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Indian Restaurant Owner in Pattaya Calls for Action Against Rental Bike Operators


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Posted

'She also expressed concern over their claims of having connections within Pattaya City authorities, arguing that such behaviour damages the city's reputation as a tourist destination' 😅😅

 

That old chestnut, again!

Posted

Time for a steamroller.

Few spaces left on beach Rd that are not occupied by this mafia. Words nothing but words since years. TiT.

 

They use public road as business premises.

They rent big bikes to every hooligan coming along.

Who asks for a license?

Posted
23 hours ago, Georgealbert said:

 

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Picture courtesy of SiamChon.

 

A distressed Indian restaurant owner in Pattaya has come forward to highlight an ongoing dispute with local motorbike rental operators, accusing them of obstructing access to her business and intimidating her over parking issues.

 

At 23:15 on 23 February, Ms. Thanya, 33, owner of Sharmaji Pure Veg Indian restaurant on Pattaya Beach Road near Soi 13/4, made a formal complaint to local media. She claims that for over a year, she has been facing harassment from a group of local vehicle rental operators, who continuously obstruct parking spaces in front of her restaurant, causing significant damage to her business. The harassment has reached such an extent that she has been left in tears. As evidence, she has provided CCTV footage capturing the alleged actions of the group.

 

According to Ms. Thanya, she has run her restaurant for over a year and initially attempted to negotiate with the rental operators. She proposed allowing them to park their motorbikes in front of her restaurant during the day while requesting that they vacate the space in the evening when her business operates. However, the operators refused to comply, even preventing her from parking her own restaurant's vehicles in the area.

 

 

She has sought assistance from various authorities, and Pattaya City officials have intervened on multiple occasions, suggesting a compromise by using an electric pole as a boundary marker. Despite this, the rental operators have continued to park their motorbikes in front of her establishment. When she tried to reserve space for her customers by parking her own vehicle there, the rental operators would immediately occupy the spot once she moved her vehicle for deliveries. Attempts to park nearby have resulted in her vehicle being boxed in and even damaged.

 

The situation escalated when a foreign tourist parked their motorbike in the public space in question. Although the area is public property, the rental operators have been treating it as their private domain, forcibly moving other vehicles to park their own. In this particular instance, they moved the tourist’s motorbike into the middle of the road, leading to the police towing it away for obstructing traffic. Initially fearing theft, the tourist later discovered the vehicle had been impounded, incurring a fine to retrieve it. Ms. Thanya clarified that she does not fault the police for their actions.

 

She reiterated that she does not operate a vehicle rental business and only parks her vehicle in front of her restaurant to prevent rental operators from occupying the space. However, the ongoing conflict has led to a loss of customers, as many are unable to find parking. She also revealed that the rental operators have openly boasted that authorities would not take action against them, further adding to her distress.

 

Ms. Thanya insists that tourists should be free to park in public spaces but opposes the rental operators monopolising these areas. She also expressed concern over their claims of having connections within Pattaya City authorities, arguing that such behaviour damages the city's reputation as a tourist destination.

 

This issue highlights the broader problem of rental vehicle operators dominating public parking spaces in Pattaya, making it difficult for tourists and local businesses to operate freely. Ms. Thanya is appealing to Pattaya City officials and law enforcement to take firm action against such practices to ensure a fair business environment for all.

 

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-- 2025-02-24

 

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I 100% agree with her complaints. I hope there will be a different solution than by machetes or guns

Posted
22 hours ago, scubascuba3 said:

Those rental businesses think they own the street on beach road, kick them out 

It has been an issue for 20 years...... nothing much changes, but reality is the shop owner does not own the street in front of their premises either, so many think they do. 

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Posted

Problem is if she gets tough so do they, it escalates until something really bad happens.

Her complaints to officials and police have fallen on deaf ears.. I wonder why?

Posted

OK I am very familiar with that Soi and that bike rental group.  I think her primary problem is it is not a public road.  I could be wrong but I think all the Pattayalands 3-5 are privately owned roads and the street spaces are leased.  This scooter company has been there at least 10 years maybe longer. 

 

And yes they dominate parking on the road at the Beach Road end.  If I am correct about who owns the road she needs to find the owner and see about changing who has parking rights there. 

 

Unless she is connected to the Indian mob she needs to tread carefully.  It might not end well and people might be hurt.  The Soi is gradually being taken over by Indians so perhaps they can band together and sort it out.  But I expect the solution will involve violence.

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Posted
29 minutes ago, jimmybcool said:

OK I am very familiar with that Soi and that bike rental group.  I think her primary problem is it is not a public road.  I could be wrong but I think all the Pattayalands 3-5 are privately owned roads and the street spaces are leased.  This scooter company has been there at least 10 years maybe longer. 

 

And yes they dominate parking on the road at the Beach Road end.  If I am correct about who owns the road she needs to find the owner and see about changing who has parking rights there. 

 

Unless she is connected to the Indian mob she needs to tread carefully.  It might not end well and people might be hurt.  The Soi is gradually being taken over by Indians so perhaps they can band together and sort it out.  But I expect the solution will involve violence.

The restaurant is on Pattaya Beach Road.

 

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Posted
6 minutes ago, jimmybcool said:

OK I am very familiar with that Soi and that bike rental group.  I think her primary problem is it is not a public road.  I could be wrong but I think all the Pattayalands 3-5 are privately owned roads and the street spaces are leased.  This scooter company has been there at least 10 years maybe longer. 

And yes they dominate parking on the road at the Beach Road end.  If I am correct about who owns the road she needs to find the owner and see about changing who has parking rights there. 

Unless she is connected to the Indian mob she needs to tread carefully.  It might not end well and people might be hurt.  The Soi is gradually being taken over by Indians so perhaps they can band together and sort it out.  But I expect the solution will involve violence.

If it is a private road she can get it sorted very quickly but she will likely not like the cost to do so
similar issue in LK Metro, as food carts rent their spaces outside of businesses and the only way to prevent it was to rent the spaces yourself
but then you need section it off to prevent becoming free parking for all

Posted

Who remembers the hilarious incident in front of Foodland Supermarket's branch on Sukhumvit Soi 5 in Bangkok. A French man in distress over the inability to cross from the right to the left hand side on the Soi in front of the supermarket made a complaint to the unofficial "parking attendant managing" the public road space for the benefit of Thai motorbike owners parking their vehicle there against a small unofficial fee. 

He tied up a string or rope around the handle bar or something, hooked it up on his pick-up and drove further into Soi 5 until the string/rope snapped. Dozens of bikes were "altered" in one or the other way, the lack of CCTV never identified the culprit until he, in his apparent intoxicated stage, must have gone to town boasting his achievement upon which he was apprehended. 

The bike parking got massively reduced, the police started to do a part of their job when roaming the lower Sukhumvit - one never knows if the Pattaya problem might go up in fire one day due to a "seeping" fuel tank and a thrown-away cigarette (as so happened in Phnom Penh by a disgruntled tenant with a similar problem). 

The selfishness combined with the absolute absence of law enforcement must, over time, result in nasty conflicts ...

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