The
second episode in the controversial Big Trouble in Tourist Thailand
television series has just been broadcast in Britain on Bravo - but Thai
authorities are now trying to prevent the rest of the eight-part series from
being completed.
Producer-director Gavin Hill says the Thailand Film Office has sent a letter
asking the British production company, Bravo, not to screen any more episodes.
Episode Three, being edited in Britain, is in rough-cut form. The show can only
go on with permission from all the people shown on-screen. That includes Winai
''JJ'' Naiman, the now-notorious Phuket jet-ski operator, who signed a release
form so that his actions could be displayed to viewers with his approval.
Hill said tonight's second episode does not reflect badly on Thailand. That was
never the intention of Big Trouble in Tourist Thailand, he added.
I don't know what's going to happen now with the series, he said. The
Thailand Film Office has 'pulled all the releases and permissions that are
required to complete the series. He has been told there is the likelihood of
a complaint being made to the British embassy. At least one volunteer expat
tourist policeman in Pattaya had also expressed concern.
In some ways, it's very positive for Thailand, he said: The young lady
who was in trouble on Koh Phangan in the first episode is fined 50 pounds, she
gets her bail money back, and she is allowed to go, with the only real penalty
being an extra three weeks in Thailand.
By coincidence, authorities on Koh Phangan have announced a plan to make the
island, noted for expat full moon rave parties, drug-free as fast as possible.
Episode One of Big Trouble screened last week, revealing footage of what
appeared to be an extortion bid by ''JJ'' with a gun in hand, and it came just
before a planned summit on jet-ski scams on Phuket. The Jet Ski operators demand
enormous compensation for unlikely damage to the jetski.
Nationwide, crackdowns are underway on crimes against tourists at Suvarnabhumi
airport in Bangkok as part of a push against corruption by the Prime Minister.
The jet-ski crackdown on Phuket came after the Deputy PM met with the Australian
ambassador. Other ambassadors later echoed their increasing concerns about
jet-ski scams to the Phuket Governor, Wichai Praisa-nob.
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