What we’re about
The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand hosts a variety of events which encourage conversation on tough topics. Our clubhouse hosts panel discussions and book launches on events in Thailand and throughout the region, where both members and non-members come to engage in stimulating conversations and meet interesting people. Come join us!
The FCCT is not just for correspondents - in fact, most of our members are not news people. For more than 60 years, the FCCT has played a vanguard role as the ASEAN region's most active press club. The Club advocates press freedom as a cornerstone of civil society in emerging democracies and is a vital venue for an open exchange of information.
A past FCCT president even came up with the slogan, "You don't have to be foreign and you don't have to be a correspondent". We are a very diverse club and welcome all.
Upcoming events (4+)
See all- Absent without leave: Taiwan movie nightForeign Correspondents Club, Khet Pathum Wan
This event is part of the “Taiwan Documentary Film Festival in Thailand 2024,” sponsored by the Ministry of Culture, Taiwan and the Taipei Economic and Culture Office in Thailand. There will be a Q&A session with the director after the film screening.
'Absent without Leave' director, Lau Kek huat, is from Perak, Malaysia and received his bachelor's degree and master's degree in Taiwan’s NTUA Department of Motion Picture. Lau is a Taiwan citizen now.
The film begins with a picture that has been on the wall for more than 30 years in the director’s family home in Perak, Malaysia. The people in it sacrificed their lives fighting for independence, but their stories have remained untold for 60 years.
It is a long-standing taboo in the director’s family not to talk about one of the men in the picture -- to the extent that even bringing up his name and his past creates disdain among the director’s older relatives.
Eventually, the director finds out that his grandfather died fighting for Malaysia’s independence, but his comrades’ stories are excluded from Malaysian history. This documentary set out to unveil these mysteries.Members who wish to book in advance should email [email protected] or call the FCCT office on 02-652-0580.
Non-members can use this link.
Members free, non-members 150 baht.
Bar and restaurant open.
- Launch of the Landmine Monitor Global Report 2024Foreign Correspondents Club, Khet Pathum Wan
The 1997 Nobel Peace Prize co-laureate International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) and its research arm, the Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, will be launching its annual global report on landmines, the Landmine Monitor Report 2024, at a press conference at the FCCT in Bangkok, Thailand.
The press conference will present the report’s major findings on the efforts by all countries to eradicate antipersonnel landmines and address their long-term impact*,* providing a global overview of efforts to universalize and fully implement the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty.
In particular, it will provide details on ongoing production, transfers, stockpiling and use of mines; mine contamination and casualties; progress made and improvement required in clearance, risk education and victim assistance; and national and international resources provided to support mine action.
This report is being issued just prior to the Mine Ban Treaty’s 5th Review Conference in Siem Reap, Cambodia, scheduled to take place from 25 to 30 November 2024. Notably, the Review Conference will take place 25 years after the Mine Ban Treaty came into force and in the country whose heavy landmine contamination and survivor-led activism helped create momentum for the ban.
Join us in the FCCT clubhouse in person or via Facebook live, to hear from:
Jody Williams, Nobel Peace co-laureate, (TBC online).
Mark Hiznay, ban policy editor, Landmine Monitor 2024.
Katrin Atkins, team senior researcher, Landmine Monitor 2024.
Loren Persi Vicentic, team lead, Landmine Monitor 2024
Ruth Bottomley, support for mine action editor, Landmine Monitor 2024.
The Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor is the civil society initiative providing research and monitoring for the International Campaign to Ban Landmines and the Cluster Munition Coalition (ICBL-CMC).
www.the-monitor.org | www.icblcmc.org | @MineMonitor | [email protected]
For more information, see:- Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, www.the-monitor.org
- International Campaign to Ban Landmines, www.icblcmc.org/about-icbl
For more information, contact in Geneva, Switzerland (CEST/UTC+2):
- Charles Bechara, ICBL-CMC communications and media manager (English, French, Arabic), Tel. +41 78 323 51 44, [email protected].
Eléa Boureux, monitor project manager (English, French), Tel. +41 78 225 60 11, [email protected].
This is not an FCCT-organized event.
Free and open to all.
- The Politics of Coercion: State and Regime Making in CambodiaForeign Correspondents Club, Khet Pathum Wan
In 'The Politics of Coercion,' Neil Loughlin explains the persistence of Cambodia’s authoritarian regime for more than four decades. The book provides a historically grounded investigation of the country's ruling coalition: political elites, many drawn from within the state's coercive apparatus, who, in coordination with state-dependent tycoons, have come to control Cambodia's politics and economy. Loughlin presents new empirical data revealing the coercive underpinnings of the modern Cambodian state and its party, the Cambodian People's Party (CPP).
The focus on coercion reflects the regime's conflict, post-conflict evolution and extractive political economy, as the ruling coalition failed to channel popular interests through its political institutions. Thus, it resorts either to low-intensity forms of coercion, such as intimidation and surveillance, or to high-intensity coercion, such as violent crackdowns and extrajudicial killings.
Through a critical reevaluation of the regime's origins and evolution in its relationship with citizens, 'The Politics of Coercion' reconceptualizes the CPP to emphasize the obstacles -- structural, institutional and distributional -- to building a mass-based clientelist or developmentally legitimate authoritarian party.
Dr Neil Loughlin is a senior lecturer (associate professor) in comparative politics at City St George's, University of London. Neil’s research focuses on comparative authoritarian politics and the political economy of development, with an emphasis on Southeast Asia.Members who wish to book in advance should email [email protected] or call the FCCT office on 02-652-0580.
Non-members can use this link.
Members free, non-members 300 baht; Thai media and students with ID, 150 baht.
Bar and restaurant open.
- Opening ceremony of Baturu cultural festivalForeign Correspondents Club, Khet Pathum Wan
The United Nations General Assembly has designated 25 November as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women to raise awareness about all forms of violence against women.
The ‘Baturu Cultural Festival’ will take place over 10 days across Bangkok, bringing artists and filmmakers to Thailand from across the Asia-Pacific region to speak about women’s rights and the importance of international cultural communication. On November 25, the festival organizers will announce the schedule of film screenings, workshops and art exhibitions.
As part of the preparations for the 30th anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing+30), the Banturu Cultural Festival will also establish an Asia-Pacific women artists network to promote connections between feminist artists in the Asia-Pacific region and other parts of the world and promote public awareness via arts and culture of women's rights in Asia-Pacific countries.
The festival launch ceremony at the FCCT will bring together diplomats, international organization representatives, UN agency staff, international and local media, artists and film makers and local NGO activists. During the ceremony, the leaders of the Baturu Festival will present the plan and activities of the festival in Bangkok, accompanied by interventions by partners in Thailand, who will discuss their cooperation with the festival. Artists and filmmakers on women’s rights will also introduce their work and programs. Following the ceremony, there will be time for social engagement and networking.
Advance booking is required, people planning to attend are requested to RSVP (indicating name, organization, and contact information) to email: [email protected]This is not an FCCT-organized event.
Free and open to all. Food and beverages will be available.