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manonthemon

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Posts posted by manonthemon

  1. Well that's a bummer! I was using BX.TH for one purpose only - to change my THB to BTC and then send these BTC to my wallet connected to my GBP account - I found this to be the most efficient way of sending my money abroad, out of Thailand. 

     

    Is there another Thai crypto exchange that allows for direct transfers of THB from a Thai bank account?  

  2. I ended up going to Penang with my old passport. I asked Thai and Malaysian immigration officers to place their stamps in the available empty space on my passport pages already carrying other stamps - they had no problem with that.  The visa agent in Penang complained a bit, claiming that a spread in a passport is considered one, not two pages (the rules state that you need two empty pages for a visa) but in the end he managed to get me a new visa. 

  3. 22 minutes ago, scorecard said:

    So the application for new PP is already lodged.

     

    Some countries issue new PPs very quickly, some take longer, did your embassy specifically mention how many days to receive your new PP?

    I'm Polish. Yes I already lodged my passport application. My embassy told me there is a chance the the passport will be ready on February 8 but they cannot be sure. I'm trig to figure out what to do in case it's not. 

  4. My salary meets the requirements, but the company has no need or funds to hire more people. 

    It feels like having a rug pulled from under me. Seven years in Thailand, always by the book, wife, kids, rented house, rented car, whole life here and suddenly this... 

    I have no idea what to do now. Even if they were issuing those single Non-B's back to back, it would be totally unsustainable to do those full-scale visa runs every 3 months. 

     

    ☹️

  5. 12 minutes ago, ubonjoe said:

    Penang will only issue a multiple entry non-b visa if you are a owner, director or significant shareholder of the company you are working for now.

     

    3

    I'm not any of those  I'm just a regular employee. Is the problem with Penang only or any other Thai embassy in a neighbouring country? 

     

    12 minutes ago, ubonjoe said:

    Your only choice may be getting a single entry non-b visa now. But getting them back to back could be a problem.

     

    So it's the one for 3 months only? And even getting that might be a problem? So what is the visa solution for a person in my situation - which I would think is a fairly common one - not owning a business but simply working for one. 

     

    12 minutes ago, ubonjoe said:

    Have you done your last 90 day entry from your visa yet. You can get one on or before the date your visa expires.

    2

    No, my actual visa expired in September. November 13 is the date of my last entry stamp. 


    Confused and worried... 

  6. Hello,

    I'm here on a one-year multiple entry Non B visa based on a work permit.  I'm told the company I work for is not big enough / doesn't have enough capital / enough Thais to foreigners ratio to apply for a one-year extension of my visa which is why I have to do border bounces every 90 days.

     

    My visa expires in under a month (my work permit has recently been renewed for another year) so I have to go abroad (I always go to Penang) to receive a new Visa. 

    However, the agent who supports my employer with visa services tells us that it's now only possible to get a 3 months visa.  Is that so? Am I supposed to go to Penang every 3 months to get a new visa.....?
     

  7. 20 minutes ago, jimster said:

    just one question to the OP mentioned in his original post: what was a doctor doing at immigration? So your wife was 8 months pregnant - if this was the case an OB/GYN from any hospital could have written a note stating she was unable to travel and this should have been acceptable to obtain a 90 day medical extension of stay. You mentioned this was done, but what I don't understand is the presence of a doctor at immigration. Since when do doctors have any business at immigration?

     

    It's an old story from 2012. We went to the immigration office in Bangkok do exactly what you say: obtain a medical extension of stay based on the hospital note you also mention. Once there, we were taken to a doctor (no idea why they had one there, maybe it's for those medical extension cases?) who refused to give her that extension. When presented with the hospital note instructing my girlfriend to refrain from air or in fact any kind of travel, he told her she should catch a train to Cambodia...

    In the end, she asked him, a medical professional, for a signed statement, allowing her to travel in the condition she was in. This changed his mind and the extension was granted. 

     

    I remember all this quite well because up until yesterday this was the most stressful and unpleasant encounter with the Thai immigration we've experienced. 

    • Like 2
  8. 8 minutes ago, stevenl said:

    All the IO knows is that she is living here, has been doing so for 6 years, and is trying to enter with a tourist visa a second consecutive tourist visa. So yes, I understand the questions, and I also understand he does not trust her on her (presumably) brown eyes. So questions asked, and after that she is allowed to enter. Nothing wrong with that.

    Just that it wasn't simply questions asked, but a straightforward "I'm not letting you in" with no explanation, followed up by more rudeness and shouting. Believe me, my GF is beyond kind and gentle and I'm sure she didn't wind that guy up, which as we know can happen in Thailand if you come here with a wrong attitude. We've been here long enough to know that it's better to smile and wai then get into arguments. 

    I think in the end it's her composure and soft approach that saved the day. She politely asked the office "Not to get angry" and talk with her calmly and explain his reasons. In the end, he reluctantly stamped her in.  All the drama was unnecessary. 



     

  9. 1 hour ago, stevenl said:

    Why do you think this is paranoid? I would find it strange if somebody who is living here for 6 years is entering on a tourist visa, and if I were the immigration officer I would ask some questions about that.

    Because it doesn't make sense. How is it feasible - for the employer (school) and employee (teacher) to have the latter leave the country every 2 months to apply for a new tourist visa in India which is both costly and takes lots of time? And why would someone who has worked here legally for 6 years suddenly decide to go through all the trouble of playing the system with tourist visas? It just doesn't add up.  

    IMO the mess we found ourselves in boils down to a lack of a proper visa solution for people not yet employed in Thailand but in the process of getting a job. They are not tourists but a tourist visa is the only option for them to enter the country. And with the work permit and visa procedures being what they are and changing often, it sometimes takes more than one entry to obtain all the papers. So people who try to go the right thing and get legal, end up being punished. 

    Another thing is that after 6 years here some sort of a more permanent residence option would be welcome. 

  10. 32 minutes ago, ubonjoe said:

    They are not married so that would not be possible if he had an extension of stay. It is not possible with only a visa entry.

    Right, we're not married yet. We want to but obtaining all the necessary documents from our countries is, well, a challenge. 

    And I'm on one of those multiple entry Non B visas. The first time, before it was always a one year extension of stay. Not even sure how this one works. 

    Anyhow, we are now happily reunited and looking for a more solid, permanent solution to the visa issue. 

     

  11. My girlfriend is being refused entry at Suvarnabhumi airport. She's just arrived from Kolkata, India, with a tourist visa in her passport. 

    The officer is very unpleasant, not just to her but to other arriving passengers too. He gives no reason for refusing entry, but we suppose it's because this is her second tourist visa in a row. My girlfriend went to Kolkata to obtain a Non B visa for a teaching position in Thailand, with the papers provided by the school, but at the visa processing centre, she was told the papers were not sufficient and that she'd have to go back to get the missing documents. Hence the tourist visa. 

     

    The officer seems to be a very angry man, shouting, telling my girlfriend that "she only thinks about herself" and "she's the boss, so what should he do?". Other immigration officers are all smiles, letting people in, just this one bossing around. He also refused entry to a Korean girl who has a 3 months ed visa for a  pre-booked Thai course. He told her to call the school...at 2 AM.  
    Update: Literally halfway through writing this post I got a message that he...let her in. A sudden change of heart. Don't know about the Korean girl though

    Seems like pure harassment just for the sake of it. We've been living here for 6 years now, always legally, with work permits and proper visas. We have two kids here, all our lives here. And frankly, we've never had this kind of problems before. In fact, we've mostly encountered kind and friendly people at the immigration (except one doctor at Bangkok immigration who tried to force my girlfriend for a visa run to Cambodia when she was 8 months pregnant and advised by other doctors not to travel ...long story.) But now that my girlfriend has found herself between jobs, things are getting complicated. She's Indian, her visa options are limited, and she can only get a visa back in her home country. 

    I began writing this post to ask for advice, but now I'll leave it here just as a  little horror story. Won't' be easy going back to sleep tonight. 

     

    • Sad 1
  12. My girlfriend, Indian, was just refused an extension of her 60 days tourist visa at the immigration office in Phuket.

     

    She was told that hers and 8 other countries can't get a normal 15 to 30 days extension and 7 days is all she can get. 

     

    Is it some new rule? It wasn't mentioned on the immigration website. We also asked a renowned law office and they confirmed she could get 30 days. Even an immigration volunteer at the Phuket office informed us that 30 days it what she'd get. 

  13. 2 hours ago, ubonjoe said:

    I would of suggested if one of  the children were attending school and were on extensions of stay she would be able to get an extension for being their parent by showing 500k baht in a Thai bank. But she would have to get a single entry non-o visa to apply for it.

    Unless she was attending a university there would be no one year extension of stay for attending school. For informal schools such as those for Thai language study the extension are only done for 90 days at a time.

    Thank you. I'm wondering, would it be somehow possible to enroll a child in a local school, pay the fees and all, but not send the child to classes? Do they have attendance limits before a student is expelled? I'm guessing it's a too specific question...

     

    How about opening a company to take care of her own work permit. Any idea of the costs of opening and keeping one open?

  14. I'm looking for a long term (one year?) visa solution for my girlfriend, who comes from India. We live in Phuket. 

     

    We've been here 6 years. So far she's been working legally and had a non b, but now we decided she'll stay home with our kids. We though she's start studying Thai and get an Ed visa but we've been told by three different languages schools in Phuket, that they can't get a one year Ed visa for an Indian. 

     

    We're not married, our kids are too small off school, and we don't want it send them to a Thai school anyway. 

     

    Are we left with any options and what are they?

  15. Today my girlfriend went to Phuket immigration in Patong to do her 90 days report. She was there two days past the date on the slip and they told her that the computer says that she should be find 2000 thb, but the officer said they 'can help her by charging her only 1000 thb'...

     

    Wasn't there a 7 days grace period for late 90 reporting? Was my gf just taken advantage of on the island which is supposed to be the shining example of successful struggle against corruption. 

     

    If it is so then it's the first time for us in six years of living in Thailand. In fact I had exactly the opposite experience in the same immigration office - once I didn't get fined despite being late more than 7 days. 

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