Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

Thai village swallowed by sea water

VnExpressVnExpress24/06/2023


Every morning, four barefoot children line up to sing the national anthem during a flag-raising ceremony at a school surrounded by seawater.

These are the last students at the school located in the coastal village of Ban Khun Samut Chin that is being "swallowed" by the sea.

The village, 10 km from Bangkok, has about 200 people left. Ban Khun Samut Chin is a prime example of the future of coastal communities around the world, as climate change causes sea levels to rise.

"I used to have about 20 classmates when I was in kindergarten, but now I'm a bit lonely and want to make new friends," said 11-year-old student Jiranan Chorsakul.

A Buddhist temple surrounded by seawater in Ban Khun Samut Chin village, June 14. Photo: AFP

A pagoda surrounded by seawater in Ban Khun Samut Chin village, June 14. Photo: AFP

At the temple built on stilts to avoid the murky waters of Bangkok Bay, village chief Wisanu Kengsamut said seawater had encroached 2km inland over the past six decades.

"There used to be a village and mangrove forest behind me, and you could easily walk from the village to the temple. But people started moving further inland, away from the temple," he said. The only remnants of the old village are electric poles bobbing on the water.

The United Nations warns that sea levels have risen by 15-25cm since 1900 and are accelerating, especially in some tropical regions. If they continue, water levels around Pacific and Indian Ocean islands could rise by nearly a meter by the end of the century.

Thailand is warned to be severely affected, as about 11 million people, equivalent to 17% of the population, live along the coast and depend on fishing and tourism for their livelihoods.

A father takes his daughter to a school outside the village. Photo: AFP

A father takes his daughter to school outside Ban Khun Samut Chin village. Photo: AFP

Danny Marks, an environmental politics expert from Dublin City University, Ireland, said the village of Ban Khun Samut Chin was a warning "of a world devastated by climate change".

“This is an example of the risks that rising sea levels pose, especially to developing countries,” he said.

Encroachment at Ban Khun Samut Chin has been exacerbated by poor local environmental management and weather patterns that have become more extreme due to climate change. The village’s groundwater has been overexploited. The mangrove forests that once acted as “breakwaters” have also been cleared to make way for shrimp farms.

Dams upstream of the Chao Phraya River, which flows through Bangkok and empties into the sea near the village, also slow the sedimentation of the bay.

Village officials have worked with Chulalongkorn University to install bamboo and concrete pillars and replant mangroves to protect against the sea, but village chief Wisanu fears that "these measures may not be enough to resist the force of nature and the village will be swallowed up."

"We have no plans to move the village inland because there is no more vacant land, so we have to try to preserve it somehow," he said, adding that he had given up hope of Thai government intervention because "calls for help have gone nowhere". "We have to save ourselves."

Four students salute the flag in the morning at a school in Ban Khun Samut Chin, June 14. Photo: AFP

Four students salute the flag in the morning at a school in Ban Khun Samut Chin, June 14. Photo: AFP

Ban Khun Samut Chin village is tapping into ecotourism to raise funds and bring awareness to their "fight for survival".

At the school, which is surrounded by water, principal Mayuree Khonjan said four students are learning about the local ecosystem and learning how to identify creatures. She hopes they will one day become tour guides. The school will have three students when one graduates next year.

In class, Jiranan concentrates as the teacher writes numbers on the board. "I want to be a teacher to impart knowledge. I want to teach at this school, if it is still here," Jiranan said.

Duc Trung (According to AFP )



Source link

Comment (0)

No data
No data

Same tag

Same category

Victory - Bond in Vietnam: When top music blends with natural wonders of the world
Fighter planes and 13,000 soldiers train for the first time for the April 30th celebration
U90 veteran causes a stir among young people when he shares his war story on TikTok
Moments and events: April 11, 1975 - The battle in Xuan Loc was fierce.

Same author

Heritage

Figure

Business

No videos available

News

Political System

Local

Product