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German Tourist Heartbroken as Thailand Trip Axed

A 68-year-old German tourist has said he was heartbroken after his flight to Thailand was cancelled due to Middle East airspace closures linked to the conflict between Iran and Israel. Rolf Kollrep had planned to spend the entire month of March holidaying in the country. His departure from Germany on 2 March was cancelled after several countries shut their airspace, disrupting routes to Thailand.

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Kollrep was due to travel with Qatar Airways, transiting through Doha before continuing to Bangkok. He had booked accommodation in Pattaya and Hua Hin since last year and visits Thailand twice annually. On the morning of 1 March, he received an email from the airline informing him that his flight had been cancelled, with rebooking available in approximately two weeks.

Several countries in the Middle East began closing their airspace on 28 February as tensions escalated between Iran and Israel. The closures have disrupted international routes passing through major transit hubs such as Doha and Dubai. Airlines have been forced to cancel or reroute flights to avoid affected areas.

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“I feel very sad, like a heartbreak. No one expected something like this to happen. But when it does, you have to accept it,” Kollrep said. Despite the setback, he confirmed he would return to Thailand once the situation stabilises. “Of course,” he replied when asked if he would reschedule his trip, reaffirming his affection for the country.

The airspace closures have affected large numbers of international and Thai travellers, particularly those flying on routes that transit the Middle East. Many passengers have been stranded at airports since 28 February and 1 March. Some flights have been cancelled, while others have been diverted to avoid the conflict zone.

Airlines are continuing to monitor the situation as regional tensions remain high. Rebooking delays of up to two weeks have been reported for affected passengers. Travellers are advised to check with their airlines for updates and alternative routing options.

Khaosod reported that Kollrep said he intends to rearrange his holiday once flights resume normal operations. The wider impact on tourism remains uncertain as long as the airspace restrictions remain in place.

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Pictures courtesy of Khaosod

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image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now Khaosod 4 Mar 2026

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Issan girl Senior Member

Issan girl

Member
On 3/5/2026 at 7:58 PM, jts-khorat said:

So, the interesting question is then: why are those poeple stuck in those airports?

This was an illegal, fully imperialist attack on a third nation: totally preventable, if the same guy would not have broken the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

On 3/5/2026 at 7:58 PM, jts-khorat said:

My assumption would be, that you would, following your logic, ask for the United States government to reimburse people for their preventable losses and hardships endured; and for those who wrote similar comments to yours and are actually American, to chip in with their own funds (as they are collectively responsible for their government -- same as the Iranian civilians dying right now, it seems).

I am waiting with bated breath hearing how some American paid for this guys airfare and hotel...

I completely agree with you that this was an illegal, imperialist attack that was unprovoked. Unfortunately Trump is causing chaos in the Middle East. I am not for this war in any way. I was simply stating that at this time, there are many people in far worse shape than this poor tourist who has to reschedule his flight to Thailand.

jts-khorat Gold Member

jts-khorat

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, Issan girl said:

I am not for this war in any way. I was simply stating that at this time, there are many people in far worse shape than this poor tourist who has to reschedule his flight to Thailand.

I get, to a point, what you are saying. But at the same time, there are in any moment in time millions of people constantly worse off, to the point of dying from starvation, famine, or -- as in this case -- war. Many of those are children, even.

It never worries anybody. Actually I would bet, would we have a starving Iranian man ringing on our doorbell right now, we would not open our house to him.

So why would we single out this guy who talks about the fact that he, personally, suffered a very quantifiable and serious financial loss.

I think all those who critisized this man are hypocrites, if they are not -- right now! -- posting from somewhere in Gaza, the South Sudan or some favela slum in South America, handing out food to the poor and suffering. Even then I would question how those holy people have the time to post banal criticism on the internet, instead of investing their time in helping those poor souls their virtue signaling is supposed to be about.

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