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Bangkok hotel fined after used condoms, toiletries bearing its name found floating in canal

  (The Nation/Asia News Network)
Bangkok
Wed, June 19, 2019

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Bangkok hotel fined after used condoms, toiletries bearing its name found floating in canal Wat Arun Temple at sunset in Bangkok, Thailand. (Shutterstock/File)

T

he Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) has imposed a 10,000 baht (S$437) fine on a hotel in the Charansanitwongse area of the capital's Bangkok Yai district for improperly disposing used condoms and toiletry items.

The items were found at the weekend floating in a canal, leading to images circulated by Thai netizens expressing their disgust.

City workers completed removing the trash from the canal - which connects to the Wat Tha Phra, Wat Tha Mul and Wat Dee Duat canals - by midnight on Sunday (June 16).

Bangkok Yai district office director Karuna Thoopthienhom led officials to inspect the 130-room hotel in question, identified by name on the disused toiletry packets.

Having found no hotel executives on the premises, and only maids, the officials learnt that the hotel occasionally hired a Nakhon Pathom-based company to send workers to collect used condoms and garbage from the hotel's five septic tanks, none of which were connected to the canal.

Read also: Would you stay at a hotel with negative reviews?

They were told that the company's workers had last cleared the tanks on Saturday.

However, since the trash had somehow found its way into the canal, Mr Karuna said the district office imposed the fine for disposing waste into a canal, which is a violation of the 1992 Maintenance of Cleanliness and Public Order Act.

The hotel manager, upon returning from the district office after paying the fine, found that officials and journalists were still at the property.

He apologised for what happened and said the Nakhon Pathom-based company was hired to fish out condoms and plastic trash from the septic tanks every six months at 16,000 baht to 18,000 baht per visit, while the wastewater inside the septic tanks was treated by BMA workers.

The hotel never had this problem before, he insisted, adding that his efforts to get an explanation from the waste-collection company have yet to bear fruit.


This article appeared on The Nation newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
 

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