Monthly Archive for June, 2006

Tsunami orphans forced to relive tragedy as BBC lines road with fake corpses for new mini-series

The Mail on Sunday June 11, 2006

Film-makers accused of outrageous exploitation as they recreate scenes of carnage

Tsunami orphans forced to relive tragedy as BBC lines road with fake corpses for new mini-series

By Andrew Drummond

IN KHAO UK, THAILAND

and Jo Knowsley

IN LONDON

FAMILIES who lost loved ones in the Indian Ocean tsunami have accused the BBC of sick opportunism for filming in resorts that were devastated by the disaster.

TV chiefs claim the mini-series Aftermath, about the tragedy that killed almost 200,000 people on Boxing Day 2004, is a ‘thought-provoking drama of loss, survival and hope’.

But British and Thai families who were caught up in the tsunami say insensitive film-makers are forcing them to relive the horror.

The film is being shot in Khao Lak and Phuket, two of Thailand’s hardest-hit resorts. Nearly 5,400 foreign tourists and locals were killed there when the huge wave struck, and 3,000 more are still missing.

Now, just 18 months on, locals are being confronted by gruesome reminders of the tragedy as harrowing scenes are filmed in full view of the public.Tsunami film 06

At several spots leading into Khao Lak national park, fake corpses were piled along a road on which children orphaned in the disaster travel to school every day.

Tsunami film 07Elsewhere a ‘corpse’ was introduced hanging upside-down from a 30ft electricity pole. Actors were visible lying bloodstained and prone by streams, in trucks and in mock mortuaries in scenes almost identical to the carnage local children witnessed after the Tsunami.

At a nearby mental health recovery centre, scores of locals are being treated for stress. Psychiatrist Dr Benjaporn Panyayon said yesterday: ‘In the past few days people I have discharged are coming back. Our patients have panic attacks and night-mares and easily burst into tears.

‘This filming would affect them. It’s like showing them a photograph when they are trying to forget.’

Stuart McLeish, from Sheffield, whose brother Andrew and sister-in-law Natalie died in the tragedy, condemned the film-makers for an ‘outrageous’ exploitation of Thailand and its people. He said: ‘I’d like to know why they had to film in Khao Lak and other areas where the disaster occurred.

‘We had the London bombings last year but I don’t think people would react too well if they piled “bodies” in Russell Square.

‘The whole thing is pretty sick. They probably worked out it would be cheaper to film in Thailand. But they could at least have blocked off the roads so that locals wouldn’t be exposed to this horrible reminder of what happened.’Tsunami film 29

The three-hour, two-part drama stars Oscar-nominated actress Sophie Okonedo, Gina McKee, Tim Roth and Hugh Bonneville and is being made by the production company Kudos for the BBC and the American cable network HBO.

But despite the traumas, Thai people are rushing to become extras for which they are paid £6 a day attracted by posters put up n bars saying: ‘Wanted. Victims. Man, woman,girl, any age, nationality, lots of people!’.

Foreigners, many volunteers who came to Thailand to help after the Tsunami, are paid £20.Tsunami film Roth

Michelle Gray, 23, from Newcastle, a volunteer who teaches English in Khao Lak, said yesterday she now regrets taking part in the production.

She added: “When I got onto the set

on to the set. Things were so realistic people could have believed there had been another tsunami, and I was not happy about the effect it would have on the locals. I think we all feel a little guilty for taking the money.’
Another volunteer, Sheila Sully, 55, from South London, did not take part but she said: ‘I have been sickened
Roth and Hugh Bonneville and is being made by the production company Kudos for the BBC and the American cable network HBO.
But despite the trauma, Thai people are rushing to become extras for which they are paid just £6 a day, attracted by posters put up in bars saying: ‘Wanted. Victims. Man,woman, girl, any age, any nationality. Lots of people!’Tsunami film 01

Foreigners - many volunteers who came to Thailand to help after the tsunami - are paid £20. Michelle Gray, 23, (left) from Newcastle, a volunteer who teaches English in Khao Lak, said yesterday she now regrets taking part in the production. She added: ‘I was shocked when I got onto the set. Things were so realistic people could have believed there had been another tsunami and I was not happy about the effect it would have on the locals.

‘I think we all feel a bit guilty for taking the money.’

Another volunteer Sheila Sulley, 55, from South London, did not take part but she said: “I have been sickened by what I have seen.”

Kate Kemp, the British-born co-owner of the Sarojin, a luxury resort that was badly damaged by the tsunami, said:
 ’I cried when I saw the bodies dumped by the side of the road and the person hanging from the pylon. I can’t imagine what the locals have had to go through.’

Last night the BBC issued a statement which said the producers were doing ‘everything to ensure the production is carried out with the highest degree of respect, not only for the memories of the individuals who lost their lives but also for those still living in close proximity to the events’.

Jane Featherstone, the film’s executive producer, said: ‘It would have been cheaper to film in somewhere like Australia but we wanted to put the money back into the region which really needs it. Kudos is making a substantial donation to a local charity.

‘We have had endless discussions with Thai authorities and surviving families who believe this film needs to be made. Our aim was to do it sensitively and intelligently.
‘Some people have been upset and I am genuinely sorry about that. I hope they feel it has been worth it when they see the film.’

Enduring love of the King and Thais

 Enduring Love of the King and Thais

From The Times
June 5, 2006

Enduring love of the King and Thais

World’s longest-reigning monarch is still revered as he celebrates 60 years on the throne

Andrew Drummond

MONARCHIES around the world may be struggling to retain the love and allegiance of their people, but not in Thailand.

Kings, queens and princes of many nationalities will fly to Bangkok this week to join King Bhumibol Adulyadej in celebrating 60 years on the throne.

For the Thai people, the world’s longest-reigning monarch remains the most revered figure in their lives, save for Lord Buddha himself.

Thailand’s strict laws forbidding criticism of the King are hardly necessary.

An accomplished jazz musician, yachtsman, artist and author, the 79-year-old monarch also devotes great energy to helping his country’s poor and has repeatedly used his immense moral authority to save his country from turmoil.

King Bhumibol, the great-grandson of King Mongkut, of The King and I fame, was born in Massachusetts in 1927. He was thrust upon the throne in 1946 after his brother, Ananda, was murdered in the palace in Bangkok with his own pearl-handled revolver.

The new King departed for Switzerland to study political science, and during the early years of his rule his influence was curtailed by the military dictator Plaek Pibulsongkram.

But when students demonstrated for democracy in 1973, and the Army opened fire on them, the King earned his subjects’ devotion by opening his palace as a refuge to them.

In 1992, when troops again fired on pro-democracy students, he summoned the leaders of the coup and the pro-democracy movement to his palace to warn them of the harm being done to the country.

Pictures of both men crawling on their knees in front of the monarch were flashed around the world. General Suchinda Kraprayoon, the coup leader, resigned and democracy was restored.

King Bhumibol intervened again this year as the People’s Alliance for Democracy demonstrated against the alleged corruption and cronyism of Thaksin Shinawatra, the billionaire Prime Minister.

He summoned Mr Thaksin, who duly announced that he would not be running again for office. “My main reason is because this year is an auspicious year for the King, and I want all Thais to unite,” he announced.

Mr Thaksin’s party called a snap election, which was boycotted by opposition groups as they had no time to prepare.

Again the King stepped in. In a televised speech he called on the courts to sort the matter out. The election was declared void and a new one will take place in October.
After each incident the country’s leaders have thanked the King for his advice, albeit through gritted teeth.

Indeed, Mr Thaksin will be master of ceremonies for the celebrations taking place over the next ten days. These have already started in Bangkok with exhibitions of the King’s work.

Over the next week the celebrations will continue with candlelight ceremonies and fireworks displays around Bangkok’s golden-spired temples. Millions of Thais will don armbands with the message “Long live the King”.

The climax will be a well-wishing ceremony in the Ananta Sarnakorn throne hall and a massive and colourful barge procession along the Chao Phraya river.

The finale will be a royal banquet for the world’s royalty and final well-wishing ceremony.

This will be attended by the heads or representatives of the royal families of Denmark, Sweden, Spain, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, Norway, the Netherlands, Belgium, Mon- aco, Brunei, Bhutan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, Japan, Jordan, Malaysia, Nepal, Cambodia, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Samoa, Tonga, Swaziland, Lesotho, and Morocco. Britain will be represented by the Duke of York.

When the celebrations are over, King Bhumibol will continue to offer sage advice to his most loyal subjects, even if it is dispensed through books describing the model conduct of his dog, Tongdeang.

The monarch uses the dog’s loyal and pragmatic behaviour in parables to inspire the Thai people.

LONGEST-SERVING LIVING MONARCHS
King Bhumibol Rama IX of Thailand (1946-)
Emir Sakr bin Muhammad Al Qasimi of Ras al Khamah (UAE) (1948-)
Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (1952-)
LONGEST-SERVING MONARCHS EVER
Pepe II Neferkare, Ancient Egypt (BC2278 - BC2184) (94 years)
Jangsu of Korea (413-491) (78 years)
Louis IX of France (1643–1715) (72 years)

Murder Comes to a holiday idyll

Katherine Horton was killed after taking a stroll on a beach in Thailand
By Andrew Drummond and Sophie Kirkham

A BRITISH student was murdered after she went for a stroll along a tropical beach in Thailand to make a mobile phone call.Murder comes to holiday idyll

Katherine Horton, 21, a psychology student from Cardiff, was travelling with a friend from Reading University and had been on the resort island of Koh Samui for only a few days.

It is thought that Miss Horton was attacked after leaving her friend and walking alone along the white sand beach to chat in private, possibly to her mother in Cardiff, on Sunday evening.

Her body was found the next morning in shallow water off Lamai beach by jetski operators. Local news reports said that she had been raped.

Speaking from Thornhill, Cardiff, her mother, Elizabeth, said yesterday that her daughter had already called home once to wish her family a happy new year: “That was the last we heard of her. She sounded so happy out there.”

Miss Horton was with Ruth Adams, also 21, on a two-week backpacking holiday. They met up with friends, one of whom rang Miss Horton’s parents yesterday to break the news. The pair had flown out on December 27 and were staying at the £10-a-night New Hut Bungalow resort on New Year’s Eve. Staff said they had seen the two women together on Sunday night outside their bungalow, and had found out that Miss Horton had been killed only when police arrived.

Miss Adams, who is said to be inconsolable, was last night still helping the authorities. She told police that they had been sitting on the beach in front of the bungalows at 9pm when Miss Horton received a call from her family on her mobile. She then strolled along the beach as she spoke to her relatives while Miss Adams returned to their bungalow and fell asleep. It was not until the next morning that she realised Miss Horton was missing.

Her body was found a short while later. One witness said there were signs of severe injuries to her head and shoulder. Local television footage showed her body slumped on the beach wearing a dark green T-shirt. She appeared to have bruising on her left shoulder.

“I can’t believe she’s gone. It just doesn’t seem real, it doesn’t seem possible,” her mother said last night. “They were really looking forward to [the holiday] and were very excited. But nobody seems to be able to tell me how she has died or what has happened to her. I just want to know what happened to my little girl. They were just going to travel around backpacking before coming home to carry on with their studies. She was such a lovely girl.”

Miss Horton, who had been due home on January 10, had two older brothers.

Her father, Richard, who also lives in Cardiff, was said to be devastated.

Koh Samui is popular with backpackers, families and budget travellers, and is known for its nightlife and beach parties, often held under a full moon. In recent years there have been reports of rise in crime in the southeastern Thai island, with the appearance of local gangs. Women travellers have complained of being harassed.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office says it had received reports of sex attacks on men and women and advises: “Female travellers in particular should maintain a high state of personal awareness in Thailand.”

TOURIST TRAP

  • Vanessa Arscott, 24, and her boyfriend, Adam Lloyd, were killed by a police officer in 2004