
Poland’s diplomatic network continued crisis-management efforts on 7 March 2026, with the Embassy in Singapore issuing an urgent travel notice on its gov.pl microsite. The post directs Polish citizens currently in Thailand to a dedicated LOT Polish Airlines web form where they can register interest in repatriation flights from Bangkok to Warsaw, tentatively planned for 11 March or later, depending on demand and overflight clearances. Before finalising any evacuation or onward travel, Polish travellers may also want to address documentation gaps early. VisaHQ’s dedicated Poland portal (https://www.visahq.com/poland/) can fast-track passport renewals, secure extra visa pages, and advise on Thai entry regulations, helping citizens avoid the blank-page and six-month-validity pitfalls now triggering denials at Suvarnabhumi. The advisory reiterates Thai entry rules: passports must be valid for at least six months; visa-exempt stays for tourists remain capped at 60 days; and since May 2025 all foreign passengers must complete the Thailand Digital Arrival Card (TDAC) up to three days before arrival. Importantly for mobility managers, the embassy reminds travellers that Thai authorities will refuse entry if passports show damage or lack blank pages—issues that have already stranded several Polish backpackers at Suvarnabhumi this week. For corporate security teams the key takeaway is that Poland is proactively mapping citizen locations across Southeast Asia as Middle-East airspace closures continue to snarl global flight paths. Registration data will allow LOT and the MFA’s Crisis Management Department to right-size aircraft and prioritise vulnerable travellers, including those on business assignments nearing visa-expiry. The embassy asks registrants to keep phones on and maintain flexibility: exact departure dates, fares and baggage limits will be confirmed only after a critical mass of sign-ups is reached. Companies with expatriate staff in Thailand should ensure employees register promptly and verify that travel insurance covers “government-organised evacuation fares,” which can be higher than standard one-way tickets.