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Search Result for “nan destinations”

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OPINION

A year of shocks, but Thailand endures

News, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 30/12/2025

» The year 2025 is not just your typical annus horribilis. Some may say that an appropriate term to describe the year is "hell on earth," or narok bon din in Thai, when many bad things happen all at once.

OPINION

Thai-EU free trade deal on the horizon

News, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 17/04/2024

» If everything goes as planned, Thailand and the EU could sign a free trade agreement by mid-next year, in what is another example of the European Union's increasing engagement in the Indo-Pacific region.

OPINION

Can Thai passports' power get a lift?

Oped, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 19/09/2023

» At the first cabinet meeting last week, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin announced one of the government's priorities -- improving the power of Thai passports. It is a headline goal that will require extraordinary efforts to achieve. Upgrading a national passport to a higher level involves numerous factors -- economic, socio-cultural, and political -- as well as the general optics of the partnership countries. After all, the large number of visitors to a country is not an indicator of how powerful its passport is. A country might be given more visa-free accessibility and be popular for foreign passports, but its own passport's power can still be low.

OPINION

New mindsets needed at Suvarnabhumi

News, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 04/09/2018

» Warning: Cheap packages tours to Thailand from China for the coming Mid-Autumn Festival (third week of September) and National Day (first week of October) are nearly fully booked. However, some major tourist agencies in the posh Chaoyangmenwai Street still hold out hope that Thailand will waive visa fees for their holidaymakers once again.

OPINION

Making Thai passports more powerful

News, Kavi Chongkittavorn, Published on 16/01/2018

» For a country that welcomed more than 33 million visitors from well over 150 countries last year, it is shocking to find out that Thai passport holders can go to just 73 countries without visas. That is pathetic and unacceptable and well below Singapore and Malaysia whose citizens can visit 176 and 166 countries visa-free respectively.