Shot in the head, Melbourne teacher lucky to be alive

Posted by | Teaching,Thailand Headlines | Tuesday 12 July 2011 11:44 am

Shot in the head, Melbourne teacher lucky to be alive
Mark Hawthorne

A Melbourne schoolteacher is lucky to be alive after being shot in the back of the head while on a school trip to Thailand.

Teachers Lynda Cody and Jess Lambden of Ringwood Secondary College had just departed a night market in Khum Kan Tok, in the northern city of Chiang Mai, when the car they were travelling was attacked by armed bandits.

Two bullets hit the car. One pierced the rear window, passed through two headrests, and hit Ms Cody in the back of the head.

The bullet grazed the back of the Ms Cody’s skull. X-rays and a CT scan have since revealed no major damage, and she was released from hospital after receiving six stitches.

The second bullet hit the body of the car.

None of the eight Ringwood Seconday College students on the trip were involved in the incident.

The shooting took place at 10pm local time on Saturday, after a farewell dinner at sister school Montford College in Chiang Mai, which was being visited by the group from Ringwood Secondary College.

Ms Cody and Ms Lambden were visiting a night market to buy souvenirs before returning to Australia with their students.

A Montford teacher, known as Mr Suwan, drove off when the car was fired on.

Ringwood Secondary College principal Michael Phillips said: “Whilst the injury sustained by Lynda was serious, the incident was particularly stressful and both staff members will need counseling support as they realise how close they were to being shot. Some may also need some counseling. This has been arranged.”

Assistant principal Julie Hughes is currently with the group, having flown over on Sunday. According to a spokesman, Ms Hughes is “liaising with the group, parents, the Department of Education and DFAT”.

The incident was reported to local police, who are investigating.

Source: http://www.theage.co…0712-1hbo3.html

– theage.com.au 2011-07-12

New, Major Visa Requirements – Education “Ed” Visas Holders Must Attend Classes

Posted by | Teaching,Thailand Headlines,Visa | Thursday 7 July 2011 12:52 pm

New, Major Visa Requirements – Education “Ed” Visas Holders Must Attend Classes
By VISITH PINPAWONG

According to the Deputy Director, the Thailand Ministry of Education is warning all schools who offer Education Visas to foreigners to be legitimate and make sure students adhere to attendance and testing requirements.

At the Pattaya City Expats Club meeting on Sunday, Immigration Volunteer and former British Consul Barry Kenyan stated the problem with Education visas as he observed it first-hand in the local Immigration office on Jomtien Beach Road, Soi 5.

“A guy came in and wanted to renew his Education visa for a 7th straight year. He waited in the queue and when it was his turn he sat at the Immigration officer’s desk in charge of Education Visas. He had all of his documents from the school. His application was completed and he had the two photos now required for any visa. So the officer looked at him and said, ‘You have been learning Thai for six years already. Is that right?’ The answer was yes so the officer looked at a nearby fish tank and said in Thai, ‘The big fish eat the little fish.” The foreigner looked at him without a clue. The officer smiled and picked up a big red stamp and stamped “CANCELLED” on the remaining portion of the current visa and told the fellow he would not again receive an Education visa,” Barry reported.

The Deputy Director of the Thailand Ministry of Education recently summoned all language schools’ owners in Pattaya along with senior Chonburi Immigration Police Investigators to address this issue and notify the schools of the crackdown.

“Now any school found to be selling the Education visa simply to allow the foreigner to stay in Thailand and not attending the school will be closed down and lose their license. All of the school’s students, whether attending or not, will have their visas cancelled,” the representative of the Ministry of Education stated.

Going to school and learning Thai is one option for people to “long stay” in the Kingdom without having to constantly do “border runs.” It is especially popular with those who can self-fund themselves living here and do not need to work but are not yet 50 years of age thus not being able to qualify for a Retirement Visa. A Pattaya Times undercover investigation has discovered that some schools are selling discounted “courses” where the “student” pays a reduced fee that gets them a visa but they have no intention of ever attending a class.

Every school in Pattaya has a maximum allocated student base dependent on classroom availability. One school in particular was named and shamed. The school in question has a maximum capacity of 160 students based on if the classrooms were full every minute of every day. Most schools have 40% of students sign up for second and third years, thus reducing the capacity of the school of new students in the second year by 40%. In the case of the capacity of the school above reducing the intake of new students to 96.

The education department in very strong language asked the particular school if they thought the education department was foolish and if they do not keep records. In the last three months this school had new sign ups of 80 students and was asked where they sit their students and where are the three extra classrooms they would require to cope with this over capacity. Even if the school opened all night they still would not be able to facilitate all the students.

It has also come to the notice of the Education Department that a lot of schools are using teachers to teach Thai who are not educated to Degree standard and they have warned this must stop.
Pol. Capt. Samruai Sa-Mann from Chonburi Immigration police then told all the schools that five foreign nationals are now working undercover on behalf of immigration trying to buy the visa from schools without attending classes.

He added, the schools will be prosecuted if the undercover investigators gather evidence of such practices.

They are also to investigate visa shops who are offering the Ed Visa and law firms who offer the Ed Visa as it is only registered schools who can offer these visas, Deputy Inspector Samruai said.
The Police Captain also added that it had also come to his attention that some schools were using foreign nationals teaching without work permits. Recently two Pattaya schools have been raided by his officers.

“If we catch teachers working in schools without a work permit, we will recommend to the Education Department that these offending schools should be closed. We will also be calling all people who advertise language lessons with a visa. We will book some lessons and on arrival we will be asking for work permits of people who we believe are working without work permits,” said Pol. Capt. Samruai Sa-Mann from Chonburi Immigration.


– Pattaya Times 2011-07-07