Thai Hill Tribes Erotic

Homeland

Thailand (Northern hills)

Region

Southeast Asia

About Thai Hill Tribes People

Thai Hill Tribes (chao khao, sometimes referred to as 'highlanders') comprise approximately 1.2% of the Thai population — approximately 750,000+, the umbrella for Northern Thailand Indigenous populations. Major sub-populations include Karen (~500,000+ in Thailand plus ~3-5M+ in Myanmar — the largest Hill Tribe in Thailand and a major ethnic group in Myanmar), Hmong (~150,000 in Thailand), Mien / Yao (~50,000), Akha (~70,000), Lahu (~85,000), Lisu (~35,000), Lawa (the Indigenous Lawa or Lua, the longest-resident Hill Tribe population in northern Thailand), Khmu, Htin, Mlabri (the very small foragers-and-gatherers community, ~300+), plus other smaller groups. Many Hill Tribe individuals lack Thai citizenship (the historical Thai government policy of granting citizenship to Hill Tribe populations has been incomplete and inconsistent) and face documented discrimination including land-rights restrictions and limitation of educational and employment opportunities.

Typical Thai Hill Tribes Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Phenotype distribution is heterogeneous across the Hill Tribe sub-populations. Karen, Lawa, Lua are Tibeto-Burman or Mon-Khmer source populations. Hmong, Mien / Yao are Hmong-Mien source populations. Akha, Lahu, Lisu are Tibeto-Burman source populations from Yunnan / China origin. Phenotype distributions broadly match the source-population characteristics of these populations with characteristic Tibeto-Burman / East Asian features for most groups.

Discussion Board

Please log in to post a message.

No messages yet. Be the first to comment!