The Asian Age

Bangkok to retain flavour minus food stalls

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Bangkok, April 20: Bangkok’s street food culture will survive a crackdown on vendors, Thailand’s tourism chief vowed on Thursday, assuring travellers that a city renowned for its chaotic charm was not being remodelled into a Singapore-lite.

The City Hall stunned Thais and tourists alike this week with plans to bar the capital’s worldfamou­s food stalls from all main roads to reclaim pavements for the public.

On Thursday, the governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand

We won’t change our Yaowarat (Chinatown) into Orchard (road)

— Uthasak Supasorn, Thailand’s tourism chief

pushed back against fears that Bangkok was being gentrified in the image of Singapore — a city that relishes orderlines­s but is often characteri­sed as tame compared to its Southeast Asian rivals.

“We will keep our uniqueness. We won’t change our Yaowarat (Chinatown) into Orchard (road),” Uthasak Supasorn said, referring to a shopping district in Singapore with wide boulevards devoid of street life.

“(The plan) is not to totally take away street food from Bangkok streets, but there are some reasons and some places that will be reorganise­d,” he added.

Nearly two-thirds of Bangkok’s 30,000 street vendors have already been removed or relocated from pavements for pedestrian­s, according to city officials. Vendors will be allowed to set up shop on smaller streets while hawkers based in tourist hubs, Chinatown and Khaosan Road, will be reorganise­d but not barred completely.

“Bangkok has some of the best street food in the world, you cannot take it away from the people of the world,” the tourist governor said.

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