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Tourists told to drop trips to affected beach site


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Tourists told to drop trips to affected beach sites

Published on December 28, 2004

 

The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) has advised incoming tourists with hotel reservations in tsunami-hit destinations to cancel their trips.

 

The message was aimed at visitors from Scandinavia, South Korea and Russia in particular, because they usually fly directly to Phuket and reserve hotels by the beach.

 

?The situation is chaotic as tourists with advance bookings for the disaster-hit destinations cannot get into the country,? said Pornsiri Manoharn, TAT deputy governor for international markets, adding that the notification would be in effect for two weeks to one month.

 

To assist tourists, the TAT and the Thai Hotels Association have prepared more than 1,200 rooms in Bangkok and Pattaya to accommodate foreign tourists who were injured or left without lodgings because of the damage to hotels by the series of tidal waves that hit the southern provinces on Sunday morning.

 

Thai Airways International, Nok Air, Orient Thai and Phuket Air will provide special flights

 

to transport the tourists from Phuket, Krabi and Hat Yai to Bangkok.

 

?All expenses involved will be shouldered by the [tourism] ministry,? Deputy Prime Minister Suwat Liptapanlop said after consulting Tourism Minister Sontaya Kunplome and TAT Governor Juthamas Siriwan yesterday.

 

The Phuket Police Station is now serving as a tourism command centre.

 

Tourists can also contact special counters located at the airports in Bangkok, Phuket, Krabi, Ranong and Hat Yai.

 

Suwat, Sonthaya and Juthamas flew to Phuket yesterday. They declined to disclose any estimates of the cost of the damage.

 

Prakit Chinamourphong, vice president of the Thai Hotels Association, said the association would prepare about 1,000 rooms for those tourists evacuated from the many islands in the South.

 

Some hotels in Bangkok such as SC Park have allocated 40 free rooms for stranded overseas tourists.

 

Rama Garden is offering 75 per cent discounts off its normal rates through until Thursday. The rate includes breakfast.

 

Prakit said that at least 1,000 rooms were needed for tourists at the moment.

 

Suchat Sritama

 

The Nation

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?All expenses involved will be shouldered by the [tourism] ministry,? Deputy Prime Minister Suwat Liptapanlop said after consulting Tourism Minister Sontaya Kunplome and TAT Governor Juthamas Siriwan yesterday.

 

Some hotels in Bangkok such as SC Park have allocated 40 free rooms for stranded overseas tourists.

 

Rama Garden is offering 75 per cent discounts off its normal rates through until Thursday. The rate includes breakfast.

 

 

Nice to see this kind of help going on instead of price gouging that sometimes occurs in these types of situations. Will be interesting to see how the Thai tourism industry in general reacts once some normalcy is restored.

 

Ranger

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