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Beggars face fine and jail under new law


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Beggars face fine and jail under new law

By The Nation

 

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Temples nationwide are being urged to discourage visitors from giving money to beggars as it is illegal, according to the Beggar Control Act's latest edition that was published in the Royal Gazette on Monday to be in effect within 90 days.

 

General Anantaporn Kanjanarat, head of the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security (MSDHS), said that his agency would co-ordinate with the National Office of Buddhism to ask for co-operation from various temples to educate the public about appropriate merit-making ways and to stop them from giving cash to beggars as it is illegal. 

 

"If people wish to help the beggars, they can make donations to the MSDHS projects for vocational promotion for beggars," he said.

 

As temples are the sites for worshipping and merit-making, many beggars wander around temples and other high-traffic attractions, to ask for money from visitors. 

 

The minister said stickers warning against handing cash to beggars in English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Cambodian and Myanmar would soon be placed at tourists attractions, airports and state offices.

 

A recent meeting of the Beggar Control Committee at the MSDHS head office in Bangkok was told 237 beggars (including 156 Thais and 81 foreign migrants) had been detected from October 2018 until March 2019, and a total of 4,361 street performers had registered with the authority for access to public space, with only 300 locations available.

 

The meeting also resolved to impose a sliding scale of fines on beggars. Those arrested for panhandling for the first time would be fined at Bt500, the second time Bt2,000, the third time Bt5,000 and the fourth time and above Bt10,000.

 

Such fines were in line with the Beggar Control Act's latest edition, which prohibits people from being beggars or face a maximum one-month jail term and/or a maximum fine of Bt10,000. 

 

The new law required beggars to admit to life quality development and protection centres or quit panhandling. Once they are admitted to such centres, they would not be allowed to leave the centres without permission or face a maximum one-month jail term and/or a maximum fine of Bt10,000. 

 

Those aiding or supporting beggars' panhandling will face a maximum two-year jail term and/or a maximum Bt20,000 fine, while those reaping benefits from beggars by hiring, asking, abetting and instigating the panhandling will face a maximum three-year jail term and/or a maximum Bt30,000 fine.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30368745

 

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-- © Copyright The Nation 2019-05-02
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My wife and in-laws are obviously Buddhist but never donate cash other than the token bucket of washing up liquid and incense sticks on important religious dates.  Fair play to them as they don't trust the monks either.

 

 

Edited by OneEyedPie
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I have seen it most mornings in cm monks doing  a blessing or begging.many Thais I see give food in they silver bowl.see a pickup follow later.never seen money pass hands but drink and food.they get alot of food I believe and then the homeless go to the temple for food and sleep,with little job after.it is the ones who beg for cash everywhere that will be stopped

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2 hours ago, LongTang said:

I do not enjoy it when people beg for money, and sometimes it can be a nuisance.

Nuisance is an understatement. Soi 11 is particularly bad where in one narrow stretch of pavement there are 2-3 beggars sitting, blocking the pathway. Some of them kids. If you're not paying attention you could easily step on them - which is probably why they sit there (someone stepping on them would be more likely to give out money as an apology).

 

Then there are the beggar kids all around Aloft. They are particularly annoying and will run after you and tug at you. Some won't go away even if you tell them "mai" (no). They're often with some lady orchestrating them, but I doubt she's their real mother as there's too many kids - more likely she's the "mama-san" and they are the workers.

 

So yes - by all means take those people off the street. Kids should be in school, not working nights for some evil lady who probably beats them if they don't make enough - which is why they're so desperate. I feel sorry for them, but I never give them money because that just perpetuates the problem - the more they earn, the more kids the bitch will put on the street.

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3 hours ago, PingRoundTheWorld said:

I feel sorry for them, but I never give them money because that just perpetuates the problem

 

I love how the middle-upper class likes to use this excuse to feel good about their conscious without doing crap.

 

The beggars will be gone for now, But later they will emerge as thieves, muggers, drug dealers, killers And not just irritating scammers..

 

 

Edited by LongTang
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A recent meeting of the Beggar Control Committee ...

You can't call it that, no way. Haha ... sounds like they view it like pest control and at least dogs have laws to protect them. With all these new crimes with disproportionate penalties then the generals might want to start building some new prisons.

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6 minutes ago, mikebell said:

Thai Law, that well-known oxymoron, gets more absurd daily!  How do you fine a beggar 10,000 baht?

Donate cash to MSDHS?  What does this ministry do to justify its air-conditioned offices?

People who are fined in Thailand can serve jail time in lieu of paying the fine.  I can't remember if the rate is 500 or 200 baht per day off of your fine for time served.  So a 10,000 baht fine would be 'paid off' with either 20 or 50 days in jail. 

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