Gulf News

Bangkok to ban street food stalls in clean-up push

Two-thirds of 30,000 vendors already removed

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Street food stalls will be banned from all of Bangkok’s main roads in a sweeping clean-up crusade, a city hall official said yesterday, prompting outcry and anguish in a food-obsessed capital famed for its spicy roadside cuisine.

For months, city officials have hemmed in hawkers of all kinds across the metropolis, where hitting the pavement for everything from late-night noodles to fried insects is the closest Thailand has to a national pastime.

“All types of stalls including clothes, counterfei­t goods and food stalls will be banned from main city roads,” Wanlop Suwandee, a chief adviser to Bangkok’s governor, said.

“They will not be allowed for order and hygiene reasons,” he said, justifying the ongoing crackdown after complaints from the public.

Officials say nearly twothirds of the city’s 30,000 street vendors of all kinds have already been removed or relocated for clogging the pavements, leaving little space for pedestrian­s and aggravatin­g traffic.

“I don’t think there will be any stalls on major roads … we have nullified their permission [to operate],” he added, without giving a deadline for the sellers to clear out.

Yet many Bangkokian­s say this kerbside chaos is part of the city’s charm and an affordable food option for all in a city where other costs of living are surging.

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