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Foreigners on non-immigrant visas urged to exploit loophole: Phuket Immigration


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Foreigners on non-immigrant visas urged to exploit loophole: Phuket Immigration

By The Phuket News

 

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The exit sign at the Phuket Immigration Office in Phuket Town. Photo: Tanyaluk Sakoot / file

 

PHUKET:-- The new long-stay visas approved by Cabinet yesterday are not grounds for tourists already in the country to apply for similar extensions of stay, Phuket Immigration confirmed to The Phuket News today (Sept 16).

 

The new “Special Tourist Visa”, now in short being called the “STV”, was approved by Cabinet yesterday, and confirmed by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha after the Cabinet meeting.

 

Under the new visas, tourists who agree to 14-day quarantine and stay for at least 90 days will be allowed to enter the country.

 

Full Story: https://www.thephuketnews.com/foreigners-on-non-immigrant-visas-urged-to-exploit-loophole-phuket-immigration-77340.php

 

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-- © Copyright Phuket News 2020-09-16
 
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9 hours ago, kingofthemountain said:

At the moment nothing has been put in place for the ones unable to extend their

O visa because of the border closure nor for the ones not allowed to enter in Thailand

even if they have already a visa, for example the retirees single or not married oficialy

with a Thai.

Plenty of options on the table...

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12 hours ago, cjinchiangrai said:

I wonder if you could come on an STV and switch to an elite?

 

Would that make any difference financially? 

The Elite Visa is just an expensive all, inclusive package for rich tourists that are used to a nanny state. 

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1 hour ago, dougiemac52 said:

This is just blackmail which is illegal 

What exactly is "blackmail"? 

If I make a contract with you of course I blackmail you to keep your part of the contract. If you don't I'll take away from you everything you have. Everything. And that is certainly not illegal. 

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Just now, connda said:

My guess is that is because overall, there is no continuity of understanding within Thai Immigration as to what the immigration laws actually mean.  In any establish organization, that organization should seek to establish consistency in its interpretation of its own laws.  But Thai Immigration?  From region to region, office to office, IO to IO immigration laws are open to individual interpretation.  Talk about exploiting "loopholes" by creating them on the fly in order to generally make life miserable for foreigners seeking to stay within the law.

 

No problem. 

People that worked all their life and live on workers' pension funds are always able to extend their permission of stay if they meet the legal requirements. Because fresh money comes in every month. 

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In the meanwhile:

"Meanwhile, with just 10 days to go before the ‘visa amnesty’ expires, Phuket Immigration has received no instructions from Bangkok to provide any reprieve for foreigners staying on non-immigrant visas who cannot prove they have the income level required by immigration in order to be issued a one-year permit to stay."

Better start clearing out pens in the local stockyards to use as makeshift, temporary Immigration Detention Centers as they start arresting and deporting "Bad Guy" foreigners.  
"Good Guy" foreigner yesterday when there was amnesty;
"Bad Guy" foreigner when amnesty runs out.
And from what the mainstream news and scientific experts say, Covid-19 is still as deadly as ever, effecting millions and killing hundreds of thousands, and is rampaging its way all over the globe making international travel a difficult nightmare. 
But coming soon to Thailand?  "Lock 'em up Dano!"

However, they'll have the same problems clearing out IDC via deportations as those foreigners who suddenly find they turned from "Good Guys" into "Bad Guys" overnight.  And that is an inability to find the availability of reasonably priced transportation back to a "home" country that may itself still be "locked down, boarded up, and closed down."

Thailand should try bringing some of their vaunted "Buddhist Compassion" to bear on immigration reforms that brings Thailand in line with other "compassionate' humanitarian-minded civilized countries.

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1 hour ago, OnTheRun said:

That's the first thing that I noticed was the minimum stay requirement of 90 days, perhaps this part is a misunderstanding in translation or perhaps another 'brain fart' rule inserted by someone to justify their fat cat salary.

I think the former is much more likely.

Common practice on here to take a translation as being literal.

The STV allows an initial entry for a minimum of 90 days and this was distorted in the article.

The new initiatives have indicated a minimum stay of 30 days but even that cannot be enforced, all they can do is restrict boarding to return tickets in excess of 30 days.

 

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