Tourists will desert the area, or even 
Bangkok, if daytime stalls are not restored, say visitors and street 
vendors
                        
                            
                            
Khaosan Road – the backpackers’ mecca – 
has it all, from cheap T-shirts to elephant-print baggy pants, from 
tattoos to henna painting, from budget guesthouses to massage parlours 
and even tour packages to southern islands.
The world-famous Bangkok destination attracts hordes of international 
youth with offers of street food, beer and a chaotic, lively nightlife. 
Just about everything and anything is available at all times of the 
day. 
However, the municipal authority wants to bring order to the late-night carnivalesque atmosphere.
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
                            
Since August 1, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) has 
strictly enforced the rarely-used Public Cleanliness and Orderliness Act
 1992, which forbids daytime street vending. Under the recent sweep, the
 street stalls have been banned from doing business in front of 
guesthouses, cars, cafes and shops during the day. 
City Hall’s plan only allows the previous daytime vendors to hawk their 
goods and services on the road from 6pm until midnight. The BMA is 
expected to allow vendors to hawk their wares from 4pm next month 
onwards. 
 The plan, however, isn’t popular with tourists and shoppers. The 
authorities are now working to solve this roblem with a public hearing 
to allow street vendors and store owners to air their views.
From around 9pm to 3am, backpackers use Khaosan as “party central”, 
rather than a shopping fair, vendors told The Nation on a recent 
night-time visit. Electronic dance beats can be heard blaring from clubs
 and bars. 
Along both sides of the road, carts and stalls are lined up, offering 
late eaters pad Thai and mango sticky rice. Several smiling hawkers 
offer “laughing gas” or a crispy fried scorpion. Local and foreign 
partygoers flock the street daily. 
“It’s my first time here in Khaosan. I’d heard that it’s brilliant and 
fantastic,” said Matthew Bechus, as he and a friend tuck into Thai 
delicacies at a stall nearby. “Now that the footpaths have been cleared,
 it’s sad. It’s a big tourist attraction and brings income for people 
and jobs and everything. I hope it comes back.” 
Russel Green, a tourist from South Africa said the new Khaosan was nothing special.
“If they clear out all the stalls, there will no longer be a reason to 
come to Khaosan,” he said. 
Green and his friend were “disappointed” 
while strolling through the area in the afternoon. “I would say tourists
 under the age of 30 visiting Thailand only come to Bangkok to visit 
Khaosan Road. Without Khaosan, they will have no reason to visit 
Bangkok. They will go straight to Phuket,” he predicted.
.
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Under the new restrictions, Khaosan Road now looks like any other place 
in Thailand. While most of the 30-million annual visitors are foreign, 
not all choose to stay in the area’s hostels, guesthouses and hotels. 
Rujira Raokhekit, a Thai who came with her boyfriend, said: “I have been
 here many times at night for parties. I don’t usually come to Khaosan 
during the day, but I think today it is quieter than before.” 
The peak selling hours for vendors and stall owners used to be from 2pm 
to 5.30pm, vendors said. After 8pm, people usually come for food, music 
and beer. 
When daytime trading was banned, Bangkok officials allowed them to set 
up stalls from 6pm, which vendors say will only give them three hours to
 sell their goods. 
“After that, the music is too loud and the crowd is not in the mood for 
shopping,” said Sukwasa Kurattana-sinchai, who has been selling T-shirts
 on Khaosan since the Tom Yum Kung crisis hit Thailand in 1997. 
“Most of our customers are backpackers who came to stay in budget 
guesthouses. They often travel light and come here specifically to buy 
comfy cotton pants and sleeveless T-shirts to wear for their whole 
trip,” Sukwasa said, as she waved at a group of backpackers. 
She said that from about 8am until late afternoon, Chinese tourists 
would normally drop by Khaosan after visiting the Grand Palace and enjoy
 an hour-long shopping spree. Most foreign tourists visit Khaosan in the
 morning for souvenirs before their flights home in the afternoon. 
Most vendors believe that clearing out the stalls is a bad move. 
“The prices in shops are usually high, which is probably why the stalls 
are banned in the afternoon,” said another vendor as he waited to set up
 his bag stall at 6pm. “Now you see most tourists walking without any 
shopping bags.” 
If the ban continues, tourists will not bother to visit Khaosan, he 
said. “They won’t even stay close to Khaosan. Why should they? There is 
nothing to buy during the day. They could book a hotel in Pratunam or Bo
 Bae [two famous shopping districts a half-hour ride from Khaosan] and 
take a tuk-tuk to Khaosan for the nightlife,” he said.
Bangkok deputy governor Sakoltee Phattiyakul said after a meeting with 
related agencies on Friday that to help solve the problem, the BMA will 
draft a regulation allowing Khaosan vendors to trade from 4pm until 
midnight.
The regulation will includes pavement trading in nearby streets of 
Banglamphu such as Rambutri, Chakrabongse, Krai Sri, Sip Sam Hang and 
Tani.
Over the next 10 days, Phra Nakhon district will collect opinions from 
street vendors and building owners. “All vendors must register with 
Commerce Ministry. We will make it legal and transparent,” he said.
“We are trying to find the middle ground for everyone. The street 
vendors can’t have everything. They can’t expect to use the footpaths 
all day.” 
He added that the vendors must not block the footpaths and stalls can be no bigger than 1.5 square metres. 
“We will also ensure that there is one stall per vendor,” Sakoltee said 
in response to claims by Bangkok officials that some vendors owned as 
many as seven stalls.
 Yada Pornoetrumpa, president of Khaosan Road Street Vendors 
Association, said: “The officials don’t understand the situation of 
Khaosan. Many vendors trade in the daytime.
 “Ideally, I want Khaosan Road to open 24 hours. They think vendors are 
greedy. But actually, stalls could help look after the street’s 
hygiene.” 
Source - TheNation 
Ps, It go look like ''The hate foreigner tourists''