China Daily

Traffic stops

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Taxis, tuk-tuks at standstill amid virus surge in Thailand

BANGKOK — Tuk-tuks and garishly colored taxis that once wove through chaotic Bangkok traffic are sitting idle in storage as a fresh coronaviru­s surge scuttles hopes of relief for Thailand’s tourism-dependent economy.

The kingdom is undergoing its worst stretch of the pandemic after largely keeping COVID-19 contained when the illness first emerged last year.

Bangkok is subject to a nighttime curfew and a ban on gatherings as authoritie­s advise residents of the capital to stay home.

“Tourists, people going to work, shopping, hanging out with friends — these are our customers but they’ve all vanished,” taxi driver Anuchit Surasit said.

The 47-year-old had just dropped off his vehicle at a garage in western Bangkok, parking it among hundreds of other cabs on forced sabbatical.

Anuchit, who loves being a cabbie, said he watched his income drop to just 300 baht ($9) a day.

He is also weighing the added risk of catching the highly contagious Delta variant of the virus that is now sweeping through the country and its Southeast Asian neighbors.

“I need to stop driving for now and find something else to do because this occupation is too risky at the moment,” he said.

A lot attendant sprayed his taxi down with disinfecta­nt and collected his keys.

Tourism accounts for a fifth of Thailand’s economy, which is suffering its worst crash since the 1997 Asian financial crisis.

The kingdom has seen a bare fraction of the 40 million tourists forecast to visit last year, before the pandemic began.

Around 100,000 people working in Thailand’s transport sector are now unemployed and more than half of metropolit­an Bangkok’s taxi fleet is off the road, said Wasuchet Sophonsath­ien, president of the Thai Transporta­tion Operators Associatio­n.

Tuk-tuk motortaxis — once ubiquitous around Bangkok’s historic neighborho­ods and a favorite transport mode of foreign travelers — have meanwhile largely disappeare­d from the roads.

“I feel hopeless but I still have to fight for the survival of my family,” said 57-year-old driver Somsak Boontook.

The government has faced an avalanche of criticism for its management of the pandemic and the slow rollout of vaccines.

It last week approved $920 million in funding to aid Bangkok businesses, including those in the transport industry.

But more is needed to be done, said Wichai Supattrano­n, who started a transport business with his mother four decades ago and now owns a fleet of 60 furloughed tuk-tuks.

“The only solution I can see now is for the government to move forward and reopen the country as soon as possible,” he said.

On Thursday, the country confirmed 13,655 new cases, the highest single-day tally since the pandemic began, taking the total number of infections to 453,132, according to the Center for the COVID-19 Situation Administra­tion. Cumulative deaths reached 3,697, up by 87 from the previous day.

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 ?? LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? With slim pickings on the street, tuk-tuk drivers wait out part of their day at a parking lot in Bangkok on Wednesday.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE With slim pickings on the street, tuk-tuk drivers wait out part of their day at a parking lot in Bangkok on Wednesday.

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