Saturday, April 24, 2010

Emergency statement: Do Not Go Bangkok


Thailand ts one of many people's summer locations but this year i suggest you spare yourself a whole load. Declaring this statement that the country has issued a code red. so stay away for your won safety

Grenade blasts in central Bangkok on Silom Road killed at least one person and wounded more than 80, prompting many countries to issue advisories against all essential travel to Bangkok. Among these are Japan, the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom and Hong Kong.
Countries like the United states offered a warning to U.S. Travelers:
"Due to escalating violence in central Bangkok, all U.S. citizens should avoid nonessential travel to Bangkok," says the U.S. advisory. "Those traveling outside of Bangkok in Thailand should be aware of the possibility of disturbances elsewhere and should exercise caution and good judgment... The possibility of more such attacks cannot be ruled out."





Silom Road is one of the city’s biggest tourist draws in Bangkok, an area filled with hotels, bars and street stalls as well as the infamous go-go bar filled Patpong Road. According to news reports, three of the grenades landed on the roof of Silom's busy Sala Daeng BTS Skytrain station, but at least one landed outside a nearby hotel, the Dusit Thani.


The Dusit Thani remains open, hotel officials reported,

but security has been increased to the highest levels, with check points at every entry to the property. Many hotels near the other key red shirt protest zone, Bangkok’s Rajaprasong intersection, are temporarily closed as demonstrations against the government there are still going on. These include the Four Seasons, the Grand Hyatt Erawan and the InterContinental. The area's upscale shopping malls, including CentralWorld and Siam Paragon, also remain closed on Friday.

Though most of Bangkok has been carrying on as normal, in spite of the prime minister declaring a state of emergency on April 7 and clashes between the government and red shirts that left about two dozen people dead and hundreds wounded on April 10, people in Bangkok are advised to avoid the Rajaprasong and Silom areas. Airports are open and protesters haven’t said they’ll occupy it, as their yellow-shirted political opponents did in November 2008.

No comments:

Post a Comment