AH3

{{Short description|Route of the Asian Highway Network}}

{{Infobox road

| country = ASIA

| type = AH

| route = 3

| image = AH3-CN.png

| map = AH3 Route Map.svg

| direction_a = North

| terminus_a = Ulan Ude, Russia

| junction =

| direction_b = South

| terminus_b = Chiang Rai, Thailand

| countries = Russia, Mongolia, China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand

| previous_type = AH

| previous_route = 2

| next_type = AH

| next_route = 4

}}

Asian Highway 3 (AH3) is a route of the Asian Highway Network which runs {{convert|7,331|km|mi|abbr=on}} from Ulan-Ude, Russia (on AH6) to Tanggu, China; and Shanghai, China (on AH5) to Chiang Rai, Thailand and Kengtung, Myanmar (both on AH2).{{cite web | publisher = UNESCAP | title = Asian Highway Handbook | year = 2003 | url = http://www.unescap.org/sites/default/files/Full%20version.pdf | format = PDF | access-date = 2017-04-16}}

Southeast Asian issues

By mid-2008 the North-South Corridor segment of the Asian Highway, AH-3, was nearly fully paved, with only a few kilometers incomplete.

The North-South Corridor Project has been on the Asian Development Bank's (ADB) agenda since 1993 and aimed to improve the connected economies of China, Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia. The portion of the North-South Corridor known as Highway 3, which runs through northwestern Laos and connects China and Thailand, was expected to cost US$95.8 million and was being financed with a loan from the ADB, along with funds from the Chinese, Thai and Lao governments.

The completed sections of the road have gone from being little more than dirt roads a few years ago{{When|date=October 2020}} to two-lane routes with concrete shoulders, drainage and concrete bridges. The journey from the Lao border town of Huai Xai to the southwestern Chinese border village of Mohan situated in southwestern Yunnan province took as long as two days on the old mostly dirt road depending on weather conditions. The new roadway has shortened that trip to five to six hours.

The route was expected to be completed in 2007, but damage to the road from floods during the 2006 rainy season pushed the completion date into 2008. While the road was now made passable all year, there are still sections, some of several kilometers in length, which remained unfinished as of 2008.

= Southeast Asian development issues =

While the AH-3 highway was expected to increase business and trade through increased market access to both China and Thailand, including the country's agribusiness and tourism sectors, the Lao government appeared more open to increasing state revenues through the collection of transit fees and taxes on goods that arrived at its borders. It was also under pressure from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to embed new costs into the already low intra-regional trade.

According to people involved in the tourism industry in northwestern Laos, while Western tourists were arriving in increasing numbers, tourists from neighbouring Thailand and China often only pass through Laos on their way to Boten on the Chinese border, where there is a large casino and a market.

In addition to reaping less economic benefits, Laos will also likely have to deal with disproportionate social and environmental costs, people monitoring the project say. Without proper control mechanisms in place, the region's opening would disproportionately benefit government-connected business groups while displacing large numbers of the non-ethnic Lao groups currently living in the area.

A 2002 ADB report estimated that approximately 2,500 people (500 households) might have to be relocated due to the road project; some monitoring groups put the real number much higher. Although resettlement plans were drafted by the ADB to compensate for the loss of houses, land, rice granaries and shops, it was not clear that the funds were truly reaching the people most affected.

Among the issues involved was the resettlement of the original Lao inhabitants of Boten village near the Chinese border, who were moved a kilometer or more down the road to allow the construction of a new Chinese-owned casino, hotel and other commercial developments. The resettled Botens complained that their new site lacked services, and that the land set aside for them was smaller and less fertile than their original land. As well, others complained about rampant land grabs adjacent to the new road by government-connected traders and businessmen who established shops and other businesses on the new prime real estate. A lack of formal land deeds or proper court systems meant there was little justice available to the displaced residents.

The legal vacuum also allowed an increasing flow of Chinese migrants, many of whom first arrived to work on the road and who then stayed on to establish businesses along the road, including whole new villages, which further aggravated those previously resettled to less fertile land.

Rights groups were also concerned with the remote area's rapid development resulting in increases to exposure of HIV/AIDS, human trafficking and the possible exploitation of the surrounding forests and wildlife resources.

While the ADB's original hopes that the route would reduce transportation costs for the movement of vehicles, goods and people, and also promote faster economic growth, as the {{convert|7,300|km|mi|abbr=on}} North-South Corridor neared completion in 2008 the real costs and benefits of the project for the local populations of Southeast Asia were still in doubt.McCartan, Brian [https://web.archive.org/web/20080509061154/http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/JA23Ae01.html Roadblocks on the Great Asian Highway], Asia Times website, 23 January 2008. Retrieved 2009-05-05;Kamat, Rahul [http://www.projectsmonitor.com/detailnews.asp?newsid=8609 The Great Asian Highway] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100117233246/http://projectsmonitor.com/detailnews.asp?newsid=8609 |date=2010-01-17 }}, Project Monitor website, 31 January 2005. Retrieved 2009-05-05

Associated routes

= Russia =

  • {{jct|country=RUS|A|340}}: Ulan-UdeKyakhta – border with Mongolia (235 km)

= Mongolia =

= China =

File:Sign of AH3 Vlcsnap-2019-09-04-23h54m14s898.png and AH3]]

= Laos =

= Thailand =

= Myanmar =

See also

References