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Phuket Land Dispute Stalls Sea Gypsy Culture Center Project


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Phuket land dispute stalls sea gypsy culture center project

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The Urak Lawoi hand the letter of protest to Phuket Vice Governor

Nivit Aroonrat on Thursday.

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The investor claims the land to the left of the red demarcation string.

The backhoe had been at work grading low-lying government land on the right.

PHUKET: -- More than a hundred sea gypsies handed a letter of protest to Phuket Vice Governor Nivit Aroonrat on Thursday, demanding action over alleged encroachment at the site of the planned Urak Lawoi Culture Center on Koh Sireh.

The protesters, who live in the nearby Laem Tukkae community, said they were at first unconcerned when they noticed workmen removing barbed wire set up to surround the project site, located off “Soi Tsunami”.

An excavator has been at work filling in part of the land in recent weeks. The sea gypsies initially thought the workman who pulled down the wire were part of the same work team, hired by the government to backfill land at the project site.

When they learned he was not, they demanded an investigation.

Sea gypsy Suthon Pramongkij, headman of Rassada Village 4, led the protest at Phuket Provincial Hall.

Kanin Terdchanakul, an engineer with Phuket Provincial Public Works said the investor presented a title deed proving he owned the plot of land in question.

Land use issues were not clearly examined from the outset, he said.

Land Office surveyors have since visited the site and staked out the boundary between the government land and that claimed by the private investor.

However a length of red string now in place there is just a temporary demarcation. It does not indicate that the land in question has been officially recognized as belonging to the investor, Mr Kanin said.

The Land Office officials are expected to meet with Vice Governor Nivit soon to present their findings.

V/Gov Nivit ordered an investigation into how and when the land title deed for the disputed land was issued.

Until the land issue is resolved, all work on the culture center project will be put on hold, officials said.

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-- Phuket Gazette 2010-11-13

Posted

I am not saying who is right or wrong in this story but it highlights why many projects, some of which can be beneficial to the general population, take forever to get completed or even started.

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