Police raid Sathon car wash, net drugs

Police raid an illegal nightclub in Yannawa district of the capital yesterday. More than 100 customers, the majority of them Chinese nationals, tested positive for illicit drug use. Police Photo
Police raid an illegal nightclub in Yannawa district of the capital yesterday. More than 100 customers, the majority of them Chinese nationals, tested positive for illicit drug use. Police Photo

A total of 104 customers, 99 of them Chinese nationals, tested positive for drugs during a police raid on three adjacent buildings illegally operating as a nightclub in Bangkok’s Yannawa area in the early hours of yesterday.

Police will permanently blacklist the tourists who tested positive for drugs.

National police chief Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapas said yesterday that the Chinese owner of the nightclub operates his entertainment venue illegally with a tourist visa. Most visitors to the nightclub are foreigners who did not have their passports with them during the raid. Some were in Thailand with a Visa on Arrival (VoA) which allows them a one-month stay with renewable extensions.

Police are currently investigating who is involved in the entertainment venue’s operations which are promoting drug use among visitors, he said.

Pol Gen Damrongsak said police will press charges against the owner who violated the law and will blacklist, for life, the tourists who tested positive for drugs.

At around 3.30am yesterday, more than 100 city police raided the Jinling, Leela and Wip Wup Car Wash buildings on Charoen Rat Road in Yannawa of Sathon district.

They were acting on a tipoff the buildings were being used illegally as an entertainment venue, with a karaoke bar to serve Chinese visitors, drug parties and illegal gambling, said Pol Maj Gen Theeradet Thamsuthee, chief of investigation at the Metropolitan Police Bureau, who led the raid.

When police entered the premises, customers and staff immediately ran to hide in the kitchens, bathrooms, and in room corners.

A total of 237 Chinese customers were detained, 111 men and 126 women. Twenty-nine others, mostly employees, were also held — Thai, Georgian, Cambodian and Vietnamese nationals.

Pol Maj Gen Theeradet said all visitors and staff at the entertainment venue were made to take urine tests for drug use. A search of the karaoke rooms and other areas inside the buildings found at least 300 sachets of illicit drugs such as ketamine and “happy water”, a combination of several illicit drugs.

He said 104 people tested positive for drug use, 50 men and 54 women. The group comprised 99 Chinese nationals (51 women and 48 men), three Thai women, one Thai man and one Cambodian man.

The arresting team impounded 34 luxury cars, including a Rolls Royce, pending an investigation into whether the owner of the entertainment venue was involved in illicit drugs or money laundering, Pol Maj Gen Theeradet said.

The foreign nationals who tested negative for drug use were handed over to immigration police.

Pol Maj Gen Nitithorn Jintakanon, deputy chief of the Metropolitan Police Bureau, said illicit drugs were sold to customers for 10,000 baht a sachet.

A police source said the nightspot had been operating for about four months. It mainly served Chinese customers.

The nightspot was operating illegally within the jurisdiction of Yannawa police. The Yannawa police chief was yesterday transferred. Pol Maj Gen Nakharin Sukhonthawit, chief of the Metropolitan Police Division 6, signed the order shunting Pol Col Thanachot Ruekdee to the division’s operations centre.