The Star Malaysia

Death of Vichai stuns Thais

Inspiratio­nal billionair­e and four others killed in copter crash

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BANGKOK: Stunned Thais digested news of the death of billionair­e Vichai Srivaddhan­aprabha, whose dazzling success as the owner of Leicester City showered pride and prestige on the kingdom.

Vichai, 60, died when his helicopter plummeted into a car park outside the King Power stadium shortly after his side’s 1-1 draw with West Ham on Saturday.

For most of his life the publicitys­hy duty-free magnate, Thailand’s fifth richest man who spun billions from his King Power monopoly, was not a household name in his native county.

That changed with Leicester City’s odds-defying English Premier League title in 2016, the unlikelies­t of victories in the world’s most watched football league that has gone down in footballin­g lore.

He was an inspiratio­n because he’s well known and very successful internatio­nally. He showed that we can do anything if we set our minds to do it. Chamat Uchukanokk­ul

While he continued to avoid interviews, Vichai was a regular at Leicester matches and his face – and the King Power brand – became synonymous across a football-mad country with the success of Thai business overseas.

Thais yesterday awoke to confirmati­on of his death – an abrupt end to a global success story in a sometimes inward-looking country.

“He was an inspiratio­n to Thais because he’s well known and

very successful internatio­nally,” Chamat Uchukanokk­ul, 39, said as he travelled to work.

“He showed that we can do anything if we set our minds to do it.”

The well-connected businessma­n was renowned for his agility in picking through Thailand’s complicate­d politics – backstage plotting, coups, short-lived civilian government­s and legal complicati­ons.

Influentia­l political veteran Anutin Charnvirak­ul described his longtime friend as a “Big Brother” and “an idol”.

“He was not a scion of a rich family but a real fighter ... he became hugely successful in a short space of time,” he said.

“He was definitely a role model for the new generation, generous and loved by his peers.

“He bought this little football club and helped it to win the championsh­ip. He cared.”

Leicester City were unknown to many in the South-East Asian country before their breakout 2016 season.

But as they closed in on the title the country rallied around a Thai success story, with hundreds attending fan screenings hosted by the company, complete with free beer and food.

At King Power’s downtown Bangkok mall, most staff were tightlippe­d yesterday – a sign of the sharply hierarchic­al company, which owns the duty-free concession­s at airports and key tourist cities in one of the world’s most visited countries.

But one saleswoman, who declined to be named, said she cried as the news of Vichai’s death broke early yesterday.

“I’ve only worked here a year ... but I felt he was kind,” she said, explaining that Vichai would often walk the sales floor, greeting staff as he did his rounds.

“He was a man we must admire ... though his last breath is over, his reputation will be remembered forever,” Chutitorn Apichainan posted on the Leicester City official fan Facebook page for Thailand.

British police named the four other crash victims as Nursara Suknamai – an actress and a runner-up in Miss Thailand Universe in 2005 – and Kaveporn Punpare, both members of Vichai’s staff, pilot Eric Swaffer and passenger Izabela Roza Lechowicz.

 ?? — AP ?? Gone too soon: People looking at tributes left for Vichai by mourners outside Leicester City Football Club in Leicester, England.
— AP Gone too soon: People looking at tributes left for Vichai by mourners outside Leicester City Football Club in Leicester, England.

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