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<>Caution: Elephants Brake for Food on Bangkok’s Roads

 

Patrick Brown for the International Herald Tribune

 

Elephants and their handlers wander Bangkok's

red-light districts and tourist areas looking for

people who will buy food for the elephants. What

is entertainment for some is a nuisance to

others. <>More Photos >

 

<>

By THOMAS FULLER

Published: January 20, 2008

 

BANGKOK — Of all the illegal activities that

animate the streets of Bangkok — the vendors who

hawk pirated DVDs and fake watches, the brothels

that call themselves saunas — one stands out more

than others.

 

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<>Elephants in Thailand

 

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Patrick Brown for the International Herald Tribune

 

An elephant and its owner wandered in a busy area

of Bangkok recently. The owner asks people to buy

snacks for his elephant. <>More Photos »

 

Elephants are not supposed to saunter down the

city’s streets as they do almost every night. For

at least two decades the giant gray beasts have

plodded through this giant gray city, stopping

off at red-light districts and tourist areas

where their handlers peddle elephant snacks of

sugar cane and bananas to passers-by.

 

Occasionally the elephants knock off the

side-view mirrors from cars or stumble into

gutters and cut themselves on sharp objects.

 

The police shrug, politicians periodically order

crackdowns and animal lovers despair.

 

The creation of a Stray Elephant Task Force in

2006 did not keep the elephants off city streets.

Nor did the team of undercover elephant enforcers

who periodically cruise through Bangkok on

motorcycles scouting for the beasts.

 

“To be honest, nobody wants to do this job,

nobody wants to deal with the elephants,” said

Prayote Promsuwon, who is in charge of the Stray

Elephant Task Force, which was formed after an

elephant handler, fleeing the police, raced his

elephant the wrong way down a large Bangkok

boulevard, causing traffic chaos.

 

The police shy away from detaining the elephants’

handlers, also known as mahouts, because the

officers fear they will not be able to control

the animals on their own.

 

“This is a dangerous job,” Mr. Prayote said. “An

angry elephant can destroy cars and make trouble

— and then we have responsibility for the damage.”

 

The government says there are 3,837 domesticated

elephants in Thailand today. Only a tiny fraction

come into Bangkok — usually no more than half a

dozen each evening — but they are hard to miss.

Many Thais say they serve as a daily reminder of

the inequalities in Thailand, the gap between

provincial poverty and urban wealth.

 

Mahouts bring their elephants into the city for

the same reasons that the sons and daughters of

rice farmers try their luck as waiters, golf

caddies and massage therapists in Bangkok: they

need the money.

 

But to critics, elephants in the city highlight

the persistent impunity of lawbreakers in

Thailand, a country with no shortage of rules but

gaping lapses in enforcement. Thailand has eight

distinct laws that can be used to arrest mahouts

who bring elephants into the city, rules that

cover moving violations, wildlife protection,

public health and urban tidiness.

 

“We’ve been fined many times,” said Nattawut

Inthong, a 24-year-old mahout who travels around

Bangkok with his 2-year-old elephant, Gra-po.

 

Mr. Nattawut treats the fine of 300 baht, about

$10, like a business expense: he pays it and

moves on. Most evenings he parades Gra-po through

the Nana red-light district, a warren of go-go

bars in Bangkok’s bustling Sukhumvit

neighborhood. The elephant adds to the

carnival-like atmosphere created by thumping

music, hawkers dressed in hill-tribe costumes and

bar girls twirling around poles in bathing suits.

 

Mr. Nattawut makes about 2,000 baht a day, or

about $67, selling sugar cane to passers-by, good

money in a country where a typical factory wage

is 8,000 baht (about $269) a month.

 

When the night life quiets down, Mr. Nattawut

leads his elephant by an ear to an abandoned lot

on the outskirts of the city where he and the

animal sleep.

 

Greater Bangkok, with more than 10 million

residents sprawled across an area nearly three

times the size of Rhode Island, has many animal

problems, among them snakes that occasionally

cause panic when they slither into homes and the

city’s ubiquitous and mangy stray dogs, which

have been known to bite pedestrians.

 

But elephants stand apart because for centuries

they have been considered noble beasts, collected

by kings and used in preindustrial times as the

tanks of the battlefield.

 

Like pandas for China, they were also tools of

diplomacy. In the 19th century, King Mongkut

offered a few pairs of elephants to the American

government, thinking it might help cement a

budding friendship between the countries.

 

(<>Abraham Lincoln, president at the time,

replied that the United States might not have a

favorable climate for the animals. “Our political

jurisdiction,” Lincoln wrote, “does not reach a

latitude so low as to favor the multiplication of

the elephant.”)

 

Before motor vehicles took over, elephants were

the taxis of the rich and the workhorses of rural

Thailand, especially prized for their help in

clearing thick swaths of jungle. It was not until

the late 1980s, when the government banned

logging to save the nation’s dwindling forests,

that hundreds of elephants found themselves

unemployed.

 

Some elephants were given jobs in the tourism

industry, carrying jungle trekkers and amusing

visitors with their ability to paint or even play

in an “elephant orchestra.” For others, the

unemployment line led to Bangkok.

 

Eight years ago, former Prime Minister Anand

Panyarachun lamented that when Thais saw

elephants walking down the streets in Bangkok,

“we are not only sorry for the elephant but we’re

also ashamed of ourselves.”

 

“The elephant was a symbol of honor, of dignity

and leadership,” he said, “but today it has

become the symbol of the failures and injustices

of Thailand’s development.”

 

Since those comments were made, the government

has experimented, unsuccessfully, with two

projects to confine the elephants to Thailand’s

rural hinterland.

 

In 2002, elephants and their mahouts were offered

jobs as scouts in national parks. The project

failed because it was underfinanced and the

elephants and their trainers were “lonely,” said

Kritapon Sala-ngam, secretary of the Thai

Elephant Association, a nonprofit group.

 

In 2006, the government started the “Bring

Elephants Home” project, offering to pay mahouts

8,000 baht a month if they agreed to live in a

specially designated area in Surin, a province

about 250 miles northeast of Bangkok.

 

However, the area is short on water and tall

grass — the staple of the elephants’ ravenous

daily diet of 50 gallons of water and food

equivalent to 10 percent of their body weight.

(Thai elephants weigh an average of about 5,500

pounds.) The project started with 181 elephants

but is down to 64, Mr. Kritapon said.

 

Surin Province is home to 1,005, or about

one-quarter, of Thailand’s domesticated elephants.

 

Their mahouts are generally Gouay people, a small

ethnic group that speaks a language distantly

related to Khmer and that for centuries

specialized in the art of capturing wild

elephants from the jungle.

 

Weerasak Pintawong, the chief veterinarian at the

National Institute of Elephant Research and

Health Services in Surin, said the concentration

of elephants was a big problem.

 

“There are too many elephants in Surin, and there’s not enough money,” he said.

 

Mr. Weerasak, who treats wounded and sick

elephants from around the country, said it was

common for elephants to be injured by cars.

Often, he said, young elephants will carelessly

bump into parked vehicles and bruise themselves.

 

“Sometimes they fall into a hole,” Mr. Weerasak

said. “Sometimes the elephant is frustrated at

being commanded too much, and it runs away.”

 

Yet unlike many city people who hold romantic

notions about elephants, Mr. Weerasak and others

who train the animals have a more practical view.

They offer a note of caution for the drunken

tourists who enjoy patting the elephants on their

backsides and the Thai bar girls who duck under

elephants’ bellies in the belief that it brings

good luck.

 

Elephants, Mr. Weerasak said, are powerful,

restless creatures prone to rebellion.

 

The single most appropriate word for them, he said, is “fierce.”

--

 

 

Merritt Clifton

Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

P.O. Box 960

Clinton, WA 98236

 

Telephone: 360-579-2505

Fax: 360-579-2575

E-mail: anmlpepl

Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

 

[ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent

newspaper providing original investigative

coverage of animal protection worldwide, founded

in 1992. Our readership of 30,000-plus includes

the decision-makers at more than 10,000 animal

protection organizations. We have no alignment

or affiliation with any other entity. $24/year;

for free sample, send address.]

 

 

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