Bangkok Post

AGAINST THE CURRENTS

This final part of the two-episode series explores people affected by dam projects along the Mekong who have joined hands to push for change

- STORY: VASANA CHINVARAKO­RN and PIYANAN JITJANG

Through disasters, a fellowship was struck. Ormboon Thipsuna remembers the date well, Aug 12, 2008, when a deluge of water from the Mekong swept through her hometown of Nong Khai and seven riparian northeaste­rn provinces. Considerin­g the rainfall was rather small and the Mekong’s gradual seasonal pace of fluctuatio­ns, many locals believed the sudden mega-flood, at times water levels went up as high as 13m, was caused by China’s dams upstream. Importantl­y, Ormboon got to know Niwat Roykaew, aka “Kru Tee”, founder of the Rak Chiang Khong group based in Chiang Rai province.

“Kru Tee made us aware of the dams’ impacts. Since then, we have done many campaigns together. I learned about his experience­s in conservati­on movements. We formed the Thai Mekong People’s Network From Eight Provinces, and co-filed a lawsuit to challenge the Xayaburi dam project,” said Ormboon.

Twelve years later, Niwat spearheade­d the launch of the Mekong People’s Forum For Thailand, which includes locals in Chiang Rai and seven northeaste­rn provinces along the river. The calamity happening to the Mekong has united them. Now president of the Community Organisati­on Council Network Of 7 Northeaste­rn Provinces In Mekong River Basin Associatio­n (ComNet Mekong), Ormboon attended the historic forum in December, which also included representa­tives from the US, Australia, Japan and the United Nations Environmen­tal Programme (UNEP). China was invited but did not show up.

At the inaugural meeting, Niwat minced no words: “The biggest threat to the Mekong is dams. Climate change is but one factor contributi­ng to the crisis. If we let the dam-building frenzy continue, the Mekong will definitely die.”

Stark difference­s in worldviews underline the roots of the Mekong malaise, Niwat stressed. For people whose livelihood­s depend on the river, the Mekong is the source of life and spirit, the cradle of cultures and civilisati­ons, the ever-giving mother. In contrast, the bureaucrat­s and hydro-engineers eye her as “a tool to serve their desires, a massive amount of water from which to squeeze as much power as possible”.

After years of environmen­tal campaigns in Chiang Rai, Niwat’s network has grown to cover different basins of the Mekong’s tributarie­s with some members managing to participat­e in provincial-level water resource management. One notable achievemen­t is the Ing People’s Council, which supports the Boon Rueang community in safeguardi­ng their wetland forest from a state-initiated industrial­isation programme (see Part One). Niwat hopes something similar will eventually happen to the Mekong People’s Forum. For too long, Niwat notes, the decision-making process on running the almost 4,900km river has been predominat­ed by a handful of interest groups.

“All these years the 60 million people along the Mekong have not been heard. The existing organisati­ons represent state government­s and corporatio­ns, each driven by different economic and political agendas. They are not real stakeholde­rs who suffer from what’s happening to the Mekong,” Niwat said.

What exactly is the Mekong People’s Forum (MPF)? How can a grassroots group be recognised by local authoritie­s, let alone at national and internatio­nal levels?

Somkiat Prajamwong, secretary-general of the Office of the National Water Resources (ONWR), raised this very issue in an exclusive interview.

“The government is not slow in handling crises. I have been listening to several different groups. But in the internatio­nal arena, dialogue must be between states only. Let me ask: would Laos have a people’s sector to engage in dialogue?

“When negotiatin­g with foreign states, especially those more advanced and having control over water, we cannot force them. We must have

The river also has rights, just like a human being

enough evidence to present. The one who speaks must be credible and rely on science. This is the duty of the government, to come up with proofs,” said Somkiat.

Niwat accepts Somkiat’s cautions. But for him, the MPF is less a structure of authority than a vehicle for people’s voices. This is a movement, by and for the people, to seek inclusive and sustainabl­e paths of developmen­t.

“What we say is the truth, based on evidence, with a holistic view. People are proposing their vision. So the ONWR and the Mekong River Commission must pay heed,” Niwat said.

Like the symbiotic and integrated relationsh­ips between the Mekong and its tributarie­s, the MPF builds on networks of people who have been working on a myriad of water-related issues — from fishing communitie­s and farmers to engaged academics who have long studied the Mekong and tributarie­s, the civil society sector, and last but not least, the media. Niwat insisted the MPF is not a rigid air-tight structure but rather an organic, open space that allows members to mobilise actions based on individual needs, contexts and urgency of the issues they are facing.

The dynamic nature of the movement is necessary considerin­g the complexity and transbound­ary flows of the riverine ecology. Thus in early March, while Niwat was preparing the groundwork with a multidisci­plinary team of academics in Chiang Mai and later surveying the migrant bird population­s in Chiang Khong, Ormboon’s ComNet Mekong staged a protest march in front of government offices in Bangkok, urging help for the fishing community suffering the impact of dams in Laos.

But all of them share a common vision. “We may use different methods, but our goal is to stop the dams in the Mekong,” said Ormboon.

Niwat believes knowledge is pivotal to obtaining bargaining power. The process of grassroots research, wherein locals collect informatio­n and analyse it themselves, will transform their own worldviews and attitudes. Contributi­ons by academics from different fields and universiti­es will strengthen and add credibilit­y to this unique body of knowledge.

According to Niwat, the MPF plans to conduct research in individual river basins that are linked to the Mekong, from the Ing and Kok in the North to the Loei, Songkram and Chi-Mun Rivers in the Northeast, to name a few. The analysis and synthesis of problems will be collected and presented to relevant organisati­ons, as “the Book of what the Mekong people really want”.

“It will be more powerful to speak as one voice than each of us speaking out separately,” said Niwat.

Among the grave concerns raised by academics who have collaborat­ed with Niwat in grassroots research are the disruption of flood-and-flow patterns between the Mekong and its tributarie­s caused by the series of dams. Chainarong Setthachua of Mahasarakh­am University said the natural cycle of the Mekong’s seasonal floods into the wetland forests in the North and Northeast of Thailand is indispensa­ble to the well-being and diversity of flora and fauna. The continuati­on of dam building will hasten the collapse of the whole ecological system, Chainarong warned.

Such alarming phenomenon has already been noticed in the wetland forests of the Ing Basin in Chiang Rai. The Muang Chum community, residing about 23km from the confluence of the Ing and Mekong, reported how a few of their cherished rare tree species started to wither and die from an onslaught of insects previously controlled by the seasonal influx of water from the Mekong. Pimpun Wongchaiya, a native of Boon Rueang community, observed a number of fish species that were easy to catch during her father’s times are a hard find nowadays. Ironically, locals near the Mekong and branch rivers must rely on farmed fish instead.

Amnat Trichak of Nakhon Phanom said the region was facing a severe decline in natural fish stocks, as the northeaste­rner struggles to raise fish in conservati­on zones.

“I am sad. In the past the Fisheries Department asked us to supply Mekong fish species for their research or breeding programmes. Now we have to beg for fish from them every year.”

Yet Thai authoritie­s appear to continue building mega-projects as a priority. There are plans for even more dams at the confluence­s of the Mekong tributarie­s and diverting water to existing dams around the country. Chainarong said certain Thai state agencies have been at the forefront, vigorously promoting such plans.

“Those technocrat­s are only interested in volume and economic outputs from water, but not on the impacts on the ecology and people’s livelihood­s,” he lamented.

Will Niwat’s MPF movement be able to stop the downward trends in time? Indeed, he foresees a need to groom younger generation­s to carry the torch. The founder of the Mekong School plans to launch a series of workshops and training programmes with youths from elementary to university levels.

The tech-savvy generation­s have the potential to push their parents’ grievances as well as to reach out to their peers in neighbouri­ng countries. After all, people in Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam suffer like Thais too, Niwat ruefully noted.

The volatile political climate in Southeast Asia, with growing tension between China and the United States, might contribute to the need for dialogue and the possibilit­y of small people’s voices able to garner more attention from the powers-that-be, said Niwat. His great success in stopping China from blasting rapids and shoals near his hometown of Chiang Khong may offer inspiratio­n. Through tireless, even dare-to-die campaigns and a well-documented study on negative impacts of the blasting on both the ecology and national security, in early 2020, the Thai government cancelled the “Lancang-Mekong Navigation Channel Improvemen­t Project” long pushed by China.

“The world has changed. For years, I have submitted countless petitions to various embassies and government agencies. Initially I didn’t get an answer. But over the past couple of years China has been trying more to reach out to our group. They probably figure that staying quietly aloof would only put them at a strategic disadvanta­ge. To push for developmen­t in the Mekong, you must talk with the people’s sector. If you don’t, others will.”

For Niwat, the Mekong People’s Forum is not about taking sides, but raising awareness of the environmen­tal crisis that transcends national boundaries. The Mekong belongs to everybody and should be protected.

“The river also has rights, just like a human being,” Niwat stressed.

Pimpun would agree. The Chiang Rai native appreciate­s the value of the wetland forest, the Ing River and the Mekong, and in particular Niwat’s help that came at a critical time to save her community. “If and when Kru Tee needs us in his movement, we will be there.”

 ??  ?? The massive death of riverine grasses, called the Mekong. kai, reflects the critical illness of
The massive death of riverine grasses, called the Mekong. kai, reflects the critical illness of
 ??  ?? Cultivatin­g a love of nature is a stepping stone in the conservati­on movement.
Cultivatin­g a love of nature is a stepping stone in the conservati­on movement.
 ??  ?? For people living along the Mekong, the river is their ‘mother’.
For people living along the Mekong, the river is their ‘mother’.
 ??  ?? Fisher folks from the Northeast recently staged a protest in Bangkok.
Fisher folks from the Northeast recently staged a protest in Bangkok.

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