Showing posts with label Myanmar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Myanmar. Show all posts

Monday 14 September 2015

Thai border crossings with Cambodia shut in the wake of the Erawan shrine bombing

Bomber Blame Game Sees Thailand Immigration Abruptly Change Visa Rules (Updated)

Foreign workers and tourists who use the country’s visa exempt entry provisions are the unwitting victims in a high-stakes blame game being played out in the wake of the Erawan shrine bombing on August 17.
On Saturday morning Thailand border crossings along the Cambodia border, along with the Phu Nam Ron/ Htee Khee border crossing at Kanchanaburi crossing into Myanmar abruptly stopped allowing people to enter Thailand using the visa exempt entry method with some reportedly also not allowing people to depart and return (out-in border hop) to activate second- or multiple-entry visas of any class.
Thailand has six land crossing with Cambodia – Ban Pakard/ Phsa Prum, Ban Laem/ Daun Lem, Chong Sa Ngam/ Anlong Veng, Chong Jom/ O Smach, Hat Lek/ Ko Kong and Aranyaprathet/ Poipet – and all are said to be affected, with local variations as to who can enter and who can not.
The instructions are said to have been issued from “someone high up in the immigration department” according to one visa service company operator who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the need to work with Thailand immigration officials on a daily basis.

According to the visa service operator the affected Thailand-Cambodia and Thailand-Myanmar border crossing received the instructions by telephone late Friday afternoon.

“At the Ban Laem/ Daun Lem border they issued visa exempt entries up until 8am, but only for people who had four or less stamps. At 8am they stopped stamping anyone in, whether they had a valid visa or not, and about one hour after that it changed again; People with valid visas were allowed to enter, but no visa exempt entries”
No mention of the abrupt change in policy was posted on the Thailand Immigration Department website, the move catching hundreds of tourists by surprise.
Equally caught by surprise were the thousands of foreign expatriate retirees and others in Thailand who are required to exit and re-enter the country every 90-days, as well as those in the country on multiple-entry tourist, or business visas.
While visa service companies that cater for the out-in border hopper and tourists travelling overland into Thailand are the most visibly affected by this sudden change in policy, the unseen victims are the tens of thousands of Laotian and Vietnamese migrant workers who use the visa exempt entry method to stay long-term in Thailand, many of them working illegally.
Also affected are thousands of Filipino domestic workers and English-language teachers who also use the visa exempt entry provisions to stay for extended periods of time in Thailand.
According to the visa service agent “the number of tourists, long-stay expats and Filipinos who cross the border each day and come back using the visa exempt entry method is minuscule compared with the number of Vietnamese and Laotians who exit and reenter.
“These companies [who transport the migrant workers] don’t have websites, they don’t advertise and you will have never heard of them, but each day they take between 400 and 800 people to the Phu Nam Ron/ Htee Khee border crossing and another 400 to 800 to the Ban Pakard / Phsa Prum border crossing.
Almost all [foreign] workers leave it until the last possible time to do their visa run so as to get the maximum stay possible. This will cause many of them to be “overstay and now illegal”, he said

Erawan Shrine Bombing
 
The abrupt closure of the Thai-Cambodian and Thailand-Myanmar borders follows the unusual public blaming and shaming of the Thailand Immigration Bureau last Wednesday by out-going national police chief, Police General Somyot Poompunmuang, himself a former deputy commander with Thailand Immigration Bureau.
In the wake of the deadly Erawan shrine bombing on August 17 the Thailand Immigration Bureau, a division of the Royal Thai Police (RTP), has been singled out as being most responsible for the bomber and his accomplices having been able to enter Thailand to carry out the attack.
Shortly after Adem Karadag was arrested at a Bangkok apartment complex where bomb-making materials and more than 200 (poorly) forged Turkish passports were allegedly discovered, investigators announced that the suspect had bribed his way into the kingdom.
According to Police General Poompunmuang, who awarded himself and Bangkok bomb investigators a Bt3 million ($83,000*) reward for catching the bomber (despite it now being acknowledged that he is not), Mr Karadag paid $600 (Bt 21,613*) to enter Thailand “from a neighbouring country”.
In the wake of the arrest and bribery claim six immigration police, including a local senior officer, from the Aranyaprathet/ Poipet border in Sa Kaeo Province 200km west of Bangkok were ordered to “transfer to Bangkok immediately”.

Thai Police Chief Humiliates Brother Cop
 
 Police General Poompunmuang then humiliated the Thailand Immigration Bureau and its head, Police Lieutenant-General Sakda Choenpakdee further by warning him, via a meeting with 259 of his subordinates that Police Lieutenant-General Choenpakdee was not at, that the immigration chief would be moved to an inactive post if he failed to rein in his men.
He then compounded the public disgracing further by calling on Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha “to clean up the immigration police bureau”, claiming their were six categories of abuse being conducted by immigration police:
  • Allowing illegal immigrants to enter the country in exchange for bribes, making it possible for human trafficking.
  • Providing service at a substantial charge to extend the stay of foreigners in this country, such as arranging student visas for foreigners without actually attending any educational institutes or changing tourist visas into business visas for between Bt12,000-Bt15,000($333-$416) per head.
  • Providing out-in or exit-entrance arrangements for foreigners to extend their stay for another 15- or 30-days at a time.
  • Stamping seals to falsely claim the stay in Thailand of illegal immigrants to help them gain entry to third countries.
  • Selling tor mor 6 documents to Laotians and Vietnamese who entered the country to work.
  • Demanding excessive fees from foreigners in exchange for visa on arrival at Don Meuang and Suvarnabhumi international airports.
According to Police General Poompunmuang about 6,000 visitors a day apply for visas on arrival (Ed: Not to be confused with visa exempt entries) and each was made to pay Bt300 ($8.33) in under-the-table fees. “The total amounts to Bt1.8 million a day and it is not known who has pocketed it”, he said.

Thai Police & Military Also To Blame For Bangkok Bomber
 
It is understood that the Thailand Immigration Bureau is seething at the public humiliation by the the national police chief as well as criticism from General Chan-o-cha.
According to one immigration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to the media, the police and military are looking for a scapegoat.
Acknowledging that the practices outlined by the police chief do occur “at some locations”, the immigration officer said border security is no longer a role carried out by the immigration police alone.
“At every border entry point there are three, sometimes four layers of security personal. It has been that way since the military took over. At the Aranyaprathet/Poipet border immigration officers stamp the passport and admit visitors; a few kilometres down the road Thai army Rangers (Thahan Phran) stop all vehilces coming from the border and check passports against faces.
“Ten kilometres later there is a Thai army checkpoint where vehicles are supposed to be emptied and passports and luggage checked. Maybe the [immigration] officers did something wrong, but why wasn’t it detected at these two other checkpoints? Why is immigration being blamed?”, he said.
According to the visa service operator the security protocols described by the immigration officer are accurate. “At every entry point there are three or four layers of security.
“At Ban Pakard it’s immigration, Rangers, Rangers and army; at Nong Khai it’s immigration, army, Rangers; At Phu Nam Ron it’s immigration, police, Rangers and Army; at Ban Laem it’s immigration, Rangers, army, and so on. Depending on which entry point at least one of the secondary security checks passengers are supposed to disembark from the vans and be face checked against their passport. Luggage is also checked, including duty free allowances. For larger buses the inspection is generally conducted on the bus, but they still check the luggage..
“The immigration police are annoyed that they are being publicly humiliated and made to look like the bad guys in all of this. The head of police accuses them of being corrupt, but makes no mention of the corruption inside the police. The easiest way for the immigration police to proceed is to not process the documents in the areas where they have been accused of being corrupt”, he said.

According to the visa service operator who, by his own admissions is only a small player in the visa service industry he pays about Bt30,000 ($832) per month to the different police checkpoints along the routes he takes.
“My drivers still get stopped and have to pay additional money – between Bt1,000 and Bt1,500 ($27.76* – $41.64*) – despite the fact that we are totally legal.
For larger operators such as those who specialise in transporting Laotian and Vietnamese workers he said the “tea money” paid to Thai police each month was likely to be” at least ten times what I pay, though he admitted he had no proof to substantiate the claim.
Like everyone else in the visa service sector the operator said he had no idea how long the current situation would last. “It could be days, it could be weeks or more. We really don’t know because we’ve been provided with no official advice of the change in the first place.
“We only heard about the ban on visa exempt entries from our staff on the border who confirmed it with local immigration officers. Until the situation is clear we are only taking people to Laos. So far there has been no change there”, he added.
Thailand officially offers visa exempt entries to passport holders from 50 countries and visa on arrival to the nationals of 19. Ordinarily holders of multiple entry visas are able to cross any Thailand land border (or travel by air), get stamped into the neighbouring country and turn around and come immediately back to reactivate their visa.
As of Sunday, September 13 Thailand land border crossings at Phu Nam Ron and Ban Pakard, were refusing to admit people using the visa exempt entry method or people attempting to do an out-in visa hop, while the Thai border crossing at Aranyaprathet and Hat Lek were reported to be allowing bona fide tourists to enter using the visa exempt entry method, but were refusing reentry to people with multiple entry visas.
No one from the Thailand Immigration Bureau could be contacted for a comment due to the weekend.

Update: This article was updated at 11.25 am on Sept 14, 2015: Thailand Immigration Bureau advises that visa exempt entry into Thailand has recommenced at all previously affected border crossings. People from eligible countries will be provided with 15- or 30-day visa exempt entries (depending on eligibility) enabling a maximum stay of no more than 90-days in one calendar year. Any time spent in Thailand on a tourist visa will not count towards the 90-day limit.
People with multiple entry visas can also once again exit and reenter (out-in/ exit-entrance) Thailand to activate the second or subsequent allowable entries. No explanation was provided for the disruption over the weekend.
At the time of writing AEC News Today has been unable to independently verify if the situation has returned to normal at all previously affected Thailand-Cambodia border crossings or the Phu Nam Ron/ Htee Khee border crossing at Kanchanaburi crossing into Myanmar.
See here for the list of nationalities permitted visa exempt entry to Thailand and visa on arrival in Thailand

Source: SamuiTimes

*****

For the Best #Hotels and #Resorts
We help you with your
#Bookings 
BOOK NOW SIMPLE CLICK ON THIS LINK ON OR THE BANNER
http://gerrit-tienkamp.blogspot.com/
http://planet-asian.blogspot.com/
https://asiabesthotels.wordpress.com/
https://europeanbesthotels.wordpress.com/
http://www.tripadvisor.com/members/Gerrit_Tienkamp

.

.

Wednesday 9 September 2015

Honouring the dead for a better life

Mon residents help tow the boat from the temple to the river. 

 The Mon community in Sangkhla Buri on Thailand's border with Myanmar pay respect to their ancestors by sending off a boat laden with food.

 
A boat loaded with food is towed into the water where it begins its slow journey to the afterlife.
 According to traditional beliefs, the seventh month in the lunar calendar is when restless spirits roam the earth. That seventh month usually falls around August or September and all over Asia, communities mark the festival of the hungry ghost in their own fashion.

Chinese-speaking communities celebrated the festival last week, burning paper money and papier-mache iPhones so that these will travel to the afterworld where they can be used by the spirits, as well as offering boiled chicken and sweets to appease the hungry ghosts. The Khmer, too, killed chickens, leaving small portions of food at crossroads to feed the dead.

 Mon women light candles for the departed souls.

 The Mon people in the western district of Sangkhla Buri, however, organise a much more festive occasion in memory of departed souls. They build a boat and load it with food then celebrate for two nights before tossing it into the water. This Mon ceremony is very rare, and draws both the curious and the culture buff to Thailand's western frontier for the rite.

Known as the Mon Floating Boat Festival, this year's festival is being held over the weekend of September 26 to 28.

"The ritual is known to the Mon as Pohamord, which roughly translates as the Boat of Offerings," says Arunya Chareonhongsa, a Mon resident of Kanchanburi's Sangkhla Buri district, as she recounts the origins and purpose of the Mon Floating Boat Festival.

 A Mon woman carries a tray of offerings on her head.

 The annual event sees Mon communities towing a full-sized, hand-crafted boat laden with food to the river, The food is left out to sate the appetites of the departed. Once a private and deeply religious ritual, today the festival brings in much-needed tourist revenue to this quiet area.

Thousands of visitors turn out every year during the rite to witness the boat being built, decorated then towed to the water.

The Floating Boat Festival not only commemorates departed Mon pilgrims but also banishes evil and brings luck to those still living. It’s a ritual that dates back to the Mon Hanthawaddy Kingdom (1369-1539) and marks the journey of a high-ranking monk and several Buddhist pilgrims across the Bay of Bengal to fetch a set of Buddhist scriptures in Sri Lanka. On their return trip, one boat capsized in rough seas and the pilgrims inside it drowned.

Every year since, the Mon have built a large boat and piled it high with offerings before sending it out to sail on the river to feed those departed pilgrims.

For the Mon who live outside the district, the festival is a home-coming and a chance to mix with friends and relatives in one of the largest and most rustic Mon communities in Thailand.

On the first day locals and visitors surround the Chedi Phutthakhaya at Wat Wang Wiwekaram to watch as the men shape long bamboo poles into a boat, a process that usually takes a full day.

While the men are building the bamboo boat, the women busy themselves cooking and preparing the offerings, which mostly consist of popcorn, ripe bananas and boiled rice in banana leaves, candles, honey, water and sticks of sugarcane.

When the boat is ready and decorated with colourful paper flags, it is moved to the front of the huge pagoda where it serves as the centrepiece for the celebrations that follow on the next two nights.

The highlight is the series of cultural shows that showcase the distinctive ways of the Mon. Whether old or young, they dress in beautiful traditional attire - red sarongs and white shirts - and move towards the boat holding trays. Young men, with mouthfuls of chewy betel nut and winning smiles, try to lure the girls who carrying baskets of food on their heads.

"In the olden days, we also made a lantern and would load it with yellow string and the necessities for entering the monkhood before releasing it into the sky," Arunya explains. "Whoever got the monk set would be ordained.

"If a woman found it, she would make a great contribution to the Buddhist temple."

The ceremony culminates in the boat being towed to the riverbank and pushed out to the water where it begins its slow journey to the spiritual world.

IF YOU GO

n Sitting on the large reservoir created by the Khao Laem Dam, Sangkhla Buri is a home to one of Thailand's largest Mon communities as well as to Karenni and Bangladeshi populations that add to its ethnic diversity.

n It draws visitors for its Mon Wood Bridge and Mon temple with a bronze pyramid-shaped Chedi and is a good starting point a day trip to the Three Pagoda Check Point, where visitors, provided they bring a passport and photo, can get a day pass to Payathonsu inside Myanmar.

 The Mon Floating Boat Festival takes place around Chedi Phutthakhaya at Wat Wang Wiwekaram, Sangkhla Buri. 

Source: The Nation

*****
  .



.