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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
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Yeah come see the car show and babes! Have fun
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Sayuri & Pandora Massage parlour in Chiang Mai |
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24 hurt as three bomb blasts strike Songkhla
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Danok blasts: Horror in southern Thailand
Report from The STAR dated 23 December 2013 :-
Danok blasts: Horror in southern Thailand BUKIT KAYU HITAM: The Thai border towns of Danok, Padang Besar and Sadao were rocked by pre-Christmas bombings, leaving a horrifying trail of mangled metal, burning vehicles and bloodied limbs and bodies. Thousands of Malaysians and other tourists had gathered in the towns for shopping and Christmas partying but the series of bomb blasts left both Thais and the tourists jittery in an area where such violence has rarely been seen. Two Malaysians were reported to be among scores of people injured in a bomb blast that rocked Danok, Padang Besar and Sadao between 11.30am and 1.40pm. Two Thais were also killed in the blasts. Malaysian authorities moved quickly to tighten security along the border. “People should not be worried but I advise those who have business in the area to just be wary,” said Deputy Inspector-General of Police Datuk Seri Mohd Bakri Mohd Zinin. The first explosion occurred between 10.30am and 10.40am when a bomb placed on a motorcycle exploded in front of the Padang Besar police station on the Thai side of the border. Five motorcycles were damaged but no one was injured. The second bomb exploded at about the same time. It was also placed on a motorcycle and went off in front of the Sadao police station. No one was injured. The third and fourth explosions occurred at about 12.30pm. More than 20 people were injured. The third bomb went off in front of the Oliver Hotel. It was placed in a car and activated with a digital watch. The explosions also resulted in a fire, which destroyed the business premises, several vehicles as well as a part of the hotel. The fourth bomb was set off in front of a shop in Bukit Kayu Hitam on the Thai side of the border. Deputy Foreign Minister Datuk Hamzah Zainudin said Wisma Putra was still trying to determine how many Malaysians had been injured. He was later quoted as saying no Malaysian was hurt although there were conflicting reports that even said three Malaysians were killed. “For now, we advise Malaysians to postpone any travel plan to southern Thailand,” Hamzah said. Thai Province Nine police chief Major-General Noppadol Pueksomon said two Thais had died in the Danok blast. “The bombings were similar to the one in Haadyai at the Lee Gardens Plaza Hotel on March 31 last year where three people, including two Malaysians, were killed,” he said. Maj Gen Noppadol said they were investigating the motive behind the attack, including if Thai separatists were involved. “We have since beefed up security in the four southern provinces to prevent a recurrence,” he added. Malaysian deputy consul-general to Songkhla Mohd Rozaimi Harun confirmed that two Malaysians were injured in the blast in Danok. “One of them is a woman, in her 50s, warded at the Padang Besar Hospital, while the second is a man. “So far, there have been no reports of deaths involving Malaysians.” Police said there had also been an attempt to explode a bomb in Phuket. However, the device was defused by the police. ----- KatoeyNewsNetwork |
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Danok blasts: ‘Burning cars and blood everywhere’
Report from The STAR dated 23 December 2013 :-
Danok blasts: ‘Burning cars and blood everywhere’ BUKIT KAYU HITAM: Burning vehicles and bloodied limbs greeted Douglas Alexis as he approached the site where a car bomb went off in Danok. Alexis said a jeep was burning and the blast had badly damaged the ground floor of Oliver Hotel where several shops were located. “There were five to six people lying on the ground outside the hotel. Some looked like they had had their hands and legs blown off,” he told The Star. Alexis, who was on one of his weekly trips to Danok to visit his wife and child who live in Roi Phat about a kilometre away, said he was walking with friends about 200m from the hotel at about noon when he heard a loud sound and “something like firecrackers going off.” “At first I thought it was the sound of shooting, because there is a shooting range nearby. “However, when I went closer I saw the hotel building and its surrounding area badly damaged and there was smoke all around,” he said. The 35-year-old, who is in the transport business in Penang, instinctively knew a bomb had exploded. After all, he had been in the midst of the Lee Garden bomb explosion three years ago in Haadyai. He said policemen arrived at the scene quickly because the police station was close by. The area around the hotel was cordoned off for several hours as police and army personnel scoured the streets to secure the area. Customers at other nearby hotels were also evacuated. “We are not under lockdown, but most places and shops in the affected area are closed and security is tight. It looks like the place is under military control,” he said. Alexis said he is worried because Danok has not been known to be the target of attacks unlike towns like Patani and Narathiwat. An escalator technician identified as Keong, meanwhile, had been looking forward to his bak kut teh lunch when the bomb went off. “I couldn’t have been more than 100m away from where the bomb went off. I felt the impact and it was like someone pushing me. “It was deafening and earth shattering,” said the 26-year-old. Keong and his colleague had only minutes earlier parked their car in front of the Paragon Disco next to the hotel and were placing their order at the restaurant across the road when the explosion occurred. “I turned around and I could see shattered glass and building debris falling down,” he said when reached on the phone yesterday. Keong said everyone in the restaurant and neighbouring premises ran to the main road about 100m away. “I heard some people screaming but I didn’t see any injured or dead people. “I was not sure what happened. Some said it was due to gas leak. The police cordoned off the area soon after the incident,” he said. “My colleague and I are really fortunate to escape unscathed,” he said. The two had arrived in Danok on Thursday in the car belonging to their supervisor to work on a project. Car owner Wong Jit Weng, 33, said he received a call from Keong at about 1.45pm to inform him of the blast. “They had visited Danok twice in the last two months to work on the project,” he said. ----- KatoeyNewsNetwork |
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Unfazed by Thai blasts
Report from The New Straits Times dated 24 December 2013 :-
Unfazed by Thai blasts BUKIT KAYU HITAM: DESPITE a government travel advisory cautioning against travelling to southern Thailand following bombings in Sadao on Sunday, Malaysians are unperturbed and are proceeding with their holiday plans. Checks at the Bukit Kayu Hitam Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) complex yesterday showed that Malaysians were still making a beeline for Thailand. A source at the state Immigration Department said that as of noon yesterday, more than 6,000 people from Penang, Kuala Lumpur, Johor, Indonesia and Singapore had crossed the border since the gates opened at 6am. Dozens of tour and express buses ferrying the visitors had queued up at the border waiting for the gates to open. It is understood that most of the visitors were heading to Hat Yai, 60km from Dannok town where the bombings occurred. A Malaysian, who wished to be identified only as Koh, said he was aware of the incident but decided to proceed with his plan to spend Christmas and school holidays in Songkhla and Hat Yai. However, he said his family were headed straight for Hat Yai instead of stopping over at Dannok. "Yes, I do feel bit anxious over the safety of my family following the bombings but we cannot simply cancel the trip we had planned since early this year. "We are keeping our fingers crossed that we will have a safe four-day holiday there," said the father of two from Kuala Lumpur. Malaysian, Lee Chun Pang, 28, from Teluk Intan, Perak played down the incident as "nothing new". "In fact, I had stayed in Dannok for almost a week prior to the Sunday incident and wasn't far from the bomb site." Lee said he was there during the hotel parking lot bombing at Hat Yai in March last year but the incidents had not deterred him from holidaying in Songkhla province. In that incident, 14 people, including a Malaysian, were killed while more than 400 were injured when a bomb planted in a car at the hotel's multi-storey parking bay went-off. It was one of the deadliest incidents involving southern Thai separatists since 2004. Travel and tour agency operator Goh Wei Meng, who operates his business in Changlun, 7km from the Malaysia-Thai border, said there had been no cancellations. "Since 4am today (yesterday), many Malaysians from Kuala Lumpur and Penang left for holiday to Hat Yai." In the Sunday incident, a bomb planted on a motorcycle left in front of the Thai police station 1km away, exploded, followed by another blast at a police station in Sadao an hour later. The third and biggest bomb, planted in a pick-up truck, went off in front of Oliver Hotel about 12.45pm Thailand time. More than 20 Thai nationals were injured in the incidents. Thai police have since tightened security around the hotel. Malaysian police, meanwhile, have stepped up security along the Malaysian-Thai border. Deputy Inspector-General of Police Datuk Seri Mohd Bakri Mohd Zinin said police were working closely with the Royal Thai Police to boost security following the attacks. He also said that there was close cooperation between the two forces in terms of intelligence gathering and inspections along the border to prevent a repeat of the incidents. ----- KatoeyNewsNetwork |
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
its better to avoid at this time of the year
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Re: 24 hurt as three bomb blasts strike Songkhla
If they wanna strike in hatyai..... most probably the target will be the new Central Festival mall rather than Lee Gardens Plaza.
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
Any bro know what is the price of BP suite now??
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
Seem like this hotel is getting more popular, and rightly so. IMHO it's in the most ideal location. Voucher from agent is 1350 baht.
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
Lovely tour is 1220bht.. juz called to ask for some hotel pricing... mayflower still 1150bht..
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
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Thanks bro..... Got free wifi or not? |
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
Typo error, it's 1250 baht with breakfast.
Yes, free wifi. At level 3 no need pw to connect. Quite good, auto login when returned back to room. But at level 4 need pw. Can find it paste on the bedside table. This one very good - fast speed. I reckon level 4 is the executive level. |
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Re: Hatyai,Thailand For Sawadee Newbies
Bros where can get nice chicken rice n siew bah in hatyai ???? Tks !!!
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