brad brace contemporary culture scrapbook

September 26, 2007

Thailand to buy foreign arms

Filed under: General,global islands,military,thailand — admin @ 4:41 am

Thailand’s post-coup government has approved the 6.7 billion baht purchase of Israeli guns, Ukrainian armoured vehicles and Chinese missiles, a cabinet spokesman said.

The army would spend 960 million baht on 15,000 rifles and 259 million baht on 992 sub-machine guns from Israel, Nattawat Suthiyothin said after a cabinet meeting.

The cabinet also approved 3.9 billion baht for 96 Ukraine-built BTR-3E1 armoured personnel vehicles, produced by state-owned Kharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design Bureau, after heavy lobbying by Russia, China, and Canada failed.

The navy would pay 1.6 billion baht for ground-to-ground missiles from China, Nattawat said without giving further details.

The military, which ousted elected Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in a bloodless coup last year, has faced criticism for buying new equipment at a time when Thailand’s economic growth has slowed due to post-coup political uncertainties.

Defence Minister Boonrawd Somtas told Reuters last month the military needed new tanks, ships, fighter jets and helicopters after the 1997/98 Asian financial crisis had capped annual defence spending at 80 billion baht in the past decade.

Next year’s budget allocates 143 billion baht to defence spending.

September 19, 2007

Thailand makes fish-skin bikinis

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 5:58 am

The fish-skin bikini is a new fashion trend in Thailand. Made out of tilapia skin, a waterproof bikini costs $75. Tilapia fish skin used to be sold for a few cents as a fried snack, but a few years ago its skin became well known in the leather market for its durability. A Thai leather vendor made a bikini from pieces of 15 fish stitched together. The fish skin, which now costs about $1.25, is dried and dyed. The bikini was unveiled at a fashion show, and tilapia skin is now used for handbags and shoes as well.

August 28, 2007

WordPress Blocked in Thailand, Turkey

Filed under: General,media,thailand — admin @ 4:48 am

According to the watchdog website Don’t Block This Blog (DBTB.org), the nations of Thailand and Turkey just recently blocked the entire WordPress.com domain for all Internet users.

In Thailand, visitors to the blocked websites will see a message in Thai which translates as follows.

“Sorry. TOT Plc., as an organization of Thai people, has restrained the access to this website as it contains content, text, and/or picture that is unappropriated which affects the mind of Thai people all over the country and cannot be accepted.”

Therefore, the government has determined that the “mind of Thai people” is affected by “unappropriated” material at WordPress.com. It’s not clear what “unappropriated” means.

Regarding WordPress being blocked in Turkey, it appears that one blog owned by a proponent of creationism prompted a court order to block the entire WordPress domain. However, an effort has been launched to collect signature on a petition to unblock blogs in Turkey.

Meanwhile, it appears that all Blogspot blogs are still banned in Pakistan. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority initially instituted the ban in March 2006 on Blogspot as a result of one blog carrying the infamous cartoons of Muhammad. However, a savvy blogger block workaround for determined bloggers has been developed using Google Docs.

August 18, 2007

Inside Thailand’s Amulet Craze

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 5:20 am

NAKHON SI THAMMARAT, Thailand — Not so long ago, Nakhon Si Thammarat was a sleepy town with no obvious tourist attractions — or tourists. Its economy revolved around shrimp farming and fishing.

Now this provincial capital in southern Thailand is crawling with thousands of visitors each week. The big draw: amulets, some as small as three centimeters wide, called Jatukam Ramathep.

Thais are big believers in the supernatural. Amulets, which come in various materials and sizes and are usually worn around the neck, are basically lucky charms thought to have magical powers that protect from physical and spiritual harm as well as bring good fortune. Thailand is predominantly a Buddhist country and the amulets usually depict famous monks or the Buddha.
[Amulet map]

Thailand has seen its share of amulet crazes over the years. But the Jatukam Ramathep medallion — which depicts a mythical figure that resembles a Hindu god with multiple arms and heads — has set new heights in the annals of amulet history. And at its birthplace in the town of Nakhon Si Thammarat, most buyers seem to be snapping them up more for their supposed power to deliver instant riches than for their promise of good health.

“Every province has its amulets, so I’ve asked myself, ‘Why this one, and why has it become so popular now?'” asks Patrick Jory, a history professor from Australia who teaches at Walailak University in Nakhon Si Thammarat province. The answer, he thinks, lies in Thailand’s weak economy and the political instability gripping the country, particularly a Muslim insurgency in the area around Nakhon Si Thammarat, a Buddhist stronghold that so far hasn’t seen conflict. There is “this sense that maybe we’re losing the south,” Mr. Jory says, so many Thais are turning to the supernatural world for help. Popular demand for Jatukam Ramathep amulets also might be a way of expressing solidarity with the beleaguered Buddhists in the southernmost provinces, he adds.

Nithit Somsimme, who has traveled to Nakhon Si Thammarat to shop for an amulet, is a believer. Mr. Nithit owns a real-estate valuation business in northeast Thailand. After his father-in-law gave him a Jatukam Ramathep amulet a few years ago, his business boomed — an outcome he attributes “100%” to the amulet. Mr. Nithit now plans to expand his business, and he wants to buy another amulet before going ahead. He’s willing to pay up to 100,000 baht ($3,200) — in cash — for the right one. “It has to be a special one,” he says before strolling off to peruse the town’s wares, which include medallions with auspicious-sounding names such as “Enormously Super Rich” and “Get Rich Quickly.”

Gold and Ivory

To the untrained eye, Jatukam Ramathep amulets might not look like much: the most popular size is five centimeters in diameter but they can be bigger. Most are decorated with a many-armed Hindu-esque god on one side and on the other, a demon-god eating the moon or a mandala, a geometric pattern that represents the universe.

Some are fashioned out of ivory and gilded in gold, silver or bronze. Typically, though, they’re made of more humble materials, such as dried jasmine, tree bark, sacred soil, medicinal herbs and holy water, all of which are mixed together and pressed into a mold, often by monks. The amulets are then glazed or touched up with gold and silver paint. They are often marketed in series, and prices start at less than $2 (about double the price of other kinds of amulets), and can go up to several thousand dollars. And as prices have climbed, speculators and investors have jumped in.

Fake plastic versions abound, especially in Bangkok’s night markets. But unless a Jatukam Ramathep amulet is registered and consecrated at Wat Phra Mahathat Woramahawihan, a 13th century temple in Nakhon Si Thammarat, it isn’t regarded as being official, and is believed to have fewer magical powers.

As to who exactly Jatukam Ramathep is, no one knows for sure, says Narong Bunsuaikhwan, a sociologist from Walailak University. Some people say it’s the spirit of a 17th-century king. Others believe the figure represents two princes from the 13th century. And there is a coterie of academics and local town officials who are bent on proving that the figure is a genuine Hindu god.

But there is one thing most people agree on: It was the death about a year ago of the man who created the amulet, Phantarak Rajadej, the town’s former police chief, that sparked the current craze. An imposing figure with a handlebar moustache, he was said to have practiced black magic and could disappear into thin air at will. According to one story, the police chief created the amulet 20 years ago as a way to raise money for a city shrine.

Mamat Pengsut, a senior government official from a nearby district, swears by a Jatukam Ramathep amulet for its protective powers. Mr. Mamat wears one around his neck on a heavy chain. A few weeks ago, he contends, the amulet saved him — and eight other people who each were wearing one as well — from harm in a three-car pileup. Another person, the only one in the accident who wasn’t wearing a Jatukam Ramathep amulet, sustained a shoulder injury.

Stories like that keep people pouring into Nakhon Si Thammarat to buy the medallions.

The extent of the craze is far-reaching — stoked by marketing campaigns. According to Neilsen Media Research in Thailand, amulet purveyors spent $5 million between January and March this year alone on TV, radio and newspaper advertising for Jatukam Ramathep amulets. It’s even swept up tourists from Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong who are beating a path to Nakhon Si Thammarat.

In Bangkok, for instance — 780 kilometers north of Nakhon si Thammarat — Chinese-Thai businessmen in suits as well as noodle vendors proudly wear the medallions, sometimes more than one. Military figures and politicians are also believers. Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont presided over several unofficial Jatukam Ramathep amulet blessing ceremonies in June at a beach getaway destination near Bangkok favored by Thai high society.

About 70% of the people buying Jatukam Ramathep amulets are speculators who are betting that their value will skyrocket, says Paka-on Tipayathanabaja, a senior researcher for Kasikorn Research Center, a Bangkok financial-information company, who has tracked the amulet market for the past five years.

Consider the gain an investor could have made on the first edition of a Jatukam Ramathep amulet. When it was issued in 1987, the amulet cost about $1.30, says Mr. Narong, the sociologist from Walailak University who has a collection of rare Jatukam Ramathep pieces he says is worth more than $160,000. Today, Mr. Narong says that same medallion has been appraised by amulet experts at nearly $13,000. “Look at me,” says Mr. Narong, chuckling. “Even Ph.D.s have lucky charms.”

Online Amulets

Thailand’s amulet trade is well established. Every major Thai town has shops that specialize in selling medallions. Amulets also are sold on eBay. There are magazines — almost 40 in all, available at mainstream bookstores nationwide — and Web sites devoted to the lucky charms. The opinions of amulet appraisers are quoted in publications, on Web sites and in Thai-language mass media. Kasikorn Research Center estimates that the total amulet market will be worth about $1.5 billion this year, more than double the total in 2005, driven largely by the demand for Jatukam Ramathep amulets. By comparison, according to the latest government figures available, in 2005 Thais spent $1.8 billion on books and newspapers.

“I feel a little weird about it,” says Watcharapong Radomsittipat, an amulet expert who has been in the business for 15 years. “Like people are too crazy about it. It’s almost overshadowing Buddhism.”

Not everyone has succumbed to Jatukam Ramathep fever though. To Buddhist purists, the big emphasis the amulet puts on wealth is anathema. They argue it is unseemly for monks to participate in such an overtly commercial venture.

At Wat Phra Mahathat Woramahawihan, for instance, the temple where all true Jatukam Ramathep amulets are blessed, sponsors give the temple $1,600 to $3,200 for each incantation ceremony. The temple holds the ceremonies, during which many amulets are blessed at once, four or five times a day. Officials at the temple say they have no idea how much money such services bring in.

As much as the Jatukam Ramathep amulet frenzy reflects “a degree of hopelessness in Thai society,” says Mettanando Bhikku, an Oxford- and Harvard-educated physician-turned-monk, “it also reflects the decadence of monks’ morality.”

Moral issues aside, Nakhon Si Thammarat’s economy is booming. While local government authorities won’t say how much the town has earned, the amulet’s effect is impossible to miss: Along the road from the airport, billboards advertise the latest series of Jatukam Ramathep amulets. In town, nearly every business along the main drag has banners emblazoned with images of medallions as well as glass display cases holding a dozen or so for sale.

Besides tourists, the craze is attracting attention from another quarter: Thailand’s tax authorities recently sent a team to town to study imposing a special tax on shops that sell the amulets.

August 9, 2007

“Hello Kitty” To Punish Bad Cops In Thailand

Filed under: General,global islands,police,thailand — admin @ 5:46 am

Bangkok, Thailand – “Hello Kitty” – the Japanese animation character has found a new job in the Thai police department. The cute round-faced cat will now punish any officer in Bangkok who is late, parks in the wrong place or commits other minor transgressions.

The bad cops breaking the rules will be made to wear the large, bright pink Hello Kitty armband, which has two hearts embroidered on it.

However, if the offense is more serious, traditional disciplinary action would be taken. Since Hello Kitty is considered an icon for young girls, it would be considered less manly if macho police officers are seen with it. Invented by a Japanese company in 1974, the character has been popular for years with children and young women.

August 6, 2007

Caught without a country

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 3:50 am

Everyone has the right to a nationality, according to the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, but an estimated 11 million people across the world do not enjoy such status.

What is statelessness?

The UN defines a stateless person as someone who is not a national of any state under its laws.

That means:

No citizenship
No passport
No refugee status
No ability to claim asylum

Stateless people often have minimal, if any, access to basic rights such as education and healthcare.

Five years ago, the Thai police arrested Afang Chue Mua and threatened to deport her, to send her to back to Myanmar.

The problem is that she is not from Myanmar. She was born in Thailand and so were her parents.

They are members of an ethnic minority called the Akha, one of seven hill tribes that live in northern Thailand, near the border with Myanmar and Laos.

Afang said: “We belong to this country. We have no doubt about our nationality – we are Thai.”

Thailand’s small hill tribes are one of its biggest tourist attractions.

The tribes bring in millions of dollars each year, but half of them – nearly one million people – still are not accepted as citizens.

In fact, their children, born and raised in Thailand, are treated like illegal immigrants, refugees in their own country. They are denied equal access to schooling, to medical care.

The Akha can not get good jobs. Without proper documents, they can not travel, even within Thailand and they are vulnerable to arrest and deportation to countries they have never even seen.

There are a quarter-million refugees in Thailand from Myanmar and Laos, as well as from China, Vietnam and Cambodia.

Most of them belong to the same ethnic minority groups as the hill tribes in Thailand, so there is some room for confusion.

Kumpol, a Thai official from the government registration unit in Chiang Rai, told Al Jazeera: “Fifty per cent of the citizenship applications we receive are fraudulent.”

But Somchart Piphatraradon, who runs a hill tribe citizenship project, says the problems run deeper.

Piphatraradon, of the Mirror foundation, said: “There’s no clear cut government policy to solve this problem because they think it’s a small matter.

“There’s also prejudice towards ethnic minorities. And there’s corruption. Citizenship is a source of money for those with power.”

Afang, now an ethnic minority rights activist, has applied for Thai citizenship and she is working to help others get it too. She visits hill tribe villages to explain the procedure.

She said: “I used to cry a lot, like when I was in jail and they called me an illegal immigrant. I’m not an illegal immigrant.”

“I used to get angry because I was young and didn’t know the law. Now, I know the law, I know what to do.”

She says she will always be Akha, but the Akha do not have their own country, so she needs to be Thai.

August 2, 2007

11 killed in attacks in south Thailand

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 6:03 am

PATTANI, Thailand – Rebels staged an ambush and set off bombs across southern Thailand in violence Wednesday that left 11 people dead, including two soldiers and five suspected Muslim insurgents, police said.

Attackers opened fire on a unit of soldiers on a search operation in the Bannang Sata district where Muslim insurgency has been particularly active, he said. No soldiers were hurt in the hour-long firefight.

“They were acting on a tip-off that these insurgents have been hiding in the village,” said Sompien.

Also Wednesday, at least three assailants sprayed dozens of bullets into a house in Narathiwat province, killing two men, said police Lt. Vorapong Klomsakun.

Police said it was one of six bombs that exploded in several areas of Narathiwat Wednesday morning.

More than 2,300 people have been killed in the predominantly Muslim provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat and some parts of Songkhla since early 2004, when a separatist movement flared up after a lull of more than two decades.

Nearly 400 young Muslim men suspected of involvement with the separatist movement have been arrested and detained during the past few months, Akara said.

June 21, 2007

Man In Thailand Selling Last Private Island In San Francisco Bay

Filed under: General,global islands,thailand — admin @ 5:45 am

SAN FRANCISCO — If you’ve ever wanted to own a piece of San Francisco Bay, now’s your chance. Red Rock, the only privately owned island in the bay, is up for sale.

A Bangkok gem dealer and attorney, David Glickman, wants ten million dollars for the 5.8 acre, uninhabited island in the shadow of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge.

Glickman, who is 78, says he isn’t going to live much longer and wants to leave his wife in good shape financially.

Red Rock Island, which gets its name from the reddish-brown color of its soil, was privately purchased in the 1920s. After a few owners, Glickman, then practicing law in San Francisco, bought it sight unseen in 1964 for $49,500.

It is about eight miles north of San Francisco’s Fisherman’s Wharf at a point where the San Francisco, Marin and Contra Costa counties converge.

Any new owner who wanted to develop the island would also have to spend extra money and go through an approval process involving state agencies in one or more of the three counties that have jurisdiction over the island.

June 5, 2007

Political Party Ban

Filed under: global islands,thailand — admin @ 7:00 am

Thailand’s military-backed interim government has lifted a ban on
political party activities. The ban was imposed last September following a
coup that ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The ban has been
lifted to allow parties to campaign for a general election, expected in
December. The move comes days after a court ordered the dissolution of Mr
Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai party and banned its leaders, including Thaksin,
from politics for five years.

May 18, 2007

A very high tide scared beach front villagers in Phuket.

Filed under: global islands,thailand — admin @ 5:33 am

Restaurants on Haad Sai Kaew beach in Mai Khao of Thalang district in Phuket were damaged by a very high tide which came up to the mangrove area. The big and strong waves forced operators to remove their belongings to higher ground.
Meanwhile, at a sea gypsy village of Laem Tukkae on the east side of Phuket island, the villagers also felt the abnormal high tide but did not panic as they knew that it was during the waning moon which normally has the highest tide. Yesterday was even higher due to the monsoon. The Navy officer at Thab Lamu Naval Base reported that highest tide was read at 11 o’clock yesterday at 2.9 metres and will be the same today. This is a normal phenomenon, but as it is now the monsoon season the waves are higher on to the shore. The Navy however will closely monitor the sea water level and will inform the public of any abnormality. Meanwhile the water also flooded the beach front property of around 10 houses at Ban Nam Kem in Phang-Nga and the beach front road was inundated.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress