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  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    People in a community on the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment011.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  People march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office Bangkok. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK008.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  People march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office Bangkok. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK006.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:     A man prays in front of Christ Cemetery, a Roman Catholic Cemetery in Bangkok. It's in the middle of a neighborhood of Catholic Churches and schools between Samsen Road and the Chao Phraya River in the Dusit section of Bangkok.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ManPraying001.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    A food vendor in a community on the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment013.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    A woman walks between houses in a community along the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment009.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment004.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment002.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march past Thai police officers guarding Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK015.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A man clears traffic for marchers near Government House in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK012.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK009.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK007.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    A man and his son on a motorcycle between houses in a community along the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment015.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    A woman walks between houses in a community along the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment014.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    A woman at a table in a working class community on the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment012.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment001.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march past Thai police officers guarding Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK014.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A man clears traffic for marchers near Government House in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK011.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK010.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  People march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office Bangkok. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK005.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  People march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office Bangkok. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK003.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK001.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment007.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment006.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment005.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  Housing along the Chao Phraya River south of the Krung Thon Bridge in Bangkok. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment003.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK017.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march past Thai police officers guarding Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK016.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  DADODIN PATAVATTO, a Buddhist monk, leads a silent march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province, members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK002.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  A man clears traffic for marchers near Government House in Bangkok. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK013.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:    A woman walks between houses in a community along the Chao Phraya River south of Krung Thon Bridge. This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment010.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:   A woman hangs her laundry on a pier on the Chao Phraya River, south of the Krung Thon Bridge.  This is one of the first parts of the riverbank that is scheduled to be redeveloped. The communities along the river don't know what's going to happen when the redevelopment starts. The Chao Phraya promenade is development project of parks, walkways and recreational areas on the Chao Phraya River between Pin Klao and Phra Nang Klao Bridges. The 14 kilometer long promenade will cost approximately 14 billion Baht (407 million US Dollars). The project involves the forced eviction of more than 200 communities of people who live along the river, a dozen riverfront  temples, several schools, and privately-owned piers on both sides of the Chao Phraya River. Construction is scheduled on the project is scheduled to start in early 2016. There has been very little public input on the planned redevelopment.           PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ChaoPhrayaRedevelopment008.jpg
  • 22 JULY 2015 - BANGKOK, THAILAND:  People march around Government House, which is the office of the Prime Minister. More than 100 people from Krabi province and members of the Save Andaman from Coal Network (SACN) have staged a series of marches and sit-ins outside the Prime Minister's office Bangkok. They are opposed to plans to build an 800 megawatt coal fired power plant near southern Thailand's Andaman coast about 650 kilometers (400 miles) south of Bangkok. The area is famous for its pristine beaches. Residents worry that the coal fired power plant will pollute the area and send power to Bangkok.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    CoalPlantProtestBKK004.jpg
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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