Huge zero-dollar tour network grounded, funds frozen
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Huge zero-dollar tour network grounded, funds frozen

Tourist police commander Surachet Hakpan, centre, leads authorities to seize the tour buses of OA Transport Co in Lat Krabang district of Bangkok on Friday. (Tourist police photo)
Tourist police commander Surachet Hakpan, centre, leads authorities to seize the tour buses of OA Transport Co in Lat Krabang district of Bangkok on Friday. (Tourist police photo)

Authorities on Friday impounded 2,155 buses and froze bank accounts containing 4.7 billion baht held by the country's biggest "zero-dollar tour" network including OA Transport Co and 381 firms.

Tourist police and officials from the Revenue, Anti-money Laundering and Business Development departments swooped on the premises of OA Transport Co in Lat Krabang district of Bangkok, after its executives had been charged with carrying on business illegally and damaging Thai tourism.

The action followed tourist police searches of OA Transport and four affiliated companies in the Lat Krabang and Jorakhae Noi areas of Bangkok last month. Two OA executives, Nisa Rojrungrangsi and Wasurat Rojrungrangsi, turned themselves in at the Phaya Thai police station for questioning late last month.

Tourist police moved the buses to the nearby Airport Rail Link station of the State Railway of Thailand. Land Transport Department officials will check if any of them were used illegally. An initial examination found that some of the buses were unregistered, police said.

Tourist police commander Surachet Hakpan said the Land Transport Department was deploying buses to serve tourists who were clients of OA Transport and the 381 related companies as their operations must stop.

The legal action was part of attempts to tackle "zero-dollar" tour operations to protect Thai tourism, Pol Maj Gen Surachet said.

Raided last month were OA Transport Co, a vehicle-rental firm, Bangkok Handicraft Centre Co, which sells leather goods; Royal Gems International Co, a jewellery firm; Royal Thai Herb Co, which sells herbal products; and Royal Paradise Co, which runs restaurants. The five companies operate stores in tourist destinations nationwide.

Zero-dollar tours are so named because they offer very cheap package deals in which tourists, mostly Chinese, are pressured to buy overpriced goods and services on which the operators make big profits.

Authorities have long alleged that the money Chinese tourists spend in Thailand on zero-dollar tours mostly goes to Chinese-operated tour firms owned by Thai nominees.

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