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Denied entry- Second attempt coming up


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33 minutes ago, SteveK said:
36 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

Who is 'we'?

 

The way I understand it, if you apply for the visa that you are qualified to apply for, you will invariably be granted that visa whereupon any semblance of 'playing lottery' with Thai immigration evaporates.

You can apply for, and obtain a visa in your home country, but still be denied entry to Thailand on the grounds of some petty rubbish.

 

Don't you read this forum at all?

Of course entry isn't a given but that applies for pretty much all countries where the IO 'at the gate' has the last say on whether you get allowed in to play hide the sausage with the current "mine's different" girlfriend. I do read the forum and the assessment of being subjected to "petty rubbish" is by far being expressed by people like the OP with long histories of visa-less entry, extensions, border-hopping and otherwise dodging the bullet.

 

The point I was making was with the member who stated the collective 'we' as if we ALL have constant battles with Immigration when the reality is only a lazy (like the OP), besotted (like the OP) and sometimes noisome minority who prefer to skate around the visa issue then get rowdy when they are (invariably) bailed up by the (invariably) stroppy female IO at (invariably) Don Meuang. If one doesn't care to work towards mitigating being harrassed by Thai immigration, then one deserves what one gets.

 

Apart from a detailed insight as to how U-Tapao airport immigration processes what would otherwise be an easy reject at other airports, all that the OP has managed to do is push that envelope once again. The downside, as he and more of his ilk test this 'back door' at U-Tapao, will inevitably be more oversight of everyone arriving at U-Tapao. More oversight at U-Tapao means that more people, including those with proper visas and better bona fides than a Thai hottie girlfriend will be subject to greater scrutiny which slows everyone's immigration 'experience'. Thanks!

 

The OP reckons this is his last time in the 'last chance saloon' of Thai immigration so here's hoping he does go home next time, gets a new passport and the appropriate visa for whatever his plans are. I hope he doesn't delude himself to try just one more small overstay or just one more land border shuffle until the weather's better in Norway. The fact is that all this previous dicking about is ALREADY in the Thai immigration database and will preclude any other similar subterfuges regardless of having the nice new passport with the appropriate visa... which I think was the main thrust of your rejoinder anyway.

Edited by NanLaew
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39 minutes ago, DaveK68 said:
Just going to leave this here and note that it doesn't give a time limit. lol

tourist
noun [ C ]
UK  /ˈtʊə.rɪst/ /ˈtɔː.rɪst/ US  /ˈtʊr.ɪst/
someone who visits a place for pleasure and interest, usually while on holiday:
 
P.S. The pecksniffian glory, though.
 

And you copy/pasted this from what Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs or Royal Thai Immigration Police website exactly?

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32 minutes ago, NanLaew said:

And you copy/pasted this from what Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs or Royal Thai Immigration Police website exactly?

In so far as I can find, there is no official Thai immigration definition of tourism. Hence, I pulled that one from a dictionary. 

However, if one reads the actual Thai Embassy requirements for tourist visas, it states quite often that tourists must have appropriate means for living in Thailand so as not to become a burden to the State.


(2) Having no appropriate means of living following entry into the Kingdom.

Thai officials seem to wish for people to have a means of living in Thailand.

 

Edited by DaveK68
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3 hours ago, FritsSikkink said:

Most of the times this involves people who live here on tourist visas. 

Except there is nothing that states one cannot "live here" on a tourist visa.

It actually states on embassy websites that one must have enough funds to live in Thailand and not become a burden to the State.

Take my case.

I came to Thailand for 6 to 8 months. I figured I'd have a break or two inbetween and would at those times obtain a new tourist visa. According to everything that I read, this is fine. There nothing that says I can't do this.

I read about the non-imm visas and none of those seemed to fit my purpose.

I figured that two SETVs with breaks in between would be cool and I'd be off to ride the sunset in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam for the break between them.

Thailand begged to differ. 

The problem is that no Thai official websites made me believe that this would be frowned upon.

Couple that with the fact that I know guys who do monthly visa runs over long periods of time and have yet to run into issues and you've got me here scratching my head.

Perhaps, I just hit the embassy on a bad day.

There is also nothing that states that I should not go to the same embassy for consecutive visas. 

Give me a rule book and I'll follow it. I was in the Army for over a decade. I can follow me some rules.

A challenge to dealing with Thailand [now] is that there are these unwritten rules that seem to be wholly subjective to whomever is holding the stamps and stickers at the moment one's request slides across their desks.

 

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The fact you had a previous overstay had NO bearing at all on being denied entry. It was because you did not have the 3 proofs they ask for...

Even IF you have a valid visa for thailand in your passport IF you are asked by immigrations you need to show (1) proof of funds, (2) onward travel and (3) accomodation. 
Very rarely will the immigration officers void those requirements (and usually that's only for people on long-stay type visas or extensions).

A person denied entry is held at IDC at the airport he flew in at until he works out with his carrier where he will go.

The immigration officers do NOT care in the least where you go to, all they tell you is that you can't enter thailand. It is between you and your air carrier where you go back to. Some let you fly back to where you came from, some let you fly anywhere they fly to and some make you go back to the country your passport is from. 

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19 hours ago, mockingbird said:

It amazes me how some people get so up in arms about people attempting to enter Thailand regularly on tourist visa's/visa exemptions.

I believe they get more distraught when the people making these attempts, are turned away and get on here complaining and crying unfair, and how they are a benefit to Thailand. They seem unwilling to accept the prerogative you mentioned of the IO and cry injustice most foul.

Edited by jacko45k
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13 hours ago, SteveK said:

You are forgetting that this is a third-world country.

 

If you are super rich or have status, in general you can ignore the rules. In Thailand the right sized brown envelope can clear you of almost any wrong doing.

 

For everyone else, the rules are deliberately vague. The purpose of this is that the official implementing said rules can interpret them however they want to cause upset, annoyance or distress in the hope of extracting tea money. Or at the very least cause frustration to someone they don't like the look of.

 

If the rules were super clear, officials couldn't bend them to annoy people, hence they would never get any "tips".

 

That's how it works here, in my opinion based on my observations.

I completely agree.

That's why I don't get the condescending "Oh...if you would only follow the rules...all would be well, my dear wayward children" attitude from some folks.  lol

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38 minutes ago, DaveK68 said:

 European tourists spend a third more per trip per person than your average Chinese tourist.

 

Even if that were true, which it isn't, the Chinese numbers dwarf the Europeans. Roughly 10m to 2m per annum.

 

There are qualified analyses all over TVF but the tendency to howl 'false' at anything even mildly positive about tourism pushes them into the background.

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