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36
Report Danish Man Disappears Amid Extortion Fears in Southern Thailand
Bro look like Warren Oates and but his 'girlfriends' hands are very masculine -
119
Revenue Department to amend tax on foreign income remittance
Every bank branch exists in its own universe, with its own set of rules. Take whatever documentation you have. Passport and pinkie or TIN card. Yellow book if you got it. Passport number does not appear on the refund letter. Couple years ago, I took my first refund letter to KT but they would not issue cash. Required to open an account for deposit. -
28
Report Thailand Eyes Tax Holiday to Draw Back 2 Trillion Baht in Overseas Funds
Agreed. Principal should be included in the tax-free remittances otherwise it's pointless as people will not repatriate big lump sums which is the expected outcome. -
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800k or 65k regular income for O visa?
My partner and I are both retired and are contemplating moving from the UK to Thailand possibly in around 12 months time and we are heading over at the beginning of next year to do a bit more boots-on-the-ground research. I've done a lot of reading about visas and would most likely apply for non-immigrant O visas here in the UK ahead of relocating but I have a couple of questions regarding finances. We both have eSIPP pensions alongside stocks and shares ISAs maintained by an investment company here in the UK. I understand that if we opt for showing a lump sum to satisfy the financial requirements we'd both need to move around £18000 into bank accounts ahead of any visa application this end and then show it as 800,000 baht in Thai accounts ahead of applying for a visa extension at the end of the initial 90 days but does it matter what type of account we opened? Is it possible to put it in savings accounts that accrue interest or does it have to go into current accounts where it would effectively lose value due to inflation? We've also considered the 65,000 baht per month regular income option to satisfy financial requirements but are unsure how this would work. For our part we could arrange for the GBP equivalent to be deposited regularly into our UK accounts and then transfer to our Thai accounts on the same date each month but how would we prove it as regular income when applying for the visa extension as we would only be able to show probably 2 months of transactions after setting up Thai accounts? I've assumed that the regular income option would be advantageous in that we could spend the money used to prove our finances rather than having to leave it dormant in a bank account but would appreciate some advice. -
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145
Transgender Community Faces Rising Hate Amid Political Attacks and Social Backlash
"It happens more now because people are being force fed to accept Trans into their daily lives. " Is what you posted. Ok, so you were never talking about your daily life, only about the daily lives of people unknown to you half a world away with whom you commiserate so deeply. And no examples of those people either I am sure cuz no one anywhere has been forced to accept trans people into their daily lives.
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