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June 14th, 2006 by admin

Chanthaburi launches a reforestation project to help save wild elephants

Kaeng Hang Maew (แก่งหางแมว) district in Chanthaburi will set aside 1,000 rai of land for reforestation and growing of plants that are food of elephants to mark the 60th anniversary of His Majesty the King’s ascension to the throne.

District chief Wiwat Chanthananurak (วิวัฒน์ ฉันทนานุรักษ์) said villagers will jointly reforest 700 of the 1,000 rai and grow small plants for elephants in another 300 rai from June 24 onwards.

Mr. Wiwat said forests in the district have been destroyed leaving wild elephants with almost nothing to eat so they often invaded plantations of villagers.

He said the reforestation project will make the areas fertile again while also providing food sources for elephants.

Source: Thai National News Bureau Public Relations Department - 14 June 2006

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June 1st, 2006 by admin

Gazette News: Land crackdown targets Thai shareholders

BANGKOK: — The Ministry of Interior has ordered a crackdown on property companies attempting to circumvent Section 74 of the Land Act in order to allow foreigners to control land ownership.

Section 74 states (unofficial translation): “In the process of registering [land] possession rights and contracts between parties … officers have the power to investigate both parties and call them for questioning or have them send relevant documentary evidence as is necessary. Officers will proceed as is appropriate to the case.

“In cases where there is reason to believe that the request to register possession rights will evade the law or where there is reason to believe that land is being bought for the benefit of foreigners a request for an order from the Minister will be made. The Minister’s order will be final.”

The crackdown will target Thai partners in Thai-foreign ventures, examining their inco me, their professional qualifications or experience, and their credit history.

In an order dated May 15 and issued to all provincial governors, the Deputy Permanent Director of the Ministry, Sura-art Thongniramol, notes, “The Ministry of Interior has received reports that there are foreigners working with Thais or [engaging] Thais to register a company with the aim of buying and selling immovable property as a business venture.

“At the initial stage a house and land are purchased for residence or [for use as] an office and later [the aims are changed] to selling and subdividing for sale to foreigners … which is illegal.”

Provincial officials are ordered, “as protection against bypassing the law”, to examine limited companies, limited partnerships and general partnerships “having the aim of carrying out business in immovable property.”

The order continues, “If it appears that an alien holds shares or is a director, or if it is reasonable to believe that a Thai holds shares as a representative of an alien, the officers shall investigate the income of Thais holding shares, delving into the number of years [they have been] in [their] current profession, and their income. The provision of necessary evidence is required.

“If a loan was taken [by the Thai] for the purchase [of shares] evidence of the loan is required.”

The order does not specify which officials will be responsible for investigating suspect companies, nor does it set out, except in the vaguest of terms, what will happen after the “investigation”.

All it says is, “If after due investigation it can conceivably be believed that the request for registration … is to bypass the law or [it can be believed] that [those involved are buying] land for the benefit of an alien as defined in Section 74 … the officers who undertook the investigation shall forward the findings to the Land Department to a wait the order of the Minister.”

No deadlines are set for how long an investigation will take, or how fast the Minister will be required to deliver a judgment.

Local reaction was hard to come by. The Phuket Provincial Land Office was not aware of the new order. However, one Thai involved in the property industry, who did not wish to be named, remarked that it seemed “like a good thing, as long as the application is fair”. He added that he worried that it might be used by some “for their [own] benefit”.

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May 31st, 2006 by admin

Thailand approves October polls by Boonradom Chitradon
Tue May 30, 10:40 AM ET

Thailand’s cabinet approved October 15 as the date for new elections and the main opposition party agreed to stand, raising hopes of an end to months of political crisis in the kingdom.

Three weeks ago the Constitutional Court annulled polls in April that were called hurriedly by Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in a bid to silence vociferous opposition to his premiership.

“The cabinet approved the October 15 date proposed by the Election Commission as a new election date,” Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-Ngam told journalists.

“It’s the cabinet’s authority to issue a new royal decree and there are 90 days to enable candidates to change party,” Wissanu said.

Under Thailand’s election law, if candidates want to run in polls, they must be members of political parties for at least 90 days before filing for their candidacy.

If they want to change political parties for the October 15 elections, they must therefore apply for new party membership by June 8 at the latest.

Last week, Thaksin, 56, staged a political comeback, formally returning to office after stepping aside in early April in the wake of mass street protests demanding his resignation over alleged corruption and abuse of power.

The premier has come under increasing pressure to quit since January, when public anger erupted over his family’s 1.9-billion-dollar tax-free sale of its stock in Shin Corp., the telecom giant he founded before entering office.

His announcement to step aside came two days after April 2 snap polls boycotted by the main opposition parties that led to the parliament being closed due to the failure to fill enough lower house seats.

The biggest opposition Democrat party welcomed confirmation of the new election date and said it would stand against Thaksin’s ruling Thai Rak Thai (Thais Love Thais) this time around.

“We are ready to run in the new polls,” said party spokesman Ongart Klampaiboon.

Thailand’s business leaders who have been jittery over an economic slump due to the political turmoil took heart from the cabinet’s agreement.

“Today’s decision is the first step to help solve the political deadlock and make Thai politics more stable,” said Pornsilp Patcharintanakul, deputy secretary-general of the Board of Trade, a major business group.

The Constitutional Court on May 8 declared the April elections invalid, saying the campaigning period was too short and polling booths were improperly organized. The court also ordered the government to hold new elections.

The Election Commission had initially proposed October 22 as a new date for the elections, but Thailand’s three most powerful courts rejected the proposal, demanding the commission resign because it had lost legitimacy.

The Democrat party spokesman maintained Tuesday that the Election Commission should resign to take responsibility for the troubled April 2 snap polls.

The government had also declared the October 22 option as inappropriate because it coincided with the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

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May 25th, 2006 by admin

UTTARADIT, Thailand - Soldiers search for bodies in Thailand

More than 1,000 soldiers searched for bodies under a sea of mud and debris Thursday in northern Thailand following flash floods that were believed to have killed more than 100 people.

The Public Health Ministry reported 51 people dead and 87 missing from the flooding that began Monday after several days of torrential rains. More than 250 people were injured in landslides.

But Boonriang Chuchai-saengrat, chief health officer of Uttaradit province, said he feared more than 100 perished in his province alone.

The troops were dispatched early Thursday to Uttaradit, where teams searched for bodies in the province’s hard-hit Tha Pla district, an area where more than 40 villagers were reportedly washed away by flash floods, but only two bodies have been recovered, Maj. Lertchai Khaithong said.

Rescue teams also brought sniffing dogs to the area to search for bodies covered by mud.

Local and government officials have released conflicting numbers, with some reporting more than 300 missing. Officials have been slow to release updated figures because of communication problems.

Some 400 search and rescue volunteers in helicopters and on foot have been trying to reach thousands of people stranded in their houses, on trains and in open terrain in northern Thailand.

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May 14th, 2006 by admin

Thai courts and election officials are to begin planning new elections this week, but analysts warn an end to months of turmoil could still be a long time coming.

The process is already off to a bumpy start, less than a week after the Constitutional Court invalidated last month’s snap polls that left the country without a functioning parliament and forced prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra to step aside.

The leading opposition parties, which boycotted the last elections, have refused to attend a meeting Monday with the Election Commission and court officials to decide when new polls should be held.

The parties insist they still plan to contest the next election, but have called on the commission to resign since the court tossed out the April 2 vote.

“It would be difficult for this Election Commission to organize the next polls as a free and fair election, because the public has no faith in them,” Democrat party spokesman Ong-art Klampaiboon said.

The court — which only took action after the king publicly castigated the judges — ruled that the campaigning period for the last election was too short, and that the polling booths did not provide enough privacy as voters ticked their ballots.

Hundreds of other cases are still pending, including claims that Thaksin’s party illegally financed campaigns by fringe groups.

The timing of the election carries important consequences, because Thai law requires that candidates belong to their parties for at least 90 days before the vote.

If the election is delayed until late this year, that could encourage a defection from Thaksin’s Thai Rak Thai party, said political analyst Thitinan Pongsudhirak from Chulalongkorn University.

“I don’t think any factions will flock to TRT,” he said. “I think the factions could leave TRT.”

“The longer it is until the election day, the better it is for the opposition,” he added.

Few expect the elections could happen within the next month, because Thailand is busy preparing for the 60th anniversary of revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s accession to the throne in June.

“The celebrations place restrictions on timing, so they shouldn’t rush it,” said Mike Nelson, a visiting scholar at Chulalongkorn.

“They should proceed in an orderly way. This is a very important celebration, but as soon as they’re over one can have the elections.”

He expected the polls could take place no sooner than late July.

The other burning question is whether Thaksin, who tearfully stepped aside on April 4, will decide to run again for prime minister.

So far, Thaksin has been deliberately vague, calling himself “jobless” one day, and resuming his official duties to preside over an important royal ceremony on another.

The billionaire businessman remains his party’s leader and its most important financier.

His charisma still holds significant appeal in much of Thailand, especially in the rural northern heartland where his economic policies have slashed rural poverty.

But the urban protesters who helped drive him from office remain watchful, and have already threatened to return to the streets if he returns, saying that would simply bring back the corruption they accuse Thaksin of.

Completely unaddressed so far is how a new government would oversee constitutional reforms that all the major parties have clamored for — a process expected to take about a year and that could result in yet another election.

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