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HEADLINES [click on headline to view story]:

IEAT to take action against firm whose workers started Maptaput fire

Koh Larn officials prepare to set out more buoys to avoid another sea disaster

14 government agencies push to reduce health care costs

Banglamung seeks funds to repair Khao Mai Kaew Road

700 PAD supporters turn out in Sattahip to hear New Politics Party boss

Chonburi hosts 4th Eastern Flower Fair

Pattaya Chinatown, parades, contests slated for Chinese New Year

39-year-old woman makes triplets as easy as ABC

Pattaya officials to tackle problems facing area youth

Mahout seeks compensation for electrocution of 800,000 baht elephant

Small garbage fire ignites bigger problem in Plutaluang

Police search for 2nd man wanted in attempted robbery of Canadian

Underpaid transvestite steals video camera to boost earnings

German’s deadly high-rise fall likely an accident, police say

Return of the Sukhumvit sinkhole

PBTA presses city for additional funding

400 Sattahip youth given anti-drug lecture

7,130 kids received polio vaccination last month


IEAT to take action against firm whose workers started Maptaput fire

Theerarak Suthathiwong
Maptaput industrial zone officials will take action against the company that violated a stop-work order issued in December and sent workers to disassemble a storage tank and, in the process, set off a fire.
Five fire engines and three water tanks responded to the Jan. 25 blaze at the National Fertilizers (Public) Co. Ltd. plant in the heart of the Rayong factory district. Thick black smoke billowed into the air, sparking fears of toxic contamination, but authorities said there was no danger to the public.
The fire apparently started when sparks from workers cutting supports for a storage tank ignited a smokestack filter. Fed by residual petroleum, the blaze spread rapidly engulfing the tank. No one was injured and damages were estimated at less than 1 million baht.
Officials from the Industrial Estate Authority of Thailand examined the scene and said it would file a complaint against the company that sent the workers to disassemble the plant as the IEAT in December had ordered all work to stop on the decommissioning of the fertilizer plant. IEAT officials would not name the firm against which they would be filing the complaint.


Koh Larn officials prepare to set out more buoys to avoid another sea disaster

Buoys are already in place in the waters in front of Tawaen Beach on Koh Larn, but the city is planning to install more.

Ariyawat Nuamsawat
More than 40 temporary buoys are ready to be anchored off Koh Larn to clearly designate the island’s swimming zone in hopes of preventing accidents like the one that killed a Russian tourist last month.
The Pattaya Marine Rescue Unit is readying cement anchors and with the cooperation of a volunteer unit known as the Thappraya 2310 will then attach the floating markers every five meters along a 150-meter stretch of Tawaen beach about 100 meters off shore. Additionally, warning signs in Thai, English and Russian will be placed on the beach.
The buoys are designed to clearly separate swimming areas from boating channels. A Russian tourist diving and swimming off Ta-Yai Beach Jan. 13 was killed when he was hit by the propeller of a passing speedboat. The accident, the third marine-related mishap since December, prompted an urgent call by Mayor Itthiphol Kunplome to Koh Larn officials to quickly provide better markings for swimming and diving.
Deputy Mayor Ronakit Ekasingh said the buoys are only the start of the city’s effort to boost marine safety. A budget to purchase permanent buoys for Koh Larn and Koh Sak has been requested and boat operators have been informed of the newly marked swimming areas.


14 government agencies push to reduce health care costs

Dentist Kritsada Ruang-Areerat said health care expenses for government employees were five times that for the general population in 2007.

Theerarak Suthathiwong
With health care costs in Thailand skyrocketing, the Health Promotion Foundation has started a campaign to keep government workers healthier, which would free up additional funds to support other insurance programs.
Fourteen government agencies are participating in the new program including Pattaya City, Nongprue Municipality, Chonburi Province and the Chachoengsao Administrative Organization. Each unit will pick project leaders who will help define projects to increase good health. Project results will then be shared with the idea the most-successful programs can be adopted nationwide.
“It is hoped that the participating organizations will realize the importance of health promotion and will help other organizations learn from their development,” said Dr. Pornchai Sitthisarankul.
Chonburi’s first program will be a sports competition pitting government workers from 33 different offices Feb. 6 at Cholkalayanukul School.
Officials estimate government outlays on health insurance will triple to 60 million baht per year within 10 years. Overall health care costs are expected to total 75.6 billion baht in 2010 alone.
Dentist Kritsada Ruang-Areerat, an HPF vice president, said health care expenses for government employees were five times that for the general population in 2007. That will soon outstrip the government’s 90 billion baht budget, he said.


Banglamung seeks funds to repair Khao Mai Kaew Road

Boonlua Chatree
Banglamung authorities have filled a deep hole on a bridge in Takhiantia with 10 dump trucks full of sand, but have come to realize what the 40-year-old roadway linking Rong Po and Khao Mai Kaew needs is a complete resurfacing.
The Banglamung Commission has applied for an extraordinary budget to repair the road, which was only recently turned over to it by the National Rural Department. At the moment, Bridge No. 2 is open to 10-wheeled trucks or smaller, but heavy vehicles transporting cargo to and from Laem Chabang Port have been banned.
The restriction was imposed after a 12 sq. m. hole three meters deep made the bridge impassable. District road workers quickly filled it in with sand and posted signs, but that was only a temporary solution.
Commissioner Chalerm Ketjae said the road is very old and was likely washed out during recent rains. Unless the entire roadway is inspected and repaved where needed, more problems will occur.

The 40-year-old roadway linking Rong Po
and Khao Mai Kaew needs a complete resurfacing.


700 PAD supporters turn out in Sattahip to hear New Politics Party boss

Patcharapol Panrak
About 700 Sattahip-area supporters of the People’s Alliance for Democracy kicked off the new year with a fund-raising party where luminaries of the yellow-shirted movement promised to stand guard over the country, but not cause any more of the problems that led to 2008’s Bangkok airport closure.

Suriyasai Katasila, secretary-general of the PAD-backed New Politics Party said the country is headed into perilous times.

Suriyasai Katasila, secretary-general of the PAD-backed New Politics Party headlined the 200 baht-per-person luncheon January 24 at Sattahip’s Sifa Restaurant. He was joined by top party officers, including Treasurer Vice. Adm. Pratheep Chouen-Arom and Political Committee members Sutthi Atchasai and Amnat Palamee of the State Enterprises Workers’ Relations Confederation union.
Amnat took the podium first, blasting the current Democrat Party-led coalition government and the state railway for a “lack of vision” that has led to faulty equipment and unsafe conditions for passengers.
But it was former PAD street-protest organizing director Suriyasai the people came to see. He warned the country was headed into perilous times with this month’s expected court ruling on whether the government will seize 76 billion baht in personal assets from deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.
With red-shirted Thaksin supporters expected to take to the streets to pressure and, if necessary, protest the verdict, the country may be faced with more street violence, Suriyasai said. While he added that he supports the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship’s right to assemble, he said the government has a responsibility to ensure they do so legally and peacefully.
Despite the PAD’s roots in Thailand’s privileged elite, Suriyasai maintained the New Politics Party was set up to protect the interests of all Thais.
“The New Politics Party is the political party for the people and their long-term protection,” he maintained. “Setting it up today doesn’t mean it will succeed tomorrow. It will take time. But the aim is to include all Thai people who are interested in joining.”
Suriyasai said the PAD will monitor the country’s situation closely but will not cause more problems than it already has. But neither will it be quiet, he added. When warranted, the PAD will take action to protect the interests of the people.
“We would not show up if it were unnecessary,” he said.


Chonburi hosts 4th Eastern Flower Fair

Boonlua Chatree
Rare and precious flowers and plants were on display when the Chonburi provincial government and the Flower and Ornamental Plants Association hosted the 4th Eastern Flower Fair Jan. 22-26 in front of Chonburi Town Hall.

Rare and precious flowers on display at the 4th Eastern Flower Fair Jan. 22-26.

Attendees also delighted in a tropical flower garden, complete with waterfall, a flower competition using orchids, Nepenthes, Crowns of Thorns, Mother in Law’s Tongue and delicate species. HRH Princess Soamsawalee handed out trophies to winners in 11 categories.
The annual fair, which drew 30,000 visitors and generated 23 million baht last year, is aimed at boosting the local market for flower and plant sales and production. Chonburi officials said a larger flower market would also boost tourism.


Pattaya Chinatown, parades, contests slated for Chinese New Year

Vimolrat Singnikorn
Pattaya officials envision creating a Pattaya Chinatown for three days as the centerpiece of its 2 million baht Chinese New Year celebration later this month.

Wuttipol Charoenphol, Pattaya City chief clerk, recently announced the city will be spending up to 2 million baht on this year’s Chinese New Year festivities.

At a Jan. 20 meeting, Wuttipol Charoenphol, Pattaya City chief clerk, heard bids from two companies vying to be named the organizers for the city’s Feb. 14-16 event. In addition to staging a Chinatown at Bali Hai Pier, there would also be parades, a Chinese celebrities show and a Chinese Young Girl pageant for kids ages 7-9 years old to win up to 80,000 baht in prize money.
Wuttipol said Chinese New Year - which coincides this year with Valentine’s Day - is one of the most important dates on the tourism calendar. He estimates no fewer than 4,000 Thais of Chinese lineage will visit the city each day during the event.
The city plans to broadly market its celebration in print and on TV and radio in three languages. “The festival should also present a romantic image because opening day is also Valentine’s Day,” he said.


39-year-old woman makes triplets as easy as ABC

Hospital officials, mom, dad and 3 bouncing baby boys
show off for the cameras at Rayong Hospital.

Theerarak Suthathiwong
A 39-year-old Rayong woman made having triplets look as easy as ABC.
Somkhuan Charoensil and 31-year-old husband Pleonpit Supantana celebrated the birth of their three boys Dec. 29 in the Rayong Hospital’s Pediatrics Ward with lots of family and friends. Babies Pasathorn or “Nong A,” Palisorn or “Nong B,” and Pasawee or “Nong C,” were born healthy, if a bit underweight, and had to spend some time in incubators until they matured a bit. And now that they’re healthy, they’ve been brought out for the whole world to see.
Hospital Director Narit Aonprom said the birth was the first time in 60 years that triplets were born at the Rayong facility. The hospital presented gifts to the new baby boys.
Somkhuan, who already has a 17-year-old son, knew she was carrying triplets about four months into her pregnancy. Remarkably, she delivered the boys naturally. Each child weighed between 1.6 kg and 1.7 kg.
The new father said he was excited at his instant family, but said taking care of them will be a challenge, as he was laid off from his job as a laborer in the Maptaput Industrial Estate last year as a result of the landmark environmental court case there.


Pattaya officials to tackle problems facing area youth

Vimolrat Singnikorn
Faced with an alarming number of teen pregnancies, HIV infections and drug use, Pattaya officials have set up several committees to tackle the problems facing area youth.

Deputy Mayor Wutisak Rermkitkarn (left) receives a souvenir from Namthip Srisakul, Regional Fundraising Officer, World Vision.

At a Jan. 28-29 seminar at the Diana Garden Resort, Deputy Mayor Wutisak Rermkitkarn called on child-welfare offices to tackle the plight of street kids and do more to educate teens and families about the perils of premarital sex and drug use. Social workers heard lectures and made visits to shelters and children’s rights offices.
He announced the city has also set up three committees chaired by top Pattaya officials. One will be a city-only committee on the protection of children. The second is a joint panel between the city, state agencies and NGOs and the third is a committee that brings together city and police officials on enforcement issues.
“The purpose behind all of this is to learn about the issues and develop better methods of protecting children,” Wutisak said. “The aim also is to get networks to cooperate and increase understanding of child-protection issues.”
The urgency of the city’s efforts stem from a study that turned up some alarming statistics on underage promiscuity, drug use and HIV infections.
For example, Banglamung Hospital - which handled about 21 percent of all births in the greater Pattaya area - reported that 1.9 percent of pregnant women it saw between the ages of 15 and 20 were HIV positive. That is 2.5 times the national average.
The study also warned that children under age 18 were also very vulnerable to physical assault and sexual abuse, usually by those who force them into the sex industry or are customers.
Drugs also play a role in the problems of Pattaya teens, with an inordinately large number either addicted to narcotics or dealing them.
The report also urged action on the issue of unemployed teens and street kids. The city plays host to about 3,000 street kids, who are often the offspring of poor families that have relocated from elsewhere and have neglected them. But even educated children have problems. The study said that a large number of teens with basic educations are unemployed, which leaves them time to get into trouble with sex and drugs.
Results of the study were discussed during the two-day seminar, which also saw Natthawut Buaprathum of the Protection of Children’s Rights Center, speak to the social-welfare officials assembled. They also visited emergency housing shelters for children, the Kanitnaree Center, the Association for Promotion of the Status of Women, and the Center for the Protection of Children’s Rights Foundation in Bangkok.


Mahout seeks compensation for electrocution of 800,000 baht elephant

Aouy Yuiram and other mahouts file a complaint with provincial authorities over the electrocution death of Aouy’s elephant.

Patcharapol Panrak
A 61-year-old mahout who faces financial ruin after his elephant was electrocuted outside a Najomtien camp wants the Provincial Electric Authority to compensate him because, he claims, its power poles are negligently maintained and shoot electricity in the ground when it rains.
Sangchan, a 50-year-old elephant, was killed Jan. 23 from apparent electrocution near Hern Najomtien Elephant Camp. Mahout Aouy Yuiram was riding Sangchan after a veterinary checkup in a light rain when, passing power-line pylons meant to protect them from lightning strikes, the elephant went rigid and collapsed. Aouy said he felt his legs go numb before being thrown during the animal’s convulsions.
PEA workers were called to the scene to find the pachyderm dead with its head lying against a high-voltage power pole. They turned off the current to remove the carcass and test the area for wayward current, but said that the poles, wires and lightning-grounding pylons were all connected properly.
Aouy disagrees. He said two other elephants and their mahout were shocked during rainy conditions in the area. Wong-ngeon and its baby, Nam-oy, survived, but their caretaker suffered a broken arm when he was thrown during their stampede away from danger.
Sangchan’s death has had tragic implications for Aouy as well. The mahout bought the pachyderm with an 800,000 baht loan at 3 percent interest rate and has 700,000 left to pay. With no animal to take tourists on elephant treks with, he faces financial disaster and is now desperately seeking compensation.
Aouy first filed a complaint with police, claiming the accident was a result of negligence by the Provincial Electric Authority. He also sought relief from the elephant camp, which turned down his claim, citing the animal died as a result of an accident out of their control.
Police Lt. A-non Infong said PEA authorities had already checked the power systems near the camp and found no problems. Aouy maintains, however, that the checks were done during dry conditions and need to be done again in the rain to see if current is streaming from the grounding pylons into the earth or subterranean water. He sees no other explanation for his expensive animal’s death.
For now, the PEA hasn’t said whether it plans to retest the area but if a solution cannot be found, Aouy said his only other option would be to sue the utility in court, which he did on January 25. He’s also asked for a registered veterinarian to perform an autopsy on the elephant to use as evidence.


Small garbage fire ignites bigger problem in Plutaluang

Patcharapol Panrak
A 64-year-old American man who decided to burn garbage during strong winds ended up torching about 160 sq. meters and threatening 10 nearby houses.

What started as a small garbage fire quickly spread during strong winds, threatening nearby houses.

It took firefighters nearly 30 minutes to extinguish the blaze in Samakkee Village 5 in Plutaluang Jan. 22. Residents fled the scene, fearing the quick-moving fire would engulf their homes.
The fire started while Richard Shainwald was burning trash in a small empty field where residents disposed of their refuse. Strong winds quickly spread the fire, however, with a utility pole suffering the most damage, plunging some homes into darkness.
Shainwald apologized to his neighbors and promised not to burn trash again for a while.


Police search for 2nd man wanted in attempted robbery of Canadian

Boonlua Chatree
Police are looking for the partner of an HIV-infected thief who received a bloody beat-down from Pattaya Police Volunteers after attempting to rob a Canadian man outside his Jomtien Beach condominium.
Saranya Yatcharoen, 27, was taken into custody Jan. 24 with a bleeding nose and mouth, swollen face and other injures after attempting to rob Bhatti Ammad Wazir, 35, outside the View Talay 2 building on Pratamnak Road that morning. Claiming he needed money for HIV treatment, as well as ya ba, Saranya and a partner identified only as “Game” allegedly held up the Canadian with a fake pistol.
Wazir told police the two men stopped him as we was going to his car and, although he recognized the gun was fake and attempted to defend himself, one man hit him with a stick in the head. Both the accused robbers fled, with Wazir in pursuit. Volunteer police in the area joined the chase and managed to stop and subdue Saranya while Game escaped.


Underpaid transvestite steals video camera to boost earnings

Boonlua Chatree
A transvestite claiming he was underpaid for his services allegedly stole a video camera from a customer hoping to cash it in for additional compensation.

Jakkapan Makkawan has been arrested
for theft.

Jakkapan Makkawan, 22, was arrested in his Marina Inn Apartments room Jan. 22. Officers recovered the JVC camera reported stolen by Sergey Chibisov at the Tim Boutique Hotel where the Russian had taken the woman-of-the-second-category earlier that night.
Jakkapan said he and friend Chanidapa Torsorn, 21, had come to the hotel to provide service to their client but were only paid 400 baht. While the victim was in the shower, he admitted to fleeting with the camera. Police are still looking for Chanidapa.


German’s deadly high-rise fall likely an accident, police say

Boonlua Chatree
Police say a 71-year-old German Gunter Kirt Zwirner died after falling off his eighth-storey balcony likely fell accidentally, perhaps due to dizziness.
Police responding to the Jan. 27 incident at the Kimhant Apartment & Mansion in Naklua’s Roi Lang Village said they found no signs of struggle or violence and that the elderly German lived alone.
Investigators assumed Zwirner was watching the sunrise on his balcony, where they found a plastic chair and a photo of the man with his lover, and likely fell over the 1 meter railing when he stood up. He was found lying face up wearing only red underwear.
Zwirner had rented the apartment beginning Nov. 19 and was due to stay until March 18. His body was sent to the Forensics Institute and the German embassy was informed of the death.


Return of the Sukhumvit sinkhole

Boonlua Chatree
The hole that swallowed Sukhumvit Road is back, and this time it’s eating trees.
Nearly two months after a giant sink hole opened at the Rong Maikeed Intersection, part of the busy roadway collapsed again January 25. This time, however, the surface collapsed under the center island and only soil and plant bits fell in, not motorbikes.

Sukhumvit sinkhole has returned, this time swallowing a tree and bushes.

The collapse runs along an underground water pipe, the same one that broke before and washed away the land supporting the pavement. City engineers rushed into the correct the problem, causing minor traffic problems in the process.
Amnouy Na-ek, director of construction operations for the city Civil Engineering Department, blamed heavy rain for washing away the soil and causing the collapse. The soil was weak from the recent laying of the Provincial Water Authority drainage pipe. But he said the city will step in to reinforce the soil to prevent further problems.


PBTA presses city for additional funding

Sawittree Namwiwatsuk
Stressing the close relationship it’s had with the city government, the Pattaya Business & Tourism Association is pushing for additional funding to help promote tourist-related development.
At its January meeting, the PBTA hosted Pattaya City Council Chairman Tavich Chaiswangwong who outlined the many projects the city has funded over the past year to enhance the city’s image and infrastructure.

Pattaya City Council Chairman Tavich Chaisawangwong (left) and Jamroon Vitsavachaipan (right), president of the Pattaya Business & Tourism Association.

Among these are projects to move power and telephone lines underground along the beachfront, complete the long-delayed road-widening project in Jomtien Beach and build a wind-power generating station on Koh Larn. And still in development, he said, is the new Pattaya Hospital and Pattaya City Secondary Demonstration School.
Tavich also cited the 1337 Call Center, improved traffic control center, closed-circuit television camera monitoring, wastewater treatment plants and sea rescue division as all positives for tourism.
PBTA President Jamroon Vitsavachaipan noted that Pattaya had allocated funding to his association in 2009, which was used to support its activities and participation in the Tourism Authority of Thailand’s “road show” project. While he said he understood that the city’s national budget allocation was cut this year, he told the city council chairman he hoped that the city would see fit to find some money to give to the association again.


400 Sattahip youth given anti-drug lecture

Pimonporn Kadeetham of the Chonburi Public Health and Environment Office warns youngsters that drug use could lead to AIDS.

Patcharapol Panrak
About 400 secondary and pre-college students at Sattahip’s Singsamut School were given a lesson in the dangers of drugs during the opening of the city’s latest drug-prevention campaign.
Pimonporn Kadeetham of the Chonburi Public Health and Environment Office warned the youngsters that drug use now could lead them to become drug dealers later or even contract AIDS.
Sattahip Mayor Paroj Malakul Na Ayutthaya said the drug problem cannot only be solved through law enforcement and that students need to be educated at any early age about the perils of narcotics. He also advised parents and teachers to be aware of the signs of drug use, including theft of valuables from the home or school to pay for a drug habit.
Drug use can also lead to HIV infection and AIDS, as the loss of control can lead youngsters to having unprotected sex or using drugs intravenously.


7,130 kids received polio vaccination last month

Vimolrat Singnikorn and Phasakorn Channgam
Pattaya’s Anti-Polio Campaign got off to a bigger-than-expected start with 7,130 Thai and foreign children under age 5 getting their first vaccinations.
Many of those kids and their parents turned out again at the Public Health Service Center Jan. 27 to receive their second of three required rounds of anti-polio drops. As with the first round, which was offered from Dec. 23 to Jan. 27, the second and third set of vaccinations are provided free of charge.

This cute little youngster receives a dose of polio vaccination drops.

Public Health Department chief of infectious disease prevention Na Anya Chantrakat said the strong turnout, which included 600 non-Thai children, was likely due to the vigorous promotion of the anti-polio campaign by the city. Pattaya City Council President Tavich Chaiswangwong presided over the Dec. 23 opening, which also featured a children’s heath contest.
The campaign is part of the nationwide “Health Policy for No Polio” that calls for at least 90 percent of Thai infants to receive three polio vaccinations in their first years of life, aggressive monitoring of Acute Flaccid Paralysis cases, investigation and control of active disease cases and promotion of anti-polio measures in the general public.
Pattaya, as one of the country’s busiest crossroads of international visitors, is a weak point in the country’s defenses, as it hosts many visitors from the developing world where polio remains a problem, officials believe.
Thailand’s anti-polio efforts are being carried out in conjunction with the World Health Organization, UNICEF and the Rotary Foundation, which launched a global polio-eradication effort in 1988. Since then diagnosed cases of polio have decreased by 99 percent from more than 350,000 cases a year to just 1,310 cases worldwide in 2007.
The Americas, Europe, China, Australia and 35 other western Pacific countries have already been declared polio-free. But it still can be found in Asia and North Africa. The disease also remains endemic in India, which accounted for the largest segment of Pattaya’s tourists this year, as well as Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria.
For more information please contact the Contagious Disease Protection and Control Center at 038-420-562 ext. 104 or 105.