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Five Dead, Six Injured in Chainat Pickup Crash

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Five people were killed and six others injured in a serious road traffic collision in Sapphaya district, Chainat province, at approximately 05:35, on 22 February 2026. The incident occurred at Huai Krot intersection, Moo 9, Huai Krot subdistrict, within the jurisdiction of Sapphaya Police Station. Police Operations Centre confirmed the fatalities and injuries following the crash.

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Police at the scene reported that the deceased were Mr Watsaphon Soongam, 28; Ms Nattaporn Namee, 23; Ms Jaruwan Singha, 26; Ms Thitima Klinthong, 25; and Ms Suphattra Promklai, 20, who later died at hospital. Six others were injured: Mr Jessada Iamcham, 23; Mr Thawatchai Yuchang, 26; Mr Suriya Rodphuean, 26; Mr Phutthiphong Wanitcha, 20; Mr Athit Buangphet, 20; and Ms Lalita Saengruang, 21.

According to the report, Mr Watsaphon was driving a white Isuzu D-Max pickup, registration from Bangkok, travelling from Don Talai towards Huai Krot intersection to return home. Police said witnesses reported the driver lost control just before the traffic lights, striking a stop sign and running a red light. It then collided with an electricity pole.

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Three vehicles were damaged. The white Isuzu D-Max was completely destroyed. A black Toyota Vigo pickup, registration from Bangkok, parked beside its owner’s home at the junction, sustained damage to both driver’s side doors and a grey Isuzu D-Max, registration from Chainat, was damaged at the rear of its cargo bed, being lightly struck while crossing the junction.

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Pictures courtesy of Responders

Investigating officers examined the scene, and a duty officer transported the wrecked vehicle to Sapphaya Police Station for safekeeping. Further investigation is ongoing to determine the full circumstances of the crash.

Key Takeaways

• Five people died and six were injured after a pickup truck crash at Huai Krot intersection on 22 February 2026.

• The vehicle struck a stop sign, ran a red light and hit a large electricity pole.

• Police secured the vehicle and are continuing their investigation.

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image.png Adapted by ASEAN Now นนธวัฒน์ วิสุทธิพัฒน์ 22 Feb 2026


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Amazing luck for that motorcycle driver and whoever was in the other pickup that was missed by a second...

1 hour ago, Georgealbert said:

a white Isuzu D-Max pickup

He was driving so fast all the stickers peeled off.

The collision was so intense it made the camera shake. So 11 people in the pick-up truck or others on the ground hit? The motorcyclist and the other truck were so lucky to have avoided injury.

It looks as if he was going way too fast as far as I can see. I'm surprised more weren't killed to be honest.

Unless I'm misreading this the five killed and six injured, so 11 overall, were all in the one pickup. Thais are extremely efficient when it comes to death and injury on the roads. Helped of course by the police not doing a very good job, or the Department of land Transport not really testing people. It's their country and their choice, but that doesn't alter the fact that they'd rather have lax driving testing and traffic enforcement, than save lives.

Looks for all the world like the driver may have fallen asleep.

Horrific to see the lives of so many wiped out, all in the prime of their lives.

11 people in vehicle & driving like a bat out of hell - didn't see or know a junction there (allegedly) at that speed!

RIP victims 😔

A tragic and utterly avoidable loss of life. My condolences to the families of those killed and injured—no one deserves to have their lives shattered like this.

Looking at the video it's possible the driver was asleep. We've seen two other fatal accidents in the last week were this may also have been the case.

Regardless of whether fatigue was the cause, once again we’re looking at a crash that isn’t some freak accident or unforeseeable twist of fate. It’s the same pattern we see over and over in Thailand: people crammed into the back of a Pickup, no seat belts, no helmets, no sense of risk, and a driving culture that treats the road like a personal racetrack rather than a shared public space.

What’s most disturbing is that none of this is new. Everyone knows the dangers, they've seen the statistics, they've seen the dashcam videos of poor driving and mangled vehicles shown daily on the morning TV programs. Yet despite this, the behaviour just doesn’t change.

Speeding is the norm. Helmets are optional. Seat belts are “inconvenient”. The mobile phone is an essential driving accessory. And the idea of protecting your passengers, your own family, or your own children, seems to take a back seat to convenience or habit.

Thailand may well have world‑class hospitality, world‑class food, world‑class scenery, but it also has world‑class road carnage.

It’s not because the roads themselves are inherently dangerous. It’s because the attitude toward safety is shockingly casual. Thais appear to fatalistically offer a shrug that seems to say, “Mai pen rai, it won’t happen to me”.

Five people are now dead, and another six are injured because of choices that could have been different. A culture that normalises unsafe behaviour keeps producing the same tragic outcomes.

Sympathy for the victims is essential. But sympathy alone won’t save the next group of people who climb into the back of a pickup or ride helmetless at 100 plus km/h.

Until Thailand takes road safety seriously, not just in laws and enforcement, but in everyday behaviour, these stories will keep repeating. And that is the real tragedy.

He must have fallen asleep and somehow his foot floored the accelerator. Deadly accidents involving sleep deprivation are well-documented to occur 1-2 hours before sunrise. A reason I really hate to learn my extended (Thai) family are so keen to ride night buses to Bangkok. Not necessarily the bus driver - could easily be caused by another vehicle too.

The curse of overloaded pickup trucks strikes again. A sad story, RIP.

On 2/22/2026 at 12:32 PM, MIke B Bad said:

Looks for all the world like the driver may have fallen asleep.

Horrific to see the lives of so many wiped out, all in the prime of their lives.

You'd think someone next to him might have woken him up. Unless they were asleep as well.

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