Opinion

The Thaiger Opinion Columns.

  • Opinion: Always put safety first | Thaiger

    Opinion: Always put safety first

    Jetsada Chanpen, 27, from Ranong, has been a Kusoldharm Foundation rescue worker for eight years. Last year, he almost lost his life doing what he loves. On March 26, Jetsada was the first to respond to an accident in which four workers had passed out in a sewer in Phuket Town. Wasting no time, he plunged into the sewer to…

  • Opinion: Promote the sport of jet-skiing in Phuket | Thaiger

    Opinion: Promote the sport of jet-skiing in Phuket

    PHUKET: Jet-skiing is a sport. It’s a real sport that deserves a great deal more respect than it is given in Phuket. Banning Phuket as a water-sport tourism destination for jet-skiing is ridiculous. Banning the current operations and tourist hooligans allowed on them, however, is understandable. Given the history of violence, death and extortion via the well-protected jet-ski operators it…

  • Opinion: Phuket defining boating culture | Thaiger

    Opinion: Phuket defining boating culture

    Erwin Bamps is CEO of Gulf Craft, listed among the world’s top 10 superyacht builders as per the 2014 Global Order Book, a report issued annually by the Boat International Group. Before his appointment to CEO in June 2014, Mr Bamps had been the chief operating officer of the company since 2009, during which the company grew from a few…

  • Opinion: Tourism – Once Thailand’s golden goose | Thaiger

    Opinion: Tourism – Once Thailand’s golden goose

    PHUKET: Thailand should decide if it wants tourism, or not. The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) has spent billions of baht over the past 15 years to build the tourism industry into a major force, and it has been largely successful in spite of political turmoil, a tsunami, floods, corruption and fluctuations in currencies worldwide. One estimate published in 2003…

  • Opinion: Ban anything, ban tourists – just be clear | Thaiger

    Opinion: Ban anything, ban tourists – just be clear

    PHUKET: The issue isn’t the beach management plan. It’s the lack of a plan or, at the very least, the lack of communicating the plan clearly and concisely. Phuket can junk up or freshen up its beaches as much as the government wants, but it won’t really matter – there are tourists suitable for each kind of beach. Of course,…

  • Opinion: Great balls of fire – sky lanterns a hazard over Phuket | Thaiger

    Opinion: Great balls of fire – sky lanterns a hazard over Phuket

    PHUKET: Among the many recent edicts that have been issued by the government to bring some order to Phuket’s beach tourism industry, one that the Gazette hopes can be comprehensively enforced is the ban on the sale of khom loi, or sky lanterns, at public beaches (story here). The Gazette concedes that the sight of khom loi slowly rising after…

  • Opinion: Working together to win the war on drugs | Thaiger

    Opinion: Working together to win the war on drugs

    Lt Col Somkid Boonrat, from Songkhla province, is chief of the investigation department at the Phuket Provincial Police Station. After graduating from the Royal Thai Police Cadet Academy, he continued on to earn a bachelor’s degree in law from Ramkhamhaeng University and a master’s degree in business administration from Prince of Songkhla University. Lt Col Somkid has been head of…

  • Opinion: Beach bums blue after latest Phuket ban | Thaiger

    Opinion: Beach bums blue after latest Phuket ban

    PHUKET: Patong Mayor Chalermluck Kebsup is correct in calling for a compromising approach to the ban on beach chairs on the island (story here). An equitable and transparent solution must be worked out before this latest embarrassment causes irreparable damage to the island’s tourism industry, permanently driving away many of the island’s most loyal guests. Images of elderly tourists being…

  • Opinion: High time for high-tide building rule enforcement | Thaiger

    Opinion: High time for high-tide building rule enforcement

    PHUKET: There is reason to be cautiously optimistic that the unprecedented involvement of the Administrative Court system in a controversial real-estate development case in Rawai (story here) could mark the emergence of a powerful new tool to ensure that local administrative bodies do a better job approving and overseeing work on future projects on the island, thus bolstering investor confidence.…

  • Opinion: “Thainess’ falls short of ecologically sustainable tourism | Thaiger

    Opinion: “Thainess’ falls short of ecologically sustainable tourism

    PHUKET: In the past 20 years, Thailand’s tourism industry has grown in leaps and bounds due to the hard work of the industry’s private-sector and effective campaigns created by the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT). One of the TAT’s most successful ever was its “Amazing Thailand” campaign launched in 1998, which aimed to bolster the country’s tourism income after the…

  • Opinion: Taking surf safety seriously | Thaiger

    Opinion: Taking surf safety seriously

    PHUKET: Kudos to Phuket Tourist Police volunteer Simon Luttrell for providing lifeguards with multi-language warning cards to help keep foreign tourists out of the surf in dangerous conditions. His generous action, though, raises the question of why local authorities and tourism agencies did not take similar action years ago. The cards (story here) address one of the key reasons why…

  • Opinion: Phuket Tourist Police should be your first call | Thaiger

    Opinion: Phuket Tourist Police should be your first call

    Maj Urumporn Koondejsumrit has been chief of the Tourist Police since 2012. He earned a master’s degree in science in criminal justice for leadership from Sam Houston State University in Texas before graduating from the Royal Police Cadet Academy. Here, Maj Urumporn advises tourists to be alert in order to avoid becoming victims of a crime, and promises that Tourist…

  • Opinion: Co-operation is key to keeping us safe | Thaiger

    Opinion: Co-operation is key to keeping us safe

    Phuriphat Theerakulpisut, 47, originally from Trang province, is chief of the Phuket Marine Office. He graduated from the Merchant Marine Training Center in 1986. Here, he talks about the duties of the Phuket Marine Office, and the changes and problems he has seen and encountered during his time as chief. PHUKET: It could be said that the Phuket Marine Office…

  • Opinion: This isn’t a game of musical chairs | Thaiger

    Opinion: This isn’t a game of musical chairs

    PHUKET: Comfortably nestled into a computer chair in front of a screen, it is hard to fathom why so many people appear to care so deeply about chairs on Phuket’s beaches. Chairs seem to be such a strange household item to polarize a community – except for maybe musical chairs. Nonetheless, the number of people engaged on the Gazette Facebook…

  • Opinion: Phuket teens can booze, thanks to local shops | Thaiger

    Opinion: Phuket teens can booze, thanks to local shops

    PHUKET: The recent order by Prime Minister Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha confirming that the basic terms of the controversial Alcohol Control Act of 2008 will remain unchanged comes as great news for “mom-and-pop” store operators across the nation, as it ensures that they will maintain their most important competitive advantage over increasingly powerful chain store competitors: the ability to sell alcohol…

  • Opinion: Re-focus hunt from hormonal teens to gun-making enablers | Thaiger

    Opinion: Re-focus hunt from hormonal teens to gun-making enablers

    PHUKET: Since mid-December, there have been four drive-by shootings reported in Phuket – three of which were fatal, and at least two of which were carried out by gangs of motorcycle-riding teenagers. The fact that these latest three attacks have occurred within the past month is truly horrifying, and is a far-from-comforting thought as the island’s tourism season continues to…

  • Opinion: The future of the Andaman’s coral reefs is in the hands of Phuket tourists | Thaiger

    Opinion: The future of the Andaman’s coral reefs is in the hands of Phuket tourists

    PHUKET: A recent comment made by a high-ranking government official that seawalking tourists should be allowed to continue hand-feeding bread crumbs to reef fish is a serious cause for concern. Ministry of Tourism and Sports Phuket Office Director Santi Pawai recently went on a fact-finding mission to investigate claims that a marine tourism operator’s seawalker tours off the coast of…

  • Tackling drug use among Phuket’s Muslim youths | Thaiger

    Tackling drug use among Phuket’s Muslim youths

    Pol Sen Sgt Maj Komon Dumluck, president of Narcotics Protection and Suppression of the Central Islamic Committee of Thailand, was born in Phuket on April 5, 1967. He graduated from Ramkhamhaeng University in Bangkok with a BA and MA from the Faculty of Political Science. He then want on to secure a PhD from Bangkok’s Suan Sunandha Rajabhat University in…

  • Phuket transport saga: A long, strange trip | Thaiger

    Phuket transport saga: A long, strange trip

    PHUKET: Even as my bus was drawing into the new Phuket bus terminal, predators were circling the bus full of unsuspecting, defenceless, bus-lagged tourists who were dying for a fresh shower or a chance to jump straight into the sea. Little did they know that their short remaining journeys would cost them half as much – if not the full…

  • Opinion: Privatized driving tests – driven by cash, or care? | Thaiger

    Opinion: Privatized driving tests – driven by cash, or care?

    PHUKET: The move by the Department of Land Transport (DLT) to privatize driver’s licence testing is a practical idea (story here), but one that is unlikely to have much impact on the dismal road-safety standards that keep Thai roads among the most dangerous on the planet. For years, going through the process of obtaining a car or motorbike driver’s licence…

  • Letter from the Governor: Let your children know you care | Thaiger

    Letter from the Governor: Let your children know you care

    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 one year. PHUKET: Children’s Day gives us the chance to show children just how…

  • Opinion: Time to tackle Phuket’s ever-growing trash dumps | Thaiger

    Opinion: Time to tackle Phuket’s ever-growing trash dumps

    PHUKET: We started 2015 with breaking news of a “private” dump site in coastal Kamala (story here), which is still serving as a pungent reminder that Phuket’s waste disposal problems remain a dire threat to the island’s future. Now, as everyone returns to work and the year begins in earnest, we must face the fact that current strategies are not…

  • Hotel compulsory buffets are hard to swallow | Thaiger

    Hotel compulsory buffets are hard to swallow

    PHUKET: There are some things we take for granted in life as being inherently part of it. Death and taxes are two of the most obvious examples, but there are again certain givens foisted on us that have absolutely no right to be there, yet we blithely accept them as being part and parcel of existence. Tourists in foreign climes…

  • Phuket’s monkey business flouting the law | Thaiger

    Phuket’s monkey business flouting the law

    Edwin Wiek is founder and director of the Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand (WFFT), an NGO protecting wildlife and nature in Thailand and Laos. He has been living in Thailand since 1989 and in 2001, founded WFFT. Here he talks about the mammoth problems facing wildlife protection forces, including systematic corruption at local level. PHUKET: While most people visit Phuket for…

  • Opinion: Phuket, an island haven lost | Thaiger

    Opinion: Phuket, an island haven lost

    PHUKET: A couple of weeks ago, I joined some work colleagues for lunch at a Cherng Talay restaurant. The restaurant is Australian-owned and caters mainly to expats who are homesick for stodgy meat pies and other Western fare. While waiting to be served I noticed, among the restaurant memorabilia, an old black-and-white photograph on the wall. It depicted a group…

  • Russian expert finds investment paradise in Phuket | Thaiger

    Russian expert finds investment paradise in Phuket

    An outstanding representative of Phuket’s international community, Sergey Nesterenko – who has a doctorate in business law and an MA in finance – has travelled the world searching for an earthly paradise to invest in property. At a unique Phuket location on secluded Naithon Beach, he is building the exclusive Vista del Mar villas with breathtaking sea and mountain views.…

  • The Iermakov affair: Where the Thai police and the Army make strange bedfellows | Thaiger

    The Iermakov affair: Where the Thai police and the Army make strange bedfellows

    PHUKET: The arrest of five soldiers by police for the abduction of Ukrainian businessman Igor Iermakov last week demonstrates the need for better cooperation between the Royal Thai Police and the military in international crime cases while the nation remains under martial law (story here). Cases involving international fugitives who opt for Phuket as a safe haven are certainly nothing…

  • Opinion: Fine solution for Phuket | Thaiger

    Opinion: Fine solution for Phuket

    PHUKET: The allegation of a 5,000-baht fine levied against a tourist for illegally parking a motorbike in a restricted zone in Karon (story here) raises several issues about the future role of local administrative bodies, both in terms of how they raise revenue and how they use these funds. The fact that Karon Municipality now appears to be taking a…

  • Opinion: No more umbrellas, no more Phuket | Thaiger

    Opinion: No more umbrellas, no more Phuket

    PHUKET: My family, together with two other families, have travelled together to enjoy our holidays in Phuket, and Karon Beach in particular, every Swedish winter for the past 13 years. But now it’s over. We are able to see Karon Beach from a web camera that broadcasts video online from a resort beside the beach – and because there are…

  • Opinion: Make transparency in ‘martial law raid’ Phuket’s blanket of safety | Thaiger

    Opinion: Make transparency in ‘martial law raid’ Phuket’s blanket of safety

    PHUKET: The recent joint police and military raid on the home of a prominent resident of Srisoonthorn has resulted in an order from Phuket’s governor for an investigation into why such heavy-handed tactics were required in what is ostensibly a case of alleged check fraud. While the December 3 raid failed in its goal to bring Mr Padungsak Songyot into…