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Maestro

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Everything posted by Maestro

  1. Thank you, Pattaya 57, for pointing this out; it had escaped my attention. As we are now on page four of this interesting topic I'd like to mention that I have never seen any published information about how immigration officials at the departure desks are instructed to handle this and I don't think any such publication exists. Sipping my hot toddy before going to bed (10.25pm in my time zone) I am trying to put myself into the position of an immigration official at a departure desk with two date stamps in front of me, one set to today's date and the other to tomorrow's date, using one or the other to stamp departing passengers' passports depending on the scheduled departure date of their flights. No, I don't think I would like this. The risk of accidentally using the wrong stamp for someone's passport would be too high.
  2. The immigration guidelines are here: https://www.immigration.go.th/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/9.FOR-RETIREMENT-PURPOSES-50-YEARS-OLD-NON-O.pdf
  3. Perhaps he means this page on the immigration website: https://www.immigration.go.th/en?p=14721
  4. Thank you for the link to that page on the immigration website with the guidelines for the notification with TM.47. The part about "...will be fined 5,000.- THB..." does not reflect correctly the text of section 76 of the Immigration Act, but regardless, the word "arrested" is the operative word and indicates that if the foreigner is arrested and taken to court, it will be the court, not an immigration official, to decide on the fine under section 76. That is why I made the point that the authority of immigration officials to issue a fine for the late submission of the notification is limited to the authority granted to them under section 84, respectively the "criteria for settlement or any conditions as deemed fit" prescribed by the Settlement Committee under the authority of that law.
  5. Removed some off-topic posts and the replies to them.
  6. I see nothing in the Immigration Act that authorises an immigration official to issue a fine "up to 5,000 Baht" for the late submission of the notification of staying longer than 90 days in Thailand. The official's authority to issue fines is covered by section 84 of that law, respectively by the "criteria for settlement or any conditions as deemed fit" prescribed by the Settlement Committee under the authority of that law.
  7. Can you post the line from the fine receipt stating the reason for the fine? It seems to me that immigration abused their authority in this case, fining you despite the fact that you submitted your notification within the prescribed period.
  8. "The rules" require a notification, nothing more and nothing less. The rules do not require an application or anything else that needs approval from immigration.
  9. @bangkok blue You, and everybody else, are kindly requested to stop using the incomprehensible acronym MENO.
  10. Meno is Italian for "less" and all of the following: https://www.google.com/search?q=What+is+MENO%3F&oq=What+is+MENO%3F&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQABiABDIJCAIQABgKGIAEMgcIAxAAGIAEMgcIBBAAGIAEMgcIBRAAGIAEMgcIBhAAGIAEMgkIBxAAGAoYgAQyBwgIEC4YgAQyBwgJEAAYgAQyBwgKEAAYgAQyCQgLEAAYChiABDIHCAwQABiABDIHCA0QABiABDIHCA4QABiABNIBCTEyMDE1ajBqNKgCALACAA&client=ms-android-samsung-ss&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8
  11. My view of this is that the district office had no need to write your passport number or anything else on the back of your KR.2 and KR.3 certificates, but I stand to be corrected if I got this wrong. The marriage certificates are meant to be valid for as long as the two of you remain married, not only until the expiration date of your current passport. If, however, you asked for copies of the certificates for the specific purpose of proving to immigration that your marriage is still valid at this point in time, the district office may have chosen to note your passport number on the back as a favour to the immigration office, which this particular immigration office may even have asked for this to be done.
  12. Thank you for clearing that up. Perhaps it depends on what came first, the assignment of the TIN by the RD or the issuance of the pink ID card. Even if the ID card came first and a TIN was applied for later, eg when taking up employment, the RD may probably assign a different number as TIN if they are not made aware of the ID.
  13. I have fixed it for you. The option "Multiple choice question" was ticked, ie enabled, by mistake. See screenshot below.
  14. When no year is shown, the day and month shown are for the current year. https://aseannow.com/topic/1293770-can-you-always-get-a-re-entry-permit-at-phuket-airport/?do=findComment&comment=18058258 3 May 2023
  15. Yes, it makes sense, but as minimum you need at least the following documents from the owner: 1. Original of the signed rental contract 2. Signed copy of his ID card 3. Signed copy of the house registration book for the rented premise
  16. I don't see how it could have caused deaths. Not enough space for the car to fall in and get "swallowed" Anyway, a good driver would have fallowed the vehicle in front of him less closely and could have stopped in time before the front wheels dipped into the whole. Did the police breathalyse him?
  17. Removed troll post and other posts that violaze forum rules. Memers are kindly requested not to feed the trolls and not to reply to posts with unattributed quotes or quotes from unreliale sources.
  18. Remove a post with an unattributed image from an unreliable source (forum rule 18)
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