The Star Malaysia - Star2

Environmen­tal rehab work

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MORE than two decades after Hollywood film The Beach was shot at Thailand’s glittering Maya Bay, the kingdom’s Supreme Court on Sept 13 ordered officials to press ahead with environmen­tal rehabilita­tion work.

The 2000 adventure drama, starring Leonardo Dicaprio (pic), drew criticism for the impact of the shoot on the pristine sands of the bay, located on the island of Phi Phi Ley in southern Thailand.

Filmmakers planted dozens of coconut trees to give a more “tropical” feel to the glimmering Maya Bay and were also accused of ripping up vegetation growing on sand dunes.

However, US production studio 20th Century Fox insisted it left the beach exactly how it had found it and had removed tonnes of rubbish.

Local authoritie­s filed a civil lawsuit in late 1999 against Thai government agencies, 20th Century Fox and a Thai film coordinato­r, seeking 100 million baht in compensati­on for environmen­tal damage.

Last month, the Supreme Court in Bangkok upheld a previous ruling by a Civil Court that the Royal Forest Department was liable for rehabilita­ting Maya Bay.

In a final ruling, the Supreme Court ordered the department to set up a committee to formulate a rehabilita­tion plan within 30 days.

Environmen­tal campaigner­s launched two unsuccessf­ul legal challenges to stop filming of the movie based on author Alex Garland’s cult novel, over concerns of ecological damage.

The film put Maya Bay on the map and it became a victim of mass tourism.

It was closed in October 2018 to allow it to recover from the impact of a daily influx of some 6,000 visitors.

The entire Phi Phi archipelag­o was forced into a convalesce­nce when the global pandemic hit and visitor numbers dwindled to virtually nil as Thailand imposed tough travel rules.

Maya Bay reopened to tourists at the start of 2022 but visitor numbers are capped to try to limit the ecological damage.

 ?? photo: Handout ??
photo: Handout

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