The Phnom Penh Post

Thai divers scour capital’s murky river for treasure

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KNEELING before his homemade metal scuba helmet, Bhoomin Samang prays for good fortune before he dives into the day’s work – scouring the bed of Bangkok’s Chao Phraya river for sunken treasure.

The 62-year-old is part of a small community known as Thailand’s “Indiana Jones” divers, who brave the inkyblack underworld of the trashfille­d waterway in search of coins, china, jewellery and scrap metal.

“We look for old coins, sometimes we are hired to find lost objects in the river,” says Bhoomin, a diver who has been scouring the river for 30 years.

Sometimes the find is more macabre – the divers have stumbled across skulls and skeletons as they feel their way along the river bed in total darkness.

“If you’re afraid of ghosts, you can’t go in because you can’t see anything. But we’re used to it,” he explains.

The “Indiana Jones” divers use makeshift equipment and operate under the radar in the middle of the country’s urban metropolis.

Wearing shorts and T-shirt, Bhoomin jumps off his motorised skiff into a river strewn with city sewage and debris.

He is able to breathe thanks to the boxy helmet that weighs around 20 kilograms (45 pounds), and is hooked up to a rubber tube that connects to an air tank aboard the boat.

The tank pumps oxygen into the helmet to keep water out, allowing the most experience­d divers to drop down to 30 metres (100 feet) below the surface.

After 15 minutes underwater, Bhoomin resurfaces with a cotton bag stuffed with mud.

He pans it out on a metal dish, revealing several 200-year-old copper and bullet coins with pictures of 19th century Thai kings Rama IV and V on them – artifacts divers call “regulars”.

The coins trace the history of Bangkok’s lively waterfront, whose traditiona­l stilted homes are increasing­ly being knocked down for developmen­t.

“In the old days, we lived on rafts and had floating markets. Villagers lost their jewelry and money in the river,” he said.

An unfinished small Buddhist amulet was also hidden inside the mud.

The divers can turn a decent profit. Selling a few copper coins can make them $15 – nearly twice Thailand’s daily minimum wage.

If lucky, a piece of jewelry or a rare coin in good condition can be sold for up to $300 at Bangkok’s antique markets, while their loot is fattened out by scrap metal.

But the divers’ fate is in limbo as urban developmen­t threatens their riverside community, which stands on weathered wooden stilts.

Bangkok officials have ordered the families to relocate away from the river as part of the junta government’s gentrifica­tion plan for the city.

The divers fear that without direct access to the river, up to “90 per cent” of them will lose their livelihood­s.

But that’s not their only tension with the law – taking artifacts is technicall­y prohibited and can be punished with fines or jail time.

Bhoomin, however, defends the trade, saying divers only go for the small stuff.

“We don’t take big artifacts like Buddha statues... (if officials really want something), they can go down there and take it,” says Bhoomin.

 ?? LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP ?? Bhoomin Samang holds jewellery and rare coins he found during previous diving trips to the bottom of Bangkok’s Chao Phraya River in June.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP Bhoomin Samang holds jewellery and rare coins he found during previous diving trips to the bottom of Bangkok’s Chao Phraya River in June.

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