About 200 immigration officers from agencies across Thailand have been mobilized and deployed at Suvarnabhumi and Don Mueang airports. This should reduce the queues for immigration, and thus the annoyance of passengers.

The reason for this measure is the growing annoyance among passengers about the long waiting times at immigration at the airports. Some time ago, hundreds of arriving passengers had to wait more than four hours at the immigration checkpoints on Don Mueang. Due to a shortage of immigration officials and an increase in arrivals, things went badly wrong there.

Pol Maj-Gen Sitthichai Lokanpai, Commander of the Immigration Bureau, inspected the immigration officials on Saturday evening, August 12, during the arrival at Don Mueang airport and asked them to be alert for both the safety of the country and the convenience for the travelers.

Source: Thai PBS

3 Responses to “200 Immigration Officers Must Help at Don Mueang and Suvarnabhumi Airports”

  1. Fontok says up

    Waiting another 4 hours after a journey of more than 11 hours flying and about 3 hours checking in at the airport where you depart and if you have a layover maybe 2 hours at the transfer? Then you will be on the road for a total of 20 hours before you are in Thailand and then we have not counted the journey to the airport. That is very bizarre. Such a thing should not really happen in such a modern age. But we saw it in May at Schiphol when checking in. It was also an annoyance for all those people.

  2. Rinse, Face Wash says up

    Oh well, shifting is a problem. The offices where these 200 people have been removed will now take longer about extensions and 90 days of reports and the like.

  3. Chose says up

    The biggest problem is that no one wants to work there.
    After your education, everyone is happy to pay for a transfer to another place.
    Where it is possible to double your salary.
    Experienced myself that a corrupt was moved to swampie.
    He was crying because the luxurious life was now over.


Leave a comment

Thailandblog.nl uses cookies

Our website works best thanks to cookies. This way we can remember your settings, make you a personal offer and you help us improve the quality of the website. read more

Yes, I want a good website