Thai general's US$83b plan to clean up border town Mae Sot
Special economic zones, tax breaks offered to investors to develop former war zones
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Sydney
FOR much of the past century, the Thai border town of Mae Sot stood on one of Asia's wilder frontiers. On the opposite bank of the swirling, mud-brown Moei River in neighbouring Myanmar, Karen insurgents waged a seemingly endless independence war. Smugglers trafficked guns, opium, timber, and gemstones. Then there was the two-way human cargo during the past three decades: 120,000 battle-scarred refugees seeking sanctuary in Thailand, battle-hardened mercenaries heading in the opposite direction.
In this unlikely outpost - and others like it along Thailand's 5,673 kilometres of borders - Prayuth Chan-Ocha, the general who runs Bangkok's ruling military junta, is making a big bet: that he can turn former war zones into some of South-east Asia's most prosperous marketplaces. He's doing it by creating 10 special economic zones that offer tax breaks and other incentives to investors venturing into now-peaceful border areas close to fast-growing Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos.
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