Did anyone see article in Vaping360 Facebook about Swiss man arrested in Thailand for vaping in public, then charged with importation of e-cigs? Scary.
The important part, I think, is that normally you see someone vaping in public even though it's illegal but that day was extra illegal. I wonder that was only applied to him or so many others.Did anyone see article in Vaping360 Facebook about Swiss man arrested in Thailand for vaping in public, then charged with importation of e-cigs? Scary.
Doing an example on a tourist is a huge mistake if you want to encourage tourism (don't know if they do or not). As we weren't present, there's no way to know how that arrest occurred. Was the tourist otherwise acting inappropriately to the officer (never a good idea, especially visiting a different country)? Were there language barriers that made the situation more difficult? Was there an offer to "prepay" the that the officer found insulting? Lots of moving parts even for a simple arrest, so while I fell horrible for the tourist, and think getting busted or vaping is nuts, I would like to know more before drawing a sweeping conclusion about their justice system.
I totally agree with you.Doing an example on a tourist is a huge mistake if you want to encourage tourism (don't know if they do or not). As we weren't present, there's no way to know how that arrest occurred. Was the tourist otherwise acting inappropriately to the officer (never a good idea, especially visiting a different country)? Were there language barriers that made the situation more difficult? Was there an offer to "prepay" the that the officer found insulting? Lots of moving parts even for a simple arrest, so while I fell horrible for the tourist, and think getting busted or vaping is nuts, I would like to know more before drawing a sweeping conclusion about their justice system.
I live in Thailand and while the details of this particular case may not be known, that does not change the openly hostile nature against vapors here. I live it and have many friends here who also deal with the reality of this treatment as a criminal act. Most commonly the situation is used as an excuse for extortion into thousands of dollars (in local currency). I do not believe they care how this effects Western tourism. The focus here is on Asian tourism.
I actually don't know much about the environment in China even though I buy most of the vape gear from them. Would you let us know?I'm in China........nuff said.
Twenty years ago you would have been right. Now for vaping you would be looking at numbers in excess of $1000 and it still might not resolve the problem. If there are more instances reported of their enforcing the 5 year jail penalty only absurd amounts of money might buy your way out.What level is that extortion at? Pretty hefty if it's for the arresting officer. I figured a "prepaid fine" of $50-100 might do the trick.
I was thinking just pay some money to the policeman at where you are found will do the trick. Do you mean that you are dealing with the police organization as a whole and pay the large amount of money? So this Swiss guy still have chance to get away from the jail penalty if they accept the big money.Twenty years ago you would have been right. Now for vaping you would be looking at numbers in excess of $1000 and it still might not resolve the problem. If there are more instances reported of their enforcing the 5 year jail penalty only absurd amounts of money might buy your way out.
I am from Japan. Not many people are vaping here in Japan but I start to find some vapers at smoking areas in Tokyo. Vape is treated in Japan, I think, as same as smoking cigarettes because vaper and smoke look the same from non-smokers or smokers. So we vape at designated smoking areas even though we think they are different.
As I don't travel outside of Japan so often, I would like to know how vape or vapers are treated in other countries. Is the vaping allowed at the non-smoking areas? Are there different rules applied for vaping and smoking?
Please let me know if this thread is irrelevant for this forum.


I live in Thailand and while the details of this particular case may not be known, that does not change the openly hostile nature against vapors here. I live it and have many friends here who also deal with the reality of this treatment as a criminal act. Most commonly the situation is used as an excuse for extortion into thousands of dollars (in local currency). I do not believe they care how this effects Western tourism. The focus here is on Asian tourism.