Travellers who arrived here found crowds of tired and angry passengers, armed guards, piles of garbage, mountains of luggage, and an increasingly tense and surreal atmosphere. -- PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
U-TAPAO (Thailand) - NOT even the dancing girls provided by a local hotel could cheer thousands of travellers as they tried to flee protest-hit Thailand through this Vietnam-era airbase.
Foreign governments race to pull nationals from Thailand
BANGKOK - FOREIGN governments were on Sunday racing to evacuate tens of thousands of visitors stranded in Thailand after anti-government protesters occupied Bangkok's airports, throwing travel plans into chaos.
About 30,000 travellers have missed their flights each day since demonstrations forced the closure of the Thai capital's main Suvarnabhumi airport on Tuesday and the domestic hub Don Mueang two days later.
BANGKOK - AUSTRALIA'S foreign minister expressed frustration on Sunday at the closure of Bangkok's international airport and said his government was pressing Thai authorities to do more to get stranded tourists out.
Other foreign governments are increasingly concerned at the closure of Suvarnabhumi airport since Tuesday by political protesters as part of their campaign to topple the government of Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat.
BANGKOK - A THAI official says more than 450 Thai Muslims stranded at Bangkok's besieged airport for four days have been bused to a military base to board a plane for the hajj pilgrimage.
Sen. Anusart Suwanmongkol says buses transported the pilgrims from Suvarnabhumi airport to the U-Tapao naval base on Sunday. From there, they are to fly on an Iran Air flight arranged by the Iranian Embassy to Saudi Arabia.
'This is my first time in Thailand and I probably won't come back,' said Mr Glen Squires, a 47-year-old tourist from England, casting a glum eye over the crowds.
'What they've done is shot themselves in the foot.'
Since Friday, the U-Tapao naval base about 190 kilometres southeast of Bangkok has been the only way in or out of the country for tourists stranded by an anti-government blockade of the capital's main airports.
Travellers who arrived here found crowds of tired and angry passengers, armed guards, piles of garbage, mountains of luggage, and an increasingly tense and surreal atmosphere.
Built in the 1960s by the US air force and equipped with just one X-ray scanner for bags, the airbase can only handle around 40 flights a day, compared to the 700-flight capacity of Bangkok's gleaming Suvarnabhumi international airport.
But thanks to the demonstrations, it's all that Thailand has to offer.
'I think it's stupid,' said Mr Danny Mosaffi, 57, from New York City. 'They have killed tourism in this country, the authorities should go do something.'
'Nobody is going to come here.'
Thai authorities say around 30,000 travellers a day - both Thai and foreign - have had flights cancelled since the occupation of Suvarnabhumi on Tuesday in what the protesters are calling their 'final battle' against the government.
Some travel agents bussed passengers down to U-Tapao, which is near the tourist resort of Pattaya, but with information proving difficult to come by in Bangkok, others came on their own more in hope than expectation.
Huge traffic jams built up outside the sprawling compound. Thai soldiers with M16 rifles guarded the entrance to the airport to prevent anti-government protesters from gaining access, as travellers lugged their bags under the sun.
Once inside the terminal, it was standing room only. Travelers were unsure where they should check in. Long queues wound around the lone luggage scanner, where soldiers tried to hold back the surging crowd.
'It's complete chaos and pandemonium,' said Ms Bonnie Chan, 29, from San Diego, California.
'We've been given incorrect information from the airlines. The US embassy says they can't help us. We're high and dry. The airlines keep giving us the run-around.'
With no departures board available, airline employees held up signs that said 'Final boarding call, Moscow', while other staff stood inside the security area and pressed signs against a glass window calling for passengers to board a flight to Hong Kong.
At one point, a group of unruly passengers pushed their way through a door to the security screening area after an airport employee announced the final boarding call for a flight to Taipei.
One woman, caught in the surge, began to scream, and the soldiers forced the doors shut.
'We've treated six patients today,' said Mr Nan Soontornnon, 24, of Bangkok Hospital in Pattaya, standing with a doctor and nurse in a makeshift clinic.
'Passengers have had headaches, exhaustion, and other problems, like fainting. But this place has protection from the soldiers - Suvarnabhumi doesn't,' she said.
U-Tapao's only other selling point was when female employees from one enterprising Pattaya hotel, taking advantage of the captive audience, put on a traditional Thai dance performance.
The women later donned red and silver dresses with feather boas, singing: 'You'll fall in love in Pattaya. There's no better place to be.' -- AFP