Ban Dung District


Ban Dung is a district in northeastern Udon Thani Province, Isan, Thailand.

Geography

Neighboring districts are Thung Fon, Phibun Rak, Phen, and Sang Khom of Udon Thani Province, Phon Phisai and Fao Rai of Nong Khai Province, and Ban Muang, Charoen Sin, and Sawang Daen Din of Sakon Nakhon Province.
North of Ban Dung are marshlands and open water called Nong Pla Tao.
The major river is the Songkhram, which marks the boundary of the district to the east.

History

The minor district Ban Dung was established on 16 May 1959, when three sub-districts were split off from Nong Han District. It was upgraded to a full district on 16 July 1963.

Administration

Central administration

Ban Dung is divided into 13 sub-districts, which are further divided into 159 administrative villages.
No.NameThaiVillagesPop.
1.Si Sutthoศรีสุทโธ1214,571
2.Ban Dungบ้านดุง1813,756
3.Dong Yenดงเย็น86,720
4.Phon Sungโพนสูง1711,160
5.Om Koอ้อมกอ108,568
6.Ban Chanบ้านจันทน์1814,277
7.Ban Chaiบ้านชัย98,615
8.Na Maiนาไหม1310,232
9.Thon Na Lapถ่อนนาลับ85,272
10.Wang Thongวังทอง96,252
11.Ban Muangบ้านม่วง148,584
12.Ban Tatบ้านตาด106,987
13.Na Khamนาคำ139,818

Local administration

There is one town in the district:
There are 12 sub-district administrative organizations in the district:
The district is the site of a Voice of America relay station, built in 1994. The Voice of America will give the station to Thailand, but will be allowed to operate it under a 25-year renewable lease expiring in 2019. Each of the station's seven shortwave transmitters is capable of broadcasting 500 kilowatts of power, covering 40 percent of the earth's surface. One of the transmitters will be dedicated for use by Radio Thailand. It will have sufficient power to reach the Middle East and the West Coast of the United States, both areas with large expatriate Thai communities.
The VOA installation has been suspected of being a CIA black site used to interrogate alleged terrorists. That suspicion has been supplanted by a BBC report that the Udon Royal Air Force Base was the home of a CIA black site, known to insiders as "Cat's Eye", but better known as "Detention Site Green", used to interrogate Abu Zubaydah, a 31-year-old Saudi-born Palestinian, believed to be one of Osama Bin Laden's top lieutenants. In December 2014 the United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence published an executive summary of a secret 6,000 page report on CIA techniques. The report alleges that at least eight Thai senior officials knew of the secret site. The site was closed in December 2002. Thailand has denied the existence of the site while the US government has neither confirmed or denied its existence.


Transport

The town is adjacent to the intersection of Highway 2022 and Highway 2096.