Thailand's tsunami-hit Phuket island offers gory souvenirs
Thailand's tsunami-hit Phuket island offers gory souvenirs
by Eileen Ng
= (PICTURES) =
PHUKET, Thailand, Jan 18 (AFP) -
Thailand's tsunami-hit Phuket island offers gory souvenirs
Eileen Ng
Agence France-Presse/Phuket
A macabre souvenir industry is emerging on Thailand's resort
island of Phuket, with tsunami VCDs, T-shirts and gory pictures
of bloated corpses floating in the sea being snapped up by both
local residents and tourists.
The island's tourism industry has been hit by the calamity,
which has killed more than 5,300 people, half of whom are Western
holidaymakers, but photo shops, bookstores and souvenir shops are
doing brisk business.
The largest photo shop in Phuket town center offers prints of
at least 30 different scenes of devastation in the southern
coastal provinces battered by the December 26 earthquake and
giant waves.
"This is the bestseller," a staffer at the Kodak Express shop
told AFP, pointing to a picture showing scores of blackened
bodies buried among a large pile of rubble of a collapsed
building in Khao Lak.
He said the shop started selling the pictures on the afternoon
of December 26, with stocks supplied by local photographers and
from navy officers.
"We have sold thousands of copies of these pictures. Business
is good because people out there want to see what is really
happening on the ground," he said, asking not to be identified.
The prints cost 20 baht (Rp 5,000) each, and are bought by
both locals and foreigners, he said, adding that it was a legal
business.
Some of the pictures depict scenes commonly seen in
newspapers, showing people running from raging waves, the
magnitude of destruction along the coastlines and shops submerged
in deep water.
Others offer a rare glimpse of the search and rescue work.
One is a picture of officers pulling in a string of dead
bodies from the sea during a night operation, and another had
bloated bodies of naked foreigners floating face up in the open
sea.
Tsunami VCDs and posters in the Thai language are also on sale
at the photo shop as well as in bookshops around Phuket.
A staffer at the Seng Ho Bookstore, the largest in town, said
their stock of some 100 VCDs, priced at 120 baht each, were sold
out to mainly Thai residents.
"I don't know why people are interested to see this sad
tragedy," she said, adding that she has not watched a video.
The VCD, apparently produced by an enterprising Thai
photographer, is a one-hour production compiling scenes in
newspapers and television of tsunami-battered areas, and heart-
wrenching interviews with local villagers displaced by the
disaster.
T-shirts are also on sale in a local market and shops in
Phuket.
A young Thai woman was spotted at Patong beach wearing a black
round-necked shirt with a picture of giant blue waves in the
front, and a line listing the provinces hit by the tsunamis.
"I bought this at a local market for 99 baht. I just want a
memory of this painful disaster that had affected Thailand," she
told AFP.
The Phuket Board Riders Club has printed dozens of tsunami
shirts and distributed them to volunteers at the makeshift morgue
at the Yanyao temple in Takua Pua.
"Magnitude 9.0. In memory of those who died in tsunami.
TSUNAMI SURVIVORS. The deadliest natural disaster in modern
history, December 26, 2004," was printed on the back of the black
collared shirt.
"It is given as a compliment to all the volunteers here, but
there is not enough for everybody," said a Thai volunteer decked
in the shirt.
Local television station ITV has also printed out tsunami T-
shirts for its staff covering the disaster.
en/gs/dv
Asia-quake-Thailand-souvenir
AFP
GetAFP 2.10 -- JAN 18, 2005 09:18:15