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Push for Tougher Actions Against Repeat Drunk Driving Offenders

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skynews-thailand-road-death_5070910.jpg

File photo for reference only

 

Authorities in Thailand are pushing for stricter enforcement against repeat drunk drivers following a significant rise in cases during the 2025 Songkran holiday. The number of incidents more than doubled compared to the previous year, prompting concerns from organizations dedicated to road safety and public health.

 

Earlier this month, the Thai Health Promotion Foundation (ThaiHealth) marked the third anniversary of its "From Repeat to Resolution" campaign in collaboration with key organizations. This initiative is focused on implementing deterrent measures, stronger penalties, and improved coordination to reduce drunk driving incidents, which continue to be a severe issue. Citing data from the Ministry of Public Health, more than 284,000 individuals were killed or injured in alcohol-related crashes from 2019 to 2023, incurring annual losses around 75 billion baht.

 

Festive periods such as New Year and Songkran see spikes in cases due to increased alcohol availability. Dr. Pairoj Saonuam of ThaiHealth emphasizes the need for collaborative support to craft laws targeting repeat offenders to help cut road casualties. The efforts align with the 5th Road Safety Master Plan, aiming to decrease road deaths to 12 per 100,000 by 2027.

 

Police enforcement is intensifying, with Traffic Division superintendent Pol Col Poj Tapanadul noting the use of a comprehensive offender database and mandatory criminal checks in prosecutions. This enhanced monitoring will extend throughout the year, not just during holidays. Supachai Somcharoen, heading a parliamentary subcommittee on road safety, supports stiffer penalties and continuous checks, including sanctions for breath test refusals.

 

Academics like Kanokporn Rattanasuteerakul call for expanded police resources and better equipment, alongside inter-agency coordination, to ensure consistent prosecution of repeat offenders. The Office of the Attorney General advocates for implementing clear nationwide procedures to prevent these individuals from avoiding justice.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Authorities are emphasizing stricter enforcement against repeat drunk drivers following a surge in cases.
  • The effort aligns with a national plan to reduce road deaths significantly by 2027.
  • Continuous monitoring and enhanced penalties are expected to be enforced year-round.

 

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image.png  Adapted by ASEAN Now from Bangkok Post 2025-09-17

 

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15 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Authorities in Thailand are pushing for stricter enforcement against repeat drunk drivers following a significant rise in cases during the 2025 Songkran holiday

Repeat offenders re-offend because they got off light the first time....

DUI no injuries mandatory one year probation, 100,000 baht fine, one year ban.

Injuries/death will have criminal sentences.

Repeat DUI mandatory jail, no suspension.

 

 

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15 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

284,000 individuals were killed or injured in alcohol-related crashes from 2019 to 2023

That seems absolutely insane. 

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Police are poorly paid. They seek additional income anyway they can. Unless you address the root cause there’s nothing in it for them to do more about this or any other issue. 

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16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Authorities in Thailand are pushing for stricter enforcement against repeat drunk drivers following a significant rise in cases during the 2025 Songkran holiday.

 

16 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Police enforcement is intensifying

 

Oh, please. "Enforcement" during Songkran consists of setting up static checkpoints in every village, where a dozen local officials sit under a tent drinking coffee, eating snacks, and playing with their phones. At most of those checkpoints, no one even bothers to pretend to pay attention to the vehicles going past - they just set up some traffic cones and then go back to Candy Crush.

 

It's actually something of a wonder to me that anyone is ever arrested for drunk driving at all, and my suspicion is that most of those arrests take place when police show up to a crash site and find a driver too inebriated to flee the scene.

Same every year all talk about more serious  sentences fines jail and so on 

But No action taken all bluff and talk 

4 hours ago, hotchilli said:

Repeat offenders re-offend because they got off light the first time....

DUI no injuries mandatory one year probation, 100,000 baht fine, one year ban.

Injuries/death will have criminal sentences.

Repeat DUI mandatory jail, no suspension.

 

 

Um, this is Thailand, those penalties are already ignored, there's simply no enforcement. And no enforcement is the main reason Thai offend.

19 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

Push for Tougher Actions Against Repeat Drunk Driving Offenders 

It doesn't get tougher than this for repeat offenders. 

 

I'm sticking to cups of tea in future 🫖

 

Push for Tougher Actions Against Repeat Drunk Driving Offenders 

 

Would be a good start if they enforce the traffic laws 24/7 instead just a couple times per year .

First time  drunk offenders, fine Thb  50 K / 3 months Jail.

Repeat offenders  Thb 100K  / 6 months Jail and Crush  Vehicles.

If that doesn't deter the repeat offenders 2 year Jail and Crush Vehicle .

1 hour ago, Aussie999 said:

Um, this is Thailand, those penalties are already ignored, there's simply no enforcement. And no enforcement is the main reason Thai offend.

The RTP turn a bling eye to some, the Judicial system turns a bling eye to some..

As you say This is Thailand

 

For those so morally bankrupt that they are prepared to risk peoples lives by drink-driving, only two things will prevent them.............

 

The probability of being caught and the penalty.

 

If the probability of being caught is low (which it is here) then the punishment has to be severe.

 

If the probability of being caught is very high then the penalty doesn't have to be so severe.

 

 

 

2 hours ago, Aussie999 said:

And no enforcement is the main reason Thai offend.

In Thailand, recently refusing a breathalyzer test is now legally treated the same as a Driving Under the Influence (DUI) offense, carrying penalties of up to one year in prison, a fine of 5,000 to 20,000 baht, and possible suspension or revocation of your driver's license.

It remains how much police actually enforce this action.

5 hours ago, AustinRacing said:

Police are poorly paid. They seek additional income anyway they can. Unless you address the root cause there’s nothing in it for them to do more about this or any other issue. 

Was the same in the Philippines.  Duterte turned that around by increasing pay, then he clamped down on corruption.  It has reverted significantly under Marcos.

4 hours ago, shackleton said:

Same every year all talk about more serious  sentences fines jail and so on 

But No action taken all bluff and talk 

Yep absolute dribble. worst is it is repeated," dribble"

1 hour ago, Srikcir said:

In Thailand, recently refusing a breathalyzer test is now legally treated the same as a Driving Under the Influence (DUI) offense, carrying penalties of up to one year in prison, a fine of 5,000 to 20,000 baht, and possible suspension or revocation of your driver's license.

It remains how much police actually enforce this action.

 

Mate, it doesn't matter what the laws are, Thais ignore them, they don't pay fines, if licence cancelled, they keep driving, if you live in Thailand, you should already know this.

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