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BANGKOK, Thailand -- Fear of the coronavirus is rapidly making
	Thailand less attractive for tourists, potentially boring for
	residents, and possibly dangerous for white people.
	
	Places where people "rub up against each other" will be closed, Prime
	Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha announced on March 17.
	
	Earlier, Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul's media blamed "dirty"
	Caucasian tourists for infecting Thailand with COVID-19.
	
	More than 600 people -- mostly Thais -- have been infected. Many of
	them recovered, and one person died because of the coronavirus.
	
	Officials announced the closure of all schools nationwide and, in and
	around Bangkok, entertainment venues such as bars, massage parlors,
	and sports stadiums from March 18-31.
	
	Concerts, some Buddhist gatherings, horse racing and other mass events
	have also been cancelled.
	
	Shopping malls, restaurants, markets, and offices remain open but need
	to sanitize people's hands or take other health precautions.
	
	Thailand's April 13-15 Songkran new year holiday has also been
	postponed indefinitely.
	
	Songkran celebrations throughout Thailand evolved in recent years to
	be the world's biggest public water fight. Thousands of Thais and
	foreigners deliriously spray and dump water on anyone in public on all
	three days, often causing accidents, injuries and deaths.
	
	White tourists meanwhile face a unique problem. Health Minister
	Anutin's twitter account stated on March 12:
	
	"Ninety percent of Thais are wearing masks.  However, none of the
	Caucasians are wearing masks.
	
	"This is the reason our country is being infected.  We should be more
	careful of the Caucasians than Asians.
	
	"Right now, it's winter in Europe, and with the [coronavirus]
	outbreak, they have all fled the cold and the virus to come into warm
	Thailand. Many of them are dirty and do not shower," the statement in
	Thai language said.
	
	The tweet was deleted hours after it was widely condemned.
	
	The health ministry told reporters it was Mr. Anutin's account but his
	staff sometimes posted tweets.  Mr. Anutin did not apologize.
	
	It was inaccurate to claim 90% of Thais are wearing face masks.
	
	During a taxi ride across Bangkok on March 22, roughly 50% of the
	Thais seen working, shopping or strolling wore face masks.  Fewer
	people wear masks in towns outside of Bangkok, some residents said.
	
	On February 7, Mr. Anutin -- who has no medical license -- said
	on-camera during his health ministry media event in Bangkok:
	
	"Those damn Caucasian tourists, that is something the embassies should
	be notified of, and the public as well, that they are not wearing
	medical face masks.
	
	"They need to be kicked out of Thailand!" said Mr. Anutin while not
	wearing a mask.
	
	A Bangkok Post editorial on March 15 criticized Mr. Anutin for "making
	racist comments about Westerners".
	
	The next day, the Bangkok Post published a letter to the editor in
	which someone named David Amaan wrote that the health minister "needs
	to be dealt with appropriately, starting with a strong disinfectant
	administered orally, followed by an enema."
	
	Tourists and expatriates expressed fear that the health minister's
	media activity could spark violent racial attacks against them in the
	street.
	
	"It might go a bit hard core in coming days, especially the blame game
	against Europeans," said a worried German writer living in Bangkok.
	
	A Muay Thai training club's manager told Bangkok's Thisrupt news, "For
	now, we are not allowing any foreigners to come to the gym to workout.
	
	"We don't know who they are, where they have been, or who their
	friends are. The foreigners could have been in contact with other
	foreigners, who have been to other places that they don't know of,"
	the Thai manager said.
	
	The racial targeting comes amid a worsening shortage of face masks in
	this Southeast Asian nation.
	
	"Some doctors have told me that each medical professional is given
	only one mask a day," columnist Paritta Wangkiat wrote on March 16.
	
	"They have had to cut up their used masks to prevent anyone from using
	them -- especially following reports of disposed masks being
	recollected, washed and resold for a profit in the market," she said.
	
	The Thai Pharmacies Association's 3,000 pharmacies "have run out of
	face masks and hand sanitizers since last month, and have not been
	able to place orders," the association's advisor Theparak Surathanond
	said.
	
	During the group's recent yearly conference in Bangkok, "We had to buy
	the goods [face masks] at a very high cost," Mr. Theparak said.
	
	Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha transferred Internal Trade Department
	chief Whichai Phochanakjj on March 15 to investigate the mask
	scarcity.
	
	Mr. Whichai's department was allegedly linked to exports of a large
	number of face masks during January and February, officials said.
	
	Do-it-yourself instructions on Thailand's social media and at live
	tutorials in shopping malls, teach people to stitch cloth, such as
	double-ply muslin, to make masks at home.
	
	The masks were of dubious quality and not sterile, medical face masks.
	
	Several "mask profiteers" were arrested for buying "recycled" face
	masks in bulk from "junk dealers" and illegally reselling them in
	Thailand, officials said.
