PATTAYA – The owners of businesses in Pattaya are happy about the change in nightlife venues’ closing times to 4 a.m.
The new regulation will also be implemented so that clubs can open until 6 a.m. on the countdown day of December 31–January 1, 2024, in Bangkok, Phuket, Chonburi, Chiang Mai, and Samui districts in Surat Thani province.
Bunanan Pattanasin, director of the Pattaya Business and Tourism Association, said extending the closing time for nightlife to 4 a.m. is a good thing as it boosts the economy, especially the service sector. He mentioned that it will also boost tourist spending, which will bring more revenue to Pattaya’s business sector.
Bunanan Pattanasin, director of the Pattaya Business and Tourism Association
However, he pointed out that the extension of the closing time must be accompanied by a safety plan to avoid problems that could arise and affect business operators such as hotels or accommodation establishments.
It is important to address the control of drugs and weapons. If everything is under control, Bunanan said, it will greatly benefit the tourism sector in Pattaya. He also mentioned that everyone should follow the rules.
“On the day of the countdown, I want to keep the store open as long as possible so that everyone can celebrate. We need officials to help plan security. And the tourists also need to take care of themselves and have a clear conscience,” Bunanan said.
Thai-released hostages arrived at Suvarnabhumi Airport around 3 p.m. on November 30, 2023. (Khaosod Photo)
BANGKOK – On Thursday, November 30, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin congratulated and thanked all parties who made it possible for the fifth batch of four Thai people to be released, while the 17 released Thai hostages are on their way back to Thailand.
The 17 Thai people left Shamir Hospital in Ramle to take an El Al Airlines aircraft LY 081 and arrived at Suvarnabhumi Airport around 3 p.m. on November 30.
Thai-released hostages arrived at Suvarnabhumi Airport around 3 p.m. on November 30.
They thanked the prime minister, who is in Uttaradit province, via a video call, while the PM congratulated and told them if there is any information that would be useful, they can tell Panpree Bahiddha-Nukara, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs.
“Throughout the period since October 7, all Thai people are concerned about all of you, give moral support, and try to do our best. I’m happy that today you return to Thailand,” the PM said.
PM Srettha Thavisin talks to the released Thai hostages via video call.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs also issued a statement that the Royal Thai Embassy in Tel Aviv has confirmed that six (6) Thai nationals were released on 28 (4th release) and 29 (5th release) November 2023 (local Israeli time).
They are now at the designated Shamir Medical Center and will undergo the necessary medical checkups, while The Royal Thai Embassy staff are on hand to contact their families.
Thai hostages kidnapped by Hamas in its October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel have been freed so far, with 9 still remaining in captivity. There were about 30,000 Thai overseas workers in Israel, mostly in the agricultural sector, but more than 8,000 have returned home since the attack
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs warmly congratulates the recently released hostages and their families and thanks all parties involved in the efforts towards this latest release.
“For the remaining 9 Thai hostages, the Royal Thai Government continues to exert all efforts towards their safe release at the earliest opportunity, while preparing to bring back those who have already been released back to Thailand after their preliminary checks as soon as possible,” it stated.
Earlier, Mr. Panpree, along with Air Vice Marshal Wachira Roengrit, Representative of Chief of Defense Force, and Mr. Sarmart Pattamasukhon, Inspector-General, Ministry of Labour, visited RTE Tel Aviv to give moral support to the Embassy officials, and met with representatives of the Thai workers, to answer their inquiries and reassured them that the Embassy will continue to look after them.
The Associated Press reported that Israel and Hamas on Thursday agreed to extend a temporary truce by another day, minutes before it was set to expire, Qatar, which has been mediating between the two sides.
Negotiations on extending it came down to the wire, with last-minute disagreements over the hostages to be freed by Hamas in exchange for another day of a halt in fighting.
Word of the extension came just as the truce was to expire at 7 a.m. (0500 GMT) Thursday. The Qatari Foreign Ministry said the truce was being extended under the same terms as in the past, under which Hamas has released 10 Israeli hostages per day in exchange for the release of 30 Palestinian prisoners.
Thai nationals wave from a bus as they leave the Shamir Hospital in Ramle, Israel, Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023, on their way back to Thailand.(AP Photo/Maya Levin)
The announcement followed a last-minute standoff earlier Thursday, with Hamas saying Israel had rejected a proposed list that included seven living captives and the remains of three who the group said were killed in previous Israeli airstrikes. Israel later said Hamas submitted an improved list, paving the way for the extension.
Negotiators had been working into Thursday to hammer out details for a further extension of the truce. The expectation had been to extend the pause in fighting for at least another day or two, with the focus on releasing women and children.
The talks appear to be growing tougher as most of the women and children held by Hamas are freed, as the militants are expected to seek greater releases in return for freeing men and soldiers.
Thai nationals walk to a bus as they leave the Shamir Hospital in Ramle, Israel, Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023, on their way back to Thailand.(AP Photo/Maya Levin)
International pressure has mounted for the cease-fire to continue as long as possible after nearly eight weeks of Israeli bombardment and a ground campaign in Gaza that has killed thousands of Palestinians, uprooted three quarters of the population of 2.3 million and led to a humanitarian crisis.
Israel has welcomed the release of dozens of hostages in recent days and says it will maintain the truce if Hamas keeps freeing captives. Still, Netanyahu underscored on Wednesday that Israel will resume its campaign to eliminate Hamas, which has ruled Gaza for 16 years and orchestrated the deadly attack on Israel that triggered the war.
Hino Wins Business+ Product of the Year Awards 2023 for the vehicle category in “commercial truck, HINO MY23”.
On November 23, 2023, Mr. Ken Iwamoto, President of Hino Motors Sales (Thailand) Ltd., has received the Business+ Product of The Year Awards 2023: Excellent Products and Services of the Year 2023 in the Vehicle Category – Energy and Fuel Saving and the Commercial Truck, “HINO MY23”, from H.E. Mr. Nurak Marpraneet, President of the Constitutional Court, at Swissotel Bangkok.
The awards are adjudicated by honourable judges in research and analysis coupled with consumer votes for the products and services of the year. They are hosted by Business Plus Magazine, ARIP Public Company Limited in collaboration with College of Management (CMMU) Mahidol University.
The chosen products and services must meet the needs of consumers or even solve their problems at the most satisfying level. As a result, the products and services will be widely accepted and create the ultimate benefits to consumers.
Mr. Ken Iwamoto, President, stated: “Hino Motors Sales (Thailand) Ltd. is honoured and appreciated to receive the award, reflecting the outstanding aspects of commercial trucks that are considered the HINO’s pride, “HINO MY23”. The concept for the award presentation, involves “Beautiful design, cost savings, safety, and worthiness of the investment”, and meets all types of transportation.
HINO has improved its products and added more details in the safety aspect. This creates trust among consumers, leading to success in award-winnings. Success is highlighted, and positive responses are made, apart from good HINO trucks, in terms of good after sales services and customer services through sales agents.
Moreover, HINO is able to meet the needs of customers at different periods of time, create benefits, and save business costs. In compliance with the HINO’s policies, “HINO is the leader of changes in commercial vehicles, or Lead to Change.”
HINO is committed to change and drive Thailand forward, by focusing on the sustainable development, considering sustainable development goals (SDGs), offering new values and new things to Thai economy and society.
This will lead to more sustainable growth and eco-friendliness, in accordance with the organizational mission, “We make a better world and future by helping people and goods get where they need to go” Under this mission, HINO has been developing and improving products and services in continuity by holding on the HINO’s principles.
“QDR” products; QDR stands for Quality, Durability, and Reliability. These are 3 things that HINO adopts to ensure the customers that HINO’s commercial trucks are made for commercial purposes to support business and create profits for customers.
Total Support: HINO provides one-stop services with care; the company offers high-quality products, integrated after sales services, and auto parts with good quality, complying with standards. Customers will gain the utmost benefits from their businesses.
The Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): HINO is prepared to provide care in all business aspects to help its customers reduce business costs to the lowest level. HINO takes care of customers in diverse aspects, including innovations in logistics like the telematic system, HINO CONNECT, which can take care and control people’s driving behaviors: driving safely and saving fuel cost. HINO will install the aforementioned system without charging fees. Some people sell their secondhand vehicles to buy new ones; HINO offers Certified Pre-Owned Trucks to customers, so they will get new vehicles for use by paying less. HINO believes that lowering the business cost will create benefits for HINO’s customers.
As the leading company of vehicles for commercial purposes, HINO is committed to create changes for the best in transport and logistics businesses in Thailand. This year, MY23 HINO truck is awarded as one of the outstanding products and services of the year 2023, under the category of vehicle – energy and fuel savings.
The award can guarantee the HINO’s philosophy and core values, reflecting the public’s acceptance of HINO’s products. It is an honor and pride for HINO to show our commitment to vehicle development towards trust, reliability, and quality.
Furthermore, we strive to meet the real needs of our customers. From now on, HINO will continue to create technological products, offer good experiences to customers, and create a better-living society.
Follow us for more information on our products in details, please feel free to contact Hino Motors Sales (Thailand) Ltd., Tel: 02-900-5000. Don’t forget to follow our good news and activities, and become a part of Hino’s family online via www.hinothailand.com, Facebook: Hino Thailand Fan Club, Line: @hinoth, Youtube: Hino Thailand Official, and TikTok : @hinoth.
BANGKOK – The Honorary Consuls Association (Thailand), dedicated to strengthening connections among honorary consuls in the country, celebrated its 12th anniversary.
The event, a collaboration between the InterContinental Hotels Group (IGH) and the Thailand Convention and Exhibition Bureau (TCEB), enjoyed the presence and warm greetings of ambassadors from over 50 countries, including more than 40 member consuls, along with representatives from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Thai Chamber of Commerce, among others. The festivities took place at the Grand Ballroom of the Intercontinental Hotel in Bangkok.
Dr. Chumpol Phornprapha, the Honorary Consul-General of the Republic of Fiji in Thailand and President of the Honorary Consuls Association (Thailand), shared his sentiments on the 12th anniversary:
“It is a valuable opportunity for our members to unite, fostering stronger connections through the annual tradition of exchanging ideas and mutual support. Currently, foreign honorary consuls in Thailand represent over 100 countries, with 71 consuls actively participating as members of the association.
Our goal is to expand our membership, thereby amplifying the association’s strength. Despite the challenges posed by the spread of the COVID-19 virus over the past three years, disrupting social gatherings, today everything is returning to normal.
The association acknowledges the vital role of promoting diplomatic negotiations between countries, with its members poised to be significant voices in public relations, spanning the economic, trade, investment, and tourism sectors. All of this is in pursuit of fostering strong international relations.”
Mr. Sanan Angubolkul, the Honorary Consul-General of the Republic of Maldives in Thailand and Advisor to the Honorary Consuls Association (Thailand), as well as Chairman of the Board of Trade of Thailand and the Thai Chamber of Commerce, underscored the crucial role of honorary consuls as bridges between the recipient and represented countries.
Each honorary consul serves as a coordinator, promoting public relations and facilitating access at every level for the benefit of their respective countries. He emphasized the importance of aligning economic development with diplomatic efforts.
The event was celebrated with a vibrant international-themed banquet for the diplomats, featuring a diverse culinary experience. The event was capped off with a lively concert performance by the Burin Band, providing a joyous and entertaining conclusion to the festivities.
Nonthaburi Police raid a luxuriously decorated hotel casino and arrest 49 gamblers and employees on November 29, 2023.
NONTHABURI – According to the investigation, a posh gambling den inside a hotel in Nonthaburi province’s Ngamwomgwan area just north west of Bangkok that police raided on November 28-29 belongs to Chinese businesspeople.
At the time police raided, they arrested 49 gamblers and staff: 24 Chinese, one Canadian, one Singaporean, one Myanmar, one Lao, four Thais, and 17 people have no registration status.
On November 30 Nonthaburi Police investigators brought 49 gamblers and employees of illegal casinos to the Nonthaburi Provincial Court to acknowledge allegations of working together to illegally gamble without permission. The hotel staff, all of whom are foreigners, were charged with working without authorization.
Nonthaburi Police bring 49 gamblers and employees of illegal casinos to the Nonthaburi Provincial Court on November 30, 2023.
23 of the suspects have admitted guilt, while the remaining 26 have pleaded not guilty. The inquiry took a long time because the suspects included Canadians, Singaporeans, Chinese, Myanmar, Laos, non-citizens, and Thais. As a result, we had to wait for the Immigration Police to send interpreters to further investigate.
Deputy Police Commander Pol. Gen. Kittirat Phanpetch issued an urgent letter on November 29 to the Police National Chief informing him of the preliminary investigation’s findings that the casino in the IWISH hotel is a Chinese business that has placed gaming equipment as a permanent gambling den. As a result, it is assumed that gambling has been open for some time. The investigation team will track down the owner and determine when the unlawful casinos were launched.
Furthermore, it will be investigated whether any police officers involved in deliberate negligence demand, receive, or have a benefit, either directly or indirectly, and how, by speeding up the investigation of the facts so that they are evident within two days.
Earlier, the Immigration Bureau’s investigation officers had information that this casino had been open for a some time. The majority of consumers are Chinese businesspeople and tourists who come to have fun.
As a result, the Immigration Police presented a criminal court warrant to search the hotel. They discovered a big casino on the 8th and 9th floors of this hotel. It was lavishly decorated.
The officers found 3.5 million baht cash, 100 sets of playing cards, chips worth tens of millions baht, six baccara tables, six slot machines, six guns among others. Police are currently searching for the true owner of the gambling den which occupies two floors of the hotel.
“If the inquiry shows that any police officers, including the police at the Rattanathibet Police Station, were involved, they will be taken into account when considering appointments and transfers in the appointment for the year 2023 and to use administrative measures such as disciplinary action and criminal action,” Pol. Gen. Kittirat stated.
FILE - China's President Xi Jinping, right, listens to former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, who led the China-U.S Track Two Dialogue, during a meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Nov. 2, 2015. He died Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023, at the age 100. (Jason Lee/Pool Photo via AP, File)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, the diplomat with the thick glasses and gravelly voice who dominated foreign policy as the United States extricated itself from Vietnam and broke down barriers with China, died Wednesday, his consulting firm said. He was 100.
With his gruff yet commanding presence and behind-the-scenes manipulation of power, Kissinger exerted uncommon influence on global affairs under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, earning both vilification and the Nobel Peace Prize. Decades later, his name still provoked impassioned debate over foreign policy landmarks long past.
Kissinger’s power grew during the turmoil of Watergate, when the politically attuned diplomat assumed a role akin to co-president to the weakened Nixon.
FILE – Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger speaks during a meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House, Oct. 10, 2017, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
“No doubt my vanity was piqued,” Kissinger later wrote of his expanding influence. “But the dominant emotion was a premonition of catastrophe.”
A Jew who fled Nazi Germany with his family in his teens, Kissinger in his later years cultivated the reputation of respected statesman, giving speeches, offering advice to Republicans and Democrats alike and managing a global consulting business. He turned up in President Donald Trump’s White House on multiple occasions. But Nixon-era documents and tapes, as they trickled out over the years, brought revelations — many in Kissinger’s own words — that sometimes cast him in a harsh light.
Never without his detractors, Kissinger after he left government was dogged by critics who argued that he should be called to account for his policies on Southeast Asia and support of repressive regimes in Latin America.
FILE – Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, left, gestures to the audience in the East Room of the White House, Sept. 22, 1973, as President Richard Nixon watches, in Washington. He died Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023. He was 100. (AP Photo, File)
For eight restless years — first as national security adviser, later as secretary of state, and for a time in the middle holding both titles — Kissinger ranged across the breadth of major foreign policy issues. He conducted the first “shuttle diplomacy” in the quest for Middle East peace. He used secret channels to pursue ties between the United States and China, ending decades of isolation and mutual hostility.
He initiated the Paris negotiations that ultimately provided a face-saving means — a “decent interval,” he called it — to get the United States out of a costly war in Vietnam. Two years later, Saigon fell to the communists.
And he pursued a policy of detente with the Soviet Union that led to arms control agreements and raised the possibility that the tensions of the Cold War and its nuclear threat did not have to last forever.
FILE – Henry Kissinger, left, President Richard Nixon’s national security adviser, and Le Duc Tho, member of Hanoi’s Politburo, are shown outside a suburban house at Gif Sur Yvette in Paris, June 13, 1973. (AP Photo/Michel Lipchitz, File)
At age 99, he was still out on tour for his book on leadership. Asked in July 2022 interview with ABC whether he wished he could take back any of his decisions, Kissinger demurred, saying: “I’ve been thinking about these problems all my life. It’s my hobby as well as my occupation. And so the recommendations I made were the best of which I was then capable.”
Even then, he had mixed thoughts on Nixon’s record, saying “his foreign policy has held up and he was quite effective in domestic policy” while allowing that the disgraced president had “permitted himself to be involved in a number of steps that were inappropriate for a president.”
As Kissinger turned 100 in May 2023, his son David wrote in The Washington Post that his father’s centenary “might have an air of inevitability for anyone familiar with his force of character and love of historical symbolism. Not only has he outlived most of his peers, eminent detractors and students, but he has also remained indefatigably active throughout his 90s.”
Asked during a CBS interview in the leadup to his 100th birthday about those who view his conduct of foreign policy over the years as a kind of “criminality,” Kissinger was nothing but dismissive.
“That’s a reflection of their ignorance,” Kissinger said. “It wasn’t conceived that way. It wasn’t conducted that way.”
His consulting firm said Kissinger died at his home in Connecticut.
Kissinger was a practitioner of realpolitik — using diplomacy to achieve practical objectives rather than advance lofty ideals. Supporters said his pragmatic bent served U.S. interests; critics saw a Machiavellian approach that ran counter to democratic ideals.
He was castigated for authorizing telephone wiretaps of reporters and his own National Security Council staff to plug news leaks in Nixon’s White House. He was denounced on college campuses for the bombing and allied invasion of Cambodia in April 1970, intended to destroy North Vietnamese supply lines to communist forces in South Vietnam.
That “incursion,” as Nixon and Kissinger called it, was blamed by some for contributing to Cambodia’s fall into the hands of Khmer Rouge insurgents who later slaughtered some 2 million Cambodians.
FILE – Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, greets former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger during a meeting in the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, July 13, 2007. (AP Photo/Sergei Chirikov, Pool, File)
Kissinger, for his part, made it his mission to debunk what he referred to in 2007 as a “prevalent myth” — that he and Nixon had settled in 1972 for peace terms that had been available in 1969 and thus had needlessly prolonged the Vietnam War at the cost of tens of thousands of American lives.
He insisted that the only way to speed up the withdrawal would have been to agree to Hanoi’s demands that the U.S. overthrow the South Vietnamese government and replace it with communist-dominated leadership.
Pudgy and messy, Kissinger incongruously acquired a reputation as a ladies’ man in the staid Nixon administration. Kissinger, who had divorced his first wife in 1964, called women “a diversion, a hobby.” Jill St. John was a frequent companion. But it turned out his real love interest was Nancy Maginnes, a researcher for Nelson Rockefeller whom he married in 1974.
FILE – President Bill Clinton, left, and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger laugh together after Clinton gave the closing remarks at a national policy conference, March 1, 1995, in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)
In a 1972 poll of Playboy Club Bunnies, the man dubbed “Super-K” by Newsweek finished first as “the man I would most like to go out on a date with.”
Kissinger’s explanation: “Power is the ultimate aphrodisiac.”
Yet Kissinger was reviled by many Americans for his conduct of wartime diplomacy. He was still a lightning rod decades later: In 2015, an appearance by the 91-year-old Kissinger before the Senate Armed Services Committee was disrupted by protesters demanding his arrest for war crimes and calling out his actions in Southeast Asia, Chile and beyond.
Heinz Alfred Kissinger was born in the Bavarian city of Fuerth on May 27, 1923, the son of a schoolteacher. His family left Nazi Germany in 1938 and settled in Manhattan, where Heinz changed his name to Henry.
Kissinger had two children, Elizabeth and David, from his first marriage.
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The late AP Diplomatic Writer Barry Schweid contributed to this report.
Thai authorities found more than 500 carcasses at a house in Ban Chang Subdistrict, Mueang District, Pathum Thani Province.
PATHUM THANI – More than 500 carcasses, including leopard carcasses, black panther carcasses, clouded leopard carcasses, and Asian golden cat carcasses, were found and seized at a house in Ban Chang Subdistrict, Mueang District, Pathum Thani Province on November 29.
Police officers from the Natural Resources and Environmental Crime Suppression Division, along with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officers and Thailand’s Department of National Park, Wildlife, and Plant Conservation, arrested Mr. Kan Panyayong, 41, a resident of Phrae province, on charges of “trafficking and possession of protected wildlife without permission.”
At the beginning of 2023, officials captured a suspect in a trade in the carcasses of Asian golden cats for sale to superstitious people at a residence in the Jarakae Bua district of Bangkok’s Lat Phrao District.
They continued their inquiry until they discovered an order on a Facebook group called “Maew Pong Again.” The authorities investigated and discovered that the proprietor of the Facebook page is Mr. Kan. So they gathered evidence and asked the court for approval to issue an arrest warrant. It resulted in the man’s arrest and the seizure of a huge number of tiger carcasses of various varieties.
Kan confessed that he had ordered the carcasses through another Facebook page to resell to customers. He acted like a middleman. It has been done for about 2 years, and he does not know where these tiger carcasses originate from.
Kan further revealed that one tiger carcass will be purchased for between 40,000 and 50,000 baht. The carcass will then be dissected and divided for sale, with the head fetching 10,000-20,000 baht and the body fetching 12,000 baht.
The majority of consumers are collectors or organisations that utilise it to manufacture amulets. He was initially taken to Subdistrict 1, Natural Resources and Environmental Crime Suppression Division, for additional legal action.
A Taiwanese man, Mr. Yang, 47, was arrested in Pattaya.
PATTAYA – A Taiwanese man, Mr. Yang, 47, was arrested by officers from the Royal Thai Police Immigration Bureau Division 3 on the accusation of “being an alien in the Kingdom without permission.” Furthermore, he is in illegal possession of dangerous narcotics.
Earlier, authorities received a report of a transgender woman who came to the Pattaya Police Station to inform that she was invited to Mr. Yang’s room and forced to take drugs. When she attempted to flee, she was threatened with harm.
The transgender woman gives information of the Taiwanese man to the police.
Following that, officials conducted an investigation to gather evidence and issue a search warrant for the target room in Pattaya. They discovered the man in possession of numerous substances, including ice, Happy Water, Erimin Five, and ketamine.
According to a passport check, Yang entered Thailand illegally via a natural passage on the Cambodian border. He was then discovered to be engaged in a case in Taiwan and to have an arrest warrant in a gun case. Initially, he will be prosecuted in Thailand.
The property of the accused group was also investigated
BANGKOK – The Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) Commissioner Pol. Lt. Gen. Jirabhop Bhuridej announced the result of the “Shutdown One Billion Hybrid Scam” operation on November 29 after searching 5 target locations in Bangkok and Samut Prakan.
He mentioned that 4 people were arrested: Mr. Ruen Hong Lin, Ms. Zhao Ye, Ms. Lawan Thaweeapiradeepoon and Ms. Savitri Angkabutr, all of whom are subject to an arrest warrant charging them with fraud by false pretenses, dissemination of false information on the Internet, participation in an international criminal organization and money laundering.
Pol. Lt. Gen. Jirabhop mentioned that the police have cracked down on this kind of crime before. Last time, they had used fake Facebook accounts posing as good-looking women and lured people to invest in digital assets, causing a huge loss.
Pol. Lt. Gen. Jirabhop Bhuridej (center) mentioned that 4 people were arrested: Mr. Ruen Hong Lin, Ms. Zhao Ye, Ms. Lawan Thaweeapiradeepoon and Ms. Savitri Angkabutr.
The crime was committed in a network and with a large organization. Both Chinese and Thai nationals were arrested last time. Last time, 9 people were arrested, including Jagreena Chukhaowong, also known as KeeKee Maxim, 28, a famous model.
More than one billion baht was confiscated.
After the initial operation, police conducted continuous investigations and found that the criminal group was using methods to transfer the money from their illegal activities to buy luxury apartments and invest in the lodge and restaurant business in Ratchada Soi 4. Ms. Jagreena or KeeKee Maczim, the accused who has already been arrested, has been identified as the owner.
The lounge with an investment value of over 200 million baht
In addition, the name of Mr. Ruen Hong Lin, KeeKee’s husband, who is a manager and has invested over 200 million baht, was discovered. The police then conducted another operation and arrested Mr. Ruen Hong Lin and Ms. Zhao Ye, an elder sister of the head of the organization. Two other suspects who had opened fake accounts for the organization were also arrested.
In addition, the property of the accused group was also investigated, including two luxury apartments worth over 80 million baht, the lounge with an investment value of over 200 million baht, three Toyota Alphard cars and imported liquor worth over 1.3 million baht, totaling more than 300 million baht.
For both operations, properties worth over 1,300 million baht have been investigated so far. All defendants have denied the allegations and have been referred for further prosecution.
Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok. (Photo by Romeo GACAD / AFP)
BANGKOK – Kerati Kijmanawat, President of Airports of Thailand (AOT), announced that AOT will increase the fee for departing passengers in six airports: Suvarnabhumi Airport, Don Mueang Airport, Chiang Mai Airport, Mae Fah Luang Airport, Chiang Rai Airport, Phuket Airport, and Hat Yai Airport, starting in April 2024.
It will rise from 700 baht per person to 730 baht per person for international departing passengers and from 100 baht per person to 130 baht per person for domestic departing passengers.
He explained on November 28, that the fee from the Passenger Service Charge (PSC) is legally obliged to be used for the improvement of the airport and for maintenance. Suvarnabhumi Airport has not increased its PSC fee since 2006.
“I would like to emphasize that the increase in PSC is not intended to burden passengers. It is merely a change in the categorization of charges that were included in the tickets. Passengers will not be affected.”
Kerati added that increasing the PSC will help AOT generate more revenue. Although the profit may not be that big, AOT is expected to generate more 3.6 billion in revenue in 2024 with the estimated 120 million passengers.
He also mentioned the plan to improve airports with a budget of 16 billion over the next 20 years, between 2022 and 2042, with more automated check-in and baggage acceptance and the plan to reduce time in passport control and immigration. AOT plans to install Automated Border Control (ABC) systems to replace officers.
Suttipong Kongpool, director of the Civil Aviation Authority of Thailand (CAAT), said the new PSC fee is under review as it must be reasonable compared to other airports in the world.