Imagine a tranquil province on the fringes of the bustling city, where the air is crisp and the waters clear. This was Samut Sakhon, a jewel in Thailand’s industrial crown, until a discovery that shocked the local community and its governing officials to their core. Nestled within the unsuspecting district of Muang, two foundries, which from the outside looked as harmless as any other, held a dark secret—a colossal 15,000 tonnes of cadmium waste, a substance as dangerous as it is carcinogenic, lay hidden within their confines. It was on a day like any other that the governor of Samut Sakhon, Phol Damtham, led an investigation into these two foundries, operated by a company that seemed to be quietly tucked away on Soi Kong Phananphon off the arterial Ekachai Road. But what they found was anything but ordinary. About 1,600 large bags filled with cadmium and zinc waste revealed the…
