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Phuket Bars Closed For Two Days


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#1 webfact

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Posted 2010-07-26 11:55:44

Phuket bars closed for two days

Posted Image
The controversial alcohol sales rules affect only retail sales, not bulk purchases.

PHUKET: -- All bars and nightlife entertainment venues on the island must close for the two-day Asarnha Bucha Day public holidays (today and tomorrow), Phuket Provincial Police have confirmed.

A spokesperson in the Phuket Provincial Police planning section today confirmed that there will be a two-day ban on alcohol sales at all nightlife venues.

Alcohol sales at retail establishments will remain as normal, with alcohol being available for sale from 11am to 2pm and from 5pm until midnight.

Asarnha Bucha Day, on the full moon of the eighth lunar month, commemorates the Buddha’s first sermon and the founding of the Buddhist sangha.

Believers observe the day by making merit at temples and attending sermons.

Respecting the alcohol ban disrupts trade in Phuket’s renowned bar scene, for local residents and tourists alike.

Among the disruptions as a result of the ban, play in the Patong Darts League has been postponed.

A highly anticipated match-up between league leaders Hemingway’s and the last team to beat them, Market Bar, has been postponed to take place at Market Bar on Nanai Rd on Thursday at 8:30pm.

Players on other teams should contact their captains to find out when the matches will be played.

The league is also holding an emergency meeting at 3pm on Wednesday to discuss the future of the league.

Started about 10 years ago, the league is down to just six teams and many of these are having difficulty finding players.

League secretary Olivier Lambert of Shakers Bar has asked all bar owners to be present. Any other league members are also welcome to attend.

“We need to put some ideas together to improve conditions,” he said.

Organizers of other events or activities that will be affected by the ban are welcome to post information in the Reader’s Forum below.


-- Phuket Gazette 2010-07-26



#2 asiawatcher

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Posted 2010-07-26 13:29:51

A fine line between respect for tradition, interference by religion and keeping the masses happy who don't give a hoot, happy.  Oh well - it won't hurt to abstain for a few days - but just feel for the tourists who arrived to party and cannot.  TIT.

#3 phuketrichard

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Posted 2010-07-26 13:52:37

they can always drink in their rooms. Theres more to Phuket than its bars

When u travel to a foreiogn country you should repsect and learn of the customs which far to few tourists seem to do.

#4 dazbandit

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:11:51

im worried for the people & my friends in pattaya !?!?!?!    lololololololol

#5 jimmybhoy

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:14:14

Would it not be more respectful if people were given a choice whether to abstain or not, maybe Buddhists should abstain  on Buddhist holy days,people coming here on vacation should be able to have a glass of wine with dinner, I used to give up drinking during lent, I did not demand everyone else in the U.K. had to abstain with me whether they were catholic or not. Thailand has many problems at the moment, tourists looking to spend money in bars and clubs should not be one of them, why not ban people from smoking on holy days, maybe food also, ban watching tv, sex,drugs,  

THAILAND MOVE INTO THE 21ST CENTURY OR BECOME A 3RD RATE TOURIST DESTINATION

#6 zthyadat

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:14:32

View Postphuketrichard, on 2010-07-26 13:52:37, said:

they can always drink in their rooms. Theres more to Phuket than its bars

When u travel to a foreiogn country you should repsect and learn of the customs which far to few tourists seem to do.
I would say this can run both ways...

"The citizens and administration of a country should respect the customs and religious beliefs of the guests they have invited for the purpose of relieving them of their money."
  
Easy to say what other people should do, isn't it?

#7 Deeral

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:14:44

If there's one issue to get people really excited on this site - alcohol - how sad!
Hope you all manage to survive - 2 whole days without a drink.....what kind of lives do you lead????

Edited by Deeral, 2010-07-26 14:15:03.


#8 frenchfarangjomtien

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:18:59

View Postphuketrichard, on 2010-07-26 13:52:37, said:

they can always drink in their rooms. Theres more to Phuket than its bars

When u travel to a foreiogn country you should repsect and learn of the customs which far to few tourists seem to do.
Nonsense, tourists don't mind and I understand them, that's why I will never travel to any muslim country where they want me to respect some retarded rules... Especially because when anyone goes to my country they do what they want, as we don't have of these stupid tradition...

#9 Jimi007

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:40:19

I'm over it! I'll just make myself another gin and tonic and read about all the whining people who can't go out to a bar! Posted Image

#10 lensta

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:45:13

View Postphuketrichard, on 2010-07-26 13:52:37, said:

they can always drink in their rooms. Theres more to Phuket than its bars

When u travel to a foreiogn country you should repsect and learn of the customs which far to few tourists seem to do.
Maybe the tourists just come for the beach and tropical climate and couldn't care less about the traditions, culture
or people of the country they are visiting. Unless you are paying for their holiday, I don't think it is for you to tell people
what they should or shouldn't do.

#11 ronrat

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:49:45

I was in Pattaya when the bars where shut for  the cremation of the princess. No big deal. Stocked up the fridge, took a girl for a few days and had her bring her kid and a friend over to play in the pool. You could still get a beer in the cafes.

#12 chadillac0

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:49:57

View PostDeeral, on 2010-07-26 14:14:44, said:

If there's one issue to get people really excited on this site - alcohol - how sad!
Hope you all manage to survive - 2 whole days without a drink.....what kind of lives do you lead????
What!!!  Such a smug comment  :huh:

#13 zorro1

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:52:18

alcoholics (pretending there not) VS ex alcoholics (pretending abstinence is more fun)

let the games begin

#14 crgram

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Posted 2010-07-26 14:59:58

View Postzorro1, on 2010-07-26 14:52:18, said:

alcoholics (pretending there not) VS ex alcoholics (pretending abstinence is more fun)

let the games begin
I'll bet on the ex's, all that pent up frustration would have to be dangerous :burp:

cr

#15 Soi Sauce

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:40:30

The worrying thing is not whethet you can drink or not; You can! As the openinhg post says, you can buy Al K Hol in shops.  The concern is that there is no legal basis for the police imposing the ban.

Thailand is fast becoming a police state and not one with a police force run by the gov. The police impose roadside fines at will and now they are the ones who decide when the bars close.

As for those who say "respect the country's rools", it would be possible to do such if there were actually any. When you book a holiday, you do not ask the local police chief what his plans for your stay are.

Finally, if Thailand were truly Buddhist, they would all be teetotal vegetarians as that was what the Buddha requested of them. Sadly, not even a small percentage of a small percentage are.

Edited by Soi Sauce, 2010-07-26 15:43:51.


#16 moetownblues

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:42:23

you can still buy all you want from the local mum & pop stores, local hardware gardening or laundry shops

#17 DickFarang

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:44:43

View Postjimmybhoy, on 2010-07-26 14:14:14, said:

Would it not be more respectful if people were given a choice whether to abstain or not, maybe Buddhists should abstain  on Buddhist holy days,people coming here on vacation should be able to have a glass of wine with dinner, I used to give up drinking during lent, I did not demand everyone else in the U.K. had to abstain with me whether they were catholic or not. Thailand has many problems at the moment, tourists looking to spend money in bars and clubs should not be one of them, why not ban people from smoking on holy days, maybe food also, ban watching tv, sex,drugs,  

THAILAND MOVE INTO THE 21ST CENTURY OR BECOME A 3RD RATE TOURIST DESTINATION
Let us be happy that Thailand is not (yet) a muslim country.

#18 Deeral

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:44:55

View Postchadillac0, on 2010-07-26 14:49:57, said:

View PostDeeral, on 2010-07-26 14:14:44, said:

If there's one issue to get people really excited on this site - alcohol - how sad!
Hope you all manage to survive - 2 whole days without a drink.....what kind of lives do you lead????
What!!!  Such a smug comment  :huh:
Neither -just someone whio's life isn't ruled by alcohol or any other drug - only an alcky could consider it a smug comment - ashamed of their dependency on drink

It astounds me how almost every action by the expat community in Thailand is dominated by alcohol.

Where they go, when they go, how they get there, what they do when they're there, and finally waking up the next day and trying to excuse what they did.

THey just don't have an inkling of how their lives are completely dominated by the breweries or their dealer of choice.
fancy a thread with people saying how they will get through the next few hours - not by doping something but by getting hold of a drink one way or another as if it is crucial to life or its enjoyment.

When was the last time they did anything - had a good laugh or had sex even without a beer or two?...

#19 moetownblues

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:49:22

View PostDickFarang, on 2010-07-26 15:44:43, said:

Let us be happy that Thailand is not (yet) a muslim country.
I do not think it will ever become a muslim country that would totaly destroy thier tourist industry.  What would become of places like phuket and Pattaya?  More unemployment girls out of work bars closed.  Don't ever think the muslim faith will take over.

#20 Kered

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:50:29

View Postmoetownblues, on 2010-07-26 15:42:23, said:

you can still buy all you want from the local mum & pop stores, local hardware gardening or laundry shops
Not quite the same as going out for the evening when on holiday and enjoying a meal and a few drinks. There is more to it than just consuming alcohol.

#21 Oberkommando

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:50:47

How typical of the Thais demanding respect for their 'religion'.

You have to earn respect I'm afraid. No wonder so many expats and tourist get annoyed with nonsense like this.

#22 moetownblues

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:54:20

View PostKered, on 2010-07-26 15:50:29, said:

Not quite the same as going out for the evening when on holiday and enjoying a meal and a few drinks. There is more to it than just consuming alcohol.
Yes I agree 100% but I was getting the impression that some were worried where the next drink was coming from.

#23 DickFarang

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Posted 2010-07-26 15:56:04

View Postronrat, on 2010-07-26 14:49:45, said:

I was in Pattaya when the bars where shut for  the cremation of the princess. No big deal. Stocked up the fridge, took a girl for a few days and had her bring her kid and a friend over to play in the pool. You could still get a beer in the cafes.
In at least one Italian restaurant in Pattaya, on “special” days, they serve wine in mugs. Problem solved.

#24 DickFarang

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Posted 2010-07-26 16:01:19

View Postmoetownblues, on 2010-07-26 15:49:22, said:

I do not think it will ever become a muslim country that would totaly destroy thier tourist industry.  What would become of places like phuket and Pattaya?  More unemployment girls out of work bars closed.  Don't ever think the muslim faith will take over.
They are everywhere already, Patts included.

#25 dazbandit

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Posted 2010-07-26 16:03:18

View PostOberkommando, on 2010-07-26 15:50:47, said:

How typical of the Thais demanding respect for their 'religion'.

You have to earn respect I'm afraid. No wonder so many expats and tourist get annoyed with nonsense like this.
YES exactly.....



 


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