Found this on Thai Visa and thought i would share!
Songkran alcohol ban mulled in a move to reduce deaths during holiday
BANGKOK: -- The Alcoholic Beverage Control Committee will on Monday
consider whether to issue a ban on the sale of alcohol during the
Songkran holiday period, Songkran Pakchokdee, director of the
Anti-Alcohol Organisations Network, told The Nation.
A ban, aimed at reducing deaths from road accidents over the period,
will be proposed by Dr Saman Futrakul, director of the Disease Control
Department's Office of Alcoholic Beverage and Tobacco Consumption
Control Committee.
The committee, chaired by Public Health Minister Pradit Sinthawanarong,
is expected to announce a decision on Monday. If the proposed ban is
passed, it will be submitted for final approval to the National Alcohol
Beverage Policy Committee, chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Plodprasop
Suraswadi, on March 28, in time for next month's water festival.
Saman's earlier proposal for a year-round ban on the sale of alcohol on
pavements, roadside areas and public walkways was shelved by
Plodprasob's committee last December.
Thailand currently bans alcohol sales on four major religious holidays:
Makha Bucha Day, Visakha Bucha Day, Asarnha Bucha Day and Buddhist Lent
Day.
In related news, the Thailand Accident Research Centre (TARC) recently
conducted a study into accidents on Thai roads over the past 20 years.
Kunnawee Kanitpong, who headed the research, said that statistics for
1993-2011 road accidents and fatalities gathered by two agencies - the
National Police Office and the Public Health Ministry - varied
significantly (see graphic).
Prommin Kantiya, director of the Accident Prevention Network, said
Thailand lacked a single systematic process to gather such information.
He said police statistics only covered cases in which victims had died
on the same day as their accidents, while the Public Health Ministry
collects follow-up information for another 30 days and therefore records
a much higher number of road-accident fatalities.
However, the number of road deaths recorded by the Health Ministry is
still lower than that gathered by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
Last month the WHO reported that up to 26,000 people are killed in road
accidents every year in Thailand, which places the country as
sixth-highest in the world for road fatalities.
The TARC research indicates that integration of relevant agencies is
necessary to gain a true reflection of trends in road use and the toll
that road accidents take, said Kunnawee.
The research study, the fruit of almost a year's work, will be forwarded
to the Road Safety Centre and published in a book this year.
-- The Nation 2013-03-23