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Thais rally against officials building homes on sacred mountain
by Staff Writers
Bangkok (AFP) April 29, 2018

Around 1,000 people rallied in the northern Thai city of Chiang Mai on Sunday to protest the construction of homes for officials on forested land flanking a revered mountain, in one of the largest shows of dissent under junta rule.

Public frustration has been mounting over the project since aerial images of several dozen officials' homes -- carved into the green foothills of Chiang Mai's Doi Suthep mountain -- started circulating on social media earlier this year.

On Sunday a huge crowd of protesters, many wearing green ribbons, called for the demolition of the buildings as they marched through Chiang Mai, the biggest city in Thailand's mountainous north.

"About 1,000 people gathered... since 7:30 am (0030 GMT) to protest against the houses," Chiang Mai police officer Jirasak Sriprasert told AFP.

Protesters say the mountain, which looms over Chiang Mai and hosts a hugely popular temple believed to hold a relic of the Buddha, is a sacred site and conservation area.

But officials have defended the housing project for judges and other court officials, saying it was carried out legally on a patch of government-owned land adjacent to the national park that covers the rest of the mountain.

The controversy has touched on long-running frustration over special treatment granted to Thai officials and elites -- often at the expense of the public and the environment.

"We want the demolition of the houses and a return of the forest," the rally's organisers said in a statement on Sunday.

"Bring back the forest to Doi Suthep. Bring back the forest to people."

The march went ahead in defiance of a ban on protests imposed by the junta that seized power in 2014.

The regime, which says it is preparing a return to democracy next year, has faced a growing number of protests in recent months as impatience mounts over military repression and impunity for the wealthy and well-connected.


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Microplastics in Arctic sea ice - 'nowhere is immune'
Paris (AFP) April 24, 2018
Researchers warned Tuesday of a "troubling" accumulation of microplastics in sea ice floating in the Arctic ocean, a major potential source of water pollution as global warming melts the sheets of frozen water. A team from the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) found 17 different plastic types in ice samples gathered during three Arctic expeditions on board the research icebreaker Polarstern in 2014 and 2015. They included plastic from shopping bags and food packaging, ... read more

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