Opinion

The Thaiger Opinion Columns.

  • First Person: Saving Thailand’s sharks | Thaiger

    First Person: Saving Thailand’s sharks

    Brendon Sing, from South Africa, has been actively involved with shark research and conservation for more than 15 years. He has taken more than 5,000 dives, many with a range of shark species across the world. Now, as one of the Directors of Shark Guardian, a United Kingdom-based charity for shark and marine conservation projects worldwide, he has been giving…

  • Island View: Who said shark attack? | Thaiger

    Island View: Who said shark attack?

    PHUKET: There is a great responsibility in the media to understand the impact and long-term effects of the language used in stories from ‘Negro’ to ‘shark attack’. The term Negro started to fall out of favor in the United States by 1966 and was completely taboo by the mid-1980s. Given the politically correct nature that balanced, main-stream media take, it…

  • Opinion: Phuket shark week | Thaiger

    Opinion: Phuket shark week

    PHUKET: We send our condolences to Australian tourist Jane Neame, whose recent visit to Phuket was marred by one of the most unlikely of accidents: a shark bite. We are impressed with the way the Australian, who is six months pregnant, took the injury in stride. We hope island residents and visitors react in kind, not unduly panicking over what…

  • First Person: Weeding out touts | Thaiger

    First Person: Weeding out touts

    Suwat Suksiri, 43, has been Chief of the Thung Talay Non Hunting Zone since 2010. He is originally from Chumphon Province and earned his bachelor’s degree in Forestry from Sukhothai Thammathirat University. He has been working in the forestry field since 1993. Here he talks about why animal touting is a serious problem for foreigners and not locals, and how…

  • Opinion: Monkey business | Thaiger

    Opinion: Monkey business

    PHUKET: The recent arrest of a number of touts for the illegal possession of gibbons on Phi Phi Don Island reveals, yet again, the continuation of the pathetic practice of using exotic animals as props to make money from uneducated tourists in Thailand. On a somewhat brighter note, the fact that the arrest followed images being sent to the Gazette…

  • First Person: Small hospital with big debt | Thaiger

    First Person: Small hospital with big debt

    Dr Sirichai Silpa-archa has been the director of Patong Hospital since 2013. Prior to becoming hospital director, he worked at Vachira Phuket Hospital for 26 years. He earned his medical degree from Chulalongkorn University, and later a specialist degree in urology from Chiang Mai University. Here he talks about the trials and tribulations of managing a small, local hospital trying…

  • Island View: Put it on a stick | Thaiger

    Island View: Put it on a stick

    PHUKET: Food on a stick is a very important staple of street food in Thailand. Coming from the midwest region of the US, I can assure you that we too have our obsession with food on a stick. Every year, we anxiously await the announcement of new food booths at the state fair to see what concoctions have been invented.…

  • Opinion: Cyclocops roam | Thaiger

    Opinion: Cyclocops roam

    PHUKET: THE recent launch of two-wheeled ‘Beach Police’ patrols at every police district on the island is a small, yet potentially positive pedal forward for a provincial police force that has developed a dubious reputation for ensuring tourist safety along our world-famous shorelines. But it’s sad that the initiative, ordered by Police Region 8, had to come in direct response…

  • Opinion: Usual suspects | Thaiger

    Opinion: Usual suspects

    PHUKET: Authorities here in Phuket have acted sensibly in the wake of the recent terrorist bombing at the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok, stepping up security at popular tourist destinations across the island and urging the public not to unduly panic or believe everything they see in social media. Sadly, in this case, it was not only the social media where…

  • Opinion: Love for Bangkok unshaken | Thaiger

    Opinion: Love for Bangkok unshaken

    PHUKET: Last night I was three blocks away from the tragic bomb blast at the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok. Like so many nights when I am in the capital city, I stay at a nearby hotel and walk around that same corner to capture the unique flavor of a truly special place. Call it routine or else a beckoning call…

  • Phuket’s aspirations call for new projects | Thaiger

    Phuket’s aspirations call for new projects

    Nisit Jansomwong, 52, from Ratchaburi, landed on the island in October to take up the position of Phuket Governor. He has a master’s degree in administration from Chulalongkorn University, where he graduated with honors. Before coming to Phuket, Governor Nisit was governor of Ratchaburi province for a year. Governor Nisit is pushing mega infrastructure projects in Phuket in order to…

  • Opinion: I write for the trees | Thaiger

    Opinion: I write for the trees

    PHUKET: Construction is underway for the much anticipated and loathed underpass at the Bang Khu intersection with cranes in full swing and excavators making their rounds on what little patches of green are still left. While sitting at the red light recently, I was daydreaming of the beautiful new home that all the little shrubs, flowers and bushes would be…

  • Opinion: Corruption battle | Thaiger

    Opinion: Corruption battle

    Law Professor Chaisit Trachoetham, 65, has been the Chairman of the State Audit Commission since 2014. He earned his Bachelor’s in Law from Thammasat University, where he is also a professor, and his Bar-at-law and Doctorate from Mahasarakam University. He has been a judge for 37 years, and is also a former president of the Court of Appeals and the…

  • Opinion: Real estate xenophobia | Thaiger

    Opinion: Real estate xenophobia

    PHUKET: While some Thais are jittery about foreigners buying Thai real estate, particularly land in some form or another, they should remember that they themselves can buy real estate in most western countries, with the rationale being that one can never bring that piece of real estate back to one’s home country. It is also pertinent to remember that Thai…

  • Opinion: In mourning | Thaiger

    Opinion: In mourning

    PHUKET: The Gazette joins the Phuket community in mourning the death of Paiboon Upatising, who passed away after a long battle against cancer last week. A descendent of Chinese immigrants, Mr Paiboon was a highly-successful businessman, who used his own good fortune to help those in need. In addition to having exclusive rights to sell Boon Rawd Brewery products on…

  • On your mind: Realpolitik defines US/Thai relationship | Thaiger

    On your mind: Realpolitik defines US/Thai relationship

    PHUKET: Webster’s dictionary defines realpolitik as a system of politics based on a country’s situation and its needs, rather than on ideas about what is morally right and wrong. No doubt, US government officials would deny that realpolitik defines American policies, but it is hard to see any clear moral imperative with regard to that country’s relationship with Thailand. The…

  • Opinion: Taking up space | Thaiger

    Opinion: Taking up space

    PHUKET: If you have ever been to Tesco Lotus or Big C – I will go out on a limb to say that most of us on the island have – did you ever park your vehicle in a handicapped parking spot if you are not handicapped? I hope not. If you have, stop being selfish and give the spot…

  • Opinion: Packed prison | Thaiger

    Opinion: Packed prison

    PHUKET: Credit is owed to the government for finally coming through with funding to build a much-needed and long overdue new prison for Phuket. It is well known that the existing Phuket Provincial Prison is dangerously overcrowded. With a maximum capacity of just 800, the 115-year-old facility currently holds more than 3,000 inmates – a recipe for disaster if ever…

  • Opinion: Sterilizing Phuket strays | Thaiger

    Opinion: Sterilizing Phuket strays

    John Dalley, originally from Leeds in the United Kingdom, is the president of the Soi Dog Foundation. John worked as a chemical plant manager for many years before retiring in 2002. In September 2003, he became involved with the Soi Foundation when it first started in Phuket. Here, he talks about the soi dog problem in Phuket, and Thailand, the…

  • Opinion: Gambling in Thailand: Out with the old, in with the new | Thaiger

    Opinion: Gambling in Thailand: Out with the old, in with the new

    PHUKET: There has been a lot in the news lately about gambling. One recent Gazette article discussed the history that Thailand has had with this recreational activity and noted that it originally came here with Chinese immigrants. As late 19th century western leaders found gambling to be crude and thought it synonymous with crime, King Rama V led the government…

  • Opinion: Phuket’s only woman lifeguard stands tall | Thaiger

    Opinion: Phuket’s only woman lifeguard stands tall

    Jongdee Haemkaew, 35, from Songkhla, is the assistant sport and recreational manager at Le Meridien Phuket Beach Resort. A former taekwondo athlete with a bachelor’s degree in health and sport science from Thaksin University in Pattalung, Ms Jongdee is the first female lifeguard on Phuket and one of the first to be certified by Surf Life Saving Australia. She has…

  • Opinion: Uphill safety battles | Thaiger

    Opinion: Uphill safety battles

    PHUKET: Accidents happen every day on the island – whether they are caused by drunk driving, running a red light or something else. I argue that the most serious accidents on our island occur during the rainy season on the hills in Patong, Kamala, Surin and Kata. Maybe some of these accidents are caused by ‘slippery roads’, as is often…

  • Opinion: Use Article 44 to take down the dolphinarium | Thaiger

    Opinion: Use Article 44 to take down the dolphinarium

    PHUKET: The Phuket Gazette endorses the recent call by SKAL and several other groups in petitioning Tourism and Sports Minister Kobkarn Wattanavrangkul to put to an end, once and for all, to the plans to open a “dolphinarium” in Chalong. In their letter to the minister, SKAL makes a succinct yet highly compelling 12-point argument against the dolphinarium, which has…

  • Opinion: The lay of the land | Thaiger

    Opinion: The lay of the land

    Dr Sangdao Wongsai, 35, from Bangkok, is a professor at Prince of Songkhla University’s Phuket campus. She graduated with a master’s degree in chemical engineering from the King Mongkut University of Techonology in Thonburi, before earning a Doctorate in Applied Statistics from Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. She now teaches statistics and researches geographic information systems (GIS) and remote sensing.…

  • Opinion: Thailand’s embarassing ‘war on drugs’ | Thaiger

    Opinion: Thailand’s embarassing ‘war on drugs’

    PHUKET: The recent revelation that the Thai Postal Service is being used to transship large quantities of illicit drugs is just the latest in a long list of embarrassments in our country’s effort to combat recreational drug use. As far back as 1943, the government passed the Krathom Act in a bid to halt declining revenues from the government-taxed opium…

  • Opinion: Bring back sun loungers, tourists will come again | Thaiger

    Opinion: Bring back sun loungers, tourists will come again

    Tommy Serban, 35, is the senior product manager of TUI Nordic, a tour operator in Scandinavia. He is originally from Copenhagen and has a master’s degree in business management. Mr Serban lived in Phuket from 2007 to 2010 and has been working with TUI Nordic for 14 years. Here, he discusses Nordic tourists’ concerns about Phuket, the current state of…

  • Opinion: Soi animals: Good, bad, scary, weird | Thaiger

    Opinion: Soi animals: Good, bad, scary, weird

    PHUKET: There are many tales told, time and time again, by Phuket residents of good, bad, scary or weird encounters they’ve had with stray animals who live their lives on the streets of this island. The stray dog problem was recently cast into the spotlight in Rawai and Nai Harn. However, this problem is not exclusive to the south of…

  • Opinion: Human rights | Thaiger

    Opinion: Human rights

    PHUKET: The plan by Rawai Mayor Aroon Solos to ban migrant workers from keeping dogs is unlikely to have much of an effect on dog populations in the area; the scheme not only fails to address the main cause of the problem, but also shifts the blame to the most convenient scapegoat. Predictably, news of the proposed ban has set…

  • Opinion: Big media blunders [video] | Thaiger

    Opinion: Big media blunders [video]

    PHUKET: Earlier this month, the Ambassador for Nepal, HE Khaga Nath Adhikari, came to Phuket to ask for our help in rebooting Nepal’s crippled tourism sector – an industry that, before the May earthquakes, accounted for about 50 per cent of the country’s annual GDP. The Ambassador’s message was that – despite news reports to the contrary – Nepal has…

  • Opinion: Lack of discipline | Thaiger

    Opinion: Lack of discipline

    PHUKET: I have been driving various vehicles in Phuket on a daily basis for 12 years now. I started out riding a Honda Wave, before moving on to a car and a big bike. My 12 years of experience on the road has made me realize that people risk their lives every day because of their sheer lack of discipline.…