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Search Result for “government officials”

Showing 1 - 10 of 27

THAILAND

Activists in the line of fire

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 04/05/2014

» While the details in the case of the missing Mr Porlajee remain unclear, some human rights activists say it has highlighted threats routinely made against environmental campaigners and human rights activists.

THAILAND

Falling under a relentless dry spell

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 09/03/2014

» In his office at Rangsit University, the country’s best-known climate expert, Seree Supratid, is staring at a computer screen intently, his face showing signs of concern.

THAILAND

Road to Dawei paved with anguish

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 02/03/2014

» From the Tenasserim mountains which form the Thai border to the bright blue Andaman waters of Myanmar’s west coast, a swathe is being cut through communities sitting in the way of progress.

THAILAND

Struggling to unearth a grain of truth

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 02/02/2014

» The government's rice-pledging scheme, long plagued by claims of mismanagement and corruption, is facing increasing scrutiny as the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) probes into caretaker Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's involvement.

THAILAND

Voices of the dammed

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 17/11/2013

» Thong feels lost in both senses of the word. After being told the plan to build a dam on the nearby Mae Wong stream had been revived, the cassava farmer, who preferred to use a pseudonym, feels defeated in his campaign to oppose the project. He is also unsure of which direction his life will take in the wake of the decision.

THAILAND

Paving a piece of paradise

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 27/10/2013

» Dech Khieonarong is one of many residents of Tak's Umphang district who cheered when the government announced it was reviving a plan to construct a new road from Khlong Lan to the remote town in the midst of a protected wilderness. Weary of traversing the 164km of arduous road with, by his count, more than 1,000 hairpin curves, he volunteered to head a committee of locals to push for the construction of the ''new'' Khlong Lan-Umphang road, a large part of which was actually constructed more than 40 years ago by the military as part of its efforts to suppress communist insurgents. The military managed to cut 115km of road through the deep forest inside Mae Wong National Park, 30km from Umphang in the 1970s. The military backed off on completing the road to Umphang because of objections that it would compromise the Western Forest Complex. Over the years the military road fell into disuse and is now overgrown and impassable in some places.

THAILAND

A different killer lurking in the forest

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 29/09/2013

» Yoo-ae, 18, could not decide whether or not to leave the cemetery. The Karen girl's mother and friends were urging her to go, but she replied, ''No, I want to stay a little longer,'' her eyes filling with tears.

THAILAND

Shielding the sanctuary

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 01/09/2013

» For Weraya O-chakull, breaking through the gender barrier involved picking up a gun and learning how to use it.

THAILAND

Seeds of hope in forest fight

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 14/07/2013

» Thap Lan National Park chief Taywin Meesap guides a team of rangers to a plot showing some signs of progress in the battle to win back land lost to forest encroachment.

THAILAND

Clock ticks for parks to keep promises

Spectrum, Piyaporn Wongruang, Published on 02/06/2013

» Officials in charge of overseeing the Dong Phayayen-Khao Yai Forest Complex are scrambling to come up with a plan to stave off a potential downgrade by Unesco's World Heritage Committee this month.