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Hua Hin police stand behind two suspects, seated at table, Thursday, April 28, 2016, who were arrested following an assault on an elderly British couple and their son who were savagely attacked during a family vacation in Hua, Hin, Thailand on April 13, 2016. A video of the attack, which was captured by overhead security cameras and posted this week on social media, has stirred shock and outrage over its brutality and the ages of the elder victims, a 65-year-old woman and 68-year-old man from Scotland. Police said Thursday they have arrested the four suspected attackers. (Hua Hin Police via AP)

Britons beaten up in Thailand say they will never go back to the country

A British man who, alongside his mother and father, was beaten unconscious in a Thai beachside resort has said his family will never return to the country after the “out of the blue” attack.

Lewis Owen, a graphic designer who lives in Singapore, was on holiday with his parents Lewis and Rosemary Owen, aged 68 and 65, when several men attacked them this month during Thai new year celebrations in Hua Hin.

Security camera footage released on Thursday showed a vicious assault in which Owen briefly touches shoulders with a Thai man carrying a bottle who appears to push him to the ground. An argument ensues and the family are set upon, repeatedly punched and kicked in the face even as they lie on the ground.

“I’m not going back to Thailand again,” Owen was quoted in the Daily Mirror as saying. “Mum and dad won’t be either. Never, ever again.”

Owen has already returned to Singapore but his parents, from Wenvoe in Wales, are expected to return to Britain next week.

He said his father had two black eyes and six stitches to the forehead. Owen said he had 16 stitches on his head in three areas. “Because it’s above my hairline it is not too bad, I have still got a bit of hair. They had to shave my hair off to stitch it up.”

He said hospital staff were worried about his mother who had to have several operations to deal with brain swelling.

The parents have been regular visitors to Thailand for many years and meet up twice a year with their son, he said.

The attack occurred on 13 April, in the early hours of the morning during the Thai new year’s Songkran festival, also known as the water festival where street parties turn into giant water fights. The water is a symbol of cleansing and renewal.

Owen said after a night at a bar, he was walking his mother and father back when they were attacked. “I didn’t know them, it was just random,” he said.

“It was just out of the blue. None of us were drunk. We had just had a merry night and were going home.”

He had not seen the video footage until Thursday and did not realise “how badly we were beaten up.

“We were all unconscious. My mum did not even realise she had been kicked in the face. I did not know my head had been stamped on.”

Hua Hin police stand behind two suspects who were arrested following the assault. Photo: AP

Thai police Colonel Chaiyakorn Siradecho said four men had been arrested and would be charged with grievous bodily harm.

A spokesman for the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) said “if found guilty, the perpetrators of this incident will face full justice under Thai law.

“The Tourism Authority of Thailand would like to express our deepest sorrow to the family who were subjected to the assault … We hope that you recover from your injuries and make a swift and full recovery. TAT would like to assure international travellers that this was an isolated incident, not targeted on any group of foreign tourists in particular. The situation was exacerbated by alcohol.”

In 2015, British visitors to Thailand crossed the one million mark for the first time.

The British embassy had begun a safety campaign to make sure tourists were aware of the dangers during the Songkran festival. Car accidents spike during the event and revellers are often drunk, but attacks on tourists are rare.

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