China Daily

Celebrants mark festival by making a splash

- GUI JINZAI / FOR CHINA DAILY, JORGE SILVA / REUTERS, HU CHAO / XINHUA AND SOE ZEYA TUN / REUTERS

Clockwise from top: Visitors and local people in Dehong prefecture of Yunnan province splash water to celebrate Songkran Festival, the traditiona­l Thai New Year’s Day, on Thursday, while children play with water during the festival, which is also Myanmar’s New Year Water Festival, outside Mandalay, Myanmar. People launch Kongming lanterns for good luck and fortune near the Lancang River in Jinghong, Yunnan province, on Thursday, and revelers enjoy a foam party during a Songkran celebratio­n in Bangkok, Thailand. The celebratio­n continues through Saturday.

BANGKOK — Hordes of revelers armed with plastic water guns poured onto Thai streets on Friday for a second day of watery warfare to ring in the kingdom’ s traditiona­l new year.

Known as Songkran, the Thai holiday is celebrated by paying respect to elders and sprinkling water over Buddha figures at local temples.

But the festival has also become one of the world’s biggest water fights.

Every April, street parties erupt across the nation as hundreds of thousands of Thais and tourists don floral shirts and drench each other with brightly-colored water pistols.

Similar water festivals are also held in neighborin­g Buddhist countries like Myanmar and Laos and celebrated in China’s Yunnan province by the Dai ethnic minority.

The burst of color was especially striking this year in Bangkok, where many people have worn only black and white for the past six months to mourn the October death of revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej. Many see the celebratio­n as a fun-filled respite from the sweltering heat that grips Thailand.

Revelers are advised not to drink alcohol, as the country has seen 33 deaths and 420 injuries from 409 road accidents since the first day of the holiday.

Officials say driving under the influence of alcohol is responsibl­e for the greatest number of accidents.

Partygoers are also warned not to use talcum powder and high-pressure water guns.

Those warnings came after a poll revealed half the females who attended the water festival complained of being sexually harassed and groped by drunken men who apply powders to others during the event.

The throwing of water is the festival’s highlight. For three days virtually the entire country turns into a celebrator­y war zone. Revelers with huge water guns roam the streets, armed with buckets of water to target anyone within reach.

Yuthasak, governor of The Tourism Authority of Thailand, expected that the country would welcome about 470,000 foreign tourists from April 13-17, adding that Chinese tourists will continue to contribute the most.

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