Monthly Archives: June 2010

Drought in Thailand

A serious drought is starting to grip most parts of Thailand including Ubon Ratchathani. The rice growing season is still salvageable but a lot of rain needs to start falling and start falling now!

Here are a few snippets from some articles published in the last two days.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has expressed strong concern over the current drought crisis which has delayed the sowing of in-season rice.

- relief web

A drought in Southeast Asia is threatening rice production in Cambodia and Thailand, the world’s biggest rice exporter. The concern about production comes as rice prices have sunk to a two-year low, hurting farmers’ incomes.

- VOA news

Water levels at major dams in Thailand have declined sharply, especially in the northeastern region, due to an ongoing drought.

- MCOT

Farmers in villages across the Issan region are nervously watching the skies while at the same time looking at rivers and dams slowly drying up.

In September last year I blogged about the Huai Luang waterfall which is located inside the Phu Chong Na Yoi National Park which is in the Amphur of Na Cha Luai, right up against the Cambodian border, a 2 hour drive from Ubon Ratchatani but just a 30 minute drive from my village.

When my mate Clint and his family visited I took them there and they had a great time swimming in the falls. This is what it looked like then.

About three weeks ago my sister was visiting so I took her to view these majestic falls. I realised of course that the water flow would be a lot less due to the different time of season that we were visiting. I also remembered this photo that I took of a poster showing what it looks like month my month. January is the pic on the left and go month by month from there across to the right.

I must admit I was surprised when this is what we saw.

We spoke with one of the rangers there and he told us that in the 15 years that he has been working in Phu Chong Na Yoi National Park he had never ever seen the Huai Luang waterfall stop flowing.

2010 Ubon Ratchathani Candle Festival

The 2010 candle festival in Ubon Ratchathani is fast approaching and it is the biggest even by far for the region. The festival runs for the entire month of July. I get many emails from readers asking me for information in English about this festival. I am happy to report that yesterday I came across a English programme that covers the entire festival in a very easy to read format (apart from the grammar and spelling mistakes!)

Click here for your copy: Ubon Candle Festival

Ubon funeral for Alexander Bailie

Alexander Bailie

    May 7, 1930 – June 23, 2010

A funeral service for Alexander Bailie is to be held at the Dtai Temple (Wat Dtai วัดใต้) in Ubon Ratchathani on Sunday the 27th of June starting at 7pm.

The cremation will happen on Monday the 28th of June at 4pm also at the Dtai Temple (Wat Dtai วัดใต้)

The temple is located on Phrommarat Road ถ.พรหมราช opposite the Electricity Authority alongside the Moon River.

If you have any queries please do not hesitate to contact Andrew on 0811422267 (English ) or Netnapha on 0870176792 (Thai )

Due to the very short notice given for this funeral we would really appreciate if you could forward this email onto as many local Ubon people as possible that you think may have known Alex. As I have only known Alex for one year I do not know many of his old friends.
Regards, Andrew.

Ubon and the red shirts through the eyes of the Washington Post

A few weeks ago when I was blogging regularly about the red shirt led unrest here in Ubon I was contacted by a few journalists wanting more information on the local situation and chasing photos. One of these was Andrew Higgins who works for the Washington Post. After the unrest settled down in bangkok he flew up for a few days to write an article from a local perspective. A very nice man who spent a lot of time working on telling this story. He has given me permission to reproduce it here and as always I value your feedback.

    Many Thai workers, now out of poverty, are in dissent

NONBON, THAILAND — San Silawat has three dogs, two cows and a parrot. He grows rice and spring onions on a small plot of land. But he’s hardly a pauper: He’s added a second floor to his house and built a blue-tiled patio. His son plays computer games in the front room. His daughter recently bought a Nissan pickup truck. His granddaughter studies nursing in Bangkok.

For all his relatively good fortune, however, San is certain about one thing: “Life is definitely getting worse,” said the 62-year-old farmer, grumbling about the price of gasoline, school fees and a political and economic system he sees as rigged in favor of the rich.

Last month, San and six friends from this village in northeastern Thailand piled into a pickup and drove 14 hours to join “red shirt” protests in Bangkok. During nine weeks of demonstrations, scores of other rural folk from Nonbon and nearby settlements made the same 390-mile trip.

Beneficiaries of an economic boom that, in just three decades, has cut the proportion of Thais living below the poverty line from 42 percent to about 8 percent, San and his family represent both the promise and the peril of Asia’s dizzying transformation.

From China in the north to Indonesia in the south, hundreds of millions of people are now living far better than a generation ago. But the gap that separates them from the rich has often grown wider. As their fortunes and expectations have risen, so too has their frustration. And, as recent turmoil in Thailand has shown, this can mean big trouble.

San and his neighbors rallied to the red shirts not because they are hungry, uninformed and desperate but because they are no longer any of those things. Though still very poor compared with Bangkok residents who cheered the red shirts’ defeat when government troops moved in on May 19, they are a better-off, better-informed and far more demanding voice in national affairs than their elders. San buys and reads a newspaper every day.

“Farmers in the past didn’t ask for anything. They just did their farming,” said his daughter, Tasaneeporn Boran, standing next to her brand-new black Nissan, which she bought in February.

“We now know what is going on,” she said. “We know what we want and don’t want.” What she doesn’t want most of all is a “government that only looks after the rich, instead of ordinary people.”

It is a demand that raises alarming questions not just for Thailand’s Eton- and Oxford-educated prime minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva, but for governments across Asia struggling to manage rising expectations amid growing, but unevenly spread, prosperity. Thailand’s protests began in March not during a recession, but as the economy recorded first-quarter growth of 12 percent, its strongest performance in 15 years.

China, meanwhile, saw its economy surge by 11.9 percent — and has since been hit by a wave of labor unrest, including a strike over wages at a Honda factory in Guangdong, one of the country’s wealthiest regions. China’s Communist Party has staked its future on a bet that economic growth will reinforce, not undermine, stability. But Thailand’s experience shows how easily such calculations can come unstuck.

Instead of political calm, growth in Thailand has brought increased tension. When the country set off the 1997 Asian financial crisis and fell into a deep slump, political stability in Thailand actually increased and then plunged as the economy took off again, according to the Worldwide Governance Indicators, compiled by experts from the Brookings Institution and the World Bank.

Over the last four decades, Thailand’s economy has grown an average of about 7 percent a year, and average real per-capita income has roughly tripled since the mid-1980s. But, according to a recent report on Thailand last year by the United Nations Development Program, the Southeast Asian nation is beset by “persistent inequality” that defies a widely accepted theory that the gap between rich and poor widens during an initial phase of development but then narrows.

Thailand’s income inequality is roughly the same as that of much poorer nations such as Uganda and Cambodia and slightly worse than that of China and the United States, both highly unequal in terms of income distribution, according to data in the United Nations 2009 Human Development Report.

Despite the income gap, the people of Nonbon have unquestionably benefited from their country’s rapid development. Tasaneeporn recalled growing up in the 1970s with no electricity, no running water and no paved roads. Only one family had a TV.

The main economic driver in the region at the time was the U.S. Air Force, which used a big airfield in the nearby city of Ubon Ratchathani to launch bombing runs over Vietnam and Cambodia. Now, a recently widened four-lane highway — dotted with convenience stores and shopping centers — connects Ubon Ratchathani, the regional capital, to farmland around Nonbon.

Tasaneeporn’s brother recently got work in the city at a new luxury hotel. The job gives him a small, steady income — and puts him in daily contact with people who have far more money.

The most vocal red shirt supporters in these parts are not the destitute — people like Sritta Sorsrisuk, a 71-year-old farmer who has seen two of his six children die. “I don’t care about politics,” he said, sitting in a tumbledown shelter next to his tiny plot of land. But others “talk about it all the time: red this, red that.”

More keen on the red shirts is Usasorn Anarat, a neighbor of San’s who traveled to Bangkok twice to join the protests. Thanks to her husband, who works in Qatar, and modest profits from a rice farm, Usasorn has a monthly income of about $1,000, far above the local average.

Like San, Tasaneeporn and nearly everyone in the villages around here, she’s a huge fan of Thaksin Shinawatra, the self-exiled former prime minister who was ousted by the military in 2006 and is now wanted for “terrorism” under a Thai warrant. Thaksin, Usasorn said, “loves the country, won elections, and they chased him away.”

Thaksin, a billionaire, regularly visited the Thai countryside and launched a raft of programs to help rural residents, including cheap health care, easy credit and handouts of about $30,000 to each village head. He even stopped off in the village next to Nonbon.

“Nobody had done that before,” said Tasaneeporn. Her father managed to shake Thaksin’s hand. He now has a picture of Thaksin pinned on his living room wall, along with photographs of Thailand’s king.

After Thaksin and King Bhumibol Adulyadej, now 82 and hospitalized, the most popular person around here is Phichet Thabbudda, a rabble-rousing radio announcer known as “DJ Toy.”

He founded and ran the “Voice of the People,” a shoestring local radio station that won a big following with fiery denunciations of the government and the well-to-do. He also organized convoys of vehicles bound for Bangkok

Echoing the rhetoric of red shirt leaders in Bangkok, DJ Toy spoke of Thailand as a nation divided between hard-working but impoverished “serfs” and an oppressive, greedy “aristocracy.” This played well in Nonbon and in other villages across northern Thailand. But Jamnong Jitnivat, a longtime local campaigner for farmers’ rights, said it distorts reality. The real issue, he said, is a government bureaucracy out of touch with an increasingly well-informed and better-off population that now “demands much more than before.”

When troops moved in to dislodge protesters in Bangkok on May 19, DJ Toy’s radio station thundered against the crackdown and called on listeners to show their anger. Protesters burned down city hall in Ubon Ratchathani. The following day, police and soldiers arrested DJ Toy at his home, raided his studio and hauled away his antenna.

San, the rice farmer, said he misses his broadcasts but still keeps up with events by reading the newspaper and watching TV. “We all know what is happening,” he said. “We know who is good and who is bad.”

Khon Pha Peng Waterfall น้ำตกคอนพะเพ็ง Laos

Khon Pha Peng Waterfall (น้ำตกคอนพะเพ็ง) is just one of a group of beautiful water falls located in southern Laos just across the border from Ubon Ratchathani.

I love travelling to Laos and especially love the area around Pakse. I get the feeling that a lot of people who live or visit here do not explore over the border because of the hassle of getting there. I have my own car and once you have sorted out a passport for it (very easy and cheap) it is a breeze to pop across for a day or two of exploring. Not everyone however has this opportunity so I am happy to blog about a bus service that I just discovered.

According to TRWeekly there is a new bus service now available. They say that air-conditioned buses operate a single service on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and public holidays. The bus leaves Ubon Ratchathani at 0730 and arrives at the waterfall in southern Laos around noon. From Khon Pha Peng, it departs at 1400 and arrives in Ubon Ratchathani around 1830. The bus also stops in Pakse for travellers who want to overnight there. The cost is 400 baht one way. From what I can work out it would appear that the service departs from the main bus station here in Ubon.

World Cup in Ubon

Soccer (Football) is not really my type of game. I would much prefer to watch a game of Australian Rules Football or Rugby Union or settle in for a day at the cricket then watch a group of over paid actors kick a ball back and forth for a draw. Every four years however enough excitement is generated by the world cup to make me sit up and take notice. I may even watch a game or two. Compared to Australia the excitement in Thailand is much much greater. Everyone here talks about it, it is on the TV, the front page of the papers and due to the simple fact that I have a white face then I must be a man of great knowledge of the game and am constantly asked about my thoughts and predictions.

For the local readers of this blog may I offer a suggestion of a great place to watch a game or two. City Mall (Sunee Grand Hotel) has set up a big screen between the two buildings. Every evening they set up tables and chairs and fire up the BBQ’s. This has got to be the best valued food in Ubon right now as what they are doing is selling seafood at their supermarket prices and cooking it up free of charge! Yesterday was Seerungs birthday and when she discovered this seafood special decided she was happy to have her birthday dinner there. We ended up having a plate full of huge snails, some scallops (in their shells), a pork steak, and an entire squid and baby Barramundi (Deep Sea Bass) for just 280 baht ($10 AUD). There was a game in progress but I took no notice in who was playing as we were all too busy eating! I think we may be spending a lot more time down there over the net 4 weeks! Thank you world cup!!

Lets see how good you are by taking this poll. My pick is Spain.