Thursday 9 August 2001

 WAR ON DRUGS: Chiang Rai ya ba seizures 'doubling'

Don Pathan
THE NATION

CHIANG RAI, Thailand

The amount of methamphetamines confiscated by authorities in Chiang Rai province over the past seven months is close to the total amount ceased by provincial officials last year, a senior police officer said yesterday.

According to Pol Col Thanakit Teurnkaew, a deputy commander at the provincial counter-narcotic unit, Chiang Rai authorities seized a total of 4,661,324 tablets of methamphetamines between January 1 and July 31 this year, compared to a total of 5,583,477 for all of last year.

"At the rate we are going, we will double the entire amount we had confiscated for the year 2000," Thanakit said. 

Chiang Rai has for decades been a major drug route for illicit opium and heroin - and in the recent years, methamphetamines - coming out of the infamous Golden Triangle, an area where Thailand, Laos and Burma share a common border.

"It's not that we are easing our counter-narcotic efforts. We have explored every possible channel, including public relations, educating the masses and setting up more checkpoints," Thanakit said.

"The problem is that producers still see the illicit business as something that is worth the risk," he said.

Thanakit said traffickers had become more sophisticated, pointing to the regular clashes with Thai soldiers along the border near Tak province as well as a major drug bust earlier this year in the Andaman Sea. "It's like a balloon affect. When the authorities squeeze one area, the illicit activities pop up in another," he said.

According to Office of the Narcotic Control Board estimates, about 90 per cent of illicit drugs produced in the area ends up in the streets of various cities in the country.

The Thai army has blamed a pro-Rangoon ethnic army, the United Wa State Army, for much of the methamphetamines flooding into the country, saying the group has over the years expanded its troops and illicit operations along the common border to areas near Tak province, as well as areas just north of the Golden Triangle bordering Laos.

It said a number of the clandestine drug labs have "popped up" in areas along the Mekong River on the Lao side near Burma since the Thai army stepped up security along the Thai-Burma border following a cross-border clash earlier this year.

The Burmese government has said it is being unfairly singled out and that Thailand and other neighbouring countries need to do more to curb the flow of precursor chemicals needed to make the drugs.

Following the border clashes, top army brass from both sides engaged in a lengthy war of words, accusing their counterparts of taking kickbacks from the drug traffickers.



Tuesday 7 August 2001

Experts call for urgent removal of "sanction" (Burma)

Don Pathan
The Nation

All nine heads of the United Nations relief agencies in Burma have made a collective plea to their respective organisations and the international community to urgently lift sanctions against the junta on humanitarian grounds.

With more than 500,000 people HIV-positive and a high maternal mortality ratio ranging between 230-580 per 100,000 live births, Burma is on the brink of a humanitarian crisis, they said in a letter sent to all chiefs of UN agencies operating in the country.

The groups include the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Unicef and the World Health Organisation.

The letter said half of the maternal deaths in Burma were due to unsafe abortions, while about 25 percent of new-born babies were underweight. One in three of all Burmese children would be malnourished by the time they reached the age of five.

"This is compounded by the fact that about 3.6 million children and 1.1 million pregnant women live in areas considered to be at high or moderate risk for malaria transmission," according to the letter.

The nine UN representatives said humanitarian assistance to Burma was a moral and ethical necessity and to deny the country the aid would cause unnecessary suffering.

They called for a dramatic overhaul of budget allocation to Burma, as well as a cohesive approach between the activities of the UN organisations operating in Burma and the political initiatives launched from within the UN system.

Moreover, said the representatives, delayed assistance may also have an escalating effect on the illicit drug business, resulting in a negative impact on the region as a whole in a wide range of other areas - including human trafficking, illegal migration and population displacements.

"The current peripheral or piecemeal assistance provided to Myanmar [Burma] is not 

adequate to reverse or even slow down certain negative trends," the letter said. Burma receives about US$1 (Bt45) per capita annually, compared with $35 for Cambodia and $68 for Laos. 

The representatives pointed out HIV/Aids, illicit drugs and food security as the top three areas that needed utmost attention.

Although the representatives agreed that a common humanitarian approach towards Burma must be viewed in the context of the country's political environment, they said: "the nature and magnitude of the humanitarian situation does not permit delaying until the political situation evolves". 

The statement from the nine UN agency heads came amid ongoing secret talks between the ruling junta and the opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner whose National League for Democracy won a landslide general election in 1990 but was denied the fruit of victory by the army.



Friday 3 August 2001

A rocky path that turned smooth: Thailand-Vietnam relations

Don Pathan
The Nation

Coming to terms with the past has not been easy for Thailand and Vietnam, the two Southeast Asian nations who have fought each other bitterly in various circles for the most part of their 25 years of diplomatic relations.

But with guidance from the country’s Royal Family, as well as the strong political will of Thailand’s successive leaders, the bitterness has subsided.

“Never before has the relationship between Thailand and Vietnam been in such good shape as it is now,” said the Vietnamese ambassador to Thailand, Do Ngoc Son, in an interview with The Nation.

There have been a lot of changes in the past 25 years, said the envoy, pointing to a number of political breakthroughs, most of which took place in recent years.

Son said regular visits by members of the Royal Family had helped pave the way for the leaders of the two sides to come to the negotiating table to pin down some of the stickiest issues that have been shelved for the best part of the relationship.

In the past decade, many of these issues were centred on the region’s security, with Vietnam being on one side and the core Asean members – Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines and Singapore – on the other. The battlefield was, naturally, the rice paddies of Indochina, as well as the United Nations.

A major breakthrough came in 1989 under the Paris Peace Agreement, which paved the way for Vietnamese troops to pull out of Cambodia. It was followed by a UN-sponsored general election in the wartorn country.

In 1992, Hanoi was granted Asean “observer” status, and three years later became a full member of the regional grouping.

“This has allowed all of us to create a deeper understanding of one another,” Son said. “It wasn’t just with Thailand, but relations with all Asean countries improved.”

But coming under the Asean umbrella wasn’t a cause for jubilation as Hanoi wanted it to be. Many of the core members were still suspicious of Hanoi’s “hidden agenda” in Vientiane and Phnom Penh. In the process, sensitive issues between Vietnam and Thailand, such as refugee repatriation, overlapping claims and the Khmer Rouge, would have to wait for political developments to be worked out.

But despite these difficult times, Son said, there was always a need in Hanoi to forge stronger bonds.

“We have always attached great importance to Thailand for various reasons – strategic, economic, historical, geographical, and the similarity in the cultures,” Son said.

A major breakthrough came in 1997 when Thailand and Vietnam became the first two countries in Southeast Asia to ink a maritime boundary, said Son.

According to Son, the agreement showed that there existed mutual political will between the two sides, and therefore paved the way for other sticky issues to be brought up.

Today, the mutual trust has expanded to other areas, including the granting of citizenship to second and third generation ethnic Vietnamese who are descended from the so-called Dien Bien Phu refugees.

Most of the Dien Bien Phu refugees left Vietnam for Thailand in the late 1940s to avoid fighting between Vietnamese nationalists and French forces. Many migrated to Thailand in the previous decade along with the leading members in the nationalist circle who came here to map out their strategy against the French.

The second major wave that fled the country following the fall of the American-backed Saigon regime in 1975 came regularly until a comprehensive plan of action backed by the UN High Commissioner of Refugees was put in place. The last group of these refugees went back in early 1999 following the closure of the Sikhiu camp.

Today, about 60 percent of the so-called descendants of Dien Bien Phu have been granted Thai citizenship, while all of the first generation have been granted residency status, thus allowing them to return to visit their homeland.

“We highly appreciate this humanitarian and reasonable policy,” Son said. “They [the Dien Bien Phu refugees] have contributed greatly to the betterment of Thailand and can also serve as a bridge to promote friendship between the two countries.”

On the economic front, Son said the two countries are looking to strengthen their global strategy in the world’s rice market before other rice-producing countries, like India and Pakistan, would be considered to take part in the scheme.

“Rice is the most important commodity for the two agricultural-based societies. We are looking at this as a way to relieve the plight of the poor farmers.”

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25th ANNIVERSARY OF DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS: The fisherman's friend: Thai-Vietnamese ties in a sea change

Don Pathan
The Nation

Published on Aug 4, 2001 

Once bitter enemies across the Cold War divide, Thailand and Vietnam have moved in recent years toward close security and economic cooperation

A few days ago a Vietnamese oil vessel rescued 18 Thai sailors from a burning ship that caught on fire just off Vietnam's southern coast. All the Thai sailors survived, although two were badly burned.

The recent rescue was a far cry from what used to take place in Vietnam's territorial waters. It is not exactly a secret that for the most part of their 25-year history of diplomatic relations, the two sides didn't see eye to eye.

Just three years ago, the name of the game was to catch Thai trawlers fishing illegally in Vietnamese waters. It was a nasty cat-and-mouse game that often struck a raw nerve with both Bangkok and Hanoi. For the Vietnamese authorities, catching Thai trawlers was good business. One vessel could fetch up to a million baht. So lucrative was the trawler trade that even non-coastal Vietnamese provinces were getting into the act.

Today, the chase is no more. Gone are the bitter days when Thai fishermen cluttered up Vietnamese jails waiting to be bailed out by greedy boat owners who were often slapped with inflated fines. 

And with illegal fishing and territorial disputes effectively becoming non-issues, the two countries are turning to each other to map out plans for further cooperation in downstream investments.

To curb illegal fishing and piracy, the navies of both countries are carrying out joint patrols in common waters.

Besides fisheries, the two countries are working together to find ways to control the international rice market. Along the way, the world's two leading rice exporters have attracted great interest from other rice-producing countries like India and Pakistan.

In the area of security cooperation, Thailand and Vietnam have shown that they have reached a level of maturity where frank discussion and exchange of information can take place. Thai authorities have acted swiftly over a recent bomb scare incident carried out by an anti-Hanoi group labeled "terrorists" by the Vietnamese government. 

Moreover, a Thai court is currently trying a Vietnamese-American activist, Ly Thong, on charges of hijacking. Ly was reported to have bribed a Thai pilot to fly him over Vietnam to drop anti-communist leaflets over Ho Chi Minh City. 

Three years ago when another anti-Hanoi movement was taking shape in Trad province, Thai officials did not hesitate to penetrate the ring and break it up. Thailand wanted to show Hanoi that it was serious about security cooperation.

But this level of trust between the two countries did not come overnight. During the Cold War, the two countries were on opposite sides, fighting each other locally in the rice paddies of Indochina, as well as internationally in New York and Paris.

A major breakthrough came in 1989 when Vietnam pulled its troops from Cambodia, paving the way for the 1991 peace settlement. Four years later, Hanoi became a member of the Asean family, pushing bilateral ties with Thailand to a higher plane. 

The mudslinging died down, making way for the strengthening of links that led to the smooth repatriation of all Vietnamese refugees. In February 1999, the Sikhiu camp in Nakhon Ratchasima was closed, thus ending one of the most disturbing chapters in the modern history of Thailand and Vietnam. 

In that year, the two countries also found a middle ground over overlapping claims in the Gulf of Siam. Vietnam became the first country in the region to reach such an agreement with Thailand.

Meanwhile, in Thailand's Northeast, the so-called Dien Bien Phu refugees who fled their homeland in the late 1940s to escape the fighting between French troops and Vietnamese nationalists are well on their way toward receiving their Thai nationality and residency. 

Unlike the previous decades where tremendous prejudice and dubious security measures prevented them from moving up the social ladder, today the sons and daughters of the Dien Bien Phu refugees are changing the face of the underdeveloped region, turning the sleepy region into a thriving business community.

In a few days, the two former enemies will celebrate the 25th anniversary of diplomatic ties. In spite of what they have overcome, a number of challenges still lie ahead. But judging from the cooperation between the two nations in recent years, it would be safe to say that it's all downhill from here.




Wednesday 1 August 2001

Abduction revives border tensions

Don Pathan
The Nation

Thai political leaders and top officials in Bangkok were tight-lipped as to how the kidnapping of seven Thai army and narcotics officers by a pro-Rangoon armed group could have occurred just weeks after the fence-mending visit by Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra to Rangoon.

Few were without an opinion as to how such an incident would affect the waxing and waning of Thai-Burmese relations. All agreed Burma's help was necessary for securing the release of the seven captives. Thai officers on the front lines along the border, on the other hand, were not so optimistic. Many see the incident as retaliation against the recent arrest of seven people, reportedly their associates, in connection with the smuggling of 74 kilograms of heroin and Bt90 million in cash.

Moreover, they said the kidnapping incident had not only strained working relations at the local level but more importantly, it had exposed the flaws in what has been billed as recuperating bilateral ties between the two governments. Needless to say, the "flaw" in this case is the 20,000-strong United Wa State Army (UWSA), dubbed one of the world's largest armed narcotics-trafficking groups.

The UWSA operate somewhat independently in an autonomous zone along Burma's northeastern frontier. At the height of the mudslinging that was kicked off by day-long cross-border shelling between the Thai and Burmese armies earlier this year, top brass from both sides were trading vicious accusations, saying their counterparts were taking kickbacks from drug traffickers.

Although the war of words may have quietened down following Thaksin's visit to Rangoon, feelings among border units remain tense, officials said. Many said it would take more than a "kiss-and-make-up" session between Thaksin and the junta to improve the situation on the front lines.

For years, Bangkok has consistently held Rangoon accountable for the Wa's illicit activities, despite acknowledging that the UWSA operate independently from Rangoon. This independence is illustrated by the fact that Burmese troops are required to disarm before entering Wa-controlled areas.

Two years ago, Thailand declared war on the UWSA, accusing them of regularly flooding the country with millions of methamphetamine pills. Economic sanctions were imposed against the Wa and a border checkpoint leading to Mong Yawn, one of their strongholds near the Thai border, was ordered shut.

According to the US State Department, Burma continues to be one of the world's largest producers of illicit opium, accounting for 80 per cent of the total production in Southeast Asia. A great deal of the drug activities there is controlled by the UWSA. The group entered a cease-fire agreement, but not a permanent peace deal, with the military government of Burma in 1989.