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Thursday, May 9, 2024

Thailand government and Indigenous conservationists clash


Ban Sop Lan village leader Tayae Yodchatmingboon has lived in the fog-shrouded mountains of Thailand’s Ob Khan National Forest his entire life. His granddaughter, the first in the village to attend university, teaches English here. Mr. Yodchatmingboon and other residents have spent years tending to a plethora of spiritual sites in the surrounding forests. It’s been this way for generations.

Yet he worries “the spirit of the community will disappear” if the government succeeds in incorporating this land into a neighboring national park. The plan, decades in the making, is meant to help preserve the forest, but could mean stricter rules on how the land – and the village – is used. Expanding the park’s jurisdiction would likely force the villagers to reduce their reliance on rotational farming, a traditional practice that critics say contributes to severe air pollution in the nearby city of Chiang Mai.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Residents of Thailand’s Ban Sop Lan village are resisting government efforts to expand a nearby national park. Both sides are driven by a commitment to preservation, but at the heart of the matter is a question of trust.

Behind the debate over the park’s expansion, there’s a deeper question about whom to trust with the land’s welfare.

Nuthamon Kongcharoen, a Chiang Mai University professor, says more public dialogue about land management is needed to address “feelings of hardship between the government and the ethnic minorities … in the conservation area.”

“This [trust debate] is ongoing,” she adds.

Bathed in Thailand’s winter sun, a dollhouse-sized structure carved from bamboo sits in a forest clearing. In front of it, an older man bows his head in silent prayer to the spirit of the little house.  

For Tayae Yodchatmingboon, the land around this spot is home.

A leader of nearby Ban Sop Lan village, he has lived in the fog-shrouded mountains all his life on land that is part of Ob Khan National Forest, about two and a half hours’ drive from the northern city of Chiang Mai. For more than 50 years, Thailand’s Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation has been working on plans to designate this area as a national park, which could mean stricter rules on how the land – and the village – is used.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Residents of Thailand’s Ban Sop Lan village are resisting government efforts to expand a nearby national park. Both sides are driven by a commitment to preservation, but at the heart of the matter is a question of trust.

“If we are not able to farm and to live off the land, our way of life will not be protected,” Mr. Yodchatmingboon says. “The spirit of the community will disappear. Our happiness will disappear.”

The villagers belong to the Karen ethnic group from Thailand and Myanmar, and have lived on this land for many generations. The government wants to expand nearby Ob Khan National Park to ensure the preservation of natural resources and the environment, while the village is fighting to preserve its livelihood and culture. Behind the debate over the park’s expansion lies a deeper question about who should be trusted with the land’s welfare.



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