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CP Foods wins five Asian Excellence Awards in 2021

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods) has won five international awards from 11th Asian Excellence Awards 2021, organized by Corporate Governance Asia magazine, the Hong Kong-based magazine dedicated to economic and corporate governance reporting. The awards demonstrated operational excellence that create food security for the consumers across the world.

Asia’s Best CEO has been given to Mr. Prasit Boondoungprasert, Chief Executive Officer. The award reflects on the success of business management under good corporate governance, helping CP Foods to achieve sustainable growth as well as creating good returns in the long run for the organization and all stakeholders.

Asia’s Best CFO has been given to Paisan Chirakitcharern, the company’s Chief Financial Officer, from the ability to manage finances and funds effectively as well as to create added value and maxized benefits to the organization.

Best Investor Relations Professional, Asia’s Best Investor Relations Professional has been given Mrs. Kobboon Srichai, Company Secretary and head of Investor Relations Office, from outstanding role in communicating with investors.

At corporate level, Best Investor Relations Company and Best CSR Company have been given Charoen Pokphand Foods PLC (CP Foods) for the company’s transparency in disseminating information and social and environmental impacts on communities based on CP Foods’ the 3 pillars towards sustainability – Food Security, Self-Sufficient Society and Balance of Nature; as well as its measures to protect employees and improve their quality of life respectively.

During the COVID-19 outbreak, CP Foods raises the highest standards of safety for employees. The company also set up a field hospital to maintain the health and safety of employees. These measures help CP Foods to feed people across the world without disruption.

Aside its business, CP Foods initiated COVID-19 relief project, CPF food from the heart against Covid-19, delivering millions of food supplies to medical personnel and vulnerable group in 500 locations nationwide.

This year, CP Foods also announced the sustainability strategy goal “CPF 2030 Sustainability in Action”, emphasizing on taking action and build food security for all people on the basis of environmentally friendly production while promoting social growth and mitigate the impacts of climate change to support the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

The Asian Excellence Awards are presented by Corporate Governance Asia to organisations that demonstrate good corporate governance. The awards are extended to visionary leaders with excellent management acumen, financial performance, corporate social responsibility, environmental practices and investor relations.

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Bangkok Gov. Apologizes for Lack of Flood Warning

Bangkok residents wade through floods on Nov. 8, 2021.

BANGKOK — Social media is awash with criticism against junta-appointed Governor Aswin Kwanmuang for his failure to warn residents in the capital about the flood that struck many riverside communities on Monday.

The river overflowed in areas in Bangkok and the neighbouring province Samut Prakan throughout yesterday, causing traffic gridlock and flooding many homes. Officials blame the phenomenon on unusually high tides in the Gulf of Thailand. The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration did not issue any warning about the flood beforehand.

Speaking to reporters during his inspection of a flooded community in Samphanthawong district, Gov. Aswin apologized for the lack of communication.

“We apologize to the people who were affected,” Aswin said, adding that he had instructed the officials to assist the public and build barricades for any further flooding.

However, deputy PM Prawit Wongsuwan insisted the authorities had already issued a warning. “We already warned the people,” Prawit told reporters on Tuesday, without elaborating.

High tide hit 2.67 metres at 9:55am on Monday morning and flooding was reported in Bangkok Noi, Taling Chan, Bang Khunthian and Nong Chok districts.

More high tide is expected on Tuesday, officials said.

Aswin was appointed as the Bangkok Governor by the ruling military junta in 2016. Although Governors typically serve for four years per term, the military-backed government has yet to announce when the next gubernatorial election will be held.

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COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT DEBUTS IN PHUKET, THE PEARL OF THE ANDAMAN, WITH THE OPENING OF COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT PHUKET TOWN

NOVEMBER 9, 2021 – PHUKET, THAILAND – Courtyard by Marriott, part of Marriott Bonvoy’s extraordinary portfolio of 30 hotel brands, today announced the opening of its newest hotel on the tropical island of Phuket, Thailand. Located in the heart of Phuket’s old town, the 248-room Courtyard by Marriott Phuket Town is set to provide a sophisticated yet comfortable environment for guests as they explore the rich culture and heritage of southern Thailand. 

We are excited to bring the Courtyard by Marriott brand to Thailand’s most famous resort destination with the opening of Courtyard by Marriott Phuket Town,” said Jakob Helgen, Area Vice President of Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Myanmar, Marriott International. “The opening of Courtyard Phuket Town marks Marriott International’s 46th property in Thailand and further compliments our commitment to growth in the region, bringing a diversified portfolio for different types of travelers to this popular leisure destination.”

Located approximately 40 minutes away from Phuket International Airport by car, Courtyard Phuket Town is easily accessible from other regional and international destinations. The hotel is perfectly positioned in the historical center of this charming provincial capital, allowing travelers to explore authentic local markets, such as the Sunday Walking Street Market and Chillva Market, as well as museums and temples that reflect the island’s classical Sino-Portuguese and Peranakan heritage. Guests can discover the best that Phuket has to offer from nearby shopping, dining and entertainment venues. Those looking to experience Phuket’s picturesque beaches can visit the popular Patong Beach and Kata Beach, both within less than half an hour’s drive from the hotel. 

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Accentuating contemporary design that encompasses comfort and functionality, the new hotel’s decor also incorporates elements of traditional Thai arts and crafts, creating a connection to the local community. Courtyard Phuket Town features 248 thoughtfully designed rooms and suites, including two 140-square-meter Presidential Suites, which are fully equipped with an array of amenities including flat-screen televisions, a comfortable work desk and high-speed internet access. The separate living area with a window side lounger in each suite provides guests a perfect spot to recline, relax and enjoy the view.

Committed to suit the palate of its global guests, the hotel’s all-day dining restaurant Krua Talad Yai offers authentic southern Thai cuisine and popular international dishes. The Talung Lounge provides guests a space to indulge in the finest coffee with freshly baked cakes and confectionaries, and lastly Kolae Pool Bar is the ideal place for guests to unwind and relax over cocktails and light bites. 

Other leisure amenities at the hotel include the Kid’s Club, a dynamic space for family travelers to create new memories. For travelers looking to stay fit while on the road, the hotel’s fitness center and outdoor swimming pool are readily available for a swim or quick workout. The hotel also offers extensive facilities for meetings, business conferences and social events. The versatile event space includes a 660-square-meter pillarless Grand Ballroom and several flexible function spaces that are perfect for corporate and social gatherings.image3 8

“Beach lovers have always been drawn to Phuket’s tropical shores, but the renowned ‘Pearl of the Andaman’ has so much more to offer than just sun, sea and sand. Phuket Town is a melting pot of Asian heritage, and guests can soak up the diverse spirit of the island through its art, architecture, customs and cuisine. Courtyard Phuket Town will blend this timeless culture with modern, forward-thinking hospitality to create truly memorable guest experiences in a unique setting,” said Pamela Ong, Hotel Manager for Courtyard by Marriott Phuket Town.

Courtyard Phuket Town is certified under the Tourism Authority of Thailand’s (TAT) Amazing Thailand Safety & Health Administration Plus (SHA+) program, which ensures that at least 70% of its staff members have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. This means that it can welcome international travelers, without the need to quarantine, under the “Phuket Sandbox” program. The hotel will also uphold the highest levels of health and safety standards under Marriott International’s “Commitment to Clean” program, which is redefining hygiene protocols in all areas in hotels and resorts around the world.

For more information about Courtyard by Marriott Phuket Town, or to make a booking, please call +66 76 643 555 or visit www.courtyardphukettown.com. image6image5 1 image1 14

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ICONSIAM rewards Thai athlete heroes of Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games with prize money worth over 990,000 baht and proudly honors them as  “YOU ARE THE ICON” thanks to their success in bringing joy and smile to Thai people

The Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games came to an end and Thai Paralympic squad had successfully accumulated 18 medals during the competition in Tokyo, Japan. ICONSIAM, the iconic landmark on the bank of Chao Phraya River, holds a ceremony to hand monetary rewards of over 990,000 baht and honors the Thai athlete heroes as “YOU ARE THE ICON” for their inspirational spirits to Thai people. The event is also aimed to express gratitude to these heroes for their enduring efforts, physical and mental toughness to accomplish their goals and also bring back joys, smiles, and prides to all Thais.

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    Mr Supoj Chaiwatsirikul, Managing Director of ICONSIAM Company Limited, says “ICONSIAM 

has a strong mission to honor and support the precious stories and prides from every single aspect of Thainess. We proudly present the stories of the competence of Thai people who successfully make the legends that are beneficial for people at large via our concept of YOU ARE THE ICON. These legendary people in different fields are the representatives of our era to tell the notable aspects of being Thainess and promote these distinctively celebrated features to be recognized in both local and international levels. The Thai Paralympic athlete heroes are recognized for their strong determination and strength and they not only achieve their goals, but also become a great source of inspiration for all Thais. They set up legendary story telling the greatness of Thai athletes and promoting Thailand to the world.”

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    The ceremony is held to provide monetary rewards and express appreciation to the Thai Paralympic winners who bring happiness to Thai people. The Thai athletes winning the gold medals at Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games receive 100,000 baht each while those winning the silver and bronze medals get 50,000 baht and 30,000 baht each respectively. All winners also receive VIZ Black Card offering many privileged offers at ICONSIAM, Siam Paragon, Siam Center and Siam Discovery. The total rewards given to the athletes worth over 990,000 baht.

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In addition to support the Paralympic athletes, ICONSIAM’s business philosophy is to provide all convenient necessities catering to people of all group, ages, genders, physical diversity and elderly adults. All buildings are fully equipped with all convenient features and are designed with universal friendly approach. The entrance and the exit areas are connected with accessible ramps installed at all building sites and are conveniently linked to the parking buildings. Lifts have sufficient spaces to enable

people using mobility devices and signages are universally recognized and located at proper viewing distance allowing users to find their destination with ease. Appropriately designed accessible public toilets and parking spaces for elderly adults and the disabilities are truly concerned and provided at all floors of the sites. ICONSIAM pier also provides separated ramps accessible for people with mobility impairments. ICONSIAM is the organization earning the 2019 Friendly Design and Tourism for All Awards from the Friendly Design for All Foundation as a good model of friendly design approach ensuring that people of all ages, genders, and abilities can access safely, easily, conveniently and equitably.

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Gov’t Promises to Fix ‘Thailand Pass’ Following Tourist Complaints

Tourists leave after arrival at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok, Thailand, Monday, Nov. 1, 2021. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP

BANGKOK — The government said it’s urgently looking into glitches and delays that afflict the online registration system for entering Thailand during the tourist reopening phase.

A government spokesman acknowledged that there have been numerous complaints, from Thais and foreigners, over the functions of the “Thailand Pass” system since its launch last week. A number of users have complained about delays in receiving the QR code required for travel into Thailand, while others say they never received it at all, or the website simply crashed during their sessions.

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha himself has instructed all relevant authorities to find solutions for the technical errors, according to government spokesman Thanakorn Wangboonkongchana.

Thanakorn told reporters there are a number of reasons behind the issues people are reporting with Thailand Pass. He said some travelers have experienced delays receiving their QR code because the system had difficulty deciphering the proof of vaccination provided — meaning it needs to be manually checked — which slows the whole process down.

In other cases, travellers have booked their first night in a hotel that is not linked to a hospital offering PCR testing, Thanakorn said.

The spokesman said the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is now coordinating with the Digital Government Development Agency and the Department of Disease Control to fix the delays and errors experienced by the users.

More than 20,000 travelers have flown into Thailand so far since the reopening officially began on Nov. 1, according to government figures. Under the “Test and Go” program, fully vaccinated visitors can travel freely after they test negative for the coronavirus upon their arrival in Thailand.

The testing is conducted at hotels, where travelers are required to stay until the result comes back. The amount of time needed varies, some report a waiting time of just six hours, while others say they had to wait for a day and a half.

Of those 20,000 air travelers who arrived throughout the past week, only 15 tested positive for the coronavirus, Thanakorn said at a news conference. He said the reopening has been a success so far.

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Crowd Surge Kills at Least 8 at Houston Music Festival

Travis Scott performs at Day 1 of the Astroworld Music Festival at NRG Park on Friday, Nov. 5, 2021, in Houston. Photo: Amy Harris / Invision / AP

HOUSTON (AP) — The crowd at a Houston music festival suddenly surged toward the stage during a performance by rapper Travis Scott, squeezing fans so tightly together that they could not breathe or move their arms and killing eight people in the chaos.

The pandemonium unfolded Friday evening at Astroworld, a sold-out, two-day event in NRG Park with an estimated 50,000 people in attendance. As a timer clicked down to the start of the performance, the crowd pushed forward.

“As soon as he jumped out on the stage, it was like an energy took over and everything went haywire,” concertgoer Niaara Goods said. “All of a sudden, your ribs are being crushed. You have someone’s arm in your neck. You’re trying to breathe, but you can’t.”

Goods said she was so desperate to get out that she bit a man on the shoulder to get him to move.

The dead ranged in age from 14 to 27, and 13 people were still hospitalized Saturday, Mayor Sylvester Turner said. He called the disaster “a tragedy on many different levels” and said it was too early to draw conclusions about what went wrong.

“It may well be that this tragedy is the result of unpredictable events, of circumstances coming together that couldn’t possibly have been avoided,” said Judge Lina Hidalgo, Harris County’s top elected official. “But until we determine that, I will ask the tough questions.”

Experts who have studied deaths caused by crowd surges say they are often a result of density — too many people packed into a small space. The crowd is often running either away from a perceived threat or toward something they want, such as a performer, before hitting a barrier.

G. Keith Still, a visiting professor of crowd science at the United Kingdom’s University of Suffolk, has testified as an expert witness in court cases involving crowds. He said he usually does not look at eyewitness reports in the early stages of analyzing an incident because emotions can cloud the picture, and witnesses can see only what’s immediately around them.

Based on fire codes, the venue could have held 200,000 people, but city officials limited the attendance to 50,000, Houston Fire Chief Samuel Peña said.

“It was the crowd control at the point of the stage that was the issue, especially as the crowd began to surge toward the stage,” Peña said.

The deaths called to mind a 1979 concert by the Who where 11 people died as thousands of fans tried to get into Cincinnati’s Riverfront Coliseum. Other past crowd catastrophes include the deaths of 97 people in an overcrowded Hillsborough Stadium in 1989 in Sheffield, England, and numerous disasters connected with the annual hajj in Saudi Arabia.

People in the Houston crowd reported lots of pushing and shoving during the performances leading up to Scott’s set.

Then when Scott took the stage, the crowd seemed to rush to the front, trying to get closer to the stage, said Nick Johnson, a high school senior from the Houston suburb of Friendswood who was at the concert.

“Everyone was passing out around you, and everyone was trying to help each other. But you just couldn’t move. You couldn’t do anything. You can’t even pick your arms up,” Johnson said. “It just got worse and worse.”

Johnson said fans started to crush each other, and people started screaming. He said it felt like 100 degrees in the crowd.

Scott seemed to be aware that something was going on in the crowd, but he might not have understood the severity of the situation, Johnson said.

On video posted to social media, Scott could be seen stopping the concert at one point and asking for aid for someone in the audience: “Security, somebody help real quick.”

In a tweet posted Saturday, Scott said he was “absolutely devastated by what took place last night.” He pledged to work “together with the Houston community to heal and support the families in need.”

Amy Harris, a freelance photographer for The Associated Press, described an “aggressive” crowd atmosphere throughout the day because of the way fans were behaving — pushing and rushing the stage barricades and prohibited VIP and admission areas.

“It was definitely the most chaotic festival environment that I’ve been in,” Harris said. “I felt uneasy all day.”

Houston Police Chief Troy Finner said his department noticed attendees “going down” at 9:30 p.m. and immediately notified concert organizers. The event was called off 40 minutes later after discussions that included the fire department and officials with NRG Park.

Finner defended the amount of time it took for the event to be canceled.

“You cannot just close when you’ve got 50,000 — over 50,000 — individuals, OK?” Finner said. “We have to worry about rioting — riots — when you have a group that’s that young.”

At one point, Gerardo Abad-Garcia was pressed so tightly into the crowd that he could not move his arms off his chest. During the performance that came before Scott’s, he started getting concerned for his safety.

“I just couldn’t breathe. I was being compressed,” he said. A security guard helped him and others climb a fence and get out.

He described the crowd during Scott’s set as a wave that was “going forward and backward.” He said some people tried to help those who were passed out on the ground, while other concertgoers seemed to ignore them and continued watching the show.

Some audience members said barricades erected near the stage and to separate different sections of ticket holders prevented fans from escaping.

Billy Nasser described an area created by a stage barricade as a closet that people were thrown into and the door was shut. Joshua Robinson said the barricades created an area that “was just way too small and compact” for the number of people there.

Part of the investigation will include reviewing how the area around the stage was designed, the fire chief said.

Authorities did not disclose the causes of death, and the dead were not immediately identified.

The police chief said authorities were investigating reports of suspicious activity in the crowd, including a security officer who told police that he felt a prick in his neck during the chaos and lost consciousness while being examined by first responders. He was revived by the opioid antidote Narcan.

Scott, one of music’s biggest young stars, founded the Astroworld Festival in 2018. The 30-year-old Houston native has been nominated for eight Grammy Awards. He has a 3-year-old daughter with Kylie Jenner, who announced in September that she’s pregnant with their second child.

Drake joined Scott on-stage at the concert, which was livestreamed by Apple Music.

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Story: Juan A. Lozano. Associated Press writers Ryan Pearson in Los Angeles, Stan Choe in New York, David Sharp in Portland, Maine, and Desiree Seals in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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China’s 1st Woman to Spacewalk Works 6 Hours Outside Station

In this image released by the Xinhua News Agency, a photo taken on a screen shows Chinese astronaut Wang Yaping steps out from the space station's Tianhe core module, at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Sunday, Nov. 7, 2021. Photo: Guo Zhongzheng / Xinhua via AP

BEIJING (AP) — Wang Yaping has become the first Chinese woman to conduct a spacewalk as part of a six-month mission to the country’s space station.

Wang and fellow astronaut Zhai Zhigang left the station’s main module on Sunday evening, spending more than six hours outside installing equipment and carrying out tests alongside the station’s robotic service arm, according to the China Manned Space agency.

The third member of the crew, Ye Guangfu, assisted from inside the station, CMS said on its website.

Wang, 41, and Zhai, 55, had both traveled to China’s now-retired experimental space stations, and Zhai conducted China’s first spacewalk 13 years ago.

The three are the second crew on the permanent station, and the mission that began with their arrival Oct. 16 is scheduled to be the longest stretch of time in space yet for Chinese astronauts.

The Tianhe module of the station will be connected next year to two more sections named Mengtian and Wentian. The completed station will weigh about 66 tons, much smaller than the International Space Station, which launched its first module in 1998 and weighs around 450 tons.

Three spacewalks are planned to install equipment in preparation for the station’s expansion, while the crew will also assess living conditions in the Tianhe module and conduct experiments in space medicine and other fields.

China’s military-run space program plans to send multiple crews to the station over the next two years to make it fully functional.

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When Thailand Debates the Lese Majeste Law

A royalist group gathers to show their support for the lese majeste law on Nov. 3, 2021 in Bangkok, submitting a letter to a representative of Parliament to oppose any move to amend the law.

The past week saw an unprecedented flurry of reactions both in support and opposition to amending the controversial lese majeste law. The issue would likely turn the next general elections into a de facto referendum on the law, if not more, for many people.

It all began on Sunday when just hours after the renewed major protest by monarchy-reform groups reiterate their year-long call and started a signature drive for the abolition of the law, or at least an amendment, depending whom you asked, the opposition Pheu Thai Party’s chief of strategic committee Chaikasem Nitisiri issued a statement late that night saying the party supports pushing for the proposal to be debated in parliament.

Given that all parties have been in a pre-electoral campaign mode for well over a month now, it wasn’t long before other parties, ruling and opposition, publicly took a stance on whether they support amending the law, abolishing it, or defending the law. As expected the ruling Phalang Pracharath Party and its two major coalition partners the Democrat and Bhumjai Thai parties all said they will oppose any move to amend the lese majeste law.

Democrat Party spokesman Rames Rattanachawaeng said Monday that the law is not the problem but it’s the thinking and actions of some people that’s the problem. “The lese-majeste law is not problematic as distorted and claimed by those calling for the amendment by the parliament… If it’s tabled for the parliament we shall fight. We support strict enforcement of the law,” Rames said.

Any hope that the current parliament will table the proposal for debate was further diminished when Prime Minister Gen Prayut Chan-ocha vowed on Wednesday that as PM and representative of the government, he opposes any amendment of the law.

“As Prime Minister and [leader] of the government, there will be no proposal to amend the lese majeste law. Do not destroy what we respect,” Prayut said. 

With clear opposition by the ruling-coalition parties and elections widely expected by the middle of next year if not earlier, it’s most unlikely that the proposal will even be tabled by the current parliament. And even if it succeeds, it will likely be rejected in a vote. This is why for many who are passionate, for or against the law, the next elections will not just be about how to solve the economic crisis but partly a de facto referendum on the law itself if not more.

Both supporters and opponents of the law are already gathering signatures to amplify their stance. On Friday, Suwit Thongprasert, aka former monk Phra Buddha Issara, and former leader of the now defunct People’s Democratic Reform Committee (PDRC), which played an instrumental role in the events leading up to the May 2014 coup, submitted a list of 200,000 online signatures to the parliament. On the other pole, over 100,000 signatures have been collected by Saturday afternoon by groups calling for the abolition of the anachronistic law. 

Back to the theatre of party politics. Any expectations that all the opposition parties are solidly behind the proposal to amend the law also quickly dashed earlier this week when the parties met and said in a press conference on Wednesday that they take no common stance on the law but will respect each opposition party’s position on the matter. The Opposition Move Forward Party’s stance is to push for an amendment while the Pheu Thai Party stopped short of pushing for an amendment but vowed to push the proposal to be discussed in parliament.

What’s striking is when the Move Forward Party made a public statement on Wednesday as to where it stands on the debate about the law, the party secretary general Chaitawat Tulathon stressed that the amendment will ensure that the “good relations” between the monarchy institution and the people under the rule of law will be achieved.

As for ousted and fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, regarded by many as the real influence behind the Pheu Thai Party, Thaksin put a brake on the party itself. Thaksin wrote on Facebook on Tuesday that the law itself is not the problem. “The law itself has never been a problem. The problem today is the misuse of the law, however…. Both sides should cease the drama. Take a deep breath and start anew… in order to properly honour the monarchy in the right manner.”

Note that in the public statements made by Prayut, Thaksin and even Chaitawat, we heard nothing about those who have lost faith in the monarchy or have gone republican. It’s as if there are only people who love and revere the monarchy, even among those who want the law reformed or abolished. This state of public self-denial is another hurdle Thailand has yet to overcome. We must try to come to terms with reality and not pretend that all are royalists. It’s as if there’re only royalist political parties, real or fake.

It’s ironic that those who acknowledge that there exist anti-monarchists and republicans are mostly the ultra-royalists. 

To amend or not amend the lese majeste law, or even to abolish it, is a much needed debate and we can start on the right foot by trying to be more honest about where the different groups stand. The perpetuation of a state of self-denial will not do Thailand any good. 

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The Votes Are In: Thailand Chooses Their 2021 Vegan Faves

Photo: Root the Future

BANGKOK — Want to keep off the meat and dairy for even just one day a week? Here are some certified vegan crowd-favorite places in Bangkok, Chiang Mai, and Phuket.

Root the Future announced on Saturday their second edition of the Plant Based Food Awards, where the public sent in more than 20,000 votes for their favorite vegan dishes and restaurants, without any nominees.

Root the Future is a website founded by Briton Max Hellier and Aussie Joanna Broomfield that promotes plant-based living in Thailand. See last year’s winners here.

Without further ado, here are the winners of the 2021 Plant Based Food Awards:

Bangkok:

Best Plant-Based Restaurant: Vistro

Best Plant-Based Meat: First Pride’s Crispy Nuggets

Best Plant-Based Burger: Golden State Vegan Restaurant’s Seafood Burger

Best Plant-Based Cheese: Butter Me Up

Best Plant-Based Delivery: Kaek Kao Kua

Best Plant-Based Dessert: Flogurt’s Plant-Based Yogurt

Best Plant-Based Ice Cream: Hebe

Best Plant-Based Milk: Goodmate’s oat milks

Best Vegan-Friendly Restaurant: Hummus Heads

Best Plant-Based Ready Meal: Meatoo

Best Plant-Based Seafood: Golden State Vegan Restaurant’s sushi

Best Plant-Based Snack: Balls & Juices’s Fit Balls

Best Plant-Based Thai Dish: Loving Hut’s Hor Mok Curry

Best Plant-Based Cheap Eats: So Vegan

Chiang Mai:

Best Plant-Based Restaurant: Goodsouls Kitchen

Best Plant-Based Meat: Let’s Plant Meat’s Plant-Based Burger Patty

Best Plant-Based Burger: I’m Your Vegan’s Tonkatsu Hangbaga

Best Plant-Based Cheese: Swees Cheese

Best Plant-Based Delivery: Anne’s Pizza/Chicago Deep Dish & More

Best Plant-Based Dessert: The Donut Cafe & Delivery’s donuts

Best Plant-Based Ice Cream: 7 Senses Gelato’s vegan options

Best Plant-Based Milk: Nature’s Charm’s Condensed Coconut Milk

Best Vegan-Friendly Restaurant: Salsa Kitchen

Best Plant-Based Ready Meal: Ezygo

Best Plant-Based Seafood: I’m Your Vegan’s Crispy Lemon Shrimp

Best Plant-Based Snack: Siamaya’s vegan chocolate

Best Plant-Based Thai Dish: Anchan Vegetarian Restaurant’s Penang Curry

Best Plant-Based Cheap Eats: Samata Plant-Based Life

Phuket:

Best Plant-Based Restaurant: The Vegan Table

Best Plant-Based Meat: Vegan Ready’s Nature’s Nuggets

Best Plant-Based Burger: The Vegan Table’s Chickin Hawaiian Burger

Best Plant-Based Cheese: The Vegan Table

Best Plant-Based Delivery: Vegan Junkie

Best Plant-Based Dessert: Vegan Junkie’s Salted Caramel Shake

Best Plant-Based Ice Cream: Torry’s Ice Cream’s vegan options

Best Plant-Based Milk: Goodmate’s oat milks

Best Vegan-Friendly Restaurant: Levantine – East Mediterranean Cuisine

Best Plant-Based Ready Meal: Vegan Ready

Best Plant-Based Seafood: Vegan Junkie’s Phish & Chips

Best Plant-Based Snack: Cocomoons’ cookies

Best Plant-Based Thai Dish: The Vegan Table’s Tom Yum Tempeh

Best Plant-Based Cheap Eats: Dok Bua Vegetarian Restaurant

Other

Best Vegan-Friendly Hotel: Away Chiang Mai Thapae – A Vegan Retreat

Best Social Media Presence: Golden State Vegan Restaurant

Best Branding: Meat Zero

Related stories:

It’s Jay Time! Thailand’s Fave Vegan Venues Announced

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UN Investigator: Crimes Against Humanity Under Myanmar Junta

Soldiers stand to provide security near a road in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Feb. 1, 2021. Photo: AP

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The head of the U.N. body investigating the most serious crimes in Myanmar said Friday that preliminary evidence collected since the military seized power on Feb. 1 shows a widespread and systematic attack on civilians “amounting to crimes against humanity.”

Nicholas Koumjian told U.N. reporters that the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar, which he heads, has received over 200,000 communications since the army takeover and has collected over 1.5 million items of evidence that are being analyzed “so that one day those most responsible for the serious international crimes in Myanmar will be brought to account.”

In determining that the crimes against civilians appear to be widespread and systematic, he said investigators saw patterns of violence — a measured response by security forces to demonstrations in the first six weeks or so after the military takeover followed by “an uptick in violence and much more violent methods used to suppress the demonstrators.”

“This was happening in different places at the same time, indicating to us it would be logical to conclude this was from a central policy,” Koumjian said. “And, also, we saw that particular groups were targeted, especially for arrests and detentions that appear to be without due process of law. And this includes, of course, journalists, medical workers and political opponents.”

Myanmar for five decades had languished under strict military rule that led to international isolation and sanctions. As the generals loosened their grip, culminating in Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi’s rise to leadership in 2015 elections, the international community responded by lifting most sanctions and pouring investment into the country.

The Feb. 1 military takeover followed November elections which Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party won overwhelmingly and the military rejects as fraudulent. Since the takeover, Myanmar has been wracked by unrest, with peaceful demonstrations against the ruling generals morphing first into a low-level insurgency in many urban areas after security forces used deadly force and then into more serious combat in rural areas, especially in border regions where ethnic minority militias have been engaging in heavy clashes with government troops.

Christine Schraner Burgener told The Associated Press shortly before her 3 ½ year term as the U.N. special envoy for Myanmar ended on Oct. 31 that “civil war” has spread throughout the country.

The U.N. investigative body was established by the Geneva-based Human Rights Council in September 2018 with a mandate to collect, consolidate, preserve and analyze evidence of the most serious international crimes and violations of international law committed in Myanmar.

Koumjian, an American lawyer who served as an international prosecutor of serious crimes committed in Cambodia, East Timor and Bosnia, was appointed by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres as its head in 2019 with instructions to prepare files that can facilitate criminal prosecutions in national, regional or international tribunals to prosecute genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Koumjian said his team has been collecting evidence from a wide variety of sources including individuals, organizations, businesses and governments, and the evidence includes photographs, videos, testimonies and social media posts “that could be relevant to show that crimes happened and who is responsible for those crimes.”

The investigative body has received information from social media companies, which he wouldn’t name except for Facebook because it had made its cooperation public.

“We began engaging with Facebook as soon as we were created in 2019, and they have been meeting with us regularly,” Koumjian said. “We have received some, but certainly not all, that we have requested. We continue to negotiate with them and actually I am hopeful that we are going to receive more information.”

He said the Human Rights Council specifically instructed the investigators to cooperate with the International Criminal Court’s probe into crimes committed against Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslim minority and the case at the International Court of Justice brought by Gambia on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation accusing Myanmar of genocide against the Rohingya.

“So we are sharing documents with those proceedings,” Koumjian said.

The court actions stem from the Myanmar military’s harsh counterinsurgency campaign against the Rohingya in August 2017 in response to an insurgent attack. More than 700,000 Rohingya fled to neighboring Bangladesh to escape what has been called an ethnic cleansing campaign involving mass rapes, killings and the torching of homes.

Koujian said: “All we’re doing is collecting evidence of the very worst violence, hopefully sending a message to perpetrators: `If you commit this, you run the risk that you will be held to account.’”

Story: Edith M. Lederer

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