BANGKOK — 28 May 2026, Thailand and Vietnam signed four cooperation agreements onThursday, with Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and Vietnamese President and Communist Party General Secretary To Lam witnessing the exchange at Government House.
The agreements cover a action plan for comprehensive strategic partnership for 2026–2031, science and technology cooperation, academic links between the Institute of Public Administration and Governance of Vietnam and Khon Kaen University, and a memorandum of understanding to develop an aircraft maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) centre at U-Tapao International Airport.
The MRO deal, signed between the Eastern Special Development Zone Policy Committee Office (EECO) and VietJet Group, is seen as a key step in deepening industrial cooperation. U-Tapao, located within the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) in Rayong province, is being developed as a major aviation hub.
On trade, Anutin said bilateral trade currently stands at around $24 billion annually, and both sides agreed to push toward a $25 billion target as quickly as possible.
“It doesn’t seem out of reach,” he said.
The two leaders also agreed to step up cooperation on security, including combating online scams and illegal fishing, as well as science and technology exchanges covering satellites, semiconductors, and agricultural biotechnology.
To Lam praised Thailand’s economic development and its role in strengthening ASEAN, and reaffirmed Vietnam’s commitment to resolving disputes through peaceful means under international law, including UNCLOS 1982.
He also welcomed progress in the Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire and the resumption of talks between the two countries. Both leaders co-presided over the launch of the official logo for the 50th anniversary of Thai-Vietnamese diplomatic relations, under the theme “Growing Together.” The anniversary falls on 6 Aug. 2026.
To Lam extended an invitation to Anutin to visit Vietnam at the earliest opportunity.
BANGKOK — 27 May 2026, The Royal Thai Navy has signed a procurement agreement with Airbus Defence and Space for two C295 maritime patrol and transport aircraft, along with support systems and auxiliary equipment, navy spokesman Rear Adm. Parach Rattanachaiphan announced Tuesday.
Navy commander Adm. Pairoj Fueangchan signed the agreement, which aims to strengthen what the navy describes as its “aerial dimension at sea” — the integration of air assets into naval operations.
The C295 is a military transport aircraft in service with more than 37 countries, with over 300 units delivered worldwide. The Royal Thai Army already operates this type of planes, a factor the navy said would ease joint operations, maintenance, logistics, and long-term aircrew development across services.
The aircraft will be capable of maritime patrol using modern detection systems, short takeoff and landing (STOL) operations, troop and equipment transport, aerial delivery, day and night search and rescue (SAR), and medical evacuation (Medevac).
Rattanachaiphan said the acquisition goes beyond simply adding aircraft to the fleet.
“This is an upgrade of joint operational capability between naval and air forces to respond to threats and maritime situations in the future — across security, humanitarian assistance, and disaster relief missions,” he said.
The navy described the procurement as transparent and cost-effective relative to long-term national interests.
VIENTIANE, Laos — 28 May 2026, Rescue teams working to extract five survivors trapped in a cave in Laos’s Xaisomboun province are urgently appealing for oxygen tanks as the operation enters a critical phase, with two others still missing.
The Thai rescue team leader, Ting Li Gengkat Bongkawong, president of the Metta Tham Rescue Association, said the team needs a large number of four-litre oxygen tanks to be placed inside the cave ahead of the extraction, as the cave’s air supply system does not yet reach all areas where the operation will take place.
“Does anyone in Laos have tanks to lend?” he posted, appealing directly to the public for assistance.
Ting Li said extracting the five survivors would be far from straightforward, with rescuers needing to navigate several hundred metres of narrow passages and move through more than 27 metres of flooded sections.
“Safety is the absolute priority — there is no room for error,” he said. “The air supply inside must be sufficient, and the safety plan must be airtight and ready to deploy immediately in an emergency.”
The rescue operation involves divers and officials from Laos, Thailand and Finland — several of whom took part in the 2018 rescue of 13 members of the Wild Boars football team from a cave in Chiang Rai.
Ting Li said the team remains hopeful that the two missing individuals will be found safe.
“We who are on the ground always hold onto hope that they are safe,” he said. “Their families must not give up either.”
BANGKOK — 27 May 2026, The South Korean Embassy in Thailand has appointed Thai rapper Milli as an honorary public diplomacy supporter, recognising her contribution to strengthening cultural understanding between Thailand and South Korea through music and popular culture.
Milli, whose real name is Danupha Khanatheerakul, was officially appointed during a ceremony held at the South Korean Embassy in Bangkok on 15 May.
South Korean Ambassador to Thailand Park Yong-min attended the event alongside 15 honorary public diplomacy supporters selected for this year’s programme.
The embassy said Milli was chosen because her work creatively blends Thai and Korean cultural influences and helps promote mutual understanding between people in both countries.
Milli recently drew widespread attention after becoming the first foreign contestant to reach the final round of “Show Me the Money” Season 12, a major South Korean hip-hop competition, in April.
The embassy praised her as an example of public diplomacy through music and Korean popular culture, saying her work had helped expand cultural exchange between Thailand and South Korea.
“Milli has successfully entered South Korea’s popular culture industry and communicates with audiences in both countries through her music,” Ambassador Park said. “She has also played an important role in promoting Thai and Korean culture to wider audiences.”
He also praised her willingness to take on new challenges and expressed hope to see more of her work in South Korea in the future.
The South Korean Embassy in Thailand organises its honorary public diplomacy programme annually, with this year marking the seventh group of participants.
During the event, Milli also shared her experiences communicating with global audiences through music and Korean popular culture to inspire other participants in the programme.
XAISOMBOUN, Laos — 28 May 2026, Rescue teams are finalising the next stage of a difficult operation to extract five Lao men found alive inside a flooded cave in central Laos, while preparing to continue the search for two others still missing, according to a Thai rescue volunteer assisting the mission.
The seven villagers reportedly entered the cave in Xaisomboun province on 19 May to search for gold before heavy rain and flooding blocked their way out. Divers reached five of the men on Wednesday after more than a week underground, finding them alive inside the cave system. Rescuers have since been working to supply food, water and air while preparing a difficult extraction.
Thai rescue volunteer Ting Li Gengkat Bongkawong, who is leading a Thai team assisting the operation, wrote in a new Facebook update that the next mission plan was nearly complete and that rescuers were preparing to search for the two remaining missing men.
Earlier, Gengkat said the mission was far from over.
Photo Credit: Gengkat Bongkawong / Facebook
“The job is not finished. The next step is finding a way to bring all five people safely out of the cave, which is not easy at all. Safety must come first and mistakes cannot happen,” he wrote, describing tight crawl spaces stretching hundreds of metres and a flooded section that rescuers must navigate while ensuring enough air remains inside the cave.
Thai rescue personnel and expert cave divers, including a veteran of the 2018 Tham Luang cave rescue in Thailand, have joined Lao teams in the operation. Rescue workers have described narrow passages, floodwater, debris and limited air supply as major obstacles.
Reuters reported Thursday that Thai volunteers had confirmed five survivors had been found, while a Lao organisation claimed all seven had been located safely, a claim that had not been independently verified. The latest update from the Thai rescue team continued to describe two people as still missing.
Gengkat said the team had consulted experts from multiple fields and was adapting procedures to conditions at the site.
“This mission is extremely difficult. No one can be arrogant or think only their own knowledge matters. We must continue listening to specialists and adapt the correct procedures to the actual situation on site,” he wrote.
He added that rescuers were focused on extracting the five survivors while continuing to search for the two others whose condition remained uncertain.
“As the rescue team, we always hope they are safe. Families must not lose hope either,” he wrote.
BANGKOK — 28 May 2026, Bangkok’s education authority is rolling out stricter food safety and nutrition standards across schools under its jurisdiction, as part of an effort to tackle child obesity and improve student health.
The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration’s Office of Education announced the measures on Wednesday, saying all schools must now follow standardised procedures for tracking meal quality under the Bangkok City for Better Health programme.
Schools are required to log ingredient receipts and photograph meals through the Thai School Lunch for BMA and TSL Check systems. Central kitchen schools must also store 300-gram food samples from every meal each day for three days for inspection purposes.
All schools must undergo a food sanitation assessment once per semester. Central kitchen schools are subject to monthly chemical and microbial testing, while other schools must carry out microbial checks monthly. Staff are also being trained to test for common contaminants, including borax in meat, formalin in seafood and bleaching agents in fruits and vegetables.
Office of Education Director Phissamai Rueangsin said child obesity is among the authority’s most pressing concerns, noting that half of Bangkok’s adult population is obese and that the figure among children is estimated to exceed 20 percent.
“We cannot solve this through rules and regulations alone,” she said. “It has to start with building good habits, with teachers serving as role models for healthy behaviour.”
The authority said the goal is to make Bangkok schools safe and sustainable environments for student health in the long term.
CHIANG MAI — 28 May 2026, Surgeons at Chiang Mai University’s Faculty of Medicine have performed the world’s first living donor liver surgery using the Hugo robotic-assisted surgery system, a breakthrough that also marks Thailand’s first robot-assisted living donor liver transplant.
The faculty announced the achievement at a press conference on Wednesday, revealing that its team had successfully used the Hugo RAS system to remove the left lobe of the liver from living donors in two separate transplant cases — one involving a child patient and one an adult.
In the first case, a 40-year-old mother donated part of her liver to her nine-year-old daughter, who was born with biliary atresia, a condition that blocks the bile ducts, and had developed severe cirrhosis with complications affecting her lungs and blood pressure. The girl had previously undergone a Kasai procedure as an infant and required supplemental oxygen at home before the transplant.
In the second case, a 27-year-old woman donated part of her liver to her 61-year-old father, who had cirrhosis and liver cancer. This case also marked Thailand’s first robot-assisted adult-to-adult living donor liver transplant.
Both donors recovered well, while both recipients underwent successful transplants under the care of a multidisciplinary team at Maharaj Nakorn Chiang Mai Hospital.
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Sanhawit Chanrangsri, the operating surgeon, said the Hugo system’s precision was critical given the complexity of operating around the liver’s key structures.
“Living donor liver surgery demands the highest priority on donor safety, because these are healthy individuals undergoing surgery solely to save another person’s life,” he said. “The robotic system provides 3D visualisation and instruments that move like a human wrist, allowing surgeons to work with far greater precision in a narrow and deep space.”
Assoc. Prof. Dr. Worakit Laphisetphan, deputy director of the Centre of Medical Excellence, said Maharaj Nakorn Chiang Mai Hospital is the only institution in Thailand with continuous experience in adult-to-adult living donor liver transplantation. He added that removing the left lobe rather than the more commonly used right lobe reduces the impact on the donor’s remaining liver function.
All four patients — both donors and both recipients — are recovering well, according to the surgical team.
The nine-year-old recipient, who attended Wednesday’s press conference with her mother, thanked her doctors and said she hoped to become a doctor herself one day. She added that she had been looking forward to trying iced tea after the surgery — and confirmed it was worth the wait.
The faculty’s dean, Assoc. Prof. Dr. Naren Chotiros Niramit, noted the milestone coincided with the unit completing its 100th robotic-assisted surgery overall, spanning urology, hepatobiliary and colorectal procedures.
A foundation advocating for sex workers submitted a draft bill to parliament on Thursday that would decriminalise sex work and extend labour protections to those in the industry.
The Empower Foundation presented the proposed Sex Service Provider Protection Act to the House of Representatives at 10:30, where it was received by an adviser to House Speaker Sophon Zarum on his behalf.
Representatives from the House Committee on Law, Justice and Human Rights, as well as MPs from the People’s Party and Pheu Thai Party, were also present.
A foundation representative said the existing Prevention and Suppression of Prostitution Act of 1996 is outdated, as it criminalises voluntary sex workers, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation, abuse and discrimination.
The proposed law would repeal the 1996 act and recognise sex work as legitimate labour, entitling workers to the same basic protections as those in other professions.
“This bill is not an endorsement of sex work,” the representative said. “It is about respecting the decisions of those who do this work and ensuring they receive the same basic rights as anyone else — nothing more, nothing less.”
The foundation said the legislation would also address safety concerns for clients and business operators, arguing that a legal framework is needed to protect all parties involved.
BANGKOK — 28 May 2026, Chile opened the Chile-ASEAN Business Summit 2026 in Bangkok this week, bringing together Chilean exporters, importers, retailers, distributors and food industry executives in one of its largest trade engagement initiatives in Thailand and Southeast Asia to date.
Chile Expands ASEAN Trade Push
Organised by ProChile, the trade promotion agency under Chile’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the five-day programme includes business meetings, trade networking events, retail market visits and participation in THAIFEX-Anuga Asia, one of Asia’s largest food and beverage exhibitions.
The summit, which runs from 26 to 30 May, is part of Chile’s broader strategy to strengthen commercial partnerships with Thailand and Southeast Asia, where demand for imported premium food products continues to grow.
Speaking at a press briefing at IMPACT Challenger, Ignacio Fernández, director general of ProChile, said Chile viewed ASEAN as a region of growing opportunity.
Fernández said business and trust were built face to face, which was why Chile had returned to ASEAN for a second consecutive year. He described the region as a major opportunity for Chilean products and services and said Chile wanted to build long-term relationships based on trust. He also described Thailand as Chile’s principal trading partner within ASEAN and said the wider region offered long-term opportunities for growth and collaboration.
The briefing was attended by David Hansen Salas, chargé d’affaires a.i. of Chile to Thailand, and Oscar Arriagada, trade commissioner of ProChile in Thailand.
Chilean delegates speak with Thai media, including a Khaosod English reporter, during a press briefing at the Chile-ASEAN Business Summit 2026 in Bangkok
Hundreds of Business Meetings Planned
This year’s summit drew buyers and business representatives from Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines. More than 300 business-to-business meetings are expected between Chilean exporters and ASEAN importers.
The Chilean delegation includes 28 companies from sectors including salmon and seafood, fresh fruit, meat, nuts, wine and beverages, forestry products, agribusiness, aquaculture services and food innovation.
Three major Chilean industry associations — Fruits from Chile, Faenacar and ChileNuts — are also participating, alongside representatives from Chile’s salmon and mussel export sectors.
Key delegates attending the briefing included Iván Marambio, president of Fruits of Chile; Rafael Lecaros, general manager of Faenacar; Eduardo Piccolo, representative of AmiChile, which represents Chilean mussel producers; Martín Correa, representative of ChileNuts; and Rodrigo Bustos, representative of SalmonChile.
Thailand’s Role in Chile’s ASEAN Strategy
The summit builds on the inaugural Chile-ASEAN Business Meeting in 2025, which brought together 76 importers from six countries and generated immediate business projections worth US$6.4 million.
Thailand was selected as host due to its position as Chile’s largest trading partner in ASEAN and its role as a regional distribution, logistics and food trade hub. In 2025, Thailand ranked as the 20th-largest destination for Chilean exports globally, with exports valued at approximately US$596 million.
Trade between Chile and ASEAN reached approximately US$5.17 billion in 2025, while Chilean non-mining exports to the bloc rose to nearly US$986 million. Food exports alone totalled US$571 million, more than double the level recorded a decade earlier.
ProChile officials said the summit reflected Chile’s growing focus on Thailand and ASEAN not only as export markets but also as strategic partners for food security, supply chain reliability and sustainable trade cooperation.
Food Exports as Chile’s ‘Soft Power’
Fernández said Chile increasingly viewed food and consumer exports as part of a broader “soft power” strategy aimed at strengthening international recognition of Chilean products and brands. He said Chilean food and consumer products helped bring the country into households around the world, with wine already serving as one of Chile’s most recognisable global brands.
Ignacio Fernández (centre), director general of ProChile, and David Hansen Salas (right), chargé d’affaires a.i. of Chile to Thailand
Marambio said Chile’s strongest competitive advantage in global food exports remained its emphasis on quality and food safety. For Chile, he said, delivering high-quality food with strong safety standards was fundamental because producers wanted consumers to trust what they eat.
He also explained that Chile’s fresh fruit exports to Southeast Asia had doubled over the past two years, rising from around 7,000 tonnes to more than 15,000 tonnes annually, led by cherries and grapes. However, market access restrictions and shipping logistics remained major challenges for Chilean exporters, with shipments to Southeast Asia taking more than 50 days, compared with around 25 days to China.
Seafood, Sustainability and Regional Growth
Bustos said Chile accounts for around 30% of global salmon production, making salmon the country’s second-largest export industry after mining. Thailand has become an increasingly important market, driven by tourism demand and the seafood processing industry.
Rodrigo Bustos, representative of SalmonChile
Piccolo, representing Chile’s mussel industry, also highlighted Thailand as a growing market, saying Chilean mussels had been adapted into Thai cuisine and street food dishes, helping expand year-round consumption. He described Thailand as an important regional trendsetter in retail, hospitality and food consumption, with neighbouring ASEAN countries often looking to Thailand as a model market for consumer trends and food innovation.
Another major theme of this year’s summit is food innovation and sustainability, with Chilean companies showcasing seafood, healthy snacks, natural ingredients, traceable agricultural products and sustainable food production capabilities.
Fernández said Chile came to the event this year to present itself through three key pillars: a reliable partner, a growing economy offering world-class products and services, and a country of talent and knowledge. He added that Chile aimed to position itself as a gateway for Thai and ASEAN businesses seeking access to Latin American markets through its regional free trade network.
With this year’s programme expanded and timed alongside THAIFEX-Anuga Asia, Chile is seeking to strengthen its commercial footprint across Thailand and Southeast Asia and pursue new opportunities in the region’s food and agribusiness sectors.
CHONBURI — 27 May 2026, Nearly an entire police station was deployed to what was initially reported as a gold shop robbery, only to find an injured local man inside the store after he gave staff a playful military salute and walked face-first into a glass panel he mistook for an exit door.
The incident occurred at about 11:55 on Wednesday at a gold shop in Moo 6, Sattahip Sub-district, Sattahip District. Sattahip Police Station’s radio centre received a report that a suspect had smashed the shop’s glass during an attempted robbery.
Pol. Lt. Col. Kriangkrai Meesaeng, deputy superintendent, Pol. Lt. Col. Aphichat Namchanto, investigation inspector, and Pol. Maj. Kosol Sila led a rapid-response team of police and local administrative officials to the scene for an immediate investigation.
At the scene, officers found a 49-year-old local man known as “Ped” injured inside the shop after suffering a deep cut to his right wrist from shattered glass. Rescue workers rushed him to Sattahip Hospital for treatment, while shop employees remained shaken by the incident.
Pol. Maj. Kosol said a combined force of investigators, patrol officers, traffic police, and local administrative officials reached the scene in less than three minutes because they believed an armed robbery was underway.
However, upon arrival, officers instead found Ped on the floor and calling for help. CCTV footage later showed him entering the shop and giving staff a playful salute before walking directly into a side glass panel, apparently mistaking it for an open exit door. The impact shattered the glass and caused his injuries.
Police recorded the incident and said the shop owner would be asked to discuss compensation for the damage. Authorities also said the man may undergo further checks, with legal action possible only if any offences are found.