Thai National Park Gains UNESCO Heritage Status Amid Rising Human Rights Concerns

Thai National Park Gains UNESCO Heritage Status Amid Rising Human Rights Concerns

Thailand’s Heritage Triumph, but Indigenous Struggles Undone

When the World Heritage Committee slapped a gold star on Kaeng Krachan, the country’s environment minister gave a cheery thumbs‑up that the park had finally earned its “big gift.” But behind the glossy award, a darker story is unfolding.

Why the Karen Dream Turns Into a Displacement Nightmare

Independent UN human‑rights experts warned that the Karen people—our forest’s original stewards—are being “evicted on a loop‑de‑loop” that’s hard to swallow. Tacitly, the government’s push to keep the forest pristine is pulling families out of their ancestral homes.

Some Numbers that Don’t Rhyme with Pride

  • More than 80 Karen residents have been cuffed this year.
  • 28 of those have faced “encroachment” charges—including a child.
  • Four attempts over 16 years to get UNESCO accreditation; we finally hit the mark last week.
  • China & Russia backed the bid, yet the Karen saga remained unnoticed in the proposal.

Sounds From the Other Side

Angkhana Neelapaijit, a former human‑rights commissioner, stated, “These people have lived here for over a century, yet the land has no rights for them. They’re being evicted in the name of conservation.” A Thai spokesperson did not answer any queries about the alleged forced evictions.

In Short

Kaeng Krachan’s UNESCO fame ships a glittering commendation to Thailand—yet for 80+ Karen families, that glitter is thin. Their homes, histories, and hopes feel like a negotiation gone wrong.