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Swedish Elias came to Thailand for a holiday. Today he plays for the national football team​

March 8, 2026 - by Helene Sadjadi-Munk

A visit to family in southern Thailand changed the course of Swedish-born defender Elias Dolah’s life. Eleven years later he plays for the Thai national team and has built a life far from the small village outside Lund where he grew up.​


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Elias Dolah grew up in a small village outside Lund in southern Sweden before football eventually took him to Thailand. Photo: Helene Sadjadi-Munk

Bangkok moves fast.

Motorbikes squeeze between cars. Taxis honk. People rush past cafés and food stalls.

In the middle of it all is Elias Dolah. Calm. Almost unmoved by the pace around him.

People recognise him. Several stop to say hello as they pass. A quick greeting here. A short conversation there. Colleagues from football. Someone who knows his fiancée. And his fiancée herself. Familiar faces appearing in the middle of the Bangkok rush.

It says something about him.

Yusef Elias Dolah, who just goes by Elias, is not loud or attention-seeking. But people seem to gravitate towards him. He greets everyone with the same easy smile before continuing on his way.

“I actually feel like Bangkok goes a bit too fast for me,” he says quietly.

“My fiancée, Dorothy, grew up in Phuket, and I can definitely see myself living there one day.”

The two met in Bangkok about six years ago at a birthday party through mutual friends.

“We clicked immediately,” Dolah says.

She even gave him a nickname that some fans now use when they recognise him.

“She calls me ‘P Jak’ which means big giant,” he says with a smile.

For now, however, the 32-year-old defender is firmly rooted in Thai football. Nearly two metres tall, he has become a recognisable figure on the national team and in the Thai League. He currently plays on loan at BG Pathum United from Buriram United.

But the road here began far away from Thailand.

Growing up Swedish

Elias Dolah was born near Lund in southern Sweden.

His father is Thai, originally from the three southern provinces where many people identify as Malay Muslims. His name Yusef Elias itself comes from the Quran.

Yet Elias’ childhood felt unmistakably Swedish.

“I grew up in a small village outside Lund. All my friends were Swedish. That shapes you.”

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More than a decade after arriving in Thailand as a young player, the country has gradually become home. Photo: Helene Sadjadi-Munk
He grew up with an older brother and an older sister in a household where family routines mattered and where time together was important.

In modern life, he says, it is easy to lose those small traditions that keep a family close. In his home, his father made sure that did not happen.

“My dad always said dinner together was important. You could not miss dinner.”

In that way, his father also carried parts of his own background into the household. Not through strict rules, but through small things – traditions, culture and the values he had brought with him from southern Thailand.

“He never enforced religion on us. But he brought culture with him.”

And growing up between cultures sometimes left questions.

“My siblings and I would sometimes wonder a bit who we were,” Dolah says.

“It can be difficult to find your identity when you grow up between places.”

Sport eventually became the space where identity felt simple.

“I played everything when I was young. Football, floorball, badminton, table tennis. Even hockey in the winter, when the local lake froze.”

Music also filled his teenage years.

“I played bass in a band from when I was about 15 until I moved to Thailand at 20. My brother played saxophone. The band was with friends I had known since childhood.”

But football slowly began to take centre stage.

After finishing school he joined Lund’s team in Sweden’s third division. The level was semi-professional, which meant football alone could not pay the bills.

“So I worked as a substitute teacher at the high school I had gone to,” he says.

“And I also worked in the village grocery store.”

At the same time he was applying for university. One programme in particular caught his attention.

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Nearly two metres tall, Elias Dolah has become a commanding presence in defence for both club and country. Photo: Supakit Wisetanuphong

“I applied to become a fire engineer.”

He pauses for a moment when he says it.

“And I’m so happy I didn’t get accepted.”

He ended up number ten on the waiting list. Looking back, he believes that rejection changed everything.

The decisive envelope

While still under contract with Lund, Dolah travelled to Thailand with his father to visit family.

At the time he still had a year left on his contract in Sweden and had no plan to leave Europe for good. The trip was simply meant as a visit.

During the stay his father suggested that he try training with a local club in southern Thailand.

After a few days, the club owner came to meet him.

“He said he really liked me and wanted me to come back and play for him.”

Then came the moment Dolah still remembers clearly.

“He gave me an envelope with 50,000 baht in cash.”

For a young player who had been juggling football with substitute teaching and supermarket shifts in Sweden, the offer felt surreal.

“I was still on holiday but I thought: okay, let’s go.”

He returned to Sweden to finish his contract with Lund. But the idea had already taken hold.

The following year, at just 20 years old, he moved to Thailand.

Injuries, loss and resilience

The move to Thailand did not lead to instant success.

In his first season he played only seven matches before suffering a serious knee injury.

“I slid into the goal post and had multiple injuries in my knee.”

The injury kept him out for more than a year. And injuries have continued to test him throughout his career.

Most recently he spent months recovering from a torn Achilles tendon. For a footballer, that kind of waiting can be mentally exhausting.

“It was kind of depressing. You see your teammates play, and you just want to play yourself – but something is stopping you.”

Determined to recover, he searched for help wherever he could find it. At one point, that search even took him to Lebanon to work with a specialist.

“I flew to Beirut to see a guy who works with fascia in the muscles. We did very strange exercises, but it helped,” he says.

The trip became memorable for another reason as well.

IMG_0106-735x551.jpg
As he moves through Bangkok, Elias Dolah is often stopped by familiar faces – friends, colleagues and people who recognise him from football. Photo: Helene Sadjadi-Munk
“While I was there, Israel bombed Beirut. I could hear drones flying overhead.”

But the hardest moment of his career had nothing to do with football.

Two years ago his mother passed away after battling cancer.

At the time Dolah was playing for Bali United and travelling with the team. He was in Hong Kong for a match when his sister called.

“She told me I had to come home immediately.”

He flew from Hong Kong to Copenhagen and then took a taxi across the Øresund Bridge to Sweden, telling the taxi driver to go as fast as possible.

He arrived during the day. Later that night his mother passed away.

“It almost felt like she was waiting for me to come home.”

During this period, football became one of the few places where his mind could briefly rest.

“When you’re playing football it’s a relief. You forget what you’re struggling with.”

Building something beyond football

More than a decade after arriving, Thailand has gradually become home.

When Elias Dolah first came to the country, the goal was clear.

“My dream was always to play for the national team.”

In the early days he stayed in a hotel that overlooked the stadium. From his room he could see the pitch.

“I remember thinking: one day I want to play there.”

Today he has represented Thailand internationally for several years. Looking back, he still finds it difficult to fully grasp how far the journey has taken him.

“Thailand has given me so much – things I couldn’t even imagine ten years ago. I’m super grateful for my journey.”

Much of that journey has been tied to Buriram United, one of Thailand’s most successful football clubs. The team has won the Thai League multiple times and regularly competes in the AFC Champions League.

The club is led by a former national politician who is widely respected in Buriram for helping develop the city.

Inside the club, the relationship with the leadership feels almost familial.

“We actually call him ‘dad’ at the club,” Dolah says with a smile.

While Dolah’s playing career continues, he has also begun to think about what comes after football. A few years ago he helped start a football academy in Bangkok together with two partners.

“I co-founded a football academy three years ago. We have about 150 kids now.”

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Off the pitch, Elias Dolah is now helping young players through a football academy he co-founded in Bangkok. Photo: Helene Sadjadi-Munk
The project grew out of a realisation that Dolah could not change everything happening in the world – but he could try to make a difference in his own surroundings.

“When I was younger I followed the news a lot. But I realised it didn’t give me anything. The world is so weird,” he says.

“I try to protect my peace. What I can’t control, I won’t bother too much about. I try to do what I can around me.”

One way of doing that is the academy.

“Some pay and some are on scholarships because many kids here need opportunities.”

For Dolah, the contrast with Scandinavia is noticable. Growing up in Sweden, organised sport was everywhere supported by schools, clubs and public funding.

“Here it’s different. Kids need opportunities.”

At the same time he is preparing for new national team matches and working on launching a gym project in Bangkok.

Yet when he thinks about the future, the picture is relatively simple:

Football for as long as the body allows.

Family.

And perhaps one day a quieter life closer to the sea. Maybe in Phuket, where Dorothy grew up.



Mvh isan lover

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Då kan du få ett svar.
I ett forum där det finns möjlighet att fråga, svara, skriva och till och med rita (om man så önskar)så finns det med andra ord fullt av utrymme för att uttrycka sin egen lilla åsikt om något…eller någon.

Vad säger en länk?
Är det tänkt att länken är någon fullständig fakta som inte kan motsägas?

Edit:
Sedan kan du kolla in inlägget ovan. Där kopierar man hela satans innehållet i länken och sedan själva länken till texten man ha kopierat.
Är det någon dröm om att vara ”Omni.se” som bara förmedlar andras nyheter?
Det spelar nog ingen som helst roll för dig om TV kommenterar en länk han lägger in eller inte. Reaktionen från dig blir en mycket elak kommentar, oavsett vilket. Lika sant som Amen i körka eller att Pfefp ger mig en skrattemoj för varje inlägg jag gör! 555
 
Det spelar nog ingen som helst roll för dig om TV kommenterar en länk han lägger in eller inte. Reaktionen från dig blir en mycket elak kommentar, oavsett vilket. Lika sant som Amen i körka eller att Pfefp ger mig en skrattemoj för varje inlägg jag gör! 555

Finns mer än en anledning till att han sedan väldigt länge ligger i botten av spam-filtret så man slipper se hans ständiga otrevligheter och barnsliga inlägg.
 
Då kan du få ett svar.
I ett forum där det finns möjlighet att fråga, svara, skriva och till och med rita (om man så önskar)så finns det med andra ord fullt av utrymme för att uttrycka sin egen lilla åsikt om något…eller någon.

Vad säger en länk?
Är det tänkt att länken är någon fullständig fakta som inte kan motsägas?

Edit:
Sedan kan du kolla in inlägget ovan. Där kopierar man hela satans innehållet i länken och sedan själva länken till texten man ha kopierat.
Är det någon dröm om att vara ”Omni.se” som bara förmedlar andras nyheter?

Hahaha har "konduktören" svarat mig i någon länk?
Jag ser inte det, han är ju så förbenat trist så efter långvarig tortyr blockade jag tomten så ser inte skräpet han spammar runt :)

/ SatanG
 
Du får ringa IT-supporten

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Jag gör ett nytt försök och tar med hela adressen denna gång.
 
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Mother in Sweden seeks help after daughter rescued in Pattaya abuse case​

March 6, 2026 - by Alexander Vittrup

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A Thai mother in Sweden sought help after her 15-year-old daughter was rescued in a Pattaya abuse case.

A Thai mother living in Sweden has appealed for help after her 15-year-old daughter was rescued in Pattaya following an abduction and sexual assault case involving two motorcycle taxi riders.

According to Thai media, the girl, who has learning difficulties, had been living in Chon Buri with her grandmother while her mother worked in Sweden. She was reported missing on 24 February after failing to arrive at school.

The mother contacted the Pavena Foundation for Children and Women from Sweden as the family searched for the teenager. She had also shared missing-person appeals online in Pattaya and said she planned to return to Thailand within days.

The girl was found on 26 February after escaping from a house near a motorcycle taxi stand in Nong Prue. Police later said two suspects were arrested on 27 February and face charges including rape, unlawful detention and child abduction for sexual purposes.

Thai authorities and child protection officials are now supporting the girl’s physical and mental recovery. The case has also drawn attention to the distress faced by Thai families overseas when serious crimes happen back home.



Mvh isan lover
 
Då kan du få ett svar.
I ett forum där det finns möjlighet att fråga, svara, skriva och till och med rita (om man så önskar)så finns det med andra ord fullt av utrymme för att uttrycka sin egen lilla åsikt om något…eller någon.

Vad säger en länk?
Är det tänkt att länken är någon fullständig fakta som inte kan motsägas?

Edit:
Sedan kan du kolla in inlägget ovan. Där kopierar man hela satans innehållet i länken och sedan själva länken till texten man ha kopierat.
Är det någon dröm om att vara ”Omni.se” som bara förmedlar andras nyheter?
Två år i varje klass...tror jag böckerna hette Sigge Nilsson?
 
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Swedish Red Notice Suspect Arrested in Bangkok​

15 hours ago

Immigration police have arrested a Swedish national wanted under an Interpol Red Notice, who had been hiding in a condominium in Bangkok’s Sukhumvit area. The suspect, identified as Mr. Knut, was also found to have overstayed his visa, prompting immediate legal action under Thai immigration law. Authorities say the arrest reinforces ongoing efforts to crack down on transnational crime in Thailand.

The operation was conducted on 17 March 2026 at around 17:00, following coordination between Thailand’s Immigration Bureau and the Swedish Embassy in Bangkok. The arrest was ordered under the direction of Pol Lt Gen Phanumart Boonyalak, Commissioner of the Immigration Bureau, along with senior officers overseeing efforts to target foreign criminals using Thailand as a base. Investigators, led by Pol Lt Col Sitthichai Khemklat, tracked the suspect after receiving intelligence that he was wanted in Sweden for serious offences.

According to immigration records, Mr. Knut entered Thailand on 5 December 2023 and was last granted permission to stay until 3 March 2026 by Chon Buri Immigration. Officials confirmed that his permitted stay had expired, placing him in overstay status at the time of arrest. He was subsequently charged with remaining in the Kingdom beyond his authorised period and handed over to local investigators for legal proceedings.

Authorities emphasised that the arrest highlights the importance of international cooperation, particularly with organisations such as Interpol. The Immigration Bureau stated that intelligence-sharing with foreign agencies is a key strategy in identifying and apprehending fugitives who attempt to evade justice by relocating abroad. The case also reflects growing scrutiny of foreign nationals residing in Thailand beyond permitted visa conditions.

Naewna reported that officials confirmed that Mr. Knut will face legal proceedings in Thailand related to his overstay, while preparations are underway to coordinate his deportation. He is expected to be returned to Sweden to face charges linked to the Interpol Red Notice issued against him. The Immigration Bureau reiterated its commitment to strengthening cross-border enforcement and ensuring public safety through continued collaboration with international partners.


image.png

Picture courtesy of Naewna


Mvh isan lover
 
Hej

Swedish Red Notice Suspect Arrested in Bangkok​

15 hours ago

Immigration police have arrested a Swedish national wanted under an Interpol Red Notice, who had been hiding in a condominium in Bangkok’s Sukhumvit area. The suspect, identified as Mr. Knut, was also found to have overstayed his visa, prompting immediate legal action under Thai immigration law. Authorities say the arrest reinforces ongoing efforts to crack down on transnational crime in Thailand.

The operation was conducted on 17 March 2026 at around 17:00, following coordination between Thailand’s Immigration Bureau and the Swedish Embassy in Bangkok. The arrest was ordered under the direction of Pol Lt Gen Phanumart Boonyalak, Commissioner of the Immigration Bureau, along with senior officers overseeing efforts to target foreign criminals using Thailand as a base. Investigators, led by Pol Lt Col Sitthichai Khemklat, tracked the suspect after receiving intelligence that he was wanted in Sweden for serious offences.

According to immigration records, Mr. Knut entered Thailand on 5 December 2023 and was last granted permission to stay until 3 March 2026 by Chon Buri Immigration. Officials confirmed that his permitted stay had expired, placing him in overstay status at the time of arrest. He was subsequently charged with remaining in the Kingdom beyond his authorised period and handed over to local investigators for legal proceedings.

Authorities emphasised that the arrest highlights the importance of international cooperation, particularly with organisations such as Interpol. The Immigration Bureau stated that intelligence-sharing with foreign agencies is a key strategy in identifying and apprehending fugitives who attempt to evade justice by relocating abroad. The case also reflects growing scrutiny of foreign nationals residing in Thailand beyond permitted visa conditions.

Naewna reported that officials confirmed that Mr. Knut will face legal proceedings in Thailand related to his overstay, while preparations are underway to coordinate his deportation. He is expected to be returned to Sweden to face charges linked to the Interpol Red Notice issued against him. The Immigration Bureau reiterated its commitment to strengthening cross-border enforcement and ensuring public safety through continued collaboration with international partners.


image.png

Picture courtesy of Naewna


Mvh isan lover

Helt sjukt!
Utvisa folk då dom bidrar ekonomiskt.

Bojkotta Thailand!
Pk till….finland
 
 

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