Drunk prostitute bites off tourist’s ear before swallowing it in front of him

A tourist had parts of his right earlobe bitten off and swallowed in front of him by a drunk Thai prostitute.

Kannika Kamton, 25, is said to have approached the 55-year-old tourist after hopping onto an open-back bus in Thailand while “severely intoxicated from alcohol”.

She boarded the vehicle after it stopped at a traffic light in Pattaya before launching her attack on the tourist who was in the car.

The s*x worker allegedly sunk her teeth into the man’s right ear lobe as passengers watched on in horror on Saturday night, August 20.

As the victim screamed in agony, Kamton swallowed the chunk of flesh. Kamton tried to run off before police were called, but she was seized by cops after being handcuffed to a truck.

She was then taken to the local police station to sober up. Officers bandaged up the holidaymaker’s ear while he was “bleeding heavily” on the side of a busy road, before he was taken to a hospital for emergency treatment.

Police Lieutenant Colonel Saijai Kamchula said: “An officer took control of the attacker, but she kicked the officer with her feet and resisted arrest, so extra help was needed to restrain her.

“The detained woman will be prosecuted. There were many witnesses and the victim wants to have the woman detained and prosecuted.” Kamton’s motive for the alleged attack currently remains unclear.

SEE WHAT HAPPENED IN THAILAND THIS MORNING!!!

Thailand crash: Bus collides with train, killing 18

A bus has collided with a train in Thailand, killing at least 18 people and injuring dozens more, officials say. The crash happened on Sunday morning, 50km (31 miles) east of Bangkok.

Thai police said passengers inside the bus were on their way to a temple to mark the end of Buddhist Lent.Rescue workers on getting to the scene requested a crane to be able to lift the bus.

Furthermore, there were 60 passengers travelling in the bus at the time of the crash, province governor Maitree Tritilanond said.

Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha gave his condolences and called for a thorough investigation.

Traffic collisions are common in Thailand, with poor safety standards and busy roads thought to be key factors. A 2018 report from the World Health Organization (WHO) said Thailand had the second-highest traffic fatality rate in the world.

In March 2018, at least 18 people died and dozens wounded when a bus in north eastern Thailand swerved off the road and smashed into a tree.

At least three people were killed in 2016 when a train collided with a double-decker bus carrying tourists at an unguarded railway crossing west of Bangkok.

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