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Samak To Relocate 1,700 Slums Out Of Bangkok


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#26 sriracha john

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Posted 2008-08-18 14:18:07

View PostLos78, on 2008-08-18 14:07:40, said:

View Postsriracha john, on 2008-08-18 13:52:43, said:

View PostLos78, on 2008-08-15 17:47:20, said:

A good idea.

Im sure the slum residents will get a good deal also from the governement.

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About 50 habitants of slums in Bangkok protested in front of the Government House on Monday morning, asking Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej to revise and withdraw his plan to relocate their slums to other areas outside the capital.
Bangkok Post / 18-08-08




Well not everyone is going to be happy with being relocated thats just natural. But if Bangkok wants to become a more dynamic and vibrant we need to redevelop these poorer down town areas. Just look at Singapore for example. It had a lot of slums in its down town areas a few years ago until the residents got relocated and redevelopment revitalised the areas. If you like to continue to see down town slums well it dosent say much about your views for making this a better place....

Neither the red text nor the OP mention discontinuing slums.... just moving them.

#27 Meerkat

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Posted 2008-08-18 14:19:00

There was quite a revealing quote in a Nation article over the weekend that touched on the slum issue:

Thammasat University anthropologist and sociologist Pathomrerk Ketutat condemned the idea as "horrible" and said Samak had this mentality long ago, dating back to his time as Bangkok governor.

Pathomrerk said Samak's plan reflected a lack of understanding that the city needed cheap labour and poor workers helped the middle classes cope.


So that's all right then...just let the poor remain poor so the middle classes can "cope". There's never a tug-one's-forelock smiley when you need one...

#28 Jingthing

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Posted 2008-08-18 14:25:29

Yeah, buts its true, though crudely stated.
Cities can be ruined by being too successful and too rich.
For example, in San Francisco, teachers and firemen can't afford to live in the city they serve. People who work in low level jobs of all kinds can't afford to live there. That hurts cities. Should Thai people trust this PPP clown to treat these weakest of people humanely? Grow up. This idea smells. Sounds like a land/money grab for cronies for sure.

Edited by Jingthing, 2008-08-18 14:27:08.


#29 Plus

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Posted 2008-08-18 15:25:19

Quote

just let the poor remain poor so the middle classes can "cope"

Where did you get the idea that Samak wants to lift them out of poverty?

He just think they are an eyesore and he wants to shift them away so as not to embarass the rich folks and tourists.

How they'll survive in the suburbs is not his problem, he's not going to employ them and pay them wages.

#30 Meerkat

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Posted 2008-08-18 16:01:11

View PostPlus, on 2008-08-18 15:25:19 post=, said:

Quote

just let the poor remain poor so the middle classes can "cope"

Where did you get the idea that Samak wants to lift them out of poverty?

He just think they are an eyesore and he wants to shift them away so as not to embarass the rich folks and tourists.

How they'll survive in the suburbs is not his problem, he's not going to employ them and pay them wages.

Eh? I didn't even comment on Samak's plan in my post, and I certainly never implied that he was going to lift them out of poverty.

It was about a university lecturer's almost feudal views regarding the poor - views probably shared by politicians across the spectrum including the present government.

#31 TAWP

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Posted 2008-08-18 17:33:12

Meerkat, what you fail to grasp is that money cannot be printed to make people richer. You cannot over night make poor people rich (by giving each and everyone a big check) and proclaim the problem gone. The reality is that there will always be poor people and rich people. And the middle class - the segment of society that pays all the taxes - would suffer if the poor was removed from the equation. The rich always survives, they eat of the middle class more than anything.

#32 Meerkat

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Posted 2008-08-18 18:36:19

TAWP, of course you can't make poor people rich or solve the nation's poverty problems overnight. Where did I say you could? It's a ridiculous notion and I'm a bit taken aback that you've read so much (wrongly) into my two modest posts on this thread.

That does not mean that society shouldn't try and improve the living standards of the poorest; those that live in the slums in rickety shacks, with poor water, poor sanitation and poor prospects. I'm not sure what you mean by saying that the middle classes would suffer if the poor were better off though - surely increasing the wealth of the nation as a whole would be a good thing. That the middle classes might have to pay their maids and drivers more as we now do in our home countries, well tough - it's still not a proper justification to try and keep them down, as I saw implied in the quoted article. Jeez, I'm a Tory - a Thatcherite if I'm to be pigeonholed - but even I believe that there are certain levels of poverty below which nobody should have to exist and that the state (read taxpayers) should help prevent. :o

As to Samak's plan, there seems precious little in the way of detail to comment upon it, at least as to what I've found in the English language press, although it's funny (though not surprising given the quality of the press here) that there's more space given to opinion against it than there is to elaborating as to exactly what it is! If it means literally tearing up the shacks and simply rebuilding them out of sight somewhere, which seems to be the view of some here, then obviously I'd be against it. If it was meant as part of a proper long-term rehousing/social welfare initiative, similar let's say to what Hong Kong did in the 50s and 60s after the awful slum fires there, then - broadly speaking and still subject to the minutiae - I'd be for it. The proposed new property taxes would be a fitting way of funding such an exercise, although I'd be amazed if they ever actually get passed.

#33 TAWP

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Posted 2008-08-18 18:58:22

I think it was you that read too much into the original article you commented about. He might not have sugar-coated it, but fact remains that it's better for middle class people to _know_ that shoveling poor people away and keeping noses high while complaining about slums isn't even in their own interest. What would be in their own interest is helping poor people to alleviate them selfs out of their situation. Since it would reduce drug use and crime, both which are affecting - again - middle class.
In a world of real politik one has to anchor implementations that help others by pointing out that we all benefit from them.

#34 Heng

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Posted 2008-08-19 00:06:12

Nah, I think an improved bussing system to get them in and out of town would be better. It's no different than having a construction worker camp site... you don't always have to have it right next to the construction site. You can have it an hour away if you want. It just means your workers get up a little earlier and get home later, and you have to spend a bit more on transport costs (not much your trucks are LPG/CNG).

:o

#35 majorpacman

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Posted 2008-08-19 06:18:22

pig face(samak) and cronies are still the corrupt government like Thaksin. Sooner are later, i hope the thai people will demand a better government for themselves or systems that works.

btw, thai people called samak, pig face.

#36 sriracha john

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Posted 2008-08-19 08:25:26

That's why he's the Leader of the PPP...

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#37 jitagon

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Posted 2008-08-19 11:06:39

View PostTAWP, on 2008-08-18 11:58:22, said:

I think it was you that read too much into the original article you commented about. He might not have sugar-coated it, but fact remains that it's better for middle class people to _know_ that shoveling poor people away and keeping noses high while complaining about slums isn't even in their own interest. What would be in their own interest is helping poor people to alleviate them selfs out of their situation. Since it would reduce drug use and crime, both which are affecting - again - middle class.
In a world of real politik one has to anchor implementations that help others by pointing out that we all benefit from them.


View PostHeng, on 2008-08-18 17:06:12, said:

Nah, I think an improved bussing system to get them in and out of town would be better. It's no different than having a construction worker camp site... you don't always have to have it right next to the construction site. You can have it an hour away if you want. It just means your workers get up a little earlier and get home later, and you have to spend a bit more on transport costs (not much your trucks are LPG/CNG).

:o

I can't believe some of the posts on this issue. The 'poor' are not another species you know! The poor suffer just as much, if not more from the effects of their own poverty through drug related and simply not having enough to eat, theft amidst themselves. And what is this, just bus them in? Where are we? Apartheid South Africa?!

As someone said on another thread, those in the West forget how poverty shapes thinking. And no one, but no one, suffers like the poor.

I hope none of you find yourselves below the breadline in such an uncaring country, with no welfare support, amongst the kinds of attitudes shown in both the Thai government and the expat community. For shame.

#38 TAWP

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Posted 2008-08-19 14:09:10

Try to read the whole post before going off on a rant.
The point is that the message was aimed at middle class and hence the wording will be towards how the middle class are affected. Unless you claim that crime and drug abuse [amongst poor] has no effect at all on the middle class, then you really have no point...

#39 Plus

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Posted 2008-08-19 15:36:03

Samak's idea is like saying that the poor are unfit to live in the city. He should think about improving their lives as they are, and where they are.

He's dealing with them as if they are not citizens with any rights and can be uprooted and sent anywhere at whim.

#40 Los78

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Posted 2008-08-19 15:45:49

View PostPlus, on 2008-08-19 15:36:03, said:

Samak's idea is like saying that the poor are unfit to live in the city. He should think about improving their lives as they are, and where they are.

He's dealing with them as if they are not citizens with any rights and can be uprooted and sent anywhere at whim.


I have seen a lot of these free buses driving around.... hmmm I dont think you can name many countries that offer free public transport. In defence of the government it is helping the poorer classes more then any other country in this region. In regards to the slums well again if you look at modern cities any where in the world they have no slums in their down town. Singapore had them about 20 years ago I dont see why Bangkok should continue having them in the down town area. I am all for relocating the slums and making down town a better and more vibrant place.

#41 plachon

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Posted 2008-08-19 17:07:43

View PostLos78, on 2008-08-19 09:45:49, said:

View PostPlus, on 2008-08-19 15:36:03, said:

Samak's idea is like saying that the poor are unfit to live in the city. He should think about improving their lives as they are, and where they are.

He's dealing with them as if they are not citizens with any rights and can be uprooted and sent anywhere at whim.


I have seen a lot of these free buses driving around.... hmmm I dont think you can name many countries that offer free public transport. In defence of the government it is helping the poorer classes more then any other country in this region. In regards to the slums well again if you look at modern cities any where in the world they have no slums in their down town. Singapore had them about 20 years ago I dont see why Bangkok should continue having them in the down town area. I am all for relocating the slums and making down town a better and more vibrant place.

Would you like to succinctly explain and justify the incredible statement that the present (lame-duck) Samak govt is "helping the poorer classes more than any other country in the region".

I've seen some amazing claims in the past from you pro-Toxin boys, but this is the pinnacle of amazingness, and definitely warrants further analysis into the logic behind your ideology. :o

#42 jfchandler

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Posted 2008-08-19 17:29:18

I'll have a little more faith in the government's ability to deal with BKK's slums problem when they first can manage to maintain a sidewalk that's fit for walking anywhere in the metropolis.... Until then, I've got my doubts!!!

And, if anyone seriously believes the announced plan really intends to convert all that BKK land (wherever it is) into new park space, I've also got some development plans I'd be more than happy to discuss with you...

#43 Tony Clifton

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Posted 2008-08-19 18:14:11

View PostLos78, on 2008-08-19 15:45:49, said:

View PostPlus, on 2008-08-19 15:36:03, said:

Samak's idea is like saying that the poor are unfit to live in the city. He should think about improving their lives as they are, and where they are.

He's dealing with them as if they are not citizens with any rights and can be uprooted and sent anywhere at whim.


I have seen a lot of these free buses driving around.... hmmm I dont think you can name many countries that offer free public transport. In defence of the government it is helping the poorer classes more then any other country in this region. In regards to the slums well again if you look at modern cities any where in the world they have no slums in their down town. Singapore had them about 20 years ago I dont see why Bangkok should continue having them in the down town area. I am all for relocating the slums and making down town a better and more vibrant place.

Do you remember Thaksin's 10 baht noodle stalls 3 years ago? They disappeared as fast as they came. Their only purpose was for PR and fool the masses, mostly the poor were his favourite targets.

Now, replace noodles with free buses. Won't last any longer than the 10 baht noodles.

#44 TAWP

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Posted 2008-08-19 18:36:07

View PostLos78, on 2008-08-19 15:45:49, said:

View PostPlus, on 2008-08-19 15:36:03, said:

Samak's idea is like saying that the poor are unfit to live in the city. He should think about improving their lives as they are, and where they are.

He's dealing with them as if they are not citizens with any rights and can be uprooted and sent anywhere at whim.


I have seen a lot of these free buses driving around.... hmmm I dont think you can name many countries that offer free public transport. In defence of the government it is helping the poorer classes more then any other country in this region.

Free transportation for 6 months is better help of the poor better than any other country in the region? And when it goes back to costing money and nothing else has changed, what has it helped? Delayed the inevitable? Just wait for an election to pass and it will be long gone...

View PostLos78, on 2008-08-19 15:45:49, said:

In regards to the slums well again if you look at modern cities any where in the world they have no slums in their down town. Singapore had them about 20 years ago I dont see why Bangkok should continue having them in the down town area. I am all for relocating the slums and making down town a better and more vibrant place.

I would prefer actually improving the situation of the poor than just relocating then so you don't have to see them.

Right now they are 'in the way' of valuable land, that is why they want to relocate them. It's not out of charity. If being forcefully moved to a place with no jobs or far away from your current job is considered 'charity'...

#45 sriracha john

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Posted 2008-08-20 11:49:09

The plan to replace slums with parks

PM Samak Sundaravej's plan to remove all city slums, replacing them with public parks is appalling, but not surprising. It's no surprise either that his controversial plan (or ultimate dream?) has triggered an outcry from the urban poor and housing activists, who say it will affect hundreds of thousands of slum dwellers. The plan does reflect one fact about our food-loving PM: he is a veteran politician who represents people of the old world. Samak will make no change and it is not realistic, by any means, to expect him to change. Doubtless, his current status as head of a party known for its super populist policies, will not help in this case, either. Perhaps the sight of the poor may be an eyesore for the old man who, during the APEC summit in 2003, made news headlines by ordering city officials to sweep the homeless - as well as stray dogs - from the streets so that foreign dignitaries and guests would not have to see them. It is evident Samak is simply being true to his own self-asserting personality, expressing

Commentary continued here:
http://www.bangkokpo...2008_news23.php

================================================================


Mustn't forget Samak's affinity for the poor...


Gigantic banner unfurled to hide slum - The Nation, October 17, 2003

Arguably the world's largest banner, stretching over half a kilometre long and standing at about the height of a four-storey building, was unfurled in Bangkok to hide an unsightly slum from delegates attending the APEC summit.

#46 sriracha john

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Posted 2008-08-23 16:59:32

EDITORIAL

Eviction move will backfire


No one can accuse PM Samak of lacking a flair for the dramatic. His approach to problem-solving while serving as Bangkok Governor was to exile the problem to the provinces, a tactic not always appreciated by those living in rural communities. Homeless people, stray dogs, and noisy, polluting two-stroke motorcycles all received their orders to move out, normally just ahead of an image-building international event. Now he has brought his moving and shaking to the office of PM. This time, though, the target is 1,700 slum communities, which, he told a week ago, will have to relocate themselves outside the capital in the near future so he can create some more parks. If this was a policy statement it was sorely lacking in detail. But if it was designed to provide a talking point and get a reaction, it succeeded. Representatives from poor communities descended on Government House to point out that this flew in the face of everything they had been promised. The claim is a valid one because the Ban Mankong and Ban Ua-arthorn homebuilding and land-sharing projects were intended to replace the slums and avoid any more forced relocations of the type now contemplated. Their launch was backed by a vow from then-PM Thaksin in 2003 to eradicate slums from Bangkok within five years, or by the end of 2008. He also promised to eliminate poverty, but that did not happen either, as the nation's six million people currently living below the poverty line know well. The Ban Mankong and Ban Ua-Arthorn housing projects were touted as the solution to the shortage of affordable accommodation and, while there were some successes, Ban Ua-Arthorn schemes gained notoriety as showpieces of corruption. This took the form of ill-fitting doors, roofs prone to blow away in the wind, holes and cracks in foundations, walls and ceilings, dangerous electrical outlets and all-round sub-standard construction. It can only be a matter of time before such low-quality, but not inexpensive, public housing projects begin to revert to slums again, completing a vicious circle. And whose fault will that be? This appalling quality control was a disappointment because the housing projects had been seen as providing opportunities at the lower end of the market, during a time of soaring land prices fuelled by industrialisation and commercial development. Now Samak is proposing to order many who work at construction sites, factories, and in the service industry to move out of their rickety homes and then keep going until they are out of the city altogether. Presumably their choice would then be to endure a long, arduous and expensive commute, or swell the ranks of the unemployed. Could he have failed to realise that much of the problem stems from populist government schemes to help the rural poor, which have had the side-effect of shifting the burden of poverty from the countryside to the slums of the capital? That rural-urban drift must be discouraged, and the defective low-cost housing developments fixed and upgraded. Of course, new parks would be nice, but these have been promised before, only to suddenly turn into condos, shopping centres, and office blocks because the locations are prime real estate. That is

Continued here:
http://www.bangkokpo...2008_news16.php

#47 dumball

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Posted 2008-08-23 21:44:06

View Postsriracha john, on 2008-08-23 16:59:32, said:

EDITORIAL

Eviction move will backfire


No one can accuse PM Samak of lacking a flair for the dramatic. His approach to problem-solving while serving as Bangkok Governor was to exile the problem to the provinces, a tactic not always appreciated by those living in rural communities. Homeless people, stray dogs, and noisy, polluting two-stroke motorcycles all received their orders to move out, normally just ahead of an image-building international event. Now he has brought his moving and shaking to the office of PM. This time, though, the target is 1,700 slum communities, which, he told a week ago, will have to relocate themselves outside the capital in the near future so he can create some more parks. If this was a policy statement it was sorely lacking in detail. But if it was designed to provide a talking point and get a reaction, it succeeded. Representatives from poor communities descended on Government House to point out that this flew in the face of everything they had been promised. The claim is a valid one because the Ban Mankong and Ban Ua-arthorn homebuilding and land-sharing projects were intended to replace the slums and avoid any more forced relocations of the type now contemplated. Their launch was backed by a vow from then-PM Thaksin in 2003 to eradicate slums from Bangkok within five years, or by the end of 2008. He also promised to eliminate poverty, but that did not happen either, as the nation's six million people currently living below the poverty line know well. The Ban Mankong and Ban Ua-Arthorn housing projects were touted as the solution to the shortage of affordable accommodation and, while there were some successes, Ban Ua-Arthorn schemes gained notoriety as showpieces of corruption. This took the form of ill-fitting doors, roofs prone to blow away in the wind, holes and cracks in foundations, walls and ceilings, dangerous electrical outlets and all-round sub-standard construction. It can only be a matter of time before such low-quality, but not inexpensive, public housing projects begin to revert to slums again, completing a vicious circle. And whose fault will that be? This appalling quality control was a disappointment because the housing projects had been seen as providing opportunities at the lower end of the market, during a time of soaring land prices fuelled by industrialisation and commercial development. Now Samak is proposing to order many who work at construction sites, factories, and in the service industry to move out of their rickety homes and then keep going until they are out of the city altogether. Presumably their choice would then be to endure a long, arduous and expensive commute, or swell the ranks of the unemployed. Could he have failed to realise that much of the problem stems from populist government schemes to help the rural poor, which have had the side-effect of shifting the burden of poverty from the countryside to the slums of the capital? That rural-urban drift must be discouraged, and the defective low-cost housing developments fixed and upgraded. Of course, new parks would be nice, but these have been promised before, only to suddenly turn into condos, shopping centres, and office blocks because the locations are prime real estate. That is

Continued here:
http://www.bangkokpo...2008_news16.php
The majority of posts here seem to reflect the suggestion to 'Relocate the poor ' as a good idea , we will not need to walk through that kind of S##t or even look at it any more , good for BKK , good for us , and the poor will be re-located in a place with better sanitation etc giving us beatiful parks we will be able to go jogging in .Look at Cambodia , same , same thinking by the government (or so it was proffessed) , they drove the poor off of thier sites where they had lived and eked out an existance for many years , some even had deeds of ownership , police , troops , bull-dozers solved that minor problem . Billions of dollars payed for the cleared lands by foreign developers with no sign of where the money went , for that matter , in most cases even where the original habitants had been 'Re-located '.As has been noted by some humanitarians , the poor people are human beings also , not chaff to be blown away indiscriminatly at some rich persons whim , shame on you for being in agreance with popular 'Pig-face '.
Developers should be made responsible for the relocation of these poor individuals into low-cost housing at a location they will still be able to make a living , helping to SOLVE the problem as apposed to just brushing it under the carpet , maepenrai bullshit .

#48 sriracha john

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Posted 2008-08-24 00:51:15

View Postdumball, on 2008-08-23 21:44:06, said:

the poor people are human beings also , not chaff to be blown away indiscriminately at some rich persons whim , shame on you for being in agreeance with popular 'Pig-face '.

:o yes... I agree.

and on another point:

View Postsriracha john, on 2008-08-23 16:59:32, said:

EDITORIAL

this flew in the face of everything they had been promised. The claim is a valid one because the Ban Mankong and Ban Ua-arthorn homebuilding and land-sharing projects were intended to replace the slums and avoid any more forced relocations of the type now contemplated. Their launch was backed by a vow from then-PM Thaksin in 2003 to eradicate slums from Bangkok within five years, or by the end of 2008. He also promised to eliminate poverty, but that did not happen either, as the nation's six million people currently living below the poverty line know well. The Ban Mankong and Ban Ua-Arthorn housing projects were touted as the solution to the shortage of affordable accommodation and, while there were some successes, Ban Ua-Arthorn schemes gained notoriety as showpieces of corruption. This took the form of ill-fitting doors, roofs prone to blow away in the wind, holes and cracks in foundations, walls and ceilings, dangerous electrical outlets and all-round sub-standard construction. It can only be a matter of time before such low-quality, but not inexpensive, public housing projects begin to revert to slums again, completing a vicious circle. And whose fault will that be?

It's the CEO's fault... it was his baby.... and they're preparing a special board meeting for him should he ever return to corporate headquarters...


View Postsriracha john, on 2008-08-22 14:49:44, said:

Attorney-General Likely to Launch Further Indictments against Thaksin

It seems that deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his close aides will be facing more lawsuits after the Attorney-General's Office and the graft-fighting panel reached an agreement over four corruption charges.

The spokesperson for the Office of the Attorney-General, or OAG, Thanapij Mulpruek has revealed that his agency has already reached an agreement with the National Counter Corruption Commission over their conflicting issue of the investigation reports for charges against Thaksin Shinawatra's administration.

The charges include the controversial purchase of baggage conveyors and the CTX bomb scanners at Suvarnabhumi Airport, the electricity cable laying project at the same airport, the Ua-Arthorn Housing Project, and the abuse of power.
- Thailand Outlook / 21-08-08

Edited by sriracha john, 2008-08-24 00:56:02.


#49 bluesmith

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Posted 2008-08-24 07:08:13

Would I be right in saying so we are talking about moving 500,000 people here may be more or are the slums going to be turned into parks and the people sleep there. Thailand has a lot problems that should delt with before they think about moving slums.

#50 Heng

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Posted 2008-08-24 08:20:36

View Postdumball, on 2008-08-23 21:44:06, said:

Developers should be made responsible for the relocation of these poor individuals into low-cost housing at a location they will still be able to make a living , helping to SOLVE the problem as apposed to just brushing it under the carpet , maepenrai bullshit .

It's no different than if you buy a foreclosed upon house with squatters (in the US, the police and some private companies often provide the eviction services). Do you purchase or build a new place for the squatters to live somewhere else? Of course not.

:o



 


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