Burma Bazaar
Burma Bazaar is a market run by Burmese refugees in Chennai, India. It is located at Parrys Corner and is one of the several unorganized or grey market shopping hubs of Chennai. The bazaar was set up in 1969 by the Government of Tamil Nadu. It is located just outside the Chennai Beach railway station, in the old financial district of the city at George Town. It is a row of about 200 shops that line either side of the road for about a kilometre.
History
Burma Bazaar was established by Burmese immigrants, who were Tamil refugees who fled Myanmar during the early 1960s.[1] The government set aside land for the Tamil refugees returning from Burma during the 1960s. The bazaar is run by the Burma Tamizhar Marumalarchi Sangam, an association that has been set up to look after the interests of the traders since 1966.[2]
The bazaar
The bazaar extends to about a kilometre along the Chennai Beach railway station. There are an estimated 200 shops in the bazaar. With several passengers coming out of the station every few minutes, the market appears busy all the time. It is estimated that over 100,000 people pass through this corridor every week.[2]
Per 2017 estimates, there are over 600 shops in the bazaar employing over 5,000 people.[3]
Movie references
Ayan, a 2009 Tamil movie, shows the operations of selling CDs, software, electronics, perfumes, and other goods in great detail. A movie named Vattaram has references as well.also references made in Tamil movie kacheri arambam.
See also
- Arabber
- Bazaar
- George Town
- Hawker centre (Asia) a centre where street food is sold
- Pan Bazaar
- Peddler
- Retail
- Ritchie Street
- Shopping in Chennai
- Street vendor
- Street food
References
- Venkat, Vidya (21 July 2008). "Grey markets, but never in the red". The Hindu. Chennai: The Hindu. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
- "Buzz hour". The Hindu. 9 May 2007. Archived from the original on 23 March 2008. Retrieved 16 March 2014.
- Sanjay Vijayakumar, Sangeetha Kandavel (29 June 2017). "Chennai's grey markets remain fuzzy about GST". The Hindu. Chennai: The Hindu. Retrieved 2 July 2017.