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Field Project - Thailand
   


A place for indigenous people in protected areas, Surin Islands, Andaman Sea, Thailand


Summary | Documents | Photos


Today there is wide recognition of the need for local-community involvement in the conservation of cultural landscapes and natural heritage. With their unique knowledge, skills and traditions, local communities have much to contribute to the management of these areas. However, when regulations are introduced that restrict their ability to maintain their traditional culture and lifestyle, this raises serious concerns.


 


Spared by the sea
It is December 26, 2004. Several elders from the Moken tribe, a small community of sea gypsies from the Surin islands Marine National Park off the coast of Phang-Nga Province, Thailand, notice that the sea is churned up and moving in an unusual way...
(Full article from The New Courier- May 2005)

 

The knowledge that saved the sea gypsies
When the water lapping the shores of Yan Chiak in Myanmar suddenly drew back on 26 December, the Moken recognized the signs. La Boon was about to strike. Dropping everything, the entire village headed for higher ground and safety. The Moken owe their survival to tales passed down by the elders of the seven waves which came to kill the Moken in their parents' day... (Full article from A World of SCIENCE, Vol. 3, No. 2, april-june 2005)

 


Indigenous peoples and parks
The Surin Islands Project

(English | Thai)






 

 

Summary:The islands and coastal regions along the eastern shores of the Andaman Sea are home to a distinctive people, the ‘Chao Lay ’ or ‘ sea nomads’, whose lifestyles, languages and cultures differ from the rest of Thai society. One group of Chao Lay, the Moken, maintain a semi-nomadic way of life.

Having frequented the Surin Islands, about 60 km from Thailand’s mainland coast, for at least several centuries, a group of Moken decided to establish themselves on a more permanent basis several decades ago. The Moken live as hunters and gatherers of the resources found on the land and in the sea, and they trade marine products such as sea cucumbers and shells for rice and other necessities. The 150 Moken people in the Surin Islands build their houses on stilts above the sea, and occasionally the village sites are moved in order to alleviate disputes and escape illness.

In 1981 the Thai Government declared the Surin Islands a protected area and established a national park. Under park regulations , the Moken no longer have the right to continue traditional resource harvesting, nor even to live within the park. This raises serious concern about the effects that the regulations may have on the Moken's ability to maintain their traditional culture and lifestyle.

To address these concerns, a field project was initiated in 1997 entitled ‘A place for indigenous people in protected areas , Surin Islands , Andaman Sea, Thailand’. This project is implemented by the Chulalongkorn University Social Research Institute and supported by UNESCO through its Bangkok Office, the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) and the intersectoral and interdisciplinary platform for ‘Environment and Development in Coastal Regions and in Small Islands’ (CSI)/Local & Indigenous Knowledge Systems (LINKS).

Following a rapid appraisal of the issues affecting the Surin Islands’ Moken community in December 1997, a series of workshops were held during which concerned stakeholders joined efforts to sustain a dialogue which would begin to provide for the conservation of the natural and cultural heritage of the Moken and the Surin Islands.

Following the workshops, a number of project activities were designed and are outlined in this publication. Each activity represents a step along the road to exploring sustainable development options with the Moken that allow them to maintain and enhance their lifestyle while conserving the biodiversity of the Surin Islands. The project activities include resource assessments based upon scientific and Moken ecological knowledge, preparation of reading material for Moken children, handicraft learning, basic health and welfare training, turtle conservation and giant clam mariculture. Work has already started on some of these activities and an update is included in the final chapter.

Across the region, and in many other parts of the world, finding sustainable solutions that benefit indigenous communities and the environment, while meeting national tourism and development objectives, has become a priority. The outcome of this project may serve as a model for the region and beyond.

This text has been taken from the Executive Summary of Indigenous peoples and parks. The Surin Islands Project. Coastal region and small island papers 8, UNESCO, Paris, 63pp. (English | Thai)


RELATED LINKS
For more information, see the description of this project at the website of UNESCO Bangkok.


 


 



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