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Thailand: Kayan 'Giraffe Women'
trapped in Thailand by tourist trade
By Richard Lloyd Parry
April 8, 2008 – (The Times) Mu Lon was born
into war, grew up in poverty and deprivation, and so the offer,
when it came, was like the chance for a second life.
She is Burmese, one of hundreds of thousands of people to have fled
the 58-year-long civil war for exile in neighbouring Thailand. From
the age of 5 she had lived as a stateless refugee, without hope
or prospects. Then came an undreamt of opportunity — a fresh
start in New Zealand, with education, housing, full citizenship
and, above all, peace.
The medical certificates were issued, the formal invitation was
delivered, and in 2006 Mu Lon and her sister were all ready to travel
to their new home. But two years later, as hundreds of thousands
of fellow Burmese have left before them, they remain stuck.
The reason for their plight is not religion, politics or the colour
of their skins but something altogether more unexpected: their necks.
Mu Lon is a member of the Kayan ethnic group whose women are known
as the “Long Necks” or, more crudely, “Giraffe
Women”. From the age of 5 they wrap their necks with tall
coils of brass that are extended as they grow into adulthood —
the extraordinary image of the swan-like women with their impossibly
long polished neck rings has become the great tourist attraction
of this remote corner of northeast Thailand. It is their value as
tourist attractions that has sealed their fate.
For two years Mu Lon and her family, the United Nations High Commission
for Refugees (UNHCR) and foreign governments have put pressure on
the Thai authorities to allow 20 Kayan to take up the opportunity
of resettlement in New Zealand and Finland. Several young Kayan
women, including Mu Lon, have even taken off their rings in protest,
abandoning centuries of tradition. The UNHCR has hinted at a tourist
boycott, but all in vain. Unlike the members of other, less photogenic
ethnic groups, the government of Mae Hong Son province, in which
they live, has refused to give the Kayan exit visas.
Vague bureaucratic excuses are given, but the true reason is an
open secret. “The local [Thai] villagers can sell to the [Burmese]
refugees, and they can sell to the tourists who come here as well,”
says Surachai Pidwai, the Thai village head who collects tens of
thousands of pounds a year from tourists who visit the Nai Soi tourist
“village” where Mu Lon and her fellow Kayan live. “If
the Kayan leave it would be unfair to all those people who benefit
from the camps. It would be awful.”
As many as ten thousand tourists visit Nai Soi every year to see
about 50 long-neck women and girls who pose for photographs and
sell postcards, bracelets and souvenirs. They pay 250 baht (about
£4) each; Mr Surachai admits to taking up to 150,000 baht
a month (£2,400) from the entrance fee. Out of this the women
and their families are supplied rice, chilli and cooking oil, and
a monthly stipend of 1,500 baht (£24) per set of neck rings.
As refugees, the Kayan have no land, no rights to social security
and no freedom of movement to find better work or education. And
at Nai Soi the monthly fee has not been paid for five months. “We
have nothing for ourselves here,” says Mu Lon, 22, who receives
no money at all now that she has cast off her rings. “Sometimes
the tourists who come here say that it is a human zoo, and it hurts
my heart. I want to go to New Zealand to have an ordinary life and
freedom. But the Thai people say that if we go no more tourists
will come.”
Tired of waiting for Mu Lon and her family the New Zealand Government
has given their places to others. The UNHCR insists that all refugees
should be treated equally, but declines to reproach the Government
directly.Last year two Kayan women found a radical solution, by
moving to a rival tourist attraction near Chiang Mai, where they
were paid more than twice as well. When the news came out local
business was outraged, the police were summoned and the Long Neck
fugitives were brought back under arrest.
The Long Necks
— Kayan women might appear to have long necks but this is
an optical illusion. As the coils are added they push the collar
bone and ribs down, creating the appearance of a longer neck
— Actually stretching the neck would result in paralysis and
death
— Removing the coils does not cause a woman’s neck to
collapse, although the muscles weaken
— There are different theories as to how the custom originated.
One suggests men put the rings on their women to deter slave traders
From:http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article3701576.ece
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