Mekong river patrol: China, Thailand, Laos, Myanmar

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
Operation "Safe River" crushes Mekong drug gangs, says China - CNN.com

(CNN) -- A joint operation between police from China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand has resulted in 2,534 arrests during a two-month anti-drug campaign along the Mekong River, reported Chinese state media Xinhua.

The operation, named "Safe River," has led to 9.78 tonnes of drugs being seized, along with 38 firearms, $3.6 million and 260 tonnes of precursor chemicals, Liu Yuejin, director general of the Ministry of Public Security's Narcotics Control Bureau told a press conference

Liu said 1,784 drug-related cases were solved during the campaign, which ran from April 20 to June 20, the news agency reported.

The Mekong River runs through China, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam -- including southeast Asia's Golden Triangle region, one of the world's major drug-producing areas -- forming a major trade route in the region.

Xinhua previously reported that one raid, conducted by China and Myanmar police on May 12, busted a Myanmarese ring engaged in smuggling methamphetamine into China, while another series of busts in China's Yunnan and Hunan provinces saw the arrest of 35 involved in importing drugs from foreign countries for distribution in China.

In March, China executed four foreign drug traffickers who had been convicted of murdering 13 Chinese sailors along a stretch of the Mekong in northern Thailand in 2011, state media reported.

Thai authorities discovered the gruesome murder scene in October 2011, after boarding two cargo ships, the Hua Ping and Yu Xing 8, that had come under gunfire. They found 12 dead bodies, some with their hands bound. One sailor was missing.

Chinese authorities identified one of the convicted men as a Myanmar drug lord named Naw Kham, with the other three -- believed to be members of his gang -- named as Hsang Kham from Thailand, Yi Lai, referred to as "stateless," and Zha Xika, a Laotian, Xinhua reported.

The agency reported that Kham was nicknamed as "the Godfather," saying that his was "the largest armed drug trafficking gang on the Mekong River."

In an interview from his prison cell with state broadcaster CCTV, Kham appeared to express regret about his past.

"The Golden Triangle area is a place of evil," he said, referring to area that overlaps the mountains of Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam and Thailand. "It turns good people bad.

"People come here doing business, but they couldn't resist the temptation of drugs, then they become drug dealers too."
Mekong river patrol: China, Thailand, Laos, Myanmar | Bangkok Post: learning
 

Tshering22

Sikkimese Saber
Senior Member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
7,869
Likes
23,239
Country flag
Drug trafficking is a serious problem in this region. We also have this problem especially in the Indo-Myanmar border here in northeast, where these drug lords fund and support terrorists in my region. Not just drugs but human trafficking big time. We often wonder how these terrorist groups survive and who finances them, well it is these drug and human trafficking groups that make hell load of money and terrorize people.
 

W.G.Ewald

Defence Professionals/ DFI member of 2
Professional
Joined
Sep 28, 2011
Messages
14,139
Likes
8,594
Drug trafficking is a serious problem in this region. We also have this problem especially in the Indo-Myanmar border here in northeast, where these drug lords fund and support terrorists in my region. Not just drugs but human trafficking big time. We often wonder how these terrorist groups survive and who finances them, well it is these drug and human trafficking groups that make hell load of money and terrorize people.
I would like to see data on the ultimate destination of the drugs.
 

Tshering22

Sikkimese Saber
Senior Member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
7,869
Likes
23,239
Country flag
I would like to see data on the ultimate destination of the drugs.
I don't have the data of that but probably a google search might help you out.

Most of the drugs and women go into places like Thailand where drugs and women are the key shady attractions and also in countries like Malaysia and Indonesia where though drug laws are harsh but still massive drugs get trafficked.

Not to mention in India as well through our states in the northeast borders with Myanmar. Myanmar is the second largest producer of illegal drugs after Afghanistan and a lot of drugs move into this region. The drug cartels in the region are as ruthless as Taliban.
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
Four Mekong nations join forces to tackle drug trafficking - The Nation

Laos, Thailand, Myanmar and China have agreed to beef up their coordination efforts to crack down on illegal drug trafficking along the Mekong River.

The four countries have set up the Safe Mekong Coordination Centre to strengthen their information exchange and have carried out inspections to observe anti-drug trafficking efforts along the river. The move comes after authorities from the four countries acknowledged that the drug problem on the Mekong affects their national security and stability.

Chief of Bokeo provincial Police Headquarters, Colonel Lamphay Yotpaphay, told Vientiane Times on Monday that the centre will enable authorities in the four countries to consolidate their efforts to combat the drug trade.

According to a Chiang Rai Times report, millions of methamphetamine pills are transported yearly along the Mekong.

Chief of the Mekong Riverine Unit in Chiang Rai province, Capt Phanu Rattanananthawathi, said the number of arrests in the area was quite low because authorities in each country patrol their own territorial waters.

Capt Phanu said drugs are mainly smuggled in from these countries on cargo ships. Couriers smuggled between 200 and 300 million speed pills and 3,500 kilogrammes of crystal methamphetamine just last year.

Personnel stationed at the centre will start their patrols at the same time on each section of the Mekong. Along an 85 kilometre section of the river there are 10 spots which need special attention.

The main focus areas are Chiang Rai's Golden Triangle, an area near the borders of Myanmar, Laos and Thailand, the fourth Thai-Lao Friendship Bridge, which connects Chiang Rai's Chiang Khong district and the Lao town of Houayxay, and ports along the river such as Chiang Saen, Hiran Nakhon and Lan Chang.

Representatives of the four countries meet every six months to review their cooperation and set plans for the year ahead.

Colonel Lamphay said "We met in Bokeo province last month to discuss how we could strengthen our cooperation and better deal with drug issues in our region."
 

Ray

The Chairman
Professional
Joined
Apr 17, 2009
Messages
43,132
Likes
23,835
China has already suffered because of Opium.



It cannot allow the country to sink again.
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
China FM: Countries along Mekong significant partners - CCTV News - CCTV.com English

The Chinese government says it will work to enhance cooperation with the five countries along the Lancang-Mekong River for the implementation of the "One Belt and One Road" initiative.

China, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam have also vowed to build a community of shared destiny between them.

This promise came during the first Lancang-Mekong River Dialogue and Cooperation Senior Officials' Meeting held in Beijing on April 6.

Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, says the community strategy will offer a very important platform for China and the five countries in the construction of the China-proposed initiative.

"It's best advantage is that it can help countries in the Indo-China Peninsula develop fast, which will also be good for ASEAN's development. Actually the area is included in the 'One Belt and One Road', and this mechanism is one part of the combination of 'One Belt and One Road' and local development strategies."

The meeting also decided that the first foreign ministers' meeting between China and the five countries will be held in Beijing this year.

The Lancang-Mekong river passes through China, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam, covering a population of more than 320 million people.

In 2013, the trade volume between the six countries exceeded 150 billion U.S. dollars.
A smart move to enhance ties with the Mekong subgroup that has overland links with China in ASEAN :thumb:

 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
'China, Thailand Plus One': Japanese, South Korean, Chinese companies flocking to Mekong region- Nikkei Asian Review


Preparations are underway to launch operations in the Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone.

TOKYO -- The economic zone in the basin of the Mekong River is starting to thrive as a key location for businesses pursuing so-called "China or Thailand Plus One" strategies.

Japanese, Chinese and South Korean companies are flocking to the area to take advantage of inexpensive labor, raising a question of whether they and other foreign companies will leave the zone for the sake of "Mekong Plus One" strategies if local wages rise.

Attractive integration

Ando, a well-established maker of small articles for Japanese kimono in Kyoto, manufactures in Pakse, a major city in southern Laos. To the sound of local popular music, some 60 young women weave braided cords with Japanese looms, sew drawstring purses and examine the quality of products at the Ando plant.

Operation manuals are written in Japanese. The women workers include nine who have completed a three-month training program in Japan and speak basic Japanese.

Ando built the Laos plant at a cost of some $500,000 and began operating it in 2014. Founded in 1923, Ando already had plants in Kyoto and China but added the Laos plant because, as third-generation CEO Ichiro Ando put it, "We'd be in trouble if something happened in China, and we find the integration of Southeast Asia attractive."

The comment symbolizes the "China Plus One" strategy. Japanese companies have grown wary of operations in China due to rising wages and anti-Japan sentiment and begun seeking "Plus One" locations.

Ando picked Laos as his company's Plus One location because factory workers in major cities there earn around $100 a month, compared with more than $500 in Beijing.

He also found the integration of Southeast Asia attractive because of Laos's geographical features.


A worker weaves a braided cord for Japanese kimono at Ando's plant in Pakse, Laos.

Laos is an inland country that borders five countries, including China, Thailand and Vietnam.

When the ASEAN Economic Community starts up at the end of 2015, customs duties will be lowered within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Exporters will be able to choose convenient ports, whether in Thailand, Vietnam or other ASEAN members, depending on their products' destination.

As labor expenses are also rising in Thailand, many businesses recognize the need for a "Thailand Plus One" strategy. Located on the opposite side of the Mekong River, Laos is an attractive alternative to Thailand for companies that want to cut payroll costs.



A plant operated by Nikon, the Japanese manufacturer of optics and imaging products, in Savannakhet, Laos's second largest city only four hours' drive from Pakse, is a typical Thailand Plus One operation.

While the plant is responsible for labor-intensive production of parts for single-lens reflex cameras, Nikon brings them to its plant in Thailand for assembling into advanced cameras for sale as popular made-in-Thailand, rather than Laos, products.

The inland location of Laos has been a major disadvantage preventing the country from having sea routes to establish ties with the rest of the world. But the disadvantage will quickly turn into an advantage after the integration of the region.

Recognizing Laos's strategic location, Toyota Boshoku, Mitsubishi Materials, Aderans and many other Japanese companies have begun operating in the country in recent years.

Drawbacks too

But not everything is rosy in Laos. Unlike Japan, Laos is a socialist country, which poses problems that Japanese companies sometimes struggle with.

According to the 2014 corruption index compiled by Transparency international, a German nongovernmental organization that monitors corporate and political corruption. Of the 174 countries in the ranking, Laos came 145th, much lower than China's 100th place.

The widespread corruption makes it difficult for foreign businesses to operate smoothly. But Laos's attractions more than offset its disadvantages.


Kolao Group boasts "Korean Technology" on its motorcycles, like the one pictured here in Savannakhet, Laos.

A large number of South Korean companies have set up shop in Laos. The Kolao Group, for example, has a noticeable presence in Savannakhet. The group's name combines "Korea" and "Laos" and both countries' national flags fly in front of its plant's main entrance.

Kolao was founded by a South Korean and has grown by importing products such as automobiles from Hyundai Motor. Motorcycles produced by Kolao carry a label that says proudly, "Korean Technology."

Like Japan, South Korea is struggling with a dwindling birthrate and aging population. With domestic demand stalling, South Korean companies need to develop overseas markets for growth.

In a sense, Kolao symbolizes the situation of South Korea, as it was founded in 1997 when the country was caught in a currency crisis.

The toughest competition involving Japanese and South Korean as well as Chinese companies in the Mekong economic zone is down the river in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.

Cambodia is a leading Plus One candidate as its wage level is almost the same as that of Laos. Japanese retail giant Aeon opened a large-scale shopping center in Phnom Penh last year. Next to the center, hotel chain Toyoko Inn operates a big hotel for businesspeople, reflecting Japanese companies' entries into Phnom Penh.

Located 20km from the center of the capital is the Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone, featuring corporate and export tax breaks.

Japanese investment firm Zephyr has a 22% interest in the SEZ and 42 of the 78 companies operating there are Japanese companies including Ajinomoto and Denso.

The SEZ will offer shares for training on the Cambodia Securities Exchange this summer and use funds from its initial public offering to develop a new SEZ near the border with Thailand in a bid to lure companies promoting Thailand Plus One strategies.

The CSX, which is owned 45% by the Korea Exchange, has created its trading system and trained the necessary personnel thanks to support from the South Korean bourse. South Korean companies are trying to benefit from Cambodia's economic growth by establishing close ties with the Cambodian government and business community.

A Korean restaurant facing Phnom Penh International Airport is called Dok Do, the Korean name of South Korea-controlled but Japan-claimed Takeshima island. Though the name of the restaurant was initially believed to be a sign of anti-Japanese sentiment in Cambodia, it more likely suggested the presence of economic tensions between South Korea and Japan.

Cambodian operations

Chinese companies, as the push ahead with overseas business expansion in the face of rising costs at home, are also entering Cambodia. They account for the majority of companies operating in the Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone 210km from the capital's center. The zone competes with the Phnom Penh SEZ, which is led by Japanese companies.


A bridge, right, built with Japan's support and another constructed with China's assistance stand side by side over the Tonle Sap River in Phnom Penh.

The competition between Japan and China is symbolized by two big bridges over the Tonle Sap River in Phnom Penh. The Japan-Cambodia Friendship Bridge, originally built in the 1960s, was destroyed during Cambodia's civil war. It was later rebuilt with Japanese aid. Right beside it is a similar bridge, recently completed with Chinese support.

Workers recently demonstrated in Phnom Penh, calling for higher wages. The minimum wage in Cambodia has more than doubled over the past three years and will rise further in view of foreign companies' strong interest in the country.

Laos is in a similar situation. Given its population of nearly 7 million, less than half of Cambodia's, wages may rise sharply as a result of intense competition for workers.

One is what foreign companies operating in Laos and Cambodia will do when labor cost rises sharply.

Over the past half century, the sewing industry has shifted operations from the U.S. to Japan, South Korea, China and Southeast Asia in a bid to secure inexpensive labor. If companies pull the plug on operations simply because of wage increases, they will meet fierce protests from societies wishing to protect employment. Businesses cannot thrive unless they coexist in the societies where they operate.

Hiroshi Uematsu, CEO of the Phnom Penh SEZ, referred to one Japanese manufacturer's strategy as an intriguing outlook for the future. The company has no choice but to make products with low added value in the zone for now, but it plans to increase mechanization by stages to manufacture higher value-added products. The company will "never retreat" from Cambodia, Uematsu quoted it as saying.

According to the strategy, the company will transfer the production of low value-added products to countries having inexpensive labor but can justify the payment of high wages in Cambodia on its economic development and maintain employment.

The strategy of contributing to long-term economic growth offers an important clue to companies operating globally as well as countries that accept companies with Plus One strategies.

==============================

Now C-J-K have extended their battle ground to Mekong :shocked:
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
video clip - China launches first communication satellite for Laos



A rocket carrying the LaoSat-1 satellite blasts off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Xichang, southwest China's Sichuan Province
, Nov. 21, 2015. (Xinhua/Qin Haishi)

BEIJING, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Lao counterpart, Choummaly Sayasone, sent each other congratulatory messages on Saturday to mark the successful launch of a Lao communication satellite with a Chinese carrier rocket.

The satellite, Lao Sat-1, was launched on Saturday at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province.

Hailing the Lao Sat-1 project as "a significant manifestation of China-Laos comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership under new circumstances", Xi said it ushers in a new paradigm of cooperation between developing countries in the field of astronautics, and will promote economic development, improve the people's livelihood and facilitate social progress in Laos.
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
Laos' northern 230 KV power grid put into operation 2015-11-30 01:01:41

LUANG PRABANG, Laos, Nov. 29 (Xinhua) -- Laos' northern 230 KV grid was put into operation Sunday, a major boost to the country's building of a unified high voltage grid.

The project was constructed by China Southern Power Grid and it is one of the China-Laos cooperation projects within the Belt and Road initiative proposed by China to enhance regional connectivity.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2015-11/30/c_134866617.htm

The minister said the grid will not only help build a unified national high voltage grid, it will also provide infrastructure for cross-border power transmission.


~~Still waters run deep. ~~from my MiPad using tapatalk
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
China's railway projects in Thailand, Laos to start


China's high-speed railway models on display for the first time, at the China-ASEAN Expo, held in Nanning, capital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region from Sept. 18 to 21, 2015. [Guo Yiming / China.org.cn]

China's high-speed railway projects are finally gaining ground in Southeast Asia, as top government officials in Thailand and Laos attending the 12th China-ASEAN Expo indicated the construction in both countries might start before the end of this year.

Thailand's Deputy Prime Minister Dr. Tanasak Patimapragorn said his country's 840-kilometer project may start this December, linking the northern city of Nong Khai with Bangkok.

Laos is also determined to have a high-speed railway project with cooperation from China in order to transform the landlocked country, according to its Deputy Prime Minister Somsava Lengsavad who gave a speech in fluent Mandarin during the opening ceremony of the 12th China-ASEAN Expo and Business and Investment Summit on Sept. 18, 2015.

As Laos' largest investor, China is also going to help launch a man-made satellite for the southeast country, according to Somasava, who saw both projects as being of historical and strategic significance to the country whose lack of infrastructure remains a massive headache.

The Thai Deputy Prime Minister added that China's "Belt and Road" initiative prompted the realization of the railway project which had gone through 10 years of tough negotiations.

China is looking to build a high-speed line from Kunming all the way down to Singapore, passing through Laos, Thailand and Malaysia, a project that would increase China's GDP and those of the involved nations by US$375 billion, according to China Railway Corp.


http://china.org.cn/business/2015-09/22/content_36649035.htm


~~Still waters run deep. ~~from my MiPad using tapatalk
 

aliyah

Regular Member
Joined
May 30, 2015
Messages
698
Likes
843
behind all drug trafficking there are intelligence agency's . without there help no trafficking can't take place
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
Plan cements Mekong cooperation

China and five other countries along the 5,000-km Lancang-Mekong River agreed on Wednesday on a sweeping plan to deepen cooperation and build a comprehensive connectivity network covering railways, highways, waterways, ports and aviation.

China also promised 10 billion yuan ($1.54 billion) in preferential loans and a credit line of $10 billion to support infrastructure and production capacity projects in cooperation with the countries.

Premier Li Keqiang announced the loans and the agreement in Sanya, Hainan province, at the first meeting of the leaders from the six countries along the river.

The Lancang-Mekong Cooperation Leaders' Meeting also discussed the use of water resources, and China vowed to take measures to support improvement of living conditions in downstream areas along the river.

The Mekong River, whose upper part is known in China as the Lancang River, is an important water source for the five countries on the Indochinese Peninsula — Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam — and it nourishes a population of 326 million.

Beijing announced last week that it will provide an emergency water supply through April 10 to countries along the river to deal with drought.

"That demonstrates China's sincerity toward improving living conditions in countries along the Mekong River," Premier Li said at a joint news conference after the meeting.

He announced that China will use $200 million from its South-South Cooperation Assistance Fund to help the five nations to realize the targets set in the United Nations' 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. China also will provide $300 million to support small and medium-sized cooperation projects proposed by the six countries.

Additionally, it will set up a Lancang-Mekong water resources cooperation center and an environmental cooperation center to promote green development.

Li suggested holding leaders' meetings every two years, foreign ministers' meetings every year and occasional meetings of high-ranking officials and working teams.

Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, who co-chaired the meeting with Li, called the gathering a "new chapter" in the Lancang-Mekong cooperation process.

Former Chinese ambassador to Cambodia Zhang Jinfeng said, "The mechanism will not only benefit the six nations, but also boost the integration of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations."

China is the biggest trading partner of Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, and the biggest source of investment in Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar. China's bilateral trade with the five nations reached $193.9 billion last year.
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
Locals slam Mekong blasting plan
Chiang Khong, Thailand, 9 January 2017

The government’s aim to clear the Mekong River’s rocky outcrops to ensure the smooth passage of large cargo boats has set off alarm bells for environmental activists and locals who fear the ecology in the area will be put at risk.


The Mekong River, known in China as the Lancang River, runs through China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam over a total distance of 4,880km.

China is pushing to use the river to ship goods from its southern province of Yunnan to Luang Prabang in Laos, a distance of 890km. Under the plan, the cargo will also be carried through Myanmar and Thailand along the river.

The Thai cabinet approved the Development Plan for International Navigation on the Lancang-Mekong River (2015–2025) on Dec 27 as a framework to ensure safety in water transport along the river.

It also gave the nod to making initial navigation improvements on the river, including surveys and other plans to move the project forward.

The Marine Department has been assigned as a key agency to follow up on the plan.

The plan is split into two phases. The first phase, which runs from 2015 to 2020, involves a survey, a design and assessment of the environmental and social impacts of the project. These have to be approved by the four countries involved.

The navigational improvements will cover a 631km route from 243 border posts from China and Myanmar to Luang Prabang in Laos to make it passable for 500-tonne cargo ships. Three cargo ports and three passenger ports will be built along the route.

The second phase (2020-2025) involves the river’s navigational improvements from China’s Simao to 243 border posts of China and Myanmar over a distance of 259km. Under this phase, four ports which can handle 500-tonne cargo ships and another nine ports serving 300-tonne boats and passengers would be constructed. A new bridge across the river will also be built.



Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister’s Office Kobsak Pootrakool said China, Laos, Myanmar and Thailand earlier set up a team to survey the Mekong River and agreed the navigation channel must be improved. Islets and rapids, which hinder the passage of boats, must also be dealt with. So far only ships with gross tonnage ranging from 50-150 tonnes can sail through the route while the bigger boats are unsafe to navigate.

“For the safety of goods and transport of people, as well as reducing risk from accidents and environmental impacts, it is necessary to make way for navigational improvements in the river to make it passable for 500-tonne ships,” said Mr Kobsak.

The Network of Thai People in Eight Mekong Provinces and an alliance of community organisations from the Mekong Basin opposes the plan. Their key focus is to protect the rapids at Khon Pi Luang north of Chiang Rai’s Chiang Khong district, stretching 1.6km in the Mekong River, separating Thailand and Laos.

They said the location has a good ecosystem and serves as a breeding ground for fish and birds. It is also an important location for the local fishery. The demolition of rapids could threaten food resources for riverside communities in both countries, they said.

The group says the clearing of islets would also accelerate the river flow, which could trigger erosion in the river bank. The navigation of large ships along the route would also make it difficult for locals to travel by boat in the area.

According to the group, the dredging could affect the border between Thailand and Laos since it is demarcated by the two lowest points of the river.

Pagaimas Viera, who owns the Mekong Delta Travel Agency, which runs Mekong cruises, said that China has occasionally cleared islets in the river in its territory to make way for large ships to navigate the river throughout the year.

She added that China, which is financially sponsoring the construction of a Mekong-crossing bridge between the Myanmar town of Chiang Lap and Chiang Kok in Laos, has said clearly that the bridge must enable the passage of 500-tonne cargo ships. China has already built a large port on a side of the Mekong River in Guan Lei, Yunnan, to serve cargo shipments, she said. Large freezer storage facilities were also built there.

“There are still islets between Laos and Thailand, called Khon Pi Luang, which have yet to be blasted off. The blasts are part of the plan as it will make way for Chinese ships to sail to Luang Prabang,” said Ms Pagaimas.

A military source said it is not easy for China to step in to clear the rocky outcrops around the area since Thailand and Laos are still locked in border disputes. Laos made clear it did not recognise the Thai map, the source noted.

Meanwhile, a source at the Marine Department said that although the cabinet has given the green light to the navigational improvement project, the process to be undertaken now is to survey, not demolish the islets.

Late last month, representatives from a Chinese company, contracted to survey the environmental and social impact from the navigation project along the Mekong River, met Thai activists to explain their work.

During the talks, Niwat Roikaew, head of the Rak Chiang Khong Group, a local network, said goods can now be transported easily via the R3A Highway from China to Thailand so the Mekong River should be spared to protect the habitat for local villagers.

“The demolition of the Mekong’s ecosystem is tantamount to killing people who are relying on the river,” said Mr Niwat. “We can live together if China reconsiders how to navigate boats in this level of water. If they only think big, small people would suffer.” Mr Niwat submitted a petition Sunday against the cabinet’s decision on Dec 27 to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).

NHRC member Tuenjai Deetes said the rights of the local people have been violated as they have no access to information and do not have a say on the project, which could affect their livelihoods. The government’s decision would also affect other countries along the Mekong River, she said.

Ms Tuenjai said she would bring up the issue with the NHRC’s subcommittee on human rights in natural resources and the environment as well as with international organisations to help promote the Mekong as a world heritage site and prevent the blasting of the islets.

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/environment/1176681/locals-slam-mekong-blasting-plan
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
China, Thailand inaugurate construction of high-speed railway in Thailand

The construction of the first section of the railway line officially began on Thursday with a ground-breaking ceremony in the northeastern Thai province of Nakhon Ratchasima.

The 253-km first phase of the railway links Bangkok with Nakhon Ratchasima province. China is responsible for design of the railway, supervision of construction and manufacturing of trains and signal systems, among others.

Once completed, the railway with a maximum speed of 250 km per hour will be the first high-speed railway of Thailand.

The second phase of the project will link Nakhon Ratchasima with Nong Khai on the border with Laos, which connects with the China-Laos railway in an artery railway linking Thailand, Laos and China.

Huang, an expert who has been paying close attention to the project, looks forward to the operation of the railway. He envisions the boom of Thailand's economy in its northeastern part under the project.

Northeastern Thailand, a region with one-third of Thailand's land area that contains about one-third of the country's population, contributes only one 10th of the Kingdom's GDP, said Huang, adding that the poor transportation results in its sluggish development.

According to Huang, there are about 4,507 km of meter gauge lines in Thailand, of which 90 percent is still single track. There are also problems with old equipment, poor management and maintenance, and low speed.

As a result, the annual volume of railway freight is less than a 10th of the total transport volume. It is estimated that the cost of land transport is six times that of rail. Since rail does not offer an alternative, the logistics costs in Thailand are higher than those in other countries.

The China-Thailand high-speed railway project will help upgrade Thailand's railway system. It is foreseeable that the railway will bring wide-reaching connectivity in the country while reducing logistic costs, and thus make Thailand ASEAN's (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) trade and investment center, as well as a transport and logistics hub.

The China-Thailand railway will be finally connected with the China-Lao railway, thus using Chinese technology, which has been widely recognized across the world, will make it more accessible in the connectivity plan, said the expert.
 

amoy

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2010
Messages
5,982
Likes
1,849
I took a Mekong cruise tour in Oct. 2017, by the way.





China eyes stronger ties with Mekong countries

PHNOM PENH, Jan. 11 (Xinhua) -- China eyes stronger ties with the other five countries along the Lancang-Mekong river, pledging new loans, medical aids and scholarships to its neighbors.

At the second Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (LMC) leaders' meeting here on Wednesday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang announced that China will provide another 7 billion yuan (1.08 billion U.S. dollars) in government concessional loans to Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam.

He also announced the setup of a 5-billion-dollar credit line for supporting production capacity and equipment manufacturing cooperation among the Lancang-Mekong countries.

The new offer came after China supplied the five riparian countries with 10 billion yuan (1.54 billion dollars) of concessional loans, 5 billion dollars of export credit and 5 billion dollars for capacity cooperation in more than 20 infrastructure and industry projects, Li said.

The deficit that China holds with the Mekong countries on farm product trade will not prevent China from importing more, Li said, adding that protectionism is China's last choice.

With a theme of "Our River of Peace and Sustainable Development," Wednesday's meeting brought leaders of China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam to the table on such issues as connectivity, water management and industrial production capacity.

China is the largest trading partner of Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam and Thailand and the second largest of Laos. Bilateral trade between China and the five riparian countries totaled 220 billion dollars in 2017, up 16 percent year on year.

Some 80 percent of China's rice imports are from the Mekong countries. Their fruit exports to China have increased at 21 percent annually over the past decade.

China is the largest source of foreign investment for Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, and the third and fourth-biggest source for Thailand and Vietnam in 2017, respectively, according to China's Ministry of Commerce.

Meanwhile, China is willing to offer free medical treatment for major diseases, such as cataract and heart attack, and oral surgery in the Mekong nations, and to launch 100 medical aid projects in the next three years.

China will step up cooperation with the Mekong countries in prevention and control of infectious diseases, carry out cross-border projects on prevention and control of such diseases, and build a network for malaria elimination.

Over the past two years, more than 12,000 students from the Mekong nations received scholarships from the Chinese government. Over 3,000 personnel went to China for training programs.

In 2018, China will offer short-term training and in-service education for 2,000 people from the Mekong countries and 100 four-year scholarships for undergraduates.

As an important mechanism along the Lancang-Mekong river sub-region, the LMC mechanism has been focusing on sustainable development and pragmatic cooperation in the sub-region and serving as an important platform for implementing the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative.

Initiated by China in 2014, the framework spans connectivity, production capacity, cross-border economic cooperation, water resources management, and agriculture and poverty reduction, benefiting dozens of millions of people living on the waterway.

The LMC mechanism has produced better-than-expected progress over the past two years as the countries moved forward with the principle of equality and inclusiveness and put development as a priority.

With progress and results delivered daily, monthly and annually, the Chinese premier said a truly remarkable LMC speed had been created, and a defining LMC culture featuring equality, sincerity, mutual assistance and kinship had been established.

The first LMC leaders' meeting was held in Sanya of China's Hainan province in March 2016, at which the goal of building a community of shared future of peace and prosperity for the LMC countries was endorsed.

The Lancang River originates on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in southwestern China. It is called the Mekong River as it flows through Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam before emptying into the sea.
 

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top