http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0506/S00007.htm

 



Osama bin Laden & 9.11 Souvenirs In S.E. Asia


Wednesday, 1 June 2005, 2:24 pm
Article: Richard S. Ehrlich 

BANGKOK, Thailand -- The Osama bin Laden cigarette lighter is adorned with
his raised, chrome portrait, an embossed "9.11", sketches of the World Trade
Center, an approaching airplane, and a big red splotch.

When you flick the sleek, metal lighter open, a light-emitting diode
illuminates the splotch so it glows bright red on one of the buildings,
emphasizing the first crash site.

Loud, computerized music beeps out a loop of Mozart.

Made in China -- as are many of the latest, gimmicky, Osama bin Laden
souvenirs -- the butane lighter recently showed up in Cambodia.

"I paid two U.S. dollars for it, in the old Soviet market in Phnom Penh," a
Canadian traveler, who asked not to be identified, said in an interview
after visiting the Cambodian capital.

"One man's catastrophe is another man's cheesy souvenir. I bought three, for
the novelty. I'll give them to people who would appreciate the irony that
they even exist.

"When you open it, it plays a classical tune. It's quite freaky, eh?"

The lighter came boxed with a gold-and-black cigarette holder, and was
manufactured by "Boerda Smoking Set Co. Ltd."

An Internet search indicated the Chinese company makes various lighters for
domestic use and export.

In a crammed, middle-class shopping mall in Bangkok, meanwhile, other bin
Laden souvenirs are currently on sale.

A Thai shop selling lava lamps, magic tricks, and embarrassing gifts to
surprise recipients, also offers a small, inexpensive hand puppet of bin
Laden wearing boxing gloves.

Stick your fingers inside and wiggle them, and little Osama punches the air.

On Bangkok's popular Khao San Road, where thousands of international
backpackers flock to cheap hotels, restaurants, discos and an avant garde
street market, stalls sell Halloween masks of a droopy, rubbery bin Laden,
alongside other scary faces. 

The trickle of souvenirs appear to be made not by Osama's supporters, but by
profit-seeking factories which have slapped bin Laden's visage, and symbols
of his international Islamist war, onto existing generic toys and other
items in a crass effort to reach a fresh demographic of buyers.

While Asian customers often appear nonplussed or bored with the al Qaeda
leader's appearance in their markets, many foreign tourists express shock
and awe at the commercialization of the world's most wanted killer.

But some tourists, including Americans, can be seen laughing with sarcastic
delight at the cruel globalization of absurdity, despite the outrageous
insult to bin Laden's victims.

Thai clothing sellers cater to both sides by offering a high-quality T-shirt
adorned with a reverently painted, color portrait of bin Laden, while
another hangar dangles a T-shirt with his face targeted inside a red
bull's-eye.

One common T-shirt in Thailand, which seems to attract mostly cynics and
anti-right-wingers, is printed with the faces of bin Laden and President
George W. Bush side-by-side, and captioned, "CIA and FBI Presents: Twin
Terrors".

"I bought one of the T-shirts of the Twin Terrors," said a snickering New
Yorker who visited Bangkok's tourist-friendly Patpong Road night market.

"But I'm afraid of bringing it back to America. Can you imagine what Customs
might do to me, if they find it in my luggage?"

Much bigger, and more bizarre, is a 15-inch (37-cm) tall, battery-powered,
action figure of bin Laden.

The box promises it "can dance and sing, hands can act, waist can wobble."

The plastic bin Laden's excited singing is reminiscent of India's Bollywood
film songs.

Two fake, plastic hand grenades clip onto the doll's vest. Five tiny fake
rockets, a pistol, and a knife are stuffed into his pockets.

The doll brandishes a plastic dagger in his right hand and waves a "V" --
for victory -- sign with his other.

Long, gray, life-like hair flows from his beard.

"Not suitable for children under 3 years old due to the danger of tearing
off and swallowing small parts," the doll's "Warfare Puppetry" box warns.

In October, French police demanded an investigation when the doll appeared
in a Paris shop, amid allegations it was "apologizing for terrorism."

The Paris police bust made headlines in Le Parisien magazine. Associated
Press picked up the story and it was splashed worldwide, including in the
Jerusalem Post.

Around the same time, the high-quality "action singer" doll also appeared in
Bangkok's so-called Arab Quarter where dozens of Middle Eastern, African and
South Asian restaurants, travel agencies, hotels, shops, shipping agencies
and other businesses cater to Muslims and other visitors who enjoy its
crammed lanes lined with signs in Arabic and other languages.

Selling for about 12 U.S. dollars, the bin Laden doll stood next to a
near-identical one of Saddam Hussein, both "Made in China" by the same
unidentified company.

The boxes showed illustrations of four other dolls, similarly armed,
including what appeared to be a Palestinian guerrilla with his head wrapped
in a black-and-white checkered scarf.

Another was a Caucasian wearing a white shirt and bright red tie under his
weapons-heavy vest. A bigger picture showed him wearing a hat featuring the
official seal of the U.S. government -- an eagle holding arrows and olive
branches.

Elsewhere in Southeast Asia, a hand-held, "Laden vs. USA" computerized game
was available in Hanoi, Vietnam, showing photos of bin Laden wearing a white
turban alongside a grimacing President Bush.

Amid the game's 10 white push-buttons for playing, a matchbox-sized screen
showed a photo of a World Trade Tower exploding, while a second airplane
impacted in flames into the other tower.

The player's low-flying airplane had to defend itself from attacks by jet
bombers.

"The game is divided into 20 levels," the package explained. "What's more,
the inspiring music will play during the game."

On sale for five U.S. dollars, it was similar to a Nintendo Game Boy, but
built by Panyu Gaming Electronic Co., Ltd., in China.

*************

Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported news from Asia
for the past 26 years, is co-author of the non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG
BIG HONEY!" -- Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing
Interviews. His web page is www.geocities.com/glossograph/

 



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