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PHUKET THAILAND

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WELCOME TO AROUND-ASEAN
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, was established on 8 August 1967 in Bangkok, Thailand, with the signing of the ASEAN Declaration (Bangkok Declaration) by the Founding Fathers of ASEAN, namely Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore and Thailand. Brunei Darussalam then joined on 7 January 1984, Viet Nam on 28 July 1995, Lao PDR and Myanmar on 23 July 1997, and Cambodia on 30 April 1999, making up what is today the ten Member States of ASEAN.

Sunday, 29 June 2014

Top 10 Places To Go In Southeast Asia

Sukhumvit Road, Bangkok :
Sukhumvit Road is one of the longest roads in the world and it’s one of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia for shopping. There is absolutely nothing you won’t find in Sukhumvit which is home to hundreds of small shops, street markets and shopping malls Sukhumvit Road is also home to many inexpensive hotels and a diverse nightlife that includes restaurants, night clubs and eye popping go go bars.



Nha Trang Coastline, Khanh Hoa Province:
Nha Trang is located in Vietnam and it’s one of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia for a beach vacation. Nha Trang boasts an amazing coastline with pristine sandy beaches and clear waters ideal for snorkeling and diving.The Nha Trang coastline is one of the most touristy spots in Vietnam being home to many hotel resorts, a cool waterpark and a ton of tourist attractions such as the Alexandre Yersin Museum and the Vinpearl Cable Car, which offers lovely views of Nha Trang bay.


Petrona Twin Towers, Kuala Lumpur:
The Petrona Twin Towers are Kuala Lumpur’s top attraction and they’re truly an amazing landmark to visit in Malaysia as they are the tallest buildings in the world! The Petrona Twin Towers are definitely one of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia as they offer some of the most breathtaking views you’ll ever get from a man made landmark Besides the amazing views from the top of the Petronas Towers, you can enjoy a guided tour of the Petronas complex, as well as dinning and shopping.



Siem Reap, Cambodia :
Siem Reap is not only one of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia but it’s also the most popular tourist destination in Cambodia because of its many temples such as Angkor Wat, which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.Angkor Wat is no doubt the centerpiece attraction in Siem Reap, though Siem Reap boasts many other great temples such as Banteay Srei and Kbal Spean that you can explore and climb while pretending to be a daring explorer like Tomb Raider or Indiana Jones!



Banaue Rice Terraces, Philippines:
 The famous Banaue Rice Terraces in Luzon Island are without a doubt, of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia. The rice terraces in Banaue are thousands of years old and are truly amazing because of the enigma surrounding their construction. If you’re staying in Manila, you can visit the terraces on a day trip from the capital with a guided tour. No matter where you stay in country, you’d definitely want to add the Banaue Rice Terraces to your list of tourist spots in the Philippines to visit.



Kinabalu National Park, Malaysia :

Kinabalu National Park is one of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia for eco-tourism. Kinabalu National Park is another popular UNESCO Site in the region as it’s home to Mount Kinabalu, which is one of the tallest peaks in the world.Kinabalu National Park is truly a dream destination for nature enthusiasts as it’s home to amazing wildlife, birdlife and plant life such as giant the Pitcher plant, mountain squirrel, leopard cat and many more. If you’re a keen hiker, you’ll also enjoy taking a trip to the park to climb to the summit of Mt. Kinabalu.



Bagan, Mandalay Division:
The ancient city of Bagan in Burma is another of the top 10 places to go in Southeast Asia to admire beautiful architecture. Bagan boasts many ruins and a myriad of stunning temples and pagodas mostly built between the 11th and 13th centuries. If you do plan to visit the temples in Bagan, be sure to hire a local guide or book an organized tour with companies such as Grand Lotus Tours to explore the area and visit the best temples. Bagan is truly a huge area to explore by on your own without prior knowledge, so a local guide will come in handy and will be worth every penny!

It's a mystery, plain and simple



The Plain of Jars in northern Laos is home to a 2000-year-old mystery.


Steve McKenna studies a bizarre and ancient site that also bears the scars of a more recent 'secret'. The Plain of Jars has all the ingredients to stir the imagination. Shrouded in mystery and myth, and laced with intrigue and tragedy, this is a bizarre collection of ancient cylinders scattered in their hundreds across the war-scarred countryside of northern Laos's Xieng Khuang province. They're believed to have been created by travelling Indian tribes more than 2000 years ago and, as I look at them for the first time, I can't help but think they're an Asian version of Stonehenge – only smaller and with far fewer tourists. Whereas Stonehenge's ruins tower above visitors, I'm able to peer into most of the lichen-encrusted jars. I'm hoping to perhaps glimpse a few gilded treasures but I spot little more than spiderwebs, birds' feathers and rainwater coated in algae. 


Sensing that I'm unimpressed, my guide Tuevee begins regaling me with a story of how he once brought a girlfriend to (a dry) one. Despite his nods and winks, I'm unconvinced the jars were built with love trysts in mind. They're not just dirty, they don't seem wide enough to hold two people. "Ah," replies Tuevee. "For us small Lao folk, it's OK. For you tall falang (the Lao term for foreigners), it's not so OK." The jars' origins and purposes still puzzle. Local legend claims they were made of congealed water-buffalo skin so they could store rice and lao-lao (Laos's rice whisky) for a giant who lived nearby. French archaeologist Madeleine Colani, visiting in the 1930s, established that most were crafted from sandstone (after all, they weigh up to a tonne each) and were probably used for ancient funeral ceremonies. Colani found a human-shaped bronzed figure carved into one urn and, nearby, a scattering of tiny stone beads, but the lack of organic materials inside the jars, notably bones, has compounded their enigma. A tour of the jars is also a real eye-opener into the so-called "Secret War", which was launched by the US in the 1960s and '70s and turned Laos into the most bombed country in history. While the world's attention was on the US-Vietnam conflict, the US showered Laos with more missiles than it dumped on Germany and Japan combined during World War II. Washington's campaign to halt the spread of communism through old Indochina was dubbed the Secret War because Joe Public and, perhaps more remarkably, the US Congress and Senate were unaware of it. The nine-year campaign wiped out innumerable towns and villages, killed tens of thousands of people and left much of the previously pristine landscape irretrievably damaged and scarred. At the first of the three major jar sites, remnants of smashed vases lie near old trench lines and bomb craters the size of fairground merry-go-rounds. The surrounding countryside, pocked with charred bunker mounds and denuded hills and valleys, is largely barren and there is little vegetation apart from pale grass tussocks and a few rows of waif-like, emaciated goblin-green-leaved eucalypts. It looks more like the interior of a sun-scorched and windswept Greek island than something from the tropics. The other two jar sites have greener, prettier panoramas, with smatterings of pine forests and irrigated rice paddies but the region largely lacks the verdant lushness that characterises so much of Laos. The horrendous legacy of the attacks goes deeper than aesthetics, however. About 30 per cent of the bombs dumped on Laos failed to blow up, leaving an estimated 250,000 unexploded ordnance (UXO) scattered throughout the country. Since 1994, when the British Mines Advisory Group (MAG) set to work here, there has been a huge increase in clearance campaigns and programs that educate locals about the dangers of tampering with suspicious metal objects. Accidents still happen weekly, however, and UXOs are regularly found near schools, in parks and forests and submerged in flooded paddy fields. MAG, which is co-funded by the US State Department, has an office in the Xieng Khuang provincial capital, Phonsavan. Its information boards showcase a handful of graphic images, plus statistics on the war and the "bombies" (the bombs' local nickname). Two things particularly strike me: that the same types of clusters have recently been used in the conflict in Afghanistan and that the average weekly wage for a Lao mine clearer is just $US55 ($69). MAG's office is the highlight of a rather dusty, uninspiring town, where guest houses and cafes are peppered with Secret War paraphernalia, including huge rockets and hand grenades. In the evenings, most tourists huddle inside MAG's HQ to watch excellent back-to-back documentaries on the Secret War and its aftermath, including one that follows the Australian mine expert Laith Stevens in his endearing attempts to train budding local bomb detonators. The film possesses moments that are tragic and funny, bleak and uplifting – emotions that, for me, would encapsulate any visit to this often forgotten, yet fascinating part of Laos.



TRIP NOTES GETTING THERE Thai Airways (www.thaiair.com) flies from Sydney to Vientiane in Laos. Lao Airlines offers irregular flights from Vientiane to Phonsavan. Check their website, laoairlines.com, for the latest. Otherwise, there are several buses a day between the two cities. Trips can take up to 10 hours.

STAYING THERE A decent accommodation option is the Vansana Plain of Jars hotel (vansanahotel-group.com). Doubles are available from $50 a night.

FURTHER INFORMATION Tours of the Plain of Jars can be booked with almost every guest house and tour agency in Phonsavan for about $15, which includes lunch. See maginternational.org for more details on the Mines Advisory Group's work and its Phonsavan branch.