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Thailand Offers Course For Women Who Marry Foreigners

The course is intended to help women avoid falling victim to human trafficking and scams.

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand is offering a free course to help Thai women cope with the highs and lows of interracial marriage and avoid potential scams or falling victim to human trafficking when moving abroad.

As Thai society becomes more accepting of interracial marriages, some women view them as a way to better their economic status, the social development ministry says.

"Our course will teach women how to conduct themselves, about the laws of their destination country, and how to prepare before going," said senior ministry official Patcharee Arayakul.

"This is to reduce the risks of women being scammed or being a victim of human trafficking," added Patcharee, who is the director of the ministry's division of gender equality.

Thai women in cosplay uniforms stand outside the brothels of Pattaya city.
LightRocket via Getty Images
Thai women in cosplay uniforms stand outside the brothels of Pattaya city.

Although there is no recent data on such marriages, a 2004 government study showed more than 15,000 women from one of the poorest regions, northeastern Isan, had married foreign men, and sent a monthly total of 122 million baht (AUD $4.6 million) to their families.

The course covers "legal rights, how to seek help through relevant Thai authorities, as well as exploring issues of culture shock," said Dusadee Ayuwat, an associate professor at Khon Kaen University who helped to design it.

The practical advice was very useful, said one woman who attended the day-long course, paid for by the ministry. "I was more interested in the legal aspects rather than the culture shock," said the woman, who declined to be named.

Ploynisa Duangdararungrueng and her husband German Ralf Wacker walk with their dogs at a park near their house in Ayutthaya province, Thailand.
Athit Perawongmetha / Reuters
Ploynisa Duangdararungrueng and her husband German Ralf Wacker walk with their dogs at a park near their house in Ayutthaya province, Thailand.

The course could be useful for some Thai women, said Ploynisa Duangdararungrueng, a former spa manager who is married to German national Ralf Wacker. "Thai women, especially those from the northeast region, are soft-spoken and submissive," she said. "They must learn to respect themselves and their culture."

Her husband said the course could prepare women for the reality of life in the West. "For a lot of women, life in the West is like a fairy tale, but in reality it can feel extremely isolating moving to a small town," said Wacker who urged Thailand to offer a similar course for Western spouses. "If the Western man does not understand the family dynamics, this can cause a lot of problems."

(Reporting by Suphanida Thakral, Writing by Amy Lefevre, Editing by Darren Schuettler)

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