Immigration increases passenger handling capacity at Suvarnabhumi airport

Immigration increases passenger handling capacity at Suvarnabhumi airport

Police watch for foreigners arriving for criminal purposes

Arriving travellers queue at immigration booths at Suvarnabhumi airport, Samut Prakan province, on Sunday. (Photo  supplied)
Arriving travellers queue at immigration booths at Suvarnabhumi airport, Samut Prakan province, on Sunday. (Photo supplied)

The Immigration Bureau on Wednesday increased its capacity to handle passenger arrivals at Suvarnabhumi airport after complaints about lengthy delays on Sunday.

Pol Maj Gen Choengron Rimphadee, the bureau spokesman, said arrivals' queues peaked on Sundays between 1pm and 5pm, with 3,000-4,000 passengers landing per hour at Suvarnabhumi airport.

On that day immigration increased staffing and average waiting time was about an hour, he said.

Immigration officers took about 45 seconds to check each arrival, using a blacklist and collecting biometrics, the spokesman said.

"Immigration police must watch out for foreigners who may arrive in the guise of a tourist for criminal purposes, especially call scams or maybe to cause a disturbance during the coming Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit," Pol Maj Gen Choengron said.

To cope with the increasing traffic, Airports of Thailand (AOT) had increased the number of immigration booths from 92 to 119 and more immigration officers were on duty from Wednesday on. This would allow them to handle about 6,500 arrivals per hour without compromising security, he said. 

Earlier the capacity was about 5,500 travellers an hour.

In addition, AOT staff would manage the queues and advise travellers on readying their documents beforehand for quick inspection, Pol Maj Gen Choengron said.

He said 45,000-50,000 foreigners were now arriving in the country daily by air and land.

Pol Maj Gen Choengron Rimphadee, spokesman of the Immigration Bureau and commander of its information technology centre. (File photo)


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