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Man Returns Home Alive 14 Days After Being Buried

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  • Popular Post

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Pictures courtesy of SiamNews

A family was left in shock after a man believed to have died and buried 14 days earlier suddenly returned home alive. The case came to light, when the man walked back to his house in Mae Fah Luang district, Chiang Rai province, despite having been officially recorded as deceased.

The discovery revealed a serious error in the identification of a body, which had already been buried on 9 January. Rescue workers were later asked to exhume the remains so they could be returned to the correct family, triggering distress for both households involved.

According to the head of the Thap Yang Public Rescue Association, the organisation was contacted by residents in Mae Fah Luang on 23 January to assist with exhuming the body. The request followed confirmation that the deceased person had been misidentified and buried in the wrong district.

The mistake occurred because the national identity card of a man from Mae Fah Luang was found on the body of the deceased, who was actually from Mae Suai district. Officials therefore sent the body to Mae Fah Luang, where the family accepted it and carried out burial rites without realising the error.

When the man whose ID card was used returned home alive, his relatives were stunned, having only recently buried what they believed to be his body. After discussions between both families, they agreed to recover the remains and return them to the deceased man’s true relatives in Mae Suai.

Rescue volunteers travelled to a burial site located some distance from the village to exhume the body. The remains were rewrapped in new burial cloths and placed in a new coffin before being transported to Mae Suai, where the correct family collected the body and held a burial on the same day.

The rescue association head said he had never encountered a case like this before but acknowledged how the error could happen. He explained that officials must rely on official documents found with a body, especially when facial features are too badly damaged to allow visual identification.

Initial inquiries suggested that the deceased and the surviving man were friends who had worked together in Chiang Mai. The deceased is believed to have been assaulted or involved in a severe accident that destroyed his facial features, making identification impossible without documents. Details of the cause of death are still being looked at by authorities.

SiamNews reported that authorities have not announced any disciplinary action but the case has highlighted risks in relying solely on identity documents. Both families have reportedly resolved the matter amicably and offered no further comment on the death. Further reviews of identification procedures may follow to prevent similar incidents in future. A police investigation into the death is ongoing.

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Key Takeaways

• A man in Mae Fah Luang returned home alive after being mistakenly buried for over 14 days.

• Misidentification occurred because his ID card was found on another man’s body.

• Rescue workers exhumed and returned the remains to the correct family in Mae Suai.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now from Siamnews 2026-01-27

 

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13 minutes ago, Georgealbert said:

The deceased is believed to have been assaulted or involved in a severe accident that destroyed his facial features, making identification impossible without documents.

Happens all the time I guess, this confusion between being a victim of either an assault or a severe accident.

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Thai forensics... Never heard of DNA matches if there is doubt about the body??? Or just assume that what ID you carry is the person???

9 hours ago, ikke1959 said:

Thai forensics... Never heard of DNA matches if there is doubt about the body??? Or just assume that what ID you carry is the person???

There wasn't any doubt about the identiity of the deceased at the time.

  • Popular Post
On 1/27/2026 at 6:00 AM, Georgealbert said:

Officials therefore sent the body to Mae Fah Luang, where the family accepted it and carried out burial rites without realising the error

No one in the family looked or checked even to say ah… poor old….bless him !

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So what was the guys answer to why this other chap had his ID a no d not his own on him. Sounds fishy

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Buried, not cremated?

Post breaking forum rules removed.

@LukKrueng 17.News articles are collected from recognised sources and may be consolidated or rewritten with AI assistance. Respectful discussion of the article content is welcome. Disrespectful comments about the articles, the use of AI, or the news team (e.g. “clickbait,” “slow news day,” mocking grammar, or AI taunts) are not permitted. Posts breaching this rule will be removed, and posting suspension or account closure may result. If you see an error in an article, please use the report function.

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The Messiah has risen!

It hath been written that the chosen one shall rise again, and loh he has done as was foretold!

The lord moves in mysterious ways! And he shall have many exclamation marks!

16 minutes ago, rwill said:

Buried, not cremated?

lucky hey!

1 hour ago, rwill said:

Buried, not cremated?

Lucky for them I suppose so the mistake could be rectified.

4 hours ago, terryofcrete said:

No one in the family looked or checked even to say ah… poor old….bless him !

“The deceased is believed to have been assaulted or involved in a severe accident that destroyed his facial features, making identification impossible without documents.”

I think this is why.

34 minutes ago, thecyclist said:

Was he Muslim?

If Buddhist there would have been a cremation. How do you exume ashes?

Could be Christian

In Myanmar even Buddhist people are buried instead of cremated if they die in an area where they don't belong. Don't ask me for the technical explanation but that is what happens. Seen it first hand.

On 1/27/2026 at 6:00 AM, Georgealbert said:

image.png

Pictures courtesy of SiamNews

A family was left in shock after a man believed to have died and buried 14 days earlier suddenly returned home alive. The case came to light, when the man walked back to his house in Mae Fah Luang district, Chiang Rai province, despite having been officially recorded as deceased.

The discovery revealed a serious error in the identification of a body, which had already been buried on 9 January. Rescue workers were later asked to exhume the remains so they could be returned to the correct family, triggering distress for both households involved.

According to the head of the Thap Yang Public Rescue Association, the organisation was contacted by residents in Mae Fah Luang on 23 January to assist with exhuming the body. The request followed confirmation that the deceased person had been misidentified and buried in the wrong district.

The mistake occurred because the national identity card of a man from Mae Fah Luang was found on the body of the deceased, who was actually from Mae Suai district. Officials therefore sent the body to Mae Fah Luang, where the family accepted it and carried out burial rites without realising the error.

When the man whose ID card was used returned home alive, his relatives were stunned, having only recently buried what they believed to be his body. After discussions between both families, they agreed to recover the remains and return them to the deceased man’s true relatives in Mae Suai.

Rescue volunteers travelled to a burial site located some distance from the village to exhume the body. The remains were rewrapped in new burial cloths and placed in a new coffin before being transported to Mae Suai, where the correct family collected the body and held a burial on the same day.

The rescue association head said he had never encountered a case like this before but acknowledged how the error could happen. He explained that officials must rely on official documents found with a body, especially when facial features are too badly damaged to allow visual identification.

Initial inquiries suggested that the deceased and the surviving man were friends who had worked together in Chiang Mai. The deceased is believed to have been assaulted or involved in a severe accident that destroyed his facial features, making identification impossible without documents. Details of the cause of death are still being looked at by authorities.

SiamNews reported that authorities have not announced any disciplinary action but the case has highlighted risks in relying solely on identity documents. Both families have reportedly resolved the matter amicably and offered no further comment on the death. Further reviews of identification procedures may follow to prevent similar incidents in future. A police investigation into the death is ongoing.

image.jpeg

Key Takeaways

• A man in Mae Fah Luang returned home alive after being mistakenly buried for over 14 days.

• Misidentification occurred because his ID card was found on another man’s body.

• Rescue workers exhumed and returned the remains to the correct family in Mae Suai.

image.png  

Adapted by ASEAN Now from Siamnews 2026-01-27

 

image.png

 

image.png

I thought Thai Buddhists always cremated their dead.

On 1/27/2026 at 6:15 AM, NanLaew said:

Happens all the time I guess, this confusion between being a victim of either an assault or a severe accident.

Suicide ruled out in this case.

On 1/28/2026 at 9:24 AM, rwill said:

Buried, not cremated?

Probably chin origin, they bury not cremate.

Many Yunnan Chin in the region.

White is the colour of death for Yunnan Chin as the coffin.

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