Boxing Day 2004 tsunami : fourth anniversary of
Mokens, displaced persons launch songs on their lives
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This Friday December 26 is the fourth anniversary of the devastating Boxing Day 2004 tsunami which struck six Andaman coastal provinces, killing more than 5,000 people in Thailand. Among the survivers of the tragedy are Moken sea gypsies, who are today still struggling to be recognized as Thai citizens.
Moken people in Ranong and displaced persons in Prachuap Kiri Khan and Chumpon are considered by the government as non-Thai citizens. They are calling for their legal status and Thai nationality, and have united to convey their suffering through songs in a special album called "From the heart of Andaman."
The songs, composed by volunteers and locals, feature the way of life of Moken people, who have settled on several islands in the Andaman Sea, as well as displaced persons who live along the Thai-Myanmar border.
They speak Thai and say they are Thais. What they want more than anything is to have legal rights as Thai people.
"My life is difficult. My classmates tease me. When my teacher asked me to show my house registration, they knew. They said I wasn’t Thai but I was from Myanmar." Nisachon Chukaew, a displaced person.
The songs on the new album were made with the aim of reflecting the Moken and displaced persons’ lives and to publicize the problems faced by people without citizenship. They don’t want to earn money from selling albums, rather they want the public to understand them.
“Our ultimate hope is to disseminate life unsaid in society. People talk about Andaman tourism and the economy, but we talk about the lives of sea gypsies, which can be lost in the ongoing development of society." Maitree Chongkraichak , Tsunami Victim Network coordinator.
This Friday on the fourth anniversary of the 2004 tsunami, the songs of the Mokens, who suffered greatly in the natural disaster, will be playing loud for others to acknowledge the lack of legal rights and other plights they face in not being granted Thai citizenship. The Mokens and displaced persons sincerely hope they will be given a chance to have a place in Thai society.
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Thais and Tourists Remember 2004 Tsunami
Thais and Tourists Remember 2004 Tsunami
Today's top story... four years have passed since the Boxing Day Tsunami in the Indian Ocean. Today hundreds of mourners and visitors in Phuket, Thailand marked the fourth anniversary.
STORY:
The governor of Phuket presided over the ceremony in Patong Beach. Survivors and victims relatives gathered at a monument at Loma Park which pays tribute to lives lost from the natural disaster.
The mourners observe a minute of silence and offer alms in tribute to the souls of the victims.
Many survivors returned to Phuket to remember the day and give thanks for their blessings.
About half of the over 5000 deaths in Thailand were foreigners. They were residing or vacationing at the famous resorts of Patong Beach and other coastal provinces in the south.
[Stephen Sumpion, British Survivor]:
"We feel very sad, very confused. We didn't know what was happening at first. But then, as the day progressed, we found out there have been a big wave. We went up to the mountain and stayed up there most of the day. But then the next day we came back there was total devastation. But the Thai people got it all together and within a week New Year's went ahead. And I came back the next year to buy a house and everything was put back together. All of the shops were opened, all the roads were opened. Within a year, everything was back to normal."
Some of the survivors took time to recover from the trauma, although many feel safe now.
[Paulette Vandenwyngaard, Dutch Tourist]:
"Yes I feel safe. At first year we were back, it was a bit difficult because you look at the sea and you think will it be calm. But now, every year we come back, and we feel pretty safe."
Thailand has since built a lot of tsunami warning towers along its Andaman seacoast and the Gulf of Thailand.
YouTube - Thais and Tourists Remember 2004 Tsunami