
BritTim
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Everything posted by BritTim
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Chong Chom Border crossing
BritTim replied to smoo1954's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Except in exceptional circumstances, all official international border crossings from Thailand are open daily. I believe, like most border crossings to Cambodia, it is open from 6:00 am until 10:00 pm. However, it might not be possible to get the required visa on arrival early morning or late evening. -
The weird thing is that, when he finally received his passport back, there was no denial stamp (and, equally strange, there was no charge for the stay in the detention room). All he received was a document given to him earlier that informed him that he was being denied entry. I have never before heard of exactly this set of circumstances. It is conceivable that, in the final analysis, this was a shadow denied entry, with no record in immigration's system. Unfortunately, there is no easy way to find out.
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Since cash is fungible, the only way anyone can prove the age of any particular pot of cash is if it is kept completely separate for an appropriate length of time. Ideal, is having two foreign bank account which you use for deposits in alternate years, transferring to Thailand from the one associated with the prior tax year. As a practical matter, since enforcement is so difficult, the Thai tax authorities do not try to tax overseas income that was not transferred directly to Thailand.
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Passport expiring in less then 12 months
BritTim replied to looplaw's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
How long did the whole process take? For how long, if at all, were you without your old passport? -
I do think that is worth trying, perhaps not telling the official that you have money, but ensuring the pile of cash is clearly visible when pretending to look for something else.
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My recollection is that only one can, though the regulations do not make this clear. If you have two children, each parent can use a different child for the process. It is fairly unusual for two foreign parents (neither working) and their child to decide on a long stay in Thailand. I would not be surprised if the way this is handled is inconsistent.
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Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
As a fellow Brit, I can confirm that the typical cultured Englishman will act in a dignified manner, even in trying circumstances. But there is another tribe within the British Isles, typified by lager louts, whose behaviour cannot generally be accurately described as "polite". -
Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Certainly, there was a reason. It does not follow that the reason was anything that the OP did wrong. On occasion, human beings (and that definitely includes Thai officials) can make decisions that defy normal explanation. -
Passport expiring in less then 12 months
BritTim replied to looplaw's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Their website does not suggest that their services include passport renewals. Which countries' passports are they empowered to issue? -
O-A retirement medical insurance
BritTim replied to Jai Dee 962's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
I have not held a Non O-A visa myself, so I may be misunderstanding the requirement, but I think you are partly correct (in that a problem exists) but not accurate on details. There is no special immigration system that holds a record of all the insurance policies. The problem, as I understand it, is that if a policy does not specifically state that it provides coverage for you when inside Thailand that satisfies the requirements for health insurance for a Non O-A visa, then you must get a letter from the insurance company that guarantees this. As a practical matter, your home country insurance company will not provide such a letter. If you purchased a policy there, and the company has a Thailand branch, the management in Thailand will refuse to provide a letter that confirms what they know to be true (your home policy provides the necessary coverage). They insist that you buy a useless policy from them in addition to your existing policy from the same company. It should be noted that those applying for an LTR-WP (Long Term Resident Wealthy Pensioner) visa have sometimes been able to convince the BOI (that handles their application) that their policy qualifies (without a letter) even when Thai immigration has refused to accept the policy. -
Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
@paulikens Is it just possible that the original immigration official missed that you had a tourist visa, and believed you were seeking a visa exemption? That would make the original denial correct, and a desire to quietly bury it (with no passport stamp, no charge for the detention room and, hopefully, no record of the denied entry in immigration's system) logical. -
Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
They can agree to that, but they will probably refuse your request. -
Passport expiring in less then 12 months
BritTim replied to looplaw's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
The only problem is that your extension will not be for a full year. Your extension will expire at the same time as your passport. You will need to apply for your following extension earlier.- 28 replies
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Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
All airlines have the ability to issue or modify reservations airside. Generally, they have transfer desks that can arrange it. If not, there are airline representatives that can be contacted. You will note that the OP received a boarding card for his flight back to Penang, which he also paid for. That is not only possible from the detention room, but anywhere airside. -
Good advice. Further, many photo shops want to "beautify" the photos by removing imperfections. This is an absolute no-no in passport photos these days.
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Some information please
BritTim replied to Binger's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
If you are going to make a trip during the "under consideration" period, whether domestically or internationally) it is important to ensure Immigration is aware of your plans. An international trip, especially, is better avoided if possible. It is allowed, and can be done. -
Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
Interesting. That suggests that they really might be trying to hide the whole incident. It is normal for the stay in the detention room to be billed. It is aggravating that there is no easy way to check what has been entered in immigration's system. -
I think, even easier if you are going to leave Thailand and return anyway, is usually to spend a night in Savannakhet and get the Non O visa while there. This eliminates the more complex Non O visa application using form TM87 (especially since rogue immigration offices might make the Non O application impossible or painful).
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Obviously, your post makes sense. There can still sometimes be good reason to use the Non O visas instead. According to my reading of Reason 2.18 for extension of stay, your child must be under 20 years old and (important) reside in the same household. That restriction does not apply when applying for a Non O visa in Savannakhet.
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If you do not budge, they will eventually have to take you without advance payment. However, if you have the ability to pay, they will usually find a way to force you. Often, the officials at your arrival airport (Penang in this case) would side with the airline, and threaten to lock you up until you pay. As an aside, you can sometimes use this payment issue to your advantage. If you wanted to go somewhere other than Penang, the airline is allowed to take you there, but must agree. You can tell them that you will willingly go to, say, Vientiane, paying without protest, but refuse to pay to be taken somewhere you do not wish to go. If the airline flies to your chosen destination, the airline representative will usually agree to this.
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Denied entry. The conclusion with a twist.
BritTim replied to paulikens's topic in Thai Visas, Residency, and Work Permits
I think it will. I guess there is an extremely small chance that they decided later that your denied entry was an error, and decided to scrub it. As you were willing to pay for the return flight to Penang, they could pretend nothing happened, and avoid losing face by telling you. Did they charge you money for your stay in the detention room?