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Stranded tourists in Thailand strain old naval air base

U-TAPAO, Thailand -- With one luggage scanner and a tiny check-in hall, a Vietnam War-era naval air base in Thailand struggled on Friday to cope with thousands of tourists left stranded by a political crisis.

The government began shuttling travellers by bus to U-Tapao, 150 km (90 miles) east of Bangkok, as an alternative landing site for airlines after protesters forced the closure of the capital's two main airports this week.

Nearly 60 flights had left by Friday afternoon, while inbound flights were expected to bring tourists for the peak holiday season, pushing the air base to its limits.

"Don't forget we're not Suvarnabhumi or Don Muang airports. The convenience and speed of services should be not be the same," Rear Admiral Surapong Ayasanond told Reuters at the base, which normally handles 14 flights a day.

People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) protesters laid siege to Suvarnabhumi, Thailand's main hub for nearly 15 million visitors a year, and the Don Muang domestic airport this week.

The sit-ins have forced hundreds of flight cancellations, stranded thousands of tourists and grounded millions of dollars of air cargo.

Built in the 1960s as a major staging area for the U.S. war in Indochina, U-Tapao's single runway can handle aircraft as large as an Airbus A380 superjumbo, Surapong said.

But with only four check-in counters, one baggage scanner, and a flight schedule hand-written on a white bulletin board, service was painfully slow in the cramped terminal building.

Some travellers took the delays in their stride.

"I don't have a visa but the airline helped me to stay at a hotel. It's no problem, but I'm glad I will go home," said an Iranian businessman stranded since Tuesday.

In Bangkok, Transport Minister Santi Prompat said national carrier Thai Airways would start flying 30,000 stranded tourists from the air force base adjacent to Don Muang from Saturday.

Fliers would be checked-in at city subway stations and shuttled by bus to the heavily-guarded airbase, he said.

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 Protesters move to Bangkok's besieged airports 
Passengers wait for check in at U-tapao international airport, 140 km (87 miles) southeast of Bangkok Friday, Nov. 28. Thai police began talks with anti-government protesters blockading Bangkok’s Don Muang airport on Friday, a senior police officer said, and will move against them if negotiations fail to end the siege. (Reuters)

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