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Thailand to promote medical tourism after good track record in handling COVID-19

Thailand aims to lure more foreign visitors in the post-Covid period by promoting itself as a medical tourism hub, building on its good track record of handling the pandemic, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha said.

A virus task force headed by Prayuth on Friday will also consider demands to reopen bars, pubs and other nightlife entertainment venues that have been shut for more than a year amid a rebound in tourist arrivals. The lifting of the curbs are seen as key to lure more visitors in the June-September period, considered a low season for Thai tourism.
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“Thailand has a proven track record in dealing with the Covid-19 outbreak, Prayuth told a conference. “We will use this to promote the country’s medical tourism and health treatment to attract foreign visitors after the COVID-19.

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Thailand expects tourist arrivals to more than triple to about a 1 million a month from October as the nation rolls back most of the pandemic-era travel curbs. While the country has scrapped mandatory Covid testing and quarantine for tourists, pre-arrival registration and insurance requirement are seen as deterrents with other tourism-reliant nations doing away such restrictions.

But with new Covid cases and deaths steadily declining, Prayuth has vowed to relax the remaining restrictions to boost business and economic activities, government spokesman Thanakorn Wangboonkongchana said in a statement on Thursday.

Thailand has seen its omicron-fueled COVID-19wave ease in recent days with new cases averaging about 5,000 a day from a peak of almost 30,000 in early April. The country, which drew praise from the World Health Organization for its handling of the early phase of the pandemic, has contained total Covid fatalities to below 30,000, fewer than neighbors Malaysia and the Philippines.

The reopening of pubs, bars and other nightlife entertainment venues in some provinces can promote tourism and help millions of people dependent on such business for livelihood, Supot Malaniyom, secretary-general of the National Security Council, said.

While Thailand’s household debt level has risen to almost 90 percent of the gross domestic product, seen as a major barrier to its economic recovery, lower interest rates and fee charges will help ease the burden, Prayuth said. The government is also betting on large investments by some of the world’s top companies in technology and digital platforms, he said.

Read more: Thailand targets homegrown mRNA COVID-19 vaccine rollout by end-2022

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