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Airstrikes Pummel Taliban Positions in Southern Afghanistan

Afghan Special forces patrol a deserted street during fighting with Taliban fighters, in Lashkar Gah, Helmand province, southern Afghanistan, Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2021. Photo: Abdul Khaliq / AP

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — U.S. and Afghan airstrikes hit Taliban targets overnight in southern Helmand province in an effort to dislodge the insurgents after they captured much of the provincial capital of Lashkar Gah, officials said Wednesday.

The United Nations and Human Rights Watch asked both sides to take care to prevent civilian casualties as the fighting rages on. The Taliban have waged a fierce push over the past months as U.S. and NATO forces complete their pullout from the war-torn country. They have taken large swaths of land and have now turned their guns on larger urban centers.

Ghulam Wali Afghan, a lawmaker from Helmand, told The Associated Press that his relatives and constituents in Lashkar Gah have told him of bodies in the streets and residents hiding inside their homes, too afraid to venture out and collect the dead.

After a night of heavy airstrikes, the Defense Ministry said Wednesday that the Taliban have suffered heavy losses in Lashkar Gah, though there was no immediate way to confirm that statement. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid denied the losses.

The authorities did not say whether Afghan forces have retaken back territory. On Tuesday, residents and officials had said the Taliban control nine out of 10 districts in the city.

The fall of Lashkar Gah would be a major turning point in the Taliban offensive and it would also be the first provincial capital to be captured by the insurgents in several years. The fighting this week has kept residents of Lashkar Gah trapped and hunkered down inside their homes.

On Wednesday, the province’s hospital chief, Sher Ali Shakir, urged people to remain in their houses, saying that in past 24 hours at least seven civilians were killed and 101 were wounded. Most of the injuries were bullet wounds, he said.

The airstrikes late Tuesday and ongoing street battles in Lashkar Gah have destroyed several houses and markets. The Helmand provincial council chief, Attaullah Afghan, charged both sides with ignoring the safety of civilians.

Earlier Tuesday, a dramatic call for people to evacuate the neighborhoods captured by the Taliban came from the Afghan forces’ commander for Helmand, Gen. Sami Sadat, who in an audio message shared with journalists asked the residents for forgiveness for the hardship they are going through.

“We will not leave the Taliban alive, Sadat said. “I know it’s hard … we do it for your future. Forgive us if you get displaced for few days, please evacuate as soon as possible.”

Lashkar Gah is one of three provincial capitals under siege by the Taliban as they stepped up their onslaught against government forces. The push on the cities came after the Taliban swept through dozens of districts across the country, many in remote and rural, sparsely populated areas. Along with Lashkar Gah, the provincial capitals of Herat, in western Herat province, and Kandahar, in southern Kandahar province have also been under Taliban attack.

Save the Children’s country director for Afghanistan said the aid group was “devastated by reports that 18 civilians, including women and children, have been killed during airstrikes on the city of Kandahar.”

Christopher Nyamandi, citing local media reports, said “some 49,000 people have been displaced since the violence flared up yesterday, including an estimated 29,400 children.” He said that Save the Children was providing aid to the displaced families.

There was no confirmation from the government on the report of 18 civilians killed.

In Herat, Afghan forces pushed the Taliban out of the city but were badly needing new supplies, according to Omar Nasir Mujadidi. He said Wednesday that pro-government militias, led by U.S.-allied warlord Ismail Khan, were aiding the Afghan security forces but need additional weapons. He said the government promised another 2,000 weapons for Khan’s followers.

The fighting in Herat in the last week has has killed 34 people and wounded more than 150, said physician Mohammad Aref Jalali, the provincial hospital chief in Herat.

Story: Tameem Akhgar

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Dr. Virachai Techavijit appointed as Member of Huachiew Chalermprakiet University Council.

Dr. Virachai Techavijit, Founder and Chairman of Regent’s International Schools and College has been nominated to the Huachiew Chalermprakiet University Council by the Poh Teck Tung Foundation.  

The University Council proposed Dr. Virachai’s candidacy to the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research & Innovation and on 30 June 2021 he was officially appointed as a Member of the Council by Executive Order No. 109/2564 of the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research & Innovation.

Dr. Virachai Techavijit taught at American Higher Educational institutions for 6 years.  His previous academic titles include Associate Professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and appointed full-time lecturer for MBA Program at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) prior to returning to Thailand.

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Arnon Nampha Renews Calls for Reform of Monarchy

Wearing Gryffindor robes, human rights lawyer and activist Arnon Nampha speaks to monarchy reform demonstrators Aug. 3, 2021 at Pathum Wan Intersection at a Harry Potter-themed protest.

BANGKOK (AP) — A Thai protest leader on Tuesday renewed calls for the reform of the country’s monarchy and suggested that time was running out for the powerful institution to respond.

“This year shall be the last year that we will discuss monarchy reform. After this, whatever will happen, will happen. You can’t stop the sun rising. You can’t control what people believe in,” Arnon Nampha said at a candlelight rally in downtown Bangkok by about 200 people who defied coronavirus regulations to attend.

The civil rights lawyer dressed as Harry Potter, a reference to what he and other proponents of change see as the opaque world of the palace. Arnon is widely considered the protest movement’s most senior figure.

The rally marked one year since Arnon delivered a speech that shook the country with its unprecedented challenge to the status of the monarchy, which is widely considered to be an untouchable bedrock element of Thai nationalism.

It sparked a series of large-scale rallies demanding that the palace be made more transparent and accountable. The protests, which also called for the resignation of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and the amendment of the constitution, raised the political temperature significantly, leading to clashes with royalists and police and the arrests of protest leaders.

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Pro-democracy supporters light candles during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2021.

The rallies died down this year due to legal action, a lack of unity in the movement and fears over the coronavirus. But in recent weeks protesters have returned to the streets, prompted by a worsening COVID-19 outbreak for which many people blame the government.

They’ve largely targeted Prayuth’s government but Arnon’s speech on Tuesday suggests the monarchy will once again be a focus of Thai political debate.

“We are here to fight to build a better future together,” he said. “This year we will fight with strategies. We will fight with goals. Not only will we fight through protests to bring pressure, we will also fight to propose laws in Parliament.”

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Pro-democracy supporters light candles or shine their mobile phone lights during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2021.

Arnon, who is currently free on bail, faces more than 10 charges under a stringent royal defamation law that mandates prison terms of up to 15 years for perceived insults. Human rights defenders say it is routinely used to stifle public discussion of the monarchy and to jail political activists. Its abolition is a key demand of the reform movement.

Many people still revere the monarchy, and the military, a major power in Thai society, considers its defense a key priority.

Questioning of the monarchy’s position has grown since the 2016 accession to the throne of King Maha Vajiralongkorn, whose much admired father, King Bhumibhol Adulyadej, ruled for seven decades.

Story: Tassanee Vejpongsa

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Harris to Focus on Security, Economic Ties on SE Asia Trip

Vice President Kamala Harris, joined by Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., left, departs the Senate as lawmakers work to advance the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, at the Capitol in Washington, Monday, Aug. 2, 2021. Photo: Scott Applewhite / AP

WASHINGTON (AP) — Vice President Kamala Harris will visit Southeast Asia later this month aiming to bolster U.S. engagement in the region in an effort to counter China’s growing influence globally.

In an early preview of the goals for her trip to Singapore and Vietnam, Harris deputy national security adviser Phil Gordon said the vice president will emphasize the Biden administration’s commitment to a free and open Indo-Pacific region, with a focus on reinforcing regional security in the area.

“The vice president will meet with government officials, leaders, people in the private sector and civil society, and she’ll focus on strengthening U.S. leadership, expanding security cooperation, deepening economic partnerships, defending the international rules-based order, in particular in the South China Sea, and standing up for our values as we do with all of our friends and partners,” he said.

The full details of Harris’ trip are still being worked out, but for her second foreign trip and first trip as vice president overseas, she is planning a weeklong engagement in the region — from Aug. 20 to 26 — a significantly longer trip than her two-day tour through Guatemala and Mexico in June. Then, she met with the leaders of both countries to discuss ways to address the root causes of migration to the U.S. from the region, a central focus of her portfolio as vice president.

Harris has had less public engagement in Southeast Asia, but Asia has been a central focus for the Biden administration from the beginning of Joe Biden’s presidency, as he’s sought to counter China’s diplomatic and military incursions in the region.

Relations between the U.S. and China deteriorated sharply under Biden’s predecessor, Donald Trump, and the two sides remain at odds over a host of issues including technology, cybersecurity and human rights.

Last week, during a speech at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, Biden warned that Chinese President Xi Jinping is “deadly earnest about becoming the most powerful military force in the world, as well as the largest and most prominent economy in the world by the mid-’40s, the 2040s.”

The president has sent some of his top Cabinet officials to Asia to show support for U.S. allies in the region.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin made their first overseas trip to Japan and South Korea. Austin traveled to Singapore, Vietnam and the Philippines last month where he vowed U.S. support against Beijing’s intrusions in the South China Sea.

Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman traveled to Indonesia, Thailand and Cambodia in May and early June. Last month she visited Japan, South Korea and Mongolia before heading to China for high-level talks that ultimately did little to resolve many of the deep divisions between the two countries.

Harris will be the first U.S. vice president to visit Vietnam, and her trip is meant to show the depth of the U.S. commitment to the region.

“The National Security Council was very supportive of the notion that the vice president would be well placed to complement those other meetings and visits with travel to Singapore and Vietnam,” Gordon said. “It’s really part of an overall unified administration engagement strategy that shows our comprehensive engagement in East Asia, South Asia and Southeast Asia as well.”

Story: Alexandra Jaffe

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Rapid Virus Spread Through Indonesia Taxes Health Workers

Health workers prepare to treat a COVID-19 patient at the Dr. Suyoto General Hospital in Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 29, 2021. Photo: Tatan Syuflana / AP

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Irman Pahlepi is back at work in Jakarta’s Dr. Suyoto public hospital, immediately resuming his duties treating COVID-19 patients after recovering from an infection himself — for the second time.

With numbers of infections in Indonesia skyrocketing and deaths steadily climbing, health care workers are being depleted as the virus spares nobody, Pahlepi, 30, felt he had no option but to jump right back in.

“We have so many extra patients to treat compared to last year,” he said. “The number of COVID-19 patients is four times higher now than during the previous highest spike in January.”

Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous country, had its deadliest day with 2,069 deaths from COVID-19 last Tuesday and fatalities remain high. As of Sunday, total official cases stood at more than 3.4 million with 97,291 deaths, though with poor testing and many people dying at home, the real figures are thought to be considerably higher.

As the region grapples with a new coronavirus wave fueled by the delta variant, Indonesia’s death rate hit a 7-day rolling average of 6.5 per million on Aug. 1, second only to Myanmar and far higher than India’s peak rate of 3.04 that it hit in May during the worst of its outbreak.

Among the dead in Indonesia are more than 1,200 health care workers, including 598 doctors, according to the Risk Mitigation Team of the Indonesian Medical Association. The doctors included at least 24 who were fully vaccinated.

Many others are exhausted from the workload, said Mahesa Paranadipa, who co-leads the mitigation team, making them more likely to fall ill, like Pahlepi.

“We are worried about overburdened workloads lasting for a long time, causing potential burnout conditions,” Paranadipa said. “This fatigue causes the immunity of health care workers to decrease.”

Acknowledging the risks faced by health care workers, Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin said Monday that a top priority is giving them a third booster vaccine dose. Most who have been vaccinated have received Sinovac, which appears to be less effective against the delta variant, and Indonesia has already begun administering booster shots.

“The boosters, from Moderna, are for health care workers … so they will be ready for the patients at the hospitals,” Sadikin said.

On top of the lack of medical personnel, Indonesia is also suffering from inadequate supplies.

Pahlepi said his hospital experiences oxygen shortages and is filled far beyond its patient capacity, making it even more difficult to treat people properly.

Over the last two months, it has become common to see dozens of people with severe symptoms waiting in line for a bed in the hospital’s emergency unit, and more lines of people waiting for a space in the isolation ward following treatment, he said.

Some patients have brought their own oxygen tanks with them, and as the hospital’s own supplies have waned, doctors and nurses have had to ask them to share with others.

Last year, most of the severely ill patients Pahlepi saw were senior citizens. Now, as the delta variant spreads through the country, most of the patients arriving at the emergency room with medium and severe symptoms are children and young adults, he said.

Between his own coronavirus infections, Pahlepi and his wife had their first child — a daughter who is now 5 months old — and he said it’s been particularly hard as a new father to see so many children admitted for treatment with relatively severe symptoms.

“It is difficult to help the infants put on an oxygen hose because they feel uncomfortable when an unfamiliar object is on their face. They need their parents to be with them when we put on the hose,” Pahlepi said.

“Those infants remind me of my baby daughter at home. It makes me sad.”

Pahlepi has been involved in treating coronavirus patients since the beginning of the pandemic, starting as a COVID-19 intake doctor at Gatot Soebroto Army Central Hospital, which was designated by the government as a referral hospital for the disease.

In November, he tested positive himself despite taking precautions. Fortunately, his case was mild and he was able to return to work after recovering in isolation for two weeks.

He tested positive again on July 14 while working extra shifts to help cope with the influx of patients in the recent surge — just one week before he was to receive his first vaccination.

While he was asymptomatic during his first infection, he had severe headaches and his bones ached during the second.

Like many of his patients, he decided to isolate at home. But unlike most, with his training he was able to keep a careful eye on his health, ensuring that his blood oxygen level was adequate and that he didn’t need more advanced treatment.

“There are so many people with heavier symptoms who deserve beds in the hospital more than me,” Pahlepi said in a video interview as he was in isolation.

As soon as he was better, Pahlepi went right back to help his overworked colleagues.

“The emergency unit was full, and we were overwhelmed handling COVID-19 patients,” he said. “The number of patients is beyond our capabilities. We have to use 200% to 300% of our energy every shift.”

Though there is no end in sight for the current wave in Indonesia, Pahlepi’s thoughts are regularly of the day when life returns to normal for his young family and the rest of the country.

“I feel tired — exhausted — but we have to keep our spirits up to make Indonesia successfully free from COVID-19,” he said.

Story: Edna Tarigan

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MedPark introduces Going the Extra Mile, Extra Hours. Pioneers a night-time Covid-19 vaccination service for expats.

Bangkok, 2 August 2021 – MedPark Hospital has launched the ‘Going the Extra Mile, Extra Hours’ campaign offering night-time Covid-19 vaccinations to foreign residents in Thailand to avoid any effects on daily vaccination services as well as on weekends. The night-time service is available from 2-9 August 2021 from 6.00pm to 10.00pm.

Dr. Pongpat Patanavanich, Managing Director of MedPark hospital, said that due to the rapid spread of COVID-19 and the surge in new cases over the past few months in Thailand, especially in Bangkok, MedPark is aware of the importance of speeding up vaccine administration for people’s safety. It is essential to generate an immune response among people including the hundreds of thousands expats who live and work with Thais.

Thanks to capabilities and readiness of the hospital as an inoculation venue with adequate medical staff and volunteers, MedPark is one of the three designated hospitals providing pre-registration for the target foreigners via the Thailandintervac campaign, which is a collaboration between Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health. Initially, the vaccination service is only available to foreigners who booked in advance or pre-registered for vaccines.

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Dr. Pongpat explained that the hospital is providing the vaccination service for expats to support the government’s vaccine allocation plan. In the urgent phase, the Department of Disease Control has prioritized vaccinations for healthcare professionals and frontline workers as their third booster dose.

While other target groups for vaccinations are Thais and foreigners aged 60 and above, people living with 7 chronic diseases (Interventional pulmonology, Coronary Artery Disease, chronic kidney disease, Stroke, Cancer, Diabetes, and Obesity with weight > 100 kg) and the foreign pregnant women with a gestational age of 12 weeks or above.
Earlier, MedPark partnered with the Ministry of Public Health and Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) to organize ‘Save Doctors, Save People, Save Thailand’ to accelerate vaccinations for members of the Thai Clinic Association and general public. MedPark has given more than 80,000 doses of coronavirus vaccines so far (as of the end of July) and expects to deliver more than 100,000 doses to Thais and foreigners by the end of September.

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“In the current crisis caused by the rapid spread of coronavirus particularly the Delta variant, MedPark is dedicated to vaccinate as many people as possible as fast as possible. It is our crucial measure to support the government’s goal of vaccinating 70% of the adult population in Bangkok and neighboring provinces including over 300,000 foreign residents in Bangkok. This will create herd immunity and help reduce the drastic impact on the public healthcare system,” Dr. Pongpat concluded.

………..

MedPark Hospital
3333 Rama 4 Road, Khlong Toei Sub-district, Khlong Toei District, Bangkok 10110
Tel. (66) 2-023 3333
Website: www.medparkhospital.com

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MARRIOTT INTERNATIONAL AND PCMA COLLABORATE TO OFFER DIGITAL EVENT STRATEGIST (DES) CERTIFICATION 

Bangkok  – Marriott International and the Professional Convention Management Association (PCMA) today announced a collaboration to provide the Asia Pacific region’s business events community access to PCMA’s Digital Event Strategist (DES) certification course. Event and meeting professionals will have the opportunity to be certified upon booking at participating Marriott Bonvoy Events across Asia Pacific. 

Digital and hybrid event education has proven to be critical as economies begin to reopen and where reskilling is paramount to future-proof events. The DES course is a self-paced, 6-course module supported by APAC Regional Experts that provide local expertise and hybrid event insights and commences with a final exam.

“Today, relationships and business models are ever-changing,” said Karen Bolinger, Managing Director APAC at PCMA. “Working with Marriott is a testament to PCMA’s commitment to its partners and industry as we continue to develop and deliver the necessary support and education both our members and clients need and want. In fact, PCMA’s most recent APAC survey indicated that over 70% of meeting planners are looking for venues with broadcast facilities and in-house expertise, and 80% of respondents said they will give their in-person and virtual event attendees an opportunity to interact. This means new skills are required to deliver on these business objectives.”

Earning the DES certification provides industry professionals with the tools to: plan, produce and measure digital and hybrid events from beginning to end; monetise digital events through fresh pricing and sponsorship strategies, and evaluate and choose the most sophisticated tech solutions.

“As we march towards full recovery for our industry, it is crucial that event professionals continue to adapt and equip themselves with the relevant skills and knowledge for success,” Ramesh Daryanani, Vice President, Global Sales, Asia Pacific commented. “Marriott International has always been committed to providing an environment that enables customers to ‘Connect with Confidence’, whether through our enhanced hygiene protocols, hybrid meeting solutions or learning opportunities. Partnerships with industry associations like PCMA, allows us to leverage the industry’s best and innovative practices and offer event professionals the solutions and insights required to navigate the current landscape to create engaging experiences and successfully host meetings and events.” image3 2

Launched in early 2021 to provide meeting and event planners the flexibility to book and organize events in anticipation of the return of large-scaled meetings and events, The Time is now is a promotion currently available at participating Marriott Bonvoy properties across Asia Pacific. The collaboration with PCMA will allow eligible customers to select the PCMA Digital Event Strategist (DES) certification as an additional benefit when booking an event or meeting with Marriott. Terms and conditions apply.

Participating hotels in Thailand are;

  1. Bangkok Marriott Hotel Sukhumvit
  2. Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park
  3. Le Meridien Chiang Mai
  4. Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok

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GULF presents 10,000 GULF CARE home isolation kits to volunteer groups and opens registration for Covid-19 patients to request free kits

Gulf Energy Development Plc. (GULF) recently presented ‘GULF CARE’ medical kits for COVID-19 patients with mild symptoms in home isolation, community isolation facilities or awaiting hospital beds. The care kits, worth 10 million baht in total, have been delivered to volunteer groups such as Zendai, and the Mirror Foundation, for a target of 10,000 sets. Additionally, patients can directly request free kits at https://bit.ly/gulfcareform or by scanning the QR code below. This campaign is part of GULF’s main campaign, ‘GULF Sparks Smiles’, which was initiated to support various groups affected by the outbreak of COVID-19. Please visit the GULF SPARK Facebook page for more information: https://www.facebook.com/GulfSPARK.TH.

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Scan the QR code to register for free GULF CARE home isolation kits

Mr. Sitamon Ratanavadi, Assistant Manager – Business Planning, Gulf Energy Development PCL, stated, “Following the increasing number of COVID-19 cases nowadays, there are many patients undergoing home isolation, community isolation or awaiting hospital beds. Many of them still do not have proper medication or the equipment to monitor their symptoms at home. Therefore, we have put together the GULF CARE isolation kits, which are enough to last at least 14 days, and contain an oxygen pulse fingertip oximeter, digital thermometer, paracetamol, Andrographis paniculata capsules, surgical masks, and hand sanitizer as well as recommendations for self-treatment at home. We wish every patient a rapid recovery and hope they are restored to perfect health soon.”

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    From the beginning of the pandemic, GULF has supported a range of different sectors in the fight against COVID-19, including recently distributing 2,000 meal boxes over 60 days (amounting to 120,000 meals) to communities, field hospitals and isolation facilities; providing essential goods to 1,800 families in Bangkok; sponsoring disinfecting equipment and basic medical equipment to all 50 districts in Bangkok; and donating 10 million baht to the Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital to fund the procurement of medical equipment and expenses to cover the ‘hospitel’ that accommodates COVID-19 patients.   

    #GULFCARE

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CPF Grow-Share-Protect Mangrove Forestation project offering community sustainable income 

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods) is building community engagement in conserving and restoring mangrove forest under the “CPF Grow-Share-Protect Mangrove Forestation”  Project by further developing eco-tourism destinations and community-based products in a bid to create sustainable income for local villagers.

“We want to encourage people in the community to see the benefit which derived from forest conservation and restoration through projects that generate income from tourism and sales of local products.” This has aspired them to understand the value of forest conservation,” said Chatchawan “Uncle Nui” Chaosamut, a villager of Bang Ya Phraek community in Samut Sakhon Province who earns from crafting a model fishing boats. He has been participating to increase and restore the mangrove forest program established by CP Foods since 2014.  

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According to his account, the mangrove areas of Bang Ya Phraek was almost a wasteland damaged by coastal erosion. It was opposite to current state of mangrove forests, an abundant forest with full of greens along the coastline.

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He said that CP Foods has support the a mangrove forest conservation fund managed by the community’s own committees for developing projects, that way it can attract tourist and sell local goods to them.  He added that the project has helped villagers to have a stable income while some parts of the profit go back to the fund to conserve the mangroves.

Chatchawan explained that Bang Ya Phraek people are salt farmers and fishermen. Therefore, it comes from the concept of using local natural materials such as salt to produce Herbal spa salt made from real salt flowers, mixed with 5 herbs, namely turmeric, sugarcane, Plai, Wan Nang Kham, and Thanaka, used for scrubbing the skin. The community also made biochar from fruit peels, twigs, and various laces.

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Currently, the outbreak of COVID-19 has damaged the local economy as all the tourism activities are put on hold. However, the community confirmed that they are ready to continue to conserve the mangrove forest in the area. This is because everyone is aware that Mangrove forests are valuable natural resources to the community and ecosystem.

The villagers will also continue the Mangrove Forest Conservation Fund to manage the forest and build a career for many people in the community. This way, the fund will help the forest to achieve sustainability in both environmental preservation and economy.

 

For those interest in supporting the product from Bang Ya Phraek Community, please contact, Maytha Putkong, Tel. 095 -524 9245.

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Myanmar Military Extends Emergency, Promises Vote in 2 Years

In this June 23, 2021, file photo, Commander-in-Chief of Myanmar's armed forces, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing delivers his speech at the IX Moscow conference on international security in Moscow, Russia. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool / AP

BANGKOK (AP) — Six months after seizing power from the elected government, Myanmar’s military leader on Sunday declared himself prime minister and said he would lead the country under the extended state of emergency until elections are held in about two years.

“We must create conditions to hold a free and fair multiparty general election,” Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing said during a recorded televised address. “We have to make preparations. I pledge to hold the multiparty general election without fail.”

He said the state of emergency will achieve its objectives by August 2023. In a separate announcement, the military government named itself “the caretaker government” and Min Aung Hlaing the prime minister.

The state of emergency was declared when troops moved against the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi on Feb. 1, an action the generals said was permitted under the military-authored 2008 constitution. The military claimed her landslide victory in last year’s national elections was achieved through massive voter fraud but offered no credible evidence.

The military government officially annulled the election results last Tuesday and appointed a new election commission to take charge of the polls.

The military takeover was met with massive public protests that has resulted in a lethal crackdown by security forces who routinely fire live ammunition into crowds.

As of Sunday, 939 people have been killed by the authorities since Feb. 1, according to a tally kept by the independent Assistance Association for Political Prisoners. Casualties are also rising among the military and police as armed resistance grows in both urban and rural areas.

Moves by The Association of Southeast Asian Nations to broker a dialogue between the military government and its opponents have stalled after an agreement at an April summit in Jakarta to appoint a special envoy for Myanmar.

Min Aung Hlaing said that among the three nominees, Thailand’s former Deputy Foreign Minister Virasakdi Futrakul was selected as the envoy. “But for various reasons, new proposals were released and we could not keep moving onwards. I would like to say that Myanmar is ready to work on ASEAN cooperation within the ASEAN framework, including the dialogue with the ASEAN special envoy in Myanmar,” he said.

ASEAN foreign ministers were expected to discuss Myanmar in virtual meetings this week hosted by Brunei, the current chair of the 10-nation bloc.

Myanmar is also struggling with its worst COVID-19 outbreak that has overwhelmed its already crippled health care system. Limitations on oxygen sales have led to widespread allegations that the military is directing supplies to government supporters and military-run hospitals.

At the same time, medical workers have been targeted by authorities after spearheading a civil disobedience movement that urged professionals and civil servants not to cooperate with the government.

Min Aung Hlaing blamed the public’s mistrust in the military’s efforts to control the outbreak on “fake news and misinformation via social networks,” and accused those behind it of using COVID-19 “as a tool of bioterrorism.”

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