Assuming his liver failure was not genetic the most likely answer is the overuse of prescription medicines, most of which are freely available to buy over the counter or a poor diet causing NAFLD which can often lead to cancer
He left Saudi and that is where facts end.
Nice try. no cigar.
You watch the paper in the coming weeks.
Did the fact that he drove a car in to Christmas shoppers , escape your fact cheeks
@delgarconyou might also try https://www.saintlouis.or.th/doctor/dr.photsawee-khemaphiphat/dbafe795-29e5-493a-ab2d-8bcc8ed1af42
As St Louis is a nonprofit and has some sort of fund for indigent Thai patients which might possibly help. I don't really know how the fund works but I've seen the office for it when there.
I think that Answer 5 in misleading.
It states the money is not taxable because the person is not resident in the year it is earned, but it doesn't mention the year the money is remitted and Thailand operates a remittance based tax system. If the money is both earned and remitted in the same year, it is free of Thai tax. But if it is earned in a year of non residency but remitted in a year when the person is tax resident, the funds are taxable. That is my interpretation and understanding of things.
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