The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thailand welcomes first tourists since March

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BANGKOK: Thailand has welcomed its first group of tourists in seven months, as part of an experiment aimed at testing if a wider opening is possible as the coronaviru­s cripples the kingdom’s economy.

A planeload of 39 Chinese tourists flew into Bangkok’s Suvarnabhu­mi Airport Tuesday evening from Shanghai to a welcome from staff in full protective equipment.

The visitors underwent health checks and had their luggage disinfecte­d, before donning protective clothing themselves and being whisked away for two weeks’ quarantine.

“It’s a welcome sign that foreigners are confident in our safety measures,” Health Minister Anutin Charnvirak­ul said in a statement.

“I instructed officials to take good care of the tourists, because if they’re safe, Thais are safe too.”

The pandemic has brought the Southeast Asian nation’s economy to its knees, with eight

It’s a welcome sign that foreigners are confident in our safety measures.

Anutin Charnvirak­u

million expected to lose their jobs by the end of the year.

Many of those losses will be in the tourism sector, in a country that saw 40 million internatio­nal arrivals in 2019.

The holidaymak­ers have come under a special tourist visa scheme, which offers 1,200 spots and allows people to stay for up to nine months.

The arrival numbers were much smaller than the 150 passengers authoritie­s touted last month.

Tourism officials declined to give a reason, but insisted it was not linked to recent confrontat­ions between prodemocra­cy protesters and police in the Thai capital and elsewhere.

Tourism consultant Bill Barnett admitted the ongoing unrest was damaging Thailand’s image, but said the country could channel visitors away from protest-hit Bangkok.

“Thailand will become an economic basket case if it doesn’t bring back tourism,” he said.

Mario Hardy from the Bangkok-based Pacific Asia Travel Associatio­n agreed, saying civil unrest had never dissuaded tourists from visiting Thailand in the past.

“They know it’s isolated, a local issue and not targeting tourists,” he said.

A second group of 147 Chinese tourists from Guangzhou is due to arrive in Thailand next week, followed by a flight from Scandinavi­a in November.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photo shows members of a group of 39 Chinese visitors with special tourist visas at Suvarnabhu­mi Airport in Bangkok.
— AFP photo Photo shows members of a group of 39 Chinese visitors with special tourist visas at Suvarnabhu­mi Airport in Bangkok.

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