tablets and 29.84 kilograms of cannabis extract. Additional assets included six cars, 10 motorcycles, gold jewellery and cash, bringing the total value of confiscated items to more than 11 million baht (about $310,000).

In total, authorities arrested 161 suspected drug traffickers, 39 drug users and four individuals wanted on outstanding warrants.

As part of the operation, officers on 13 March raided a business in Sai Thai subdistrict suspected of illegally producing and distributing cannabis extracts. The premises, operated by Cannazon Co., had been converted into a cultivation and processing facility, with multiple cannabis strains and a laboratory capable of producing extracts such as kief, hash and moonrock.

A 31-year-old Israeli national who identified himself as the owner was arrested and charged under Thailand’s narcotics laws. Authorities also seized assets linked to the operation, including the building, equipment and bank accounts, valued at more than 3 million baht.

Officials said this was the second raid on the same premises after an earlier operation in January resulted in charges related to the use of Thai nominees and a 60-day suspension of its cannabis sales licence. Investigators allege the suspect resumed operations after being released on bail, selling cannabis extracts locally and online for 250 to 500 baht per gram.

In a separate case, police in Ao Luek district raided a rental house following a tip-off and arrested suspects with 1,909 methamphetamine pills, customer records and several firearms. One suspect admitted ordering the drugs via the Line messaging app for resale.

Authorities said further investigations are under way to trace financial transactions and expand the crackdown on related networks, including asset seizures under narcotics laws.

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Former TOWIE participant found dead in Phuket canal

Former TOWIE participant found dead in Phuket canal

PHUKET — 20 March 2026, A British man found dead in a canal in Phuket has been identified as a former participant in the UK reality television series The Only Way Is Essex (TOWIE), with police now believing he accidentally fell into the water and was unable to climb out.

The body of Jordan Wright, 32, was discovered face down in a drainage canal in Bang Tao area of Thalang district at about 14:00 on 14 March. Investigators, forensic officers and a medical examiner who examined the scene found no signs of physical assault.

A hotel key card found near the body led police to a room at Coco Phuket Bangtao hotel, where Wright had been staying alone.

Further checks showed Wright entered Thailand on 3 December 2025 on Qatar Airways flight QR828, arriving in Bangkok at 19:15, and was due to depart on 31 May 2026.

CCTV footage from the hotel indicated Wright had been pacing repeatedly before running out of the premises at around 23:25 on 12 March. He was seen heading towards a nearby construction area before entering a drainage canal approximately 1.6 metres deep.

Police said the canal measures about 2 metres from ground level to the bottom, making it difficult to climb out, particularly at night. Investigators believe Wright, who appeared to be in a distressed or agitated state at the time, was unable to get out of the canal and later died.

Authorities said the investigation remains ongoing, with further forensic examination under way to determine the exact cause of death.

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Cambodian man held over illegally modified guns

Cambodian man held over illegally modified guns

SA KAEO — 20 March 2026, Police in Sa Kaeo province have arrested a Cambodian man after he collected a suspicious parcel containing modified blank-firing guns and a cache of ammunition, in a case believed to be linked to an illegal cross-border arms network.

Pol. Col. Chuchat Khongmuang, superintendent of Khlong Luek Police Station, said officers acted on a tip-off and inspected the parcel, which was suspected of containing illicit items. The suspect, later identified as Sok Em, 23, was detained while arriving to receive the package.

Inside, officers found two modified 9mm blank guns, three magazines, a suppressor, two gun cases and a mobile phone. Authorities said all items were illegal. The suspect was charged with illegal possession of firearms and unlawful entry into the kingdom.

A subsequent search of the suspect’s residence uncovered additional items, including 310 rounds of 9mm blank ammunition, 20 rounds of 8mm ammunition, six gun boxes and two more parcels concealed inside the house.

Police believe the case may be connected to a network smuggling and distributing illegal firearms along the border. Investigators are working to trace the origin of the parcels, identify transport routes and track down other suspects.

The suspect and seized items have been handed over to investigators at Khlong Luek Police Station for legal proceedings. The investigation is ongoing.

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Phuket busts South Korean drug gang, arrests four with export stash

Thai officials stand behind the arrested South Korean men with seized evidence laid out on the table ahead of them.

PHUKET — 20 March 2026, A South Korean drug ring has been busted in Phuket, with immigration police arresting four suspects and intercepting narcotics allegedly bound for South Korea.

The operation was carried out under a nationwide crackdown on foreign nationals involved in transnational crime, directed by senior Immigration Bureau commanders. Authorities had been alerted by South Korean police, via the Royal Thai Police’s Foreign Affairs Division, about suspects allegedly trafficking drugs from Thailand to South Korea and believed to be hiding in Phuket.

Following surveillance, investigators identified a luxury housing estate in tambon Koh Kaew, Muang district, as the group’s hideout. A court-approved search warrant was executed at around 08:30 on 19 March.

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Four South Korean nationals were arrested:

  • Sim, 43 — charged with illegal possession of a Category 2 drug (ketamine) and use of a Category 1 drug (methamphetamine); tourist visa revoked.
  • Lee, 32 — charged with illegal use of methamphetamine; tourist visa revoked.
  • Kim, 31 — charged with possession of ketamine and crystal methamphetamine (ice), drug use, and overstaying his visa by 733 days.
  • Seo, 31 — charged with possession and use of methamphetamine, and overstaying by 733 days.

Authorities seized the following items:

  • Approximately 300 grams of ketamine
  • Approximately 100 grams of crystal methamphetamine (ice)
  • Drug paraphernalia, including syringes
  • Six mobile phones
  • One laptop and one computer CPU
  • Six luxury-brand items (watches and bags)
  • Two credit cards

Police said two of the suspects had entered Thailand on 60-day tourist visas but became involved in a drug trafficking network, violating the terms of their stay. All four suspects, along with the seized evidence, have been handed over to investigators for legal proceedings.

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Dry season turns profitable as red ant eggs sell at 500 baht per kilo

NAKHON RATCHASIMA — Villagers in Ban Don Tat Ruea, Non Daeng district, are turning to harvesting red ant eggs as a source of food and income during the dry season, when farming activities have slowed.

Residents in Non Daeng subdistrict said they have been collecting the eggs from nests built by red ants on roadside trees, particularly along the route linking Ban Don Tat Ruea and Ban Don Udom in Don Yai subdistrict. The seasonal activity has drawn many villagers seeking both household consumption and supplementary earnings.

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Priyaporn Khaengkhan, 33, said she spends a few hours each day gathering red ant eggs while taking a break from agricultural work. “I collect enough for my family and to share with neighbours,” she said.

She added that an average harvest yields around 1–2 kilogrammes per day. With market prices reaching about 500 baht per kilogramme, some villagers are focusing more seriously on collecting the eggs for sale.

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Despite the high price, demand remains strong, with many customers placing advance orders. Locals said those who collect the eggs for sale can earn between 1,000 and 1,500 baht per day, making it a lucrative seasonal activity.

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Fishing boats gutted in 4-hour blaze, 8 vessels destroyed, losses exceed 10 million baht

NAKHON SI THAMMARAT — 20 March 2026, A fire tore through a cluster of fishing boats in Khanom district early Friday, burning for about four hours and destroying eight vessels, with damage estimated at more than 10 million baht.

Police were alerted to the blaze at around 01:00 at a fishing pier in Khanom. Officers from Khanom Police Station, marine police, and local rescue units rushed to the scene.

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Firefighters found intense flames engulfing a group of older fishing boats moored at a raft area in Khlong Khanom. The fire spread to nearby structures, while strong winds hampered efforts to contain it. Crews took approximately four hours to bring the blaze under control.

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Initial reports indicate that all eight fishing boats were completely destroyed. Authorities suspect the fire may have been caused by an electrical short circuit on one vessel, which then spread to others.

However, police have not ruled out arson and are still investigating the exact cause. It remains unclear which boat was the source of the fire.

A witness said one burning boat broke free after its mooring rope snapped and drifted into nearby vessels, causing the flames to spread rapidly from one boat to another.

Forensic officers will conduct a detailed examination of the scene to determine the cause. Speculation has circulated that the fire could be linked to frustration over high fuel prices and shortages, though this has not been confirmed.

Reports also suggest the boats belong to the family of a parliamentary candidate who was not elected. The fleet is said to be among the largest in Nakhon Si Thammarat, consisting mainly of large single-trawl fishing vessels. The full extent of the damage is still being assessed.

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Thai Baht as Gold Proxy Is Changing Forex Dynamics for Global Investors

Thailand’s currency market is entering a very unusual phase, and forex traders are starting to notice that the Thai baht is no longer moving only on the usual drivers like tourism, exports, and interest rate expectations. Gold has become so influential in Thailand’s financial system that foreign investors are increasingly treating the baht as a proxy for gold exposure. That may sound surprising at first, but it makes sense once you look at how strongly gold transactions have begun affecting capital flows and exchange rate behavior inside the country. Reuters reported in January that Thailand’s central bank was moving to tighten controls on gold related transactions specifically because heavy gold trading in baht was helping drive the currency higher and increasing volatility.

This is a major shift for Thailand because it changes how the baht should be understood. For years, many forex investors looked at the Thai currency mainly through the lens of current account trends, political headlines, and regional risk appetite. Those factors still matter, but the role of gold has become too large to ignore. When gold buying and selling starts influencing the baht directly, the currency becomes something more than just a national unit of exchange. It becomes a financial signal tied to one of the world’s most important safe haven assets.

For Thailand, this new dynamic matters because it affects far more than short term market charts. It has implications for exporters, tourism competitiveness, central bank policy, and the wider way global investors engage with the country. A baht that is partly behaving like a gold linked currency is not just a technical market curiosity. It is a structural shift that could reshape how Thailand is priced in international financial markets.

Why the Thai Baht Is Becoming Linked to Gold

Thailand has always had a strong relationship with gold. Gold is widely understood, actively traded, and deeply familiar to Thai households and investors. But in 2026, that relationship has become large enough to influence the country’s currency in a visible way. This is what makes the current environment so important.

Gold flows are now affecting the baht directly

The strongest evidence comes from the Bank of Thailand itself. Reuters reported that the central bank blamed large gold related foreign exchange transactions for part of the baht’s rise and said these flows were strong enough to justify new controls beginning in March. The measures included tighter scrutiny, limits on daily online gold transactions, and closer monitoring of foreign currency inflows tied to gold activity.

That tells the market something very important. It means the baht is not strengthening only because of broad confidence in Thailand. It is also being pulled by the mechanics of gold trade and settlement. When investors buy or move gold in ways that require baht conversion, the currency starts reacting to gold market behavior more directly than normal.

Why foreign investors care about this relationship

Foreign investors are always looking for indirect ways to express a market view. Sometimes they buy a currency because they like a country’s economy. Other times they buy it because the currency gives them access to a wider theme. In Thailand’s case, the baht is increasingly reflecting gold related flows, which means it may now serve as a partial proxy for gold sentiment under certain market conditions.

That creates a new kind of appeal. An investor who believes gold demand will remain strong may begin to watch the baht more closely, not because Thailand has suddenly become a pure commodity economy, but because local financial structures have made gold activity more relevant to currency direction. This does not make the baht identical to gold, but it does make the link more meaningful than many traders expected.

The result is a market where Thailand’s currency story now includes a precious metals dimension that would have seemed unusual just a few years ago.

Why This Changes the Forex Picture for Thailand

A currency that starts behaving like a proxy for another asset cannot be analyzed in the same old way. Thailand’s baht now needs to be understood not only through macroeconomic fundamentals but also through the rhythm of gold demand, safe haven positioning, and trading rules around precious metals.

Traditional baht analysis is no longer enough

In the past, a trader looking at the baht would focus on exports, tourism receipts, domestic politics, central bank signals, and regional flows. All of that still matters, but the gold connection adds another layer. If gold prices surge and Thai gold activity intensifies, the baht can strengthen for reasons that have little to do with standard domestic demand.

That is a big change for Thailand centric traders. It means a currency move may no longer be explained fully by local growth or inflation alone. Sometimes the real answer may lie in the gold market.

Policy makers are now forced to respond differently

This new relationship also forces the central bank to think differently. Reuters reported that Thai officials were worried that baht appreciation linked partly to gold flows was hurting export and tourism competitiveness. That is a highly specific policy problem. It means the authorities are not dealing only with normal capital inflows. They are dealing with a currency being shaped by trading behavior in another asset class.

When a central bank starts introducing gold related controls to manage exchange rate pressure, it signals that the currency has entered a different kind of market environment. That makes the baht more complex, more interesting, and in some ways more difficult to predict.

For Thailand, this means the baht is now part of a broader financial ecosystem where gold and currency movement can no longer be separated cleanly.

What This Means for Investors Watching Thailand

The emergence of the baht as a gold proxy does not mean every move in the currency will follow bullion prices. Thailand is still influenced by growth, trade, politics, and regional sentiment. But the gold link is strong enough now that investors who ignore it may miss an important part of the story.

A new source of volatility and opportunity

For traders, this creates both opportunity and complexity. If the market begins pricing the baht partly through gold related flows, then periods of strong gold demand could create unusual currency moves. This could make the baht more sensitive during times of geopolitical stress, inflation fears, or global risk aversion when gold normally attracts attention.

Thailand’s market identity is evolving

More broadly, this suggests Thailand’s financial identity is changing. The country is no longer just a tourism and manufacturing story in currency markets. It is becoming a place where gold activity can shape exchange rate behavior in a serious way. That is a notable evolution, and it may increase the baht’s importance for global investors looking at Asia through a wider thematic lens.

For Thailand, that shift could bring more attention from international capital, but it also means managing a more complicated currency narrative in the years ahead.

Conclusion

Foreign investors are increasingly treating the Thai baht as a proxy for gold because gold linked transactions have become large enough to influence the currency directly. Reuters reporting makes clear that Thailand’s central bank has already recognized this connection and moved to tighten oversight because of its impact on baht strength and volatility.

This changes everything because it gives the baht a new role in global markets. It is no longer just a reflection of Thailand’s economy. It is becoming part of a wider story about how gold, capital flows, and currency behavior now interact inside one of Southeast Asia’s most important financial systems. For anyone watching Thailand closely, that makes the baht one of the most interesting currencies in the region right now.

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Gunmen ambush Prachachat MP in Narathiwat; two aides critically injured

Gunmen ambush Prachachat MP in Narathiwat; two aides critically injured

NARATHIWAT — 20 March 2026, A member of parliament from the Prachachat Party narrowly escaped an assassination attempt after gunmen opened fire on his vehicle outside his home in Bacho district early on Friday, leaving two aides seriously wounded.

The attack occurred at 01:09 local time when an unidentified group of assailants travelling in a white four-door pickup truck trailed and then overtook the vehicle of Kamolsak Leewamoh, 59, MP for Narathiwat’s constituency 5.

According to initial reports, the gunmen reversed their vehicle and fired more than 10 rounds from what authorities described as a military-style firearm at the black Toyota Alphard carrying Kamolsak and his aides. The shooting took place in front of his residence on Phetkasem Road in tambon Bacho.

Two people in the vehicle were critically injured: the driver, Uchalumh Koloh, 55, and Pol. Snr. Sgt. Maj. Harirak Heemmina, 43, a police officer assigned to the MP’s security detail. Both sustained multiple gunshot wounds and were rushed by local residents to Bacho Hospital before being transferred to Naradhiwas Rajanagarindra Hospital.

Kamolsak, who had been returning from Hat Yai, survived unhurt after lying down across the back seat when he heard gunfire, narrowly avoiding the bullets.

CCTV footage from nearby homes captured the incident, showing the attackers overtaking the MP’s vehicle before reversing and opening fire, then fleeing the scene towards central Bacho.

Police have launched an investigation to identify and apprehend the suspects. Motive for the attack was not immediately known.

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Blast rocks Mini Big C in Pattani, no injuries reported

PATTANI — 20 March 2026, A loud explosion was reported at a Mini Big C convenience store in Thung Yang Daeng district early Friday, triggering a major fire that caused extensive damage.

The incident occurred at approximately 03:10 at the Mini Big C Thung Yang Daeng branch in tambon Thung Yang Daeng, Thung Yang Daeng district. Witnesses reported hearing a blast-like sound before flames rapidly engulfed the premises.

No injuries have been reported as of initial checks. Authorities are investigating the cause of the incident, and further updates will be provided as more information becomes available.

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Seven migrant workers arrested in Trat market crackdown

TRAT — Authorities in Khao Saming district arrested seven migrant workers during a joint inspection at Saen Tung municipal fresh market on 19 March, officials said.

The operation, conducted at 10:00 by a multi-agency team including Khao Saming Police, Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC) Trat, provincial employment officials, immigration police and local administrative officers, targeted illegal foreign labour and sought to protect jobs reserved for Thai nationals.

Officials said the suspects — four Cambodians, two Myanmar nationals and one Lao — were found working as vendors selling vegetables, sausages, grilled chicken and ice, occupations prohibited for foreign workers. They were charged with working beyond permitted rights under Section 8, with penalties under Section 101. Some were also found to have expired passports or border passes. All suspects were later handed over to investigators at Khao Saming Police Station for legal proceedings and will be deported after due process, authorities said

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