EXTRACTS FROM THAILAND DEADLY DESTINATION BY JOHN STAPLETON
EXTRACTS
FROM THAILAND: DEADLY DESTINATION BY JOHN STAPLETON
FROM
CHAPTER ONE
FRUIT
FOR THE PICKING
The daily robbing, bashing, drugging, extortion and
murder of foreign tourists on Thai soil, along with numerous scandals involving
unsafe facilities and well established scams, has led to frequent predictions
that Thailand’s multi-billion dollar tourist industry will self-destruct.
Instead tourist numbers more than doubled in the decade to 2014. Both the Thai
Tourism Authority and the Thai Ministry of Tourism forecast an astonishing 30
million tourist arrivals per annum in 2015 and beyond. The world might not have
come to the hometowns of the many visitors fascinated by Thailand, but it
certainly came to the Land of Smiles.
While the Thai media is heavily censored, and bad
news stories about tourists suppressed, nonetheless there is more than enough
evidence to demonstrate that something has gone seriously awry with the
nation’s tourist industry.
In 2014, just as in the years preceding it, there
were train, bus, ferry, speedboat, motorbike and car accidents, murders,
knifings, unexplained deaths, numerous suicides, diving accidents, robberies
gone wrong, anonymous bodies washing up on the shores and a string of alcohol
and drug related incidents.
Thailand’s carefully manufactured reputation for hospitality,
as a land of palm trees and sun-drenched beaches, happy-hour bars, world class
hotels and welcoming people, as paradise on Earth, is very different to the reality
many tourists encounter. The rapid growth in Thai tourism has been a triumph of
advertising and image creation; building the perception, firmly entrenched in the
West, that Thais embrace strangers. In reality, the relations between ethnic Thais
and foreigners are often difficult; and there has been growing friction and
disengagement, a drift from curiosity to contempt, as visitor numbers have
increased.
Tourists choose one destination over another for a
number of reasons, most of which Thailand scores highly on: cultural
uniqueness, climate, natural resources and environment, value for money,
quality accommodation, modern transport infrastructure, a range of tourist
activities and experiences, entertainment, and a hospitable reputation. But
since the events of September 11, 2001 safety has been one of the factors
underpinning a traveller’s choice of one destination over another.
And on the core issue of safety, Thailand scores
very badly indeed.
While many foreigners leave the country happy, there
are equally thousands of travellers from Europe, America, Australia, India and
the Middle East, both short-time tourists and long-term residents, leaving the
country impoverished, distressed, frightened and unlikely to ever return.
If, with the murder or accidental deaths of tourists
a common event, they leave at all.
Travel was once the domain of the rich, adventurous
and eccentric.
No longer.
With the growth of mass tourism, the world is on the
move. Naive young and not so young travellers are more likely to be factory
workers than travellers protected by wealth or experience.
Hordes of this new breed of traveller now disembark
daily from giant air buses at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi airport, often
transferring straight to flights for Chiang Mai, Pattaya and Phuket.
All these individuals know about Thailand is what
they have read in tourist brochures or heard from friends. Far from acting as
if they’ve just flown half way across the world to one of Earth’s most exotic
and dangerous destinations, they act, and dress, as if they were just heading
down to their local strip of sand for a surf. Or to their local bar.
Life in Thailand is cheap. And the deaths of
foreigners often go unlamented; even unrecorded. Only a smattering of the
murders or accidental deaths of tourists and expatriates make it into the
newspapers. Tourists are still given few warnings of the reality of the
situation they are entering.
Despite the window dressing of a dedicated Tourist
Police, and the recent establishment of Tourist Courts, in reality aggrieved
foreigners have little or no recourse to justice. Soon enough they are gone, their
personal losses swept away in the tides of their personal histories.
Just as tens of thousands of tourists depart the
Kingdom’s international airports each day, at the same time airbuses disgorge
thousands more holiday makers with only one thing on their minds, to have as
good a time as they possibly can.
Only a taxi ride away from the triumphs of
functionality and style that are Bangkok, Phuket, Chiang Mai and Pattaya
airports lie the nation’s infamous bars, clubs and massage parlours, waiting
for the next crop.
“Fruit for the picking,” as the locals describe
tourists.
FROM
CHAPTER TWO
PASSPORTS
Visitors to Thailand are not warned by travel
agents, airlines or their own governments that their passports are highly
prized in Thailand, and stand a very good chance of being stolen.
Depending on the nationality, a passport can fetch
thousands of dollars on the black market, several months pay for many Thais.
There are gangs stealing passports to order. European, American, Australian and
Canadian passports are particularly prized.
Foreign embassies, fearful the documents are ending
up in the hands of Islamist militants and international criminal networks, have
made repeated representations to the Thai government without affect.
INTERPOL Chief, Secretary General Ronald Noble
describes passport fraud as the “biggest threat facing the world”.
But for decades the Thai authorities have done
little to stop their country’s blatant trade in stolen, doctored and forged
documents. By inaction and complicity, Thailand has become an epicentre for the
trade, a key link in international terrorist networks and a danger to the
travelling public worldwide.
Forged passports from Thailand are regarded as the
highest quality of any in the world.
There is an established practice across the country
of bike, car, jet-ski and other rental services requiring passports as
collateral. When punters return to claim their documents, they have
disappeared.
With jihadist networks one of the main purchasers of
fake documents, a perfectly innocent peace-loving tourist can be associated
with a terrorist act, simply by leaving their passport as collateral in a hire
shop while they are on holiday in Thailand. By their choice of destination, by
choosing a country notorious for its lax law enforcement they can find
themselves inadvertently contributing to the deaths of others.
No travel association explains this moral
dilemma—for exactly the same reason that motivates the criminals on the other
side of the ledger, the river of easy money tourists represent.
Not only is the trade in passports and fake
documents fuelling terrorism and international crime gangs, it is also
facilitating false job applications through counterfeit academic
qualifications, bank fraud through the establishment of false identities, and
illegal access to restricted areas in various companies, not just at airports.
There are few official warnings to tourists that
they can expect zero help from the hire company involved in the theft of their
passports, from their hotel, from the local police or from the Thai Tourist
police.
Their money might be welcome, but they are not. No
amount of protest will bring their documents back. The black money from the
stolen passports makes the complaints or distress of a foreigner very easy to
dismiss.
There has been no action taken by the police against
the hire companies routinely stealing from tourists for one simple reason. The
police benefit financially from the practice. Nor have Thailand’s dysfunctional
series of governments done anything to stop businesses demanding passports as collateral,
or initiated a crackdown on the police and criminal networks involved. The
trade in forged documents is not seen as impacting on the welfare of the
ultra-nationalistic Thais; and therefore not an issue worthy of action.
Foreigners are forced to go through considerable
inconvenience as they get their passports reissued.
Partly a result of the Thai authorities complicity
in or failure to act against the trade, international embassies have seen a
drain on resources as they assist their distressed and confused citizenry
replace stolen passports and readjust travel schedules.
In other words, it is the tax payers in the
tourist’s country of origin who are ultimately paying for the well established
racket of thieving passports from holidaymakers in Thailand.
Renowned Thai journalist Chutima Sidasathian
describes Phuket, with its international orientation and plethora of news
stories, as a reporter’s paradise.
While questioning the Phuket police at a press
conference about the number of stolen passports being traced to the island
after the disappearance of MH370, she was castigated for raising a subject
which could damage the reputation of the
island and of Thailand itself.
She declared she was just doing her job and shot
back to the senior officer:
“Yes, but what is the answer?”
As she recalls: “There was no answer.”
Indeed, to the charge against the Thai political,
military, police, social and business elites of allowing racketeers to trade
freely in doctored, stolen and forged passports, along with a wide variety of
other false documents, thereby fuelling criminal and terrorist networks and
endangering the world’s travelling public, there is no answer.
And no defence.
FROM
CHAPTER THREE
MAYHEM
The pleasure dens tourists so eagerly seek are not
safe. And the more travellers relax in the false bonhomie of the bars, the more
unsafe they become.
Often drunk or off their guard while on holidays,
fooled by the marketing of Thailand, trusting people they should never have
trusted, sightseers are not warned of the very high probability of having their
drinks spiked, or that they stand a very real chance of being bashed and robbed
by mafia run gangs.
A relaxed attitude to prostitution is all very well
and good, and despite the moralising from various quarters not a cultural trait
to be criticised. But with the inherent dislike and distaste for foreigners,
which is a national trait, often comes zero respect from sex workers for their
customer’s welfare or safety, and zero respect for their property, at a time or
in circumstances when those individuals are most vulnerable. The attitude of
murderous indifference to the welfare of strangers is ingrained enough in the
Thai psyche for it to justify formal government warnings to the many hundreds
of thousands of tourists venturing into the bars and clubs of Thailand on a
nightly basis.
It is standard operating procedure in Thailand for
the bars and clubs to pay bribes to the local police and municipal authorities
in order to be able to open their doors. If a bar, club or parlour does not
make this payment in all likelihood they will be closed down. The police are
not acting in the best interests of the visitors making complaints for the
simple reason that they are being paid by bar and club owners; the commonplace
complaints of tourists about being robbed are simply shrugged off.
Those who don’t understand the system, that almost
every Thai policeman is on the take and expects to be paid, could well find
themselves in jail. Or killed.
One common saying from the locals sums it up:
“Bangkok police same same Bangkok mafia.” The saying can be adapted for the
whole of Thailand.
The lack of warnings, or education of tourists
visiting the kingdom, means that many visitors are under the illusion that
there is a legal apparatus and judicial process to which they can turn for
assistance. The lack of education on the dangers of Thailand is little more
than criminal negligence on the part of the travel operators peddling their
wares, and a clear breach of a legislated duty of care on the part of many
countries supplying tourists to Thailand.
Tourists are not warned that if they are robbed and
bashed in the bars and nightclubs, there is little use complaining to the local
police. Indeed, if they persist in their complaints, the tourists may well find
themselves being seriously harassed, entrapped, threatened or murdered.
It is a well oiled machine, made possible by the
fact that most tourists stay less than a fortnight; are in a country which they
do not understand and are powerless to take any action.
The same sex worker that robbed a tourist one day
and was the subject of a complaint to the police will be back working at the
same club the next night, primed and ready to fleece another customer. For both
the police and the bar owners themselves benefit from these robberies. In
essence, the bars are running organised gangs of thieves masquerading as sex
workers.