sickness

Inside abandoned ‘ghost ship’ hotel left to rot after tragedy and sickness

A massive, seven storey ship that was once used as a luxury hotel in a Thai resort was deserted after reports of a curse and the apparent death of one of its workers

It was supposed to be a luxurious and unique destination in one of Thailand’s most beautiful areas, but a catalogue of disasters led to the downfall of an infamous hotel that locals believed was cursed.

The Galaxy looked like a huge cruise liner that had come aground on the unspoilt banks of the shore, but it was actually a seven storey structure its owner hoped would attract thousands of tourists.

Following its demise, it became a hotspot for urban explorers desperate to get inside the eerie ship – to discover what remained of the once glamorous interior for themselves.

One of these was US social media influencer Joshua T Yozura. He visited the site which lies seven hours south of Bangkok on Thailand’s third largest island, Koh Chang.

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The blogger shared his findings with his followers on his YouTube series, Exploring with Josh, where he explained the dark and mysterious history behind the abandoned ship.

It started out as a US Navy vessel before it was converted to a traditional Thai ship. A resident billionaire then bought the boat because his dream was to own a floating hotel. It was originally supposed to be located in Phnom Pen, Cambodia, but after that didn’t work out it was placed on Koh Chang instead.

The resort, which is now abandoned, sits deep in the jungle on a beautiful lagoon known as Koh Chang Lagoona. Back in 1998 it was popular with tourists who could stay in the impressive bungalows dotted about or on the ship which dominated the area.

The hotel sat on land next to a long untouched beach and swimming pools in the area were designed to look like a ship’s deck.

Originally the seven storey hotel and its 70 guest rooms were said to be the height of luxury with plush carpets, chandeliers and highly trained staff. When Josh visited the site, he witnessed a dilapidated wreck, with the once gleaming white exterior marked with streaks of brown rust.

The structure remained in the original plot, surrounded by palm trees and lush vegetation but there was a spooky silence in the deserted area. He and his crew had hoped to get inside the hotel to see what remained of the accommodation but they were followed by a man who told them to leave.

He explained that a variety of factors led to the failure of the impressive hotel. Its bad luck began when a Banyan tree was knocked down so the ship could sit in its location in the lagoon. This angered the highly religious and spiritual locals who believed the tree was sacred to the land, as were the elephants who could no longer roam freely. This was the moment that the hotel’s reputation of being cursed was born.

Josh revealed that apparently when the hotel was active a lot of workers and guests became sick, had falls and even died. “There’s a lot of legends and rumours that say people used to jump from the top of the ship to the bottom,” he said. “I can’t prove that online, it’s always up in the air with stuff like this. There was an article I read that a Russian guy actually got hurt and fell and died on the ship – it’s hard to say [if it’s true].”

As well as the spiritual ‘curse’, the hotel was doomed by its tropical location. The area, which was surrounded by water, was infested with mosquitoes. This led to Dengue fever and malaria and meant guests were fearful of staying there. It was also extremely humid and the ship was difficult to keep cool, which made for a very uncomfortable holiday.

When it eventually closed to staying guests in 2012 it was possible for a time to buy tickets to explore the ‘haunted’ relic with its many decks. However after the pandemic, the resort itself closed down because of lack of finances and tourism.

Then in December 2024 the ship mysteriously caught fire and was destroyed. It was left to smoulder before workers set about dismantling the top sections and removing materials for scrap. All that remains of the bizarre, ‘supernatural’ hotel is the charred hull and a wealth of folklore and legends.

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Ban some foreigners from sickness benefits, Badenoch urges

Paul Seddon

Political reporter

PA Media Kemi Badenoch gives a speech in front of a podium reading: "Conservatives". She is standing in front of a red backdrop reading: "CSJ The Centre for Social Justice" and two union jacks.PA Media

Kemi Badenoch has called for foreign nationals to be barred from claiming disability and sickness benefits, as she set out plans for tighter curbs on welfare.

In a speech on Thursday, the Tory leader described Britain’s benefits bill as a “ticking time bomb” that could “collapse” the economy.

It comes after the party outlined some of its own proposals to reduce spending, after Labour largely gutted its own plan for benefits cuts after a backbench revolt.

Legislation to bring in remaining government cuts to sickness benefits was approved by MPs on Wednesday evening.

But other proposals, including changes to the eligibility criteria for disability benefits, have effectively been put on hold.

The government announced plans to shrink welfare spending in March, warning the working-age welfare bill was set to rise by nearly £30bn by 2030 and reforms to the system were required to ensure it remained sustainable.

It wanted to make it harder to claim personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability benefit in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and make health-related top-ups for universal credit less generous.

But ministers significantly watered down the cuts earlier this month after a huge rebellion from Labour MPs, all but wiping out savings estimated to be worth £5bn a year by the end of the decade.

Plans to freeze the higher rate of universal credit for existing health-related claimants have been reversed, whilst all changes to the Pip system have been parked pending a government review into the assessment regime.

In her speech on Thursday, Badenoch accused Labour of being “beholden to left-wing MPs” and “turning a blind eye” to rising benefit costs.

She also sought to create a dividing line with Reform UK over the two-child benefit cap, which Nigel Farage’s party has pledged to scrap, branding him “Jeremy Corbyn with a pint and a cigarette”.

“On welfare he shows his true colours – promising unaffordable giveaways with no plan to fix the system,” she said.

Labour is under pressure from some of its own MPs to lift the cap, which was introduced under the Conservatives and prevents most families from claiming means-tested benefits for any third or additional children born after April 2017.

A Labour spokesperson said: “The Conservatives had 14 years to reform welfare – instead, they left the country with a broken system that holds people back and fails to support the most vulnerable.”

The party also warned that the Conservative proposal could see disabled British nationals living abroad being denied support if other countries decided to take a similar approach.

Tory welfare proposals

The Conservatives have not backed the government’s legislation to deliver changes to the welfare system, arguing its proposals do not go far enough.

They have proposed that disability and sickness benefits should only be paid to British citizens, with exceptions for those covered by international agreements, such as citizens from EU countries who have acquired settled status in the UK.

At the moment, foreign nationals gain access to the welfare system when they are granted indefinite leave to remain or refugee status. Applicants for Pip generally need to have lived in Britain for at least two of the last three years.

Asylum seekers are not allowed to apply for benefits, although they have access to taxpayer-funded accommodation and separate financial support.

“We can’t afford to be spending a billion pounds a month on benefits for foreign nationals,” Badenoch said.

“It is not unreasonable to expect someone to have paid in and become a British citizen before they unlock access to sickness benefits.”

The party says figures obtained under freedom of information laws show universal credit payments to households containing at least one foreign national stood at £941m a month as of March.

But working out the exact scale of payments to non-UK nationals specifically is complicated, because the Department for Work and Pensions does not provide a breakdown of claimants by immigration status and nationality.

However, the department is due to publish the first such breakdown next week, and has committed to updates every three months thereafter.

Other Tory proposals include limiting access to Pips and the health-related part of universal credit to those with “less severe” mental health conditions, and preventing claimants from receiving payments without a face-to-face assessment.

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Bruce Springsteen speaks out on Trump again at Manchester concert

The beef is building between Bruce Springsteen and President Trump.

The Boss did not back down on his fiery rhetoric against Trump on the third night of his “Land of Hopes and Dreams” tour in Manchester, England, on Saturday — a day after Trump lashed out against the legendary singer on Truth Social, calling him an “obnoxious jerk,” a “dried out ‘prune’ of a rocker,” and writing that he should “keep his mouth shut.”

Springsteen didn’t oblige. In a resolute three-minute speech from the Co-op Live venue, Springsteen thanked his cheering audience for indulging him in a speech about the state of America: “Things are happening right now that are altering the very nature of our country’s democracy, and they’re too important to ignore.”

He then repeated many of the lines that he used during a previous Manchester show — the same words that upset Trump to begin with, including the administration defunding American universities, the rolling back of civil rights legislation and siding with dictators, “against those who are struggling for their freedoms.”

Trump’s Truth Social post contained what appeared to be a threat, writing of Springsteen, “We’ll see how it goes for him,” when he gets back to the country. This did not dissuade the “Born in the USA” singer.

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“In my home, they’re persecuting people for their right to free speech and voicing their dissent. That’s happening now,” Springsteen said. “In America, the richest men are taking satisfaction in abandoning the world’s poorest children to sickness and death. That’s happening now. In my country, they’re taking sadistic pleasure in the pain they inflict on loyal American workers.”

In a steady voice, he listed the many concerns of those who oppose Trump, his enablers and his policies.

“They are removing residents off American streets without due process of law and deploying them to foreign detention centers as prisoners. That’s happening now. The majority of our elected representatives have utterly failed to protect the American people from the abuses of an unfit president and a rogue government,” Springsteen said as the crowd applauded and yelled its support. “They have no concern or idea of what it means to be deeply American.”

He finished on a positive note.

“The America I’ve sung to you about for 50 years is real, and regardless of its many faults, it’s a great country with a great people, and we will survive this moment. Well, I have hope, because I believe in the truth of what the great American writer James Baldwin said. He said, ‘In this world, there isn’t as much humanity as one would like, but there’s enough.’ ”

Springsteen has long been a vocal critic of Trump, and campaigned for former Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 election. Trump is known for his angry diatribes against celebrities who criticize him, including Taylor Swift and Robert DeNiro.

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Sickness benefits crackdown is critical for the health of both the economy and young people

Gen Z scars

A CRACKDOWN on the number of people on sickness benefits is not only critical for the economic health of the country but also for the health of our young people.

Britain cannot afford for a large swathe of Generation Z — or any other generation — to be idle. The Gen Zedders themselves can’t afford to be left behind.

The last thing young people need is to be left languishing on welfare handouts

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The last thing young people need is to be left languishing on welfare handoutsCredit: Getty

Yes, many mental health problems are genuine enough, as Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall concedes.

But plenty more are self-diagnosed and encouraged by social media.

Many of today’s 18-25s have plenty to be stressed about — saddled with education debt, facing global financial instability and with rapidly diminishing prospects of ever owning their own home.

But the last thing they need is to be left languishing on welfare handouts.

Work will give them purpose, new skills, and an essential sense of their worth in the world. And they have so much to offer to employers willing to trust in them.

The Government must make sure they are learning skills that are needed, and make it easier for firms to employ young people and give them a leg-up in life.

Not put more and more obstacles in their way.

Non-policing

A NEW report for Policy Exchange has found that more than 60,000 police hours are spent investigating social media posts.

What a shameful waste of police resources that should be used to tackle real crime — such as rape, burglary, shoplifting, illegal drugs and the explosion of knife offences — and what an outrageous attack on our precious freedom of speech.

The probes are often not into criminal offences, like incitement to violence, but into “non-crime hate incidents” — NCHIs — that anyone with hurt feelings can make a complaint about.

Sherrell Dillion feature on Benefits fraud figures

Former Detective Chief Inspector David Spencer, who has highlighted this nonsense, is perfectly justified in calling for NCHIs to be abolished.

If they are “non-crimes”, then what on earth have they got to do with the police? Absolutely nothing.

Strike spikers

IS there any crime more cowardly than drink-spiking?

Pathetic men increasingly use this vile method to prey on girls enjoying a night out, and it is likely to get worse as we head into the festive party season.

Home Office minister Jess Phillips is right to describe it as a diabolical act.

Training for bar staff and security guards to spot the crime, and to help the victims, is welcome, but even more so is making spiking a specific criminal offence, rather than cases falling under several different laws as now.

We look forward to the perpetrators spending long spells in jail.

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‘Markets turn on Reeves’ and ‘rising sickness claims bill’

The headline in the Financial Times reads: "Borrowing costs tick up as investors digest Reeves Budget debt demands".

The fallout from the Budget delivered on Wednesday continues to dominate the front pages. The Financial Times says the government’s borrowing costs rose to their highest level this year on Thursday amid investor worries over the additional debt required by the government’s plans. The paper says the rise took rates closer to those seen after Liz Truss’s 2022 mini-budget, which sparked a financial crisis, though adds that “many played down any parallels”, and quotes one analyst saying “this does not look like a repeat of the market reaction” then.

The headline in the Telegraph reads: "Markets turn on Reeves over tax burden".

The Daily Telegraph says markets have “turned on” Chancellor Rachel Reeves and are “dumping UK assets in a swift rebuke of [her] debt-fuelled spending plans”. It quotes from an interview with Bloomberg in which Reeves sought to reassure the markets, saying public finances were on a “stable trajectory” and that “fiscal stability” was her “number one commitment”.

The headline in the i reads: "Interest rates will fall more slowly after Budget, economics warn".

Economists have warned that interest rates will fall more slowly as a result of the Budget, according to the i. But the paper also quotes the International Monetary Fund backing the Budget and saying that it supports the “envisaged reduction in the deficit over the medium term”.

The headline in the Guardian reads: "Reeves told she will have to raise further £9bn for public services".

The Guardian says Reeves has been warned that an extra £9bn in tax rises may be required to avoid a fresh round of austerity for some public services. It quotes Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, saying that Reeves is effectively pretending that she plans to provide generous funding to government departments and rein in public spending later. “That’s not going to happen,” he says. “The spending plans will not survive contact with her cabinet colleagues.”

The headline in the Sun reads: "A kick in the bullocks".

“A kick in the bullocks”, reads the headline in the Sun. The paper says farmers are furious over changes that mean family farmers will have to pay inheritance tax at an effective rate of 20% on assets worth more than £1m. It says some are warning of “massive disruption” and possible food shortages because of the move.

The headline in the Mail reads: "Reeves' tax raid to cost charities £1.4 billion a year".

The Daily Mail says the chancellor’s decision to increase the national insurance contributions paid by employers will cost charities £1.4bn a year. The paper says charity bosses have warned the change may mean they will have to cut services, lay off staff, and even close down, and that they have asked Reeves to exempt them from the tax altogether.

The headline in the Times reads: "Soaring cost of sickness claims".

The total cost of sickness benefits is on course to reach £100bn a year by the end of this parliamentary term, according to the Times. The paper says a surge in claims after the pandemic is becoming permanent because of a decline in the population’s health, and that Britain is unusual in the developed world in not seeing a decline in the numbers after the pandemic passed. Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall is quoted calling the trend “unacceptable” and saying the government will “bring forward a proper plan to get Britain working”.

The headline in the Metro reads: "400 victims of al Fayed".

The Metro reports that a total of 421 people have told lawyers they were victims of or witnesses to sexual abuse by former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed. The paper reports that the Justice for Harrods Survivors group says most of the alleged abuse took place “in the Harrods context”, though some was at Fulham FC, which Al Fayed also owned at the time, and elsewhere. Harrods’ new owners have previously said they were “utterly appalled” by the allegations and were investigating whether any current staff were involved.

The headline in the Mirror reads: "Trapped in nightmare: Spain counts death toll as world braces for more climate change disaster".

And the Daily Mirror carries a picture of a street in Valencia devastated by the floods that have swept through eastern and southern Spain in recent days. The paper says the death toll has reached 158, with rescuers desperately hunting for survivors, and that residents are “trapped in a nightmare”. It also quotes experts blaming climate change for the flooding and warning that more disasters are to come.

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