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Posted
3 hours ago, Jenkins9039 said:

Those days are over, he would be detained and processed, the old method of blacklisted and shown to the plane after paying are over since at least a year.

 

The only airport from where it has been reported that overstayers are arrested and sent off to the local police station for processing instead of sending them on their way with a fine and a ban is Phuket.

 

And even there, it isn't clear from those reports if they're doing that with every longterm overstayer or just with certain ones, e.g. if there are additional issues besides a lengthy overstay.

 

Flying out from Bangkok with no other issues than a lengthy overstay shouldn't be a problem in any case, as long as the fine is paid without fuss. They have the authority to fine and blacklist an overstayer right there.

  • Agree 1
Posted
1 hour ago, Caldera said:

They have the authority to fine and blacklist an overstayer right there.

 

Also, the possibility to avoid blacklisting may be negotiated 😉

  • Haha 1
Posted
11 hours ago, ttkeric said:

Thank you to everyone who shared their ideas. Like many have said, ideally, sort out passport > air ticket > head out and settle whatever we encounter at the airport. 

 

Why go to the airport if you can pay the fine and exit at a land border?

  • Sad 1
Posted
10 minutes ago, JoseThailand said:

 

Why go to the airport if you can pay the fine and exit at a land border?

Land boarders where you can face one set of rules one day, and another next day often involved bribery, when you know exiting Suvarnabhumi is most likely the safest way? 

 

 

Posted
15 hours ago, bigt3116 said:

Report to Local Authorities:

Police Report: Immediately report the loss or theft of your passport to the local police and obtain an official report.

I wouldn't do that!

  • Confused 1
Posted
17 hours ago, soi3eddie said:

 

What others have written is best advice. Passport->air ticket->get to airport->pay fine->fly out.

BUT, the biggest worry should be getting from Mae Sot to either Chiang Mai or Bangkok without getting detained. I took a bus from Mae Sot to Bangkok in 2016. The bus was stopped, and boarded by immigration officers checking documents no less than 3 times (they got several Burmese off the bus). And that was before passing Kampaeng Phet. This would be the biggest risk in my opinion.

 

 

Lots of Advice on here...   but as has been pointed out, as 'another asian' passing the check-points over the hills between Mae Sot and Tak is going to be the biggest hurdle. 

 

Does the Ops Malaysian friend have an MyKAD (Malaysian ID card) - if in private transport there is less likelihood of being checked in detail, but a Malay ID card may work in lieu of showing a passport (he could say his passport is with the Malaysian Embassy and he's going to pick it up).

 

Steps are still the same

1) Report Loss of Passport to Police (get a Police report) this may be better done at a station more familiar with tourist in Bangkok (he'll blend into the 'background' there, so to speak).

 

2) Malaysia Embassy offers an Emergency Certificate (EC) for a single direct journey back to Malaysia - the Ops friend will sill need his MyKAD.

 

3) With an EC, it would be best to take a flight from BKK to KUL declaring the overstay at the Airport and paying the 20,000 baht fine - this would 'usually' be a formality, though due to the overstay the Ops friend will be blacklisted for a duration.

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
11 minutes ago, BarBoy said:

I disagree with this.

 

If there are two things the thais seem to be very good at it's generalizing and stereotyping.

 

The amount of thai people who questioned me about the swiss doctor down in phuket (like it was me who did it) was amazing during that time..

 

I don't think the Thai's get tied down into that - most are as simply indifferent to our presence as they are each other and we are treated on merit without any issue.

 

One of the things that I am quite thankful for when living in Thailand is that I'm not automatically tarred with the brush of negativity and treated as a some sort of low class waster and I'm not stereo typed as the kee-nok bum retiree etc...

 

I guess much of this will be dependant on location, the individual themselves and their experiences and exposure to Western foreigners in general and of course, how we behave and look.

 

 

[I think you are referring to the Swiss guy in Hua Hun who allegedly kicked a Doctor - it made the national news, there was outrage, everyone knew about it - no one I know thinks all foreigners act this way]

 

 

Anyway - We've digressed: This Malaysian lad overstaying, or any foreigner overstaying is not going to have any impact at all on the manner in which the general Thai population treat me (or any other Western Foreigner). Neither will this have any impact on the manner in which Immigration officers treat us.

 

 

 

 

 

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