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British Family Seeks Aid to Bring Injured Traveller Home from Thailand


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Posted
17 hours ago, steve187 said:

£144,000 as opposed to a check £100 ish insurance policy, and on top of that riding a motorcycle on Koh Samui, death island for bike riders

Motor cycle riding is often not covered in travel insurance, also mainly excluded are things like white water rafting, paragliding, rock climbing (in some circumstances) 

Posted
15 hours ago, Harrisfan said:

Always Brits no insurance. 

Nigerian man living in Britain.

As British as an Isan farmer.

Donations up to £37.000 btw.

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Posted
20 hours ago, webfact said:

Eyewitnesses report that Sule's motorbike collided with a car, leaving him with a severe brain haemorrhage. Following emergency brain surgery, Sule remains in a comatose state.

 

Facing soaring costs totalling £144,000 (roughly 6.2 million baht) for Sule's medical repatriation to the UK

 

how much does it costs to do brain surgery in Thailand? Surely not 6.2 million baht. If he's desperate he should find the best hospital he can afford and do the surgery in Thailand, a country well known for medical tourism anyways.

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Posted

Yawn. Another day, another beg page.  Thailand is very economical to enjoy, spend the extra 40 or 50 pounds on a Medical Only policy from reputable company and not have to worry.

 

Most have repatriation clauses.

Posted
17 hours ago, khunPer said:

Samui's traffic is among the most dangerous in Thailand – if not the most dangerous – many tourists have accidents, and it seems like insurance is a returning subject. I have stopped counting the number of dead victims I've seen in the streets, some days up to three bodies. In average I see one or two traffic accidents per week, and I'm not driving that much on the island.

 

I went to Samui for the first time last year during January and stayed on some beach villa on the north/west corner. Got a motorbike and explored around the north and western side of the island trying to get up all the steep little concrete roads I could find. The island has some shockingly steep roads I had fun with but would be deadly during the rainy season.

 

Otherwise I didn't experience dangerous traffic or anything out of the ordinary for Thailand down there. I think I may have been on the wrong side of the island though where it's not very dense. There was some tension on the narrow roads in a few places and it picked up once you get in to the city.

 

The most noteworthy thing about Samui is how non-Thai it is. 100% dominated by tourism. Even the staff at restaurants was Burmese often. There wasn't a single Thai person on the flight to or back from Chiang Mai. Fake Thailand to say the least.

 

If tourists are crashing often they're probably just doing it to themselves is my guess and doesn't even have much to do with Thailand per se.

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Posted

Says they can't find his passport, perhaps worth asking the motorcycle rental shops if they have it

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Posted
16 minutes ago, NorthernRyland said:

 

how much does it costs to do brain surgery in Thailand? Surely not 6.2 million baht. If he's desperate he should find the best hospital he can afford and do the surgery in Thailand, a country well known for medical tourism anyways.

Brain surgery is not required in Thailand, 

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Posted

Many first time tourists are unaware of all the dangers and don’t do’s.

Any risks they do know of fly out the window due to excitement 

Posted
9 minutes ago, ChipButty said:

Brain surgery is not required in Thailand, 

 

Quote

Eyewitnesses report that Sule's motorbike collided with a car, leaving him with a severe brain haemorrhage. Following emergency brain surgery, Sule remains in a comatose state.

 

Oops re-read again. So he already had brain surgery in Thailand and now needs medical reparation for 6 million baht and wants others to pay for him. How about he just stay in Thailand until he recovers. If he's brain dead then have the family come for the funeral in Thailand.

 

This guy is probably the kid of some Nigerians that made it to England in the late 80s or 90s and now he's traveled to Thailand and smashed his brain. This story has nothing to do with the English, Europeans or even Thai's for that matter. It's just some African with a British passport.

 

If I have any money to donate it will go towards my own family or locals in my Thai community, not some random Nigerian that wants to vacation in Thailand and do dangerous things.

 

Stop feeding the bears, give these people ZERO baht every time.

Posted
20 hours ago, webfact said:

A British family is urgently seeking financial support to bring their loved one back home after a tragic motorcycle accident in Thailand. In a desperate bid, they aim to raise £100,000 to cover theA British family is urgently seeking financial support to bring their loved one back home after a tragic motorcycle accident in Thailand. In a desperate bid, they aim to raise £100,000 to cover the costs of repatriation and medical expenses.contri costs of repatriation and medical expenses.

christ alive.

 

so many idiots coming here without insurance and relying on gofundme's

 

I for one wont be contributing a single cent.

stupid is as stupid does, i'm afraid..

 

regards,

bob.

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

Isn't there a limit to the generosity of GoFundMe donors? Surely people must be getting sick of these cries for help for people who were too stupid to take responsibility for their own welfare. I assume that these beggars are not only from Thailand but also from the other many holiday resorts around the world. Is GoFundMe a bottomless pit?

Posted
1 hour ago, 8OA8 said:

Says they can't find his passport, perhaps worth asking the motorcycle rental shops if they have it

 

Good point.

If the rental people have it, I am sure that they will have thrown it away by now.

It is illegal to keep the passports.

 

The proposed 300 baht tourist tax is 'supposed' to provide insurance for visitors.

I bet that in this poor lad's case, they would not cover him either.

Posted
20 hours ago, happysoul said:

So since the beginning of the year we had 36k then 24k and now 100k... Keep coming on !

 

I have a friend (real person, real experience) that got rapatriated in a hospitalized private jet (Embraer Phenom 300) from Thailand (local airport) to a local airport in EU. He paid.... 0.- (his insurance did). So, yes, it is possible to get rapatriated for free when <deleted> hits the fan but you need some work upfront.

 

Obviously you don’t know much about travel insurance companies. Yes, some are better than others. A friend of mine had to fight hand and foot to get reimbursed, it took over a year , and the same  documents asked for  over and over again, although they had the complete dossier from the Hospital concerned. He had this insurance for 15 years , everything was in order, even the small print. This was a huge European insurance company . 
I honestly believe , for every TOURIST , there should be a choice of viable insurance companies that are required to enter Thailand, included in the ETA that is coming soon. 
Something must be done, this situation with bikes and the crazy roads here ,plus all the other dangers, tour boats sinking , and general accidents, even falling down a hole in the pavement ( every day in Pattaya and Phuket) , merit some sort of emergency action.

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Posted
1 hour ago, NorthernRyland said:

 

 If he's desperate he should find the best hospital he can afford and do the surgery in Thailand,

 

 

Would threy tickle his feet to get him to wake from the coma so he can go round shopping hospitals ?

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