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Sakorn Sachiwa had been working on a fishing boat since January last year and had his identification card stolen

Thai family stunned as ‘long dead’ man arrives home

Sakorn Sachiwa had been working on a fishing boat since January last year and had his identification card stolen

Thailand
Sakorn Sachiwa had been working on a fishing boat since January last year and had his identification card stolen

A man from the northeastern Si Sa Ket province in Thailand who was believed dead and cremated in May has returned home very much alive, to his family’s great astonishment, and is now seeking to correct the official record.

Sakorn Sachiwa, 44, walked in unannounced at his home in Non Khun district on Sunday, Thai media reported. 

His stepbrother Charoen Lekdi, a janitor at a local school, said the family was totally astounded. They had been contacted in May by Nang Loeng police and asked to collect Mr Sakorn’s body. Police said he had died of a digestive disease at a rented room in Phra Nakhon district on May 18.

The family went to pick up the body from the Faculty of Medicine Vijira Hospital of Navamindradhiraj University. They received a death certificate dated May 21, issued by Phra Nakhon district in Bangkok.

Nakornchai Pimklang, 33, a cousin, said family members asked to look at the body. He noticed the front teeth were different. His step-brother had two teeth missing.

He had pointed this out to an official, who suggested the family to just take the body, which was already swollen. The family took the body home and held religious rites for three days before the cremation. The bone relics were placed in a chedi at Wat Ban Lao Fai.

And then Mr Sakorn arrived home on Sunday evening. The family was shocked. The cousins kept touching him until certain he was not a ghost, he said.

The family informed village headman Veerasak Manthong, who had known Mr Sakorn for a long time. Mr Veerasak confirmed it was the real Mr Sakorn who had showed up at the house.

Mr Sakorn said he had been working on a fishing boat based in Nakhon Si Thammarat since January 24, 2016. During that time a Myanmar worker had stolen his identification card and fled. He reported the missing card and had been issued a new one at Khanom district office in the southern province.

He had now left the job and had returned home, only to find his family thought him long dead and cremated.

Mr Sakorn now wants the official record changed, because it still shows he died on May 18.

Mr Veerasak said he would take Mr Sakorn to the district chief, so the necessary steps could be taken.

It is not known who was cremated in his place.

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