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Opinion





Icnos R Us

Despite a push by the interim government for people and organizations to adopt HM the King’s “Sufficiency Economy” principles, Phuket has clearly retained its uncanny ability to attract big, bold development schemes, both from the government and private sectors.

In the past few month alone, there have been private sector initiatives to build a man-made island to cater to the yachting needs of the word’s richest people, followed by a raucous public hearing on the need for the ambitious Phase II of the Chalong Marina plan.

These two schemes combined would pale into insignificance if the futuristic Phuket Bay “International Convention, Exhibition, Entertainment & Resort Complex” ever becomes reality.

Earlier this year, a proposal was put forward to build a tsunami barrier that would automatically pop up in the nick of time, protecting Patong Bay from the ravages of any future tsunamis.

Back on dry land, investors last week came to meet the governor to sound out the possibility of constructing a cable car to transport holiday-makers up to a scenic vista in the hillsides above Patong (see News pages).

In January 2003, Srimuang Charoensri, then a member of the Senate Committee on Communications, became the latest official to propose the construction of a tunnel under Patong Hill to ease traffic congestion and reduce road accidents there.

Slowly nearing completion in the Nakkerd Hills, on what was once government virgin forest land, is what promises to be Phuket’s newest icon: the Mingmongkol Buddha image, a 45-meter-high colossus built on donations by faithful Buddhists “finding their ways to leap out from sufferings to face the enduring happiness”, according to the project’s fund-raising website.

Another icon to be open soon is the Phuket Provincial Administration Organization’s long-delayed, 46-million-baht “Welcome Gate” project at Tah Chat Chai.

Two other ambitious plans that threaten to leave much of Tah Chat Chai covered in concrete are the large sports complex and the international convention center, both on Treasury Department land.

If and when all of these projects are completed, Phuket will likely have more icons than a computer desktop – but much less of the natural beauty that attracted most residents in the first place.

When a new government is elected, let’s see if it identifies environmental protection as its top priority and takes steps to preserve what is left of Phuket’s natural beauty after decades of poorly-regulated, greed-driven development. A good first step would be immediate funding for a second incinerator at Saphan Hin.


The Editor


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