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Find Your “Pizza Perfection” in Bangkok With Marriott International – Including a Free Second Pizza for Marriott Bonvoy Members!

4 March 2021, Bangkok, ThailandPizza is one of life’s timeless pleasures. So appetizing, so versatile and great for sharing, this Italian specialty can be enjoyed at any time of day with all your friends and family. It’s no wonder that this comfort food, which was born on the streets of southern Italy, now delights diners in every corner of the world!

Throughout March and April, Marriott International invites guests and local residents in Bangkok to find their “Pizza Perfection” at a choice of 20 hotel restaurants, café, lounges and bars! Under an enticing new promotion, diners can discover more than 20 fresh, wood-fired pizzas, ranging from traditional Italian to tempting Thai, international flavors and even a sweet dessert variety. Dining with a friend? Marriott Bonvoy members will get their second pizza for FREE!

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For a true taste of Italy, the talented chefs at Rossini’s, the authentic Italian trattoria at Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok, will serve their famous “Rossini’s Burrata, Culatta Ham & Rucola” pizza; Giorgio’s at Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel & Towers is preparing classic “Quattro Stagioni” and “Quattro Formaggi” pizzas; Sukhumvit Park, Bangkok – Marriott Executive Apartments is offering the original “Pizza Margherita” at Bistro M and Bar on 3; and 57th Street, Bangkok Marriott Hotel Sukhumvit, is showcasing a sensational “Spicy Salami” pizza.

Fancy infusing your Italian experience with Thai flavors? BBCO, the casual bakery at JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok, has created “Larb Gai” and “Prik Pao Talay” pizzas; MoMo Café at Sathorn Vista, Bangkok – Marriott Executive Apartments has crafted “Thai Green Curry” and “Satay Nuea” pizzas; while Orchid Café and The Living Room at Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok are offering a spicy seafood “Kra Pao Talay” pizza!

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Other unique international options can be experienced at The Westin Grande Sukhumvit, Bangkok’s Zest Bar & Terrace, which is serving an “Indian Chicken Tandoori” pizza; and The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok, where a “Murgh Malai Tikka” pizza is available at three venues. Akira Back, the Japanese-inspired dining destination at Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park, is inviting guests to savor the “Eringi” mushroom pizza; and The Kitchen Table at W Bangkok has created a succulent “Pulled Pork” pizza.

“Seafood Lovers” will love the special pizza at 57th Street, Bangkok Marriott Hotel Sukhumvit; the “Smoked Salmon, Asparagus & Rocket” pizza at La Tavola, Renaissance Bangkok Ratchaprasong Hotel; or the innovative “Tuna” pizza at Akira Back, Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park. Finally, diners with a sweet tooth should head to The Bakery, The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok, for the sumptuous “S’mores Nutella” pizza!

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A total of 25 different pizzas are available at 20 of Marriott’s popular hotel restaurants, cafés, lounges and bars in Bangkok from 1 March to 30 April 2021! So gather your loved ones and discover the timeless pleasures of perfect pizzas and great company. Buon appetito!

Prices start from just THB 280 and Marriott Bonvoy members get their second pizza for FREE! Not a member yet? CLICK HERE to join today!  For reservation and further information, please visit https://marriottbonvoyasia.com/R+B/seasonalMenu/Bangkok-Pizza-Perfection

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Participating hotel restaurants and bars are as follows:

  1. 57th Street, Bangkok Marriott Hotel Sukhumvit
  2. Akira Back, Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park
  3. MoMo Café, Courtyard by Marriott Bangkok (Delivery only)
  4. BBCO, JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok
  5. La Tavola, Renaissance Bangkok Ratchaprasong Hotel
  6. Giorgio’s, Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel & Towers
  7. Lobby Lounge, Royal Orchid Sheraton Hotel & Towers
  8. MoMo Café, Sathorn Vista, Bangkok – Marriott Executive Apartments
  9. Orchid Café, Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  10. The Living Room, Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  11. Rossini’s, Sheraton Grande Sukhumvit, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  12. Bistro M, Sukhumvit Park, Bangkok – Marriott Executive Apartments
  13. Bar on 3, Sukhumvit Park, Bangkok – Marriott Executive Apartments
  14. The Allium, The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  15. The View, The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  16. Rain Tree Café, The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  17. The Glaz Bar, The Athenee Hotel, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Bangkok
  18. Seasonal Tastes, The Westin Grande Sukhumvit, Bangkok
  19. Zest Bar & Terrace, The Westin Grande Sukhumvit, Bangkok
  20. The Kitchen Table, W Bangkok
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Opinion: Diminishing Trust and Increasing Political Violence

Protesters clash with riot police on Vibhavadi Rangsit Road on Feb. 28, 2021.

When the parliament-appointed National Reconciliation Committee on Monday invited me to offer my views about the political protests, I highlighted the need for trust and non-violence.

Trust is diminishing while violence increasing, I told the committee. This week’s panel on the lese majeste law at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand showed how little or no “good faith” remains between supporters and opponents of the controversial law. There was no dialogue, just a monologue.

After the Wednesday’s event, lese majeste supporter and panelist Warong Dechgitvigrom, leader of Thai Phakdee Party and ultra-royalist group of the same name wrote on his Facebook account: “What I got from the debate on the lese majeste law at the FCCT was distortion of truth and academic principles”.

On the other side of the ring, panelist and opponent of the lese majeste law Yaowalak Anuphan, head of Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, also reacted on her Facebook page.

She wrote on the following day: “I think the panel last night was useless. It wasn’t a venue to deliberate a common solution. I won’t be joining such a panel again. It’s a big waste of time. They didn’t talk with reasons but with emotions. How can we move forward?”

In case you weren’t convinced by the two panelists from opposing political pole, Bangkok-based French Yan Marchal expat was also there and summarized it as follows.

“This panel on lese majeste lasted 3 hours and hardly qualified as a debate. The positions of both sides were so far from each other – and their dislike for each other so palpable – that no interactive discussion would have made sense.

The highlight of the show was probably lese majeste supporter Arnond Sakworawich angrily shaking his head each time it was the other side’s turn to speak, as if it was physically painful for him to bear with their speech while waiting for his turn,” Yan perceptively wrote on his Facebook page.

To be fair, this has become a common state of political affairs in Thailand.

In tandem with the breaking down of any possible dialogue and deliberation is the growing political violence.

At the monarchy-reform cum anti-government protest last Saturday, police claimed 90 officers were injured. One riot police officer died of stroke. On the protesters’ side, scores were beaten with batons and over twenty arrested.

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A riot police fires rubber bullet at anti-government demonstrators in front of the 1st Infantry Regiment army base on Feb. 28, 2021.

Police used rubber bullets for the first time last Saturday. A reporter from Prachatai online news said he overheard one police officer say the rules of engagement are anything goes now.

On the demonstrators’ side, rocks and bricks were thrown at police, along with plastic as well as glass bottles and home-made explosives.

As the REDEM, or Restart Democracy Group which is the reincarnation of Free Youth Group, plans to protest again this Saturday, some have already exchanged Molotov Cocktail recipe in anticipation of growing police violence.

Some young protesters have lost hope that any dialogue or parliamentary process could bring about monarchy reform and political change. That’s why some are turning to violence as a means to raise awareness.

One must not forget that there also exists a deeper level of structural violence which goes deeper and more profound than the police’s use of rubber bullets.

Laws such as lese majeste and sedition are currently being used to incarcerate a number of mostly-young protest leaders. They see the laws as unjust, and to detain someone under pre-trial detention is not just a denial of justice but a form of structural violence.

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Power Couple Quits Jobs to Work as Private Chefs in Pandemic

Left: Jeremy Simeon and Jitlada “Tang” Sirachadapong. Right: Tomyum tuile and chili jam paste made by the couple. Photo: Jitlada Sirachadapong / Courtesy

KOH SAMUI — A little over a year ago, New Zealander Jeremy Simeon was working as an executive chef at a luxury resort on Koh Samui. His girlfriend, Jitlada “Tang” Sirachadapong, was a lawyer in Bangkok with 17-year experience in the job. And then everything changed.

The coronavirus outbreak struck, closing down borders and turning the popular island into a ghost town. With tourists gone, Jeremy’s career was no longer a safe and stable one like it was. So he and Jitlada took a gamble. They left their jobs and started a new business: they’d be private chefs for hire, cooking up fine-dining meals in private homes – just when restaurants were ordered to close down amid the pandemic.

No doubt it was huge upheaval for Jitlada, 38, who spent nearly half her life in law firms, working mostly on LGBT and disability rights. She had no background as a professional chef, but she has always loved cooking. And that’s enough for her.

“I worked with a lot of LGBT people. The same feeling that katoey have, where they are unable to come out and be themselves made me think of how I was unable to do what I really loved, which was cooking,” Jitlada said.

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A deserted beach on Koh Samui amid the coronavirus pandemic in July 2020.

For six months now, under the name Chada Culinary, the couple has been cooking fine dining meals for people vacationing in villas on Samui. They target a niche, yet growing, client base: high-end families and celebrities who would rather eat at a luxury beach home than go out because of COVID-19 anxiety.

“They’re thinking, well, where can we go this year?” Jeremy said. The pair spoke to Khaosod English for an interview in Bangkok during their business trip to the capital. “Dining in is the new dining out.”

But the venture’s image as a hobby available only to the ultrarich hiso may be deceptive, when you consider the price they charge.

The range for Chada Culinary is between 1,850 baht to 2,800 baht a person, with the most expensive being an eight-course omakase. That’s actually more affordable than many of the fine-dining venues in the glitzy parts of Bangkok.

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Chada Culinary’s grilled duck curry (kaeng phed ped yaang) with grape slices and flower garnishes. Photo: Jitlada Sirachadapong / Courtesy

To compare, Michelin-starred Ginza Sushi Ichi offers dinner omakase for 5,000 and 7,000 baht – service and tax not included. A seven-course dinner set at Blue by Alain Ducasse runs for 4,950.

The pandemic also means a high-end vacationing on Samui isn’t as high-end as it used to be. A private villa on Samui can be rented for a cost of 5,000 baht per night on Airbnb. A Bangkok Airways flight to the island is sometimes as inexpensive as 2,500 baht.

“Yes, private dining might be for rich people, but we want food to be accessible to everybody,” Jitlada said. “We want everybody to benefit from that, not just high-end people.”

‘The Market Has Changed A Lot’

For Jeremy, 49, the new venture is a next step for his career as an executive chef – he cooked for Ed Sheeran when he vacationed at Song Saa private island in Cambodia.

The transition was much harder for Jitlada, who struggled to convince her family that leaving a stable lawyer job to start a cooking business in the height of a pandemic and soaring unemployment is really the logical thing to do.

“My heart was already there,” she said. “But I don’t think my father could take the fact that part of my job involves scraping and cleaning dishes.”

Jeremy said the pandemic “forced him to do his own thing,” and the two began approaching villas and offered private omakase packages for vacationers lumped in with the villa stay, which would in turn support resort staff.

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Swede puree and caviar. Photo: Jitlada Sirachadapong / Courtesy

“Before COVID, if you had a nice restaurant, good food, and a good view, you would get people coming. But the market has changed a lot,” the New Zealander said.

He gives a nod to one of his favorite restaurants in Bangkok, Saawaan, in the presentation of Thai food in a modern way. Clients often assume Jeremy is cooking the Western food and Jitlada the Thai, but the reverse is true. 

The pair carry cooking equipment and meal prep ingredients to villas, making dishes like Kaeng Kua Supparot Goong, or shrimp and pineapple curry and grilled duck curry (kaeng phed ped yaang) with grape slices and flower garnishes.

Once, a client has asked for albino beluga to be subbed in, or white caviar that costs at least 20,000 baht a jar. 

A Stormy Year for Samui

But Jeremy and Jitlada said the glamorous elements of their job doesn’t blind them from the harsh reality of so many lives upended by the pandemic on the island – the hardship is simply impossible to ignore.

Food bank queues were so huge in the streets that police were deployed to ease traffic flow. Although Thai tourists later trickled back to the island, their spending habits can’t match the foreign travelers and backpackers. Afterall, office workers from Bangkok are unlikely to be interested in beach chair massage or hair braiding.

“An entire section of Chaweng Beach is gone. Half the bars, massage places, resorts, are gone,” Jeremy said.

Top: A popular travel blogger shares her experience of visiting Koh Samui during the coronavirus pandemic. 

He saw hotel occupancy plunge from 75 percent to 8 percent, with places staying open just to avoid laying off staff. Vendors who used to sell sunglasses switched to setting up tables and chairs to sell curry and noodles in front of their homes, but it’s never for a lot of money, Jeremy said.

One auntie who used to braid hair for foreign tourists caught the couple’s attention. They recalled seeing her, jobless and forlorn on the beach, so they boxed some extra food they prepared for a private dining session then handed it to the auntie. The reaction was heart-wrenching, Jeremy remembered.

“She started crying and holding my hands. I had to jump back in the car and get out of there, or else I would have a breakdown,” he said. “It’s really a hard time for some people during COVID. You might have food, but what about people like her?”

Top: A Twitter user shows the dire situation on Koh Samui during the coronavirus pandemic in September 2020.

With the grim reality of life under the pandemic always fresh in their mind, Jeremy and Jitlada pledged to donate 10 percent of their revenues to several charities, including Healing Family Foundation for Autistic People in Chiang Mai, the Redemptorist Foundation for the Development of Persons with Disabilities in Pattaya, and the Ban Nana Mae Sai nonprofit for children in Chiang Rai.

Health professionals and hospitality workers on Samui are eligible for COVID-19 vaccine. The government said the initiative is to prepare for reopening the border to foreign tourists. But it remains unclear when that’ll actually happen – no timeframe has been discussed as of now.

Starting to Enjoy Life Again

Misery on the island aside, Jitlada said she enjoys her newfound passion way more than the old life of poring over hundreds of legal documents. She had no previous cooking experience, so she trained with Hanuman, a foreign Thai cooking expert, before taking her leap of faith.

As for Jeremy, he said that being able to get his hands on cooking as part of a small team has revived his dormant love for cooking.

“I’m starting to enjoy it again. At an executive level, mostly it’s managing people and numbers,” Jeremy said of his old job.

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Few people are seen at a beach on Koh Samui amid the coronavirus pandemic in July 2020.

Neither regret waving goodbye to a stable corporate salary and saying hello to prepping curries in holiday villas.

“Use this opportunity to do what you really love to do. You’ll make money eventually,” Jeremy said.

“It’s like we get to go on vacation and cook each day, but with a different view,” Jitlada said. “We’re blessed.”

The two urged Bangkokians to take their next trip down to Samui. “It’s the best time to visit. It’s completely empty,” Jeremy said.

Follow Chada Culinary on their Facebook and Instagram

Khaosod English signing out, March 6, 2021. 

Related stories:

Expats Donate to Thais, Migrant Workers Hurt by Virus

Tour Guide Who Lost His Job in Pandemic Opens Tea Shop

Grounded by the Pandemic, This Pilot is Now a ‘Grab’ Driver

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Russian Family Bakes Bangkok’s Tangiest ‘Sourdough’

Andrei Matveenkov, Daria Matveenkova, 5, and Olga Matveenkova holding loaves of sourdough bread.

BANGKOK — They say Russia is between Europe and Asia, but is fully neither and rather its own category. And so between the dense, dark ryes of Germany and the fluffy, sweetened milk breads of Asia are the Matveenkov’s crunchy, yet moist sourdoughs.

“Sourdough Bangkok,” a humble family-run bakery cafe which opened in November, has gained a cult following for tangy bread lovers even in the face of the coronavirus pandemic.

“At some point in the 90s, all bread became crap because of commercial yeast,” Olga Matveenkova, 39, said. “All this bread is Russian heritage and recipes, with just flour, water, salt, and starter. People from different countries have told me that this is the bread of their childhood.”

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Sourdough Bangkok is founded by Olga and her husband Andrei Matveenkov. Their daughter Daria can be found skipping around the roomy tables on some days.

If dropping by, do not forget to take home a Classic Wheat sourdough loaf (120 baht) or a Wheat Loaf with Seeds (160 baht). To put it simply, a loaf takes two days to make, since no commercial yeast is used to hasten the process.

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The result is a large loaf crunchy on the outside, moist and springy on the inside, naturally low in gluten. The author herself has been to the cafe several times before deciding to review it, and found that the breads were very light for Asian stomachs, and even aided in digestion.

“Ours is 100 percent sourdough. Some bakeries may label a bread as sourdough even if they only use five percent. There’s no law about that,” Olga said.

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Rye sourdough loaves are also available (180 baht), and take one day to make. Lovely, round golden sourdough brioches (120 baht) are only available on the weekends and take a whopping 42 hours to make.

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Avocado open sandwich (200 baht).

If planning to have some coffee and a chat with a friend, the cafe is very reasonably-priced, with most dishes under 200 baht. The avocado open sandwich (200 baht) served with a slice of classic wheat sourdough, a smear of truffle, and a mix of avocado and cucumber chunks, topped with two poached eggs.

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Borscht with rye sourdough (120 baht).

Vegetarian borscht served with rye sourdough is just 120 baht and incredibly filling (“It’s like a stamp of Russia, like tom yum for Thai,” Andrei said.) For more Russian-ness, blinis are also available (100 baht).

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All coffees are under 100 baht, such as the iced cappuccino at 95 baht, and TWG teas are also available at 130 baht, going well with macarons (50 baht) which come in coconut, matcha, lemon, milk chocolate with salted caramel, and strawberry.

From Island to City

The family started baking sourdough in 2019, after they were unable to find the kind of bread they wanted in Thailand. Upon encouraging feedback from friends, they started supplying bakeries and supermarkets on Koh Phangan.

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“If I eat bread with yeast, it becomes like a brick inside my stomach,” Andrei said. “But with this bread, I have no problem at all. I’m not uncomfortable. I’ve eaten half a loaf every day for 1.5 years, and didn’t gain weight like I did with other breads.”

Even amidst the pandemic, the Matveenkovs knew that their bread needed more space to rise – and so moved to bangkok in June in order to start their cafe in November.

“We didn’t come because of the pandemic, but because we needed our natural business to grow. We’re lucky to make it,” Olga said. “I was surprised that so many Bangkokian people know about sourdough. I thought our clientele would be foreign, but it’s 50/50 Thais.”

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Their starter dough is one and a half years old (it doesn’t have a name, though). Even when the family was travelling around Thailand, they would bring the little starter in a suitcase of ice (“We feed it every day, like a baby,” Andrei said.)

Tucked into a side soi off Pan Road, Sourdough Bangkok is a large, airy space two floors high, all white walls and wooden furniture. It’s roomy and sunny, a refreshing break from other cafes in the city which are only getting tinier and tinier, with microscopic tables.

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And a Russian word of the day from the Matveenkovs: sourdough is xleb na zakvaske (хлеб на закваске).

Sourdough Bangkok is open from 9am to 6pm every day, except Tuesdays. The cafe is an equidistant 10 minute walk from either BTS Saint Louis or BTS Surasak. 

This review is unsponsored and is based on a hosted visit.

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Brioche being prepared on Friday for Saturday.

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Protesters Defy Myanmar Security Forces as UN Action Urged

Women grieve as they view the body of Zwee Htet Soe, a protester who died during a Mar. 3 anti-coup protest, during his funeral in Yangon, Myanmar, Friday, Mar. 5, 2021. (AP Photo)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Demonstrators defied growing violence by Myanmar security forces and staged more anti-coup rallies Friday, while the U.N. special envoy for the country called for urgent Security Council action, saying about 50 peaceful protesters were killed and scores were injured in the military’s worst crackdowns this week.

The escalation of violence has put pressure on the world community to act to restrain the junta, which seized power on Feb. 1 by ousting the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi.

Large protests against military rule have occurred daily in many cities and towns. Security forces escalated their crackdown with greater use of lethal force and mass arrests. At least 18 protesters were shot and killed Sunday and 38 on Wednesday, according to the U.N. Human Rights Office. More than 1,000 have been arrested, the independent Assistance Association for Political Prisoners said.

Protests continued in the biggest cities of Yangon and Mandalay and elsewhere Friday. They were met again with force by police, and gunfire was heard. In Mandalay, Zaw Myo was fatally shot as the 26-year-old and other residents sought to protect a march by a group of engineers.

U.N. special envoy Christine Schraner Burgener said in her briefing to a closed Security Council meeting that council unity and “robust” action are critical “in pushing for a stop to the violence and the restoration of Myanmar’s democratic institutions.”

“We must denounce the actions by the military,” she said in her briefing, as released by the U.N. “It is critical that this council is resolute and coherent in putting the security forces on notice and standing with the people of Myanmar firmly, in support of the clear November election results.”

Schraner Burgener reiterated an earlier appeal to the international community not to “lend legitimacy or recognition to this regime that has been forcefully imposed and nothing but chaos has since followed.”

She urged council members to hear “the voices of the people of Myanmar” and support Kyaw Moe Tun, the country’s U.N. ambassador who was terminated by the military after denouncing the coup in a dramatic speech to the General Assembly. The military appointed his deputy, who resigned a day later and Tun has said he remains Myanmar’s permanent representative to the U.N.

The Security Council took no immediate action. Council diplomats said Britain circulated a draft presidential statement for consideration, a step below a legally binding resolution.

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Armed police stand guard on a major street to preven anti-coup demonstration in Yangon, Myanmar, Friday, March 5, 2021. (AP Photo)

Any kind of coordinated action at the U.N. will be difficult because two permanent members of the Security Council, China and Russia, are likely to veto it.

Schraner Burgener, a veteran Swiss diplomat, said she hopes to visit Myanmar and use her “good offices” to find a peaceful solution through dialogue.

Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department said Friday that the government has taken action to prevent Myanmar’s military from improperly accessing more than $1 billion in Myanmar government funds held in the United States.

And YouTube removed five channels run by Myanmar’s military for violating its guidelines and said it is watching for any further violations. It earlier pulled dozens of channels as part of an investigation into content uploaded in a coordinated influence campaign.

The decision by YouTube followed Facebook’s earlier announcement that it has removed all Myanmar military-linked pages from its site and Instagram, which it owns.

Many cases of targeted brutality by security forces in the streets have been captured in photos and videos that have circulated widely on social media. Videos have showed security forces shooting people at point-blank range and chasing down and savagely beating demonstrators.

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Anti-coup protesters hold up images of deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi as they gather in Yangon, Myanmar, Friday, Mar. 5, 2021. (AP Photo)

The U.S. called the images appalling, the U.N. human rights chief said it was time to “end the military’s stranglehold over democracy in Myanmar,” and the world body’s independent expert on human rights in the country, Tom Andrews, urged Security Council members to watch the videos.

While many abuses are committed by police, there is even greater concern about military forces — notorious for decades of brutal counterinsurgency tactics and human rights abuses — being deployed in Myanmar’s cities.

They include members of the army’s 77th Light Infantry Division, which was also sent to the streets in 2007 to suppress anti-junta rallies, firing on protesters and ramming them with trucks, witnesses told Human Rights Watch.

The 99th Light Infantry Division also has been deployed, including in Mandalay. It is infamous for its counterinsurgency campaigns against ethnic minorities, including spearheading the response that led to a brutal crackdown that caused more than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee from Rakhine state to Bangladesh. It also has been accused of war crimes in Shan state, another ethnic minority area, in 2016 and early 2017.

A leader of barred lawmakers who say they are the legitimate representatives of the country released a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urging the Security Council to help end the violence and restore the ousted government.

The letter asked for outside parties to help prevent human rights violations, sanctions on military leaders and military-linked businesses, a total arms embargo and penalties for perpetrators of atrocities.

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Anti-coup protesters wearing helmets and masks take positions as police gather in Yangon, Myanmar, Friday, March 5, 2021. (AP Photo)

The letter is signed by Dr. Sasa, who uses one name, on behalf of the Committee Representing Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, Myanmar’s Parliament, which the military has barred from convening. The lawmakers want foreign countries and international organizations to recognize them instead of the junta.

Schraner Burgener said earlier this week she warned Myanmar’s army that the world’s nations and the Security Council “might take huge, strong measures.”

“And the answer was, ‘We are used to sanctions, and we survived those sanctions in the past,’” she said. When she also warned that Myanmar would become isolated, Schraner Burgener said, “the answer was, ‘We have to learn to walk with only a few friends.’”

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations has urged a halt to violence and the start of talks on a peaceful solution in Myanmar.

The 10-member regional group, which includes Myanmar, is constrained from enacting serious measures by a tradition of acting by consensus and reluctance to interfere in each other’s internal affairs.

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Anti-coup protesters wearing protective gear take positions as police gather in Yangon, Myanmar, Friday, March 5, 2021. (AP Photo)

However, one member, Singapore, was outspoken Friday in criticizing Myanmar’s coup.

“It is the height of national shame for the armed forces of any country to turn its arms against its own people,” Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said in Parliament.

But he also warned that the approach favored by some Western nations of pressuring Myanmar’s generals with sanctions would not be effective.

“Despite all our fervor and earnest hopes of reconciliation … the keys ultimately lie within Myanmar. And there’s a limit to how far external pressure will be brought to bear,” he said.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in tweeted that the use of violence against the people of Myanmar must stop.

“There should not be any more loss of lives. We condemn the violent suppression of protests by the military and the police forces and strongly call for the immediate release of all those detained including State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi,” he said.

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Editorial: Thailand Has a Moral Duty to Stop the Killings in Myanmar

Myanmar nationals living in Thailand rally in front of the U.N. office in Bangkok on March 4, 2021.

Even under the notorious principle of “non-intervention” imposed by the ASEAN community, the Thai government still can – and should – exert its diplomatic influence to end the bloodshed in their neighboring country. 

The Thai public could only watch in horror as footage of the deadly crackdown in Myanmar made its way to our living rooms and mobile phones. 

Just on Wednesday alone, 38 people were confirmed to have been killed by the Burmese security forces, who appeared intent on crushing the resistance to the Feb. 1 coup with unchecked violence. 

At least 50 civilians, most of them peaceful protesters, have perished under the hands of the Myanmar military and police since the military takeover.

And that’s in just a month. Observers fear the orgy of killings that horrified the world is just the beginning of greater tragedies to come.

Also worrying is the arrest of The Associated Press correspondent Thein Zaw, apparently just for doing his job as a reporter. He’s one of five members of the media to have been charged so far in Myanmar for “spreading fake news,” an offense that could see them jailed for up to three years. 

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A man holds a picture of Kyal Sin during her burial in Mandalay, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

As a media partner who syndicates wire stories from The Associated Press, we join the calls with many media organizations in Myanmar and from all over the world to demand for Thein Zaw’s immediate release, and we urge the Myanmar authorities to cease its suppression of the media.

We’re under no illusions that our voice would matter much to the Myanmar coup regime. But we are not alone in the show of solidarity with media professionals in Myanmar either.

Almost immediately after the military takeover unfolded in Naypyidaw, the Thai Journalist Association released a statement affirming its support to its counterpart in Myanmar, and stressing that “any use of violence is unacceptable.”

“We would like to express concerns about the safety of members of the media in case of violent situations, and also the limitation of freedom of the press during this period,” the Thai Journalist Association wrote. “However, we hope that all the people are safe and the journalists are still able to perform their duties professionally without any harm or threat.”

Unfortunately, the reality in Myanmar took a turn for the worse, prompting the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand to voice its dismay at the deteriorating civil rights under the regime.

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Policemen and soldiers armed with guns and sling-shots advance towards anti-coup protesters in Mandalay, Myanmar, Wednesday, March 3, 2021. (AP Photo)

“With state media in Myanmar now parroting only the propaganda of the new regime, it is essential that independent media be supported and protected as far as possible. The FCCT urges other governments and agencies engaging with the regime in Myanmar to ensure that they prioritise the safety of journalists in their discussions,” the statement said.

“Our colleagues in Myanmar have shown great courage and ingenuity in ensuring they can broadcast confrontations between the authorities and the civil disobedience movement, giving us a far fuller picture of events there than was possible in the past. We stand in solidarity with them as they try to work in the most difficult and dangerous conditions.”

It’s also safe to say the general mood of the Thai people toward the escalating violence in Myanmar is of concern and revulsion – as is evident in conversation taking place everywhere around Thailand, from outrage on social media platforms to the uncles muttering over newspapers together in coffeehouses.

Yet the government of Thailand has been markedly silent and unwilling to condemn the killings taking place right next door.

On one hand, their inaction is understandable. The imaginary community of ASEAN is barely held together by their principle of non-intervention in domestic politics – even in the face of severe human rights violations.

But the crisis unraveling in Myanmar is on a scale unseen in decades, and it poses a present-day challenge to ASEAN member states like Thailand to rethink their lukewarm approach.

Thailand has already hosted an informal dialogue to steer the conflict toward a peaceful resolution. The effort was commendable, and the Thai government can do so much more. Officials at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs are reputed to possess a greater understanding of human rights and statecraft than any other Thai state agency. The ministry should dedicate its diplomatic reach to convincing the Burmese state actors to reconsider their doomed path.

As a close neighbor to Myanmar, Thailand is blessed with many instruments in its arsenal that can be deployed to pressure the Myanmar generals into stopping the bloodshed. All options should be considered critically by the foreign ministry.

This is a matter of moral duty as much as realist necessity – it would not serve Thailand’s national interests if its neighbor collapses into anarchic violence. If the bloodshed in Myanmar spirals into a full blown slaughter, many will be forced to flee the country en masse, seeking refuge elsewhere and destabilizing the region even further. And that’s just one scenario.

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Myanmar nationals living in Thailand rally in front of the U.N. office in Bangkok on March 4, 2021.

Surprisingly enough, it was left to Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to break ranks from the collective silence in the ASEAN region. In a recent media interview, Singapore’s leader rightly called out the violence perpetrated on Myanmar civilians.

“To use lethal force against civilians and unarmed demonstrators, I think it is just not acceptable,” PM Lee said. “That is disastrous not just internationally, but disastrous domestically.”

It should have been Thailand, as Myanmar’s closest neighbor in ASEAN, to deliver the stern remark, which may have had an even greater impact on the Burmese junta – a wakeup call that Thailand will no longer stand idly by or turn a blind eye to the Tatmadaw’s atrocities on unarmed protesters.

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha’s government may have failed at upholding democracy at home, but he can still make a difference for the people of Myanmar. Gen. Prayut is no champion of human rights, but he can still earn an honored place in history if he chooses to act and tells the Myanmar government to do the right thing for once.

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Prayut Orders Probe Into Facebook’s Removal of Army ‘IO’

Transparency activists Winyu Wongsurawat and Yingcheep Atchanont file a suit with the Administrative Court in Bangkok seeking an order to stop the Royal Thai Army’s information operation on March 4, 2021.

BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha says he has assigned the Royal Thai Army to investigate after Facebook Inc. removed 185 accounts and groups allegedly engaged in an information-influencing operation in Thailand run by the military.

That followed Facebook’s announcement a day earlier that it had deleted 77 accounts, 72 pages, 18 groups and 18 Instagram accounts for violating its policy against government interference, which is defined as coordinated inauthentic behavior on behalf of a government entity.

“Facebook took action like this. It can be interpreted in many ways. We must make it clear,” said Prayuth.

About 703,000 accounts followed one or more of these pages, about 100,000 accounts joined at least one of these groups and around 2,500 people followed one or more of the Instagram accounts. Facebook said.

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PM Prayut Chan-o-cha speaks to reporters at Government House on March 4, 2021.

Facebook says the network of accounts originated in Thailand and targeted domestic audiences in its southern provinces, where the army faces a longstanding insurgency movement. The people behind the network used both authentic and fake accounts, posting their content on multiple pages to make it look more popular than it was. The majority of page postings appear to have occurred in 2020.

The Facebook report says the network posted primarily in Thai about news and current events, including content in support of the Thai military and the monarchy. The posts included calls for non-violence, regional Covid-19 updates, allegations of violence by the insurgent groups in southern Thailand and criticism of separatist and independence movements.

“Although the people behind it attempted to conceal their identities and coordination, our investigation found links to the Thai military’s Internal Security Operations Command,” Facebook said.

On Thursday, three activists including Yingcheep Atchanont, Sarinee Achavanuntakul and Winyu John Wongsurawat, filed a suit with the Administrative Court in Bangkok seeking an order to stop the Royal Thai Army’s information operation. The three said they have been targeted in such operations.

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Transparency activists Winyu Wongsurawat and Yingcheep Atchanont speak to reporters on March 4, 2021.

They said they also planned to contact Facebook and the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Expression seeking an investigation into army’s information operations against Thai civilians.

“The army has no authority to commit such information operations,” Yingcheep told reporters. “The government should protect people who want to express their opinions, not create propaganda and attack those who have differing views.”

The issue of army information operations has surfaced during parliamentary debates.

Nattacha Boonchaiinsawat, a lawmaker from the opposition Move Forward Party, accused the army of misusing funds to foment hatred toward critics of the government. The army responded by saying it just trains officers for public relations, to promote a positive image for the military.

In October 2020, Twitter disclosed it had uncovered a network of 926 accounts allegedly involved in information operations linked to the army. It said the accounts were engaging in amplifying pro-Royal Thai Army and pro-government content and also targeting prominent political opposition figures.

Apart from in Thailand, Facebook said last month that it had detected and removed attempts to reestablish a presence on the platform by military-linked networks in Myanmar, where the army took over in a Feb. 1 coup. Facebook had removed those accounts.

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Okinawan Women Group Chronicles Sex Crimes by U.S. Military

Protesters display signs against a planned Marine base relocation during a rally in Naha, Okinawa prefecture, in August 2018. (Koji Harada/Kyodo News)

OKINAWA (Kyodo) — In a book by an Okinawan women’s civic group documenting sex crimes by U.S. soldiers in Japan, a 9-month-old infant girl is listed as the youngest rape victim.

Among a litany of cases the group began compiling after the rape of an Okinawan elementary schoolgirl by three U.S. soldiers in 1995, the 1949 crime by a U.S. serviceman who was an acquaintance of the baby’s mother stands out as arguably the most heinous and unimaginable – the baby reportedly died soon afterward.

Continue reading the story here

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Myanmar Crackdown on Protests, Widely Filmed, Sparks Outrage

A woman cries during the burial of anti-protester Kyal Sin in Mandalay, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. Kyal Sin was shot in the head by Myanmar security forces during an anti-coup protest rally she was attending Wednesday. (AP Photo)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Footage of a brutal crackdown on protests against a coup in Myanmar unleashed outrage and calls for a stronger international response Thursday, a day after 38 people were killed. Videos showed security forces shooting a person at point-blank range and chasing down and savagely beating demonstrators.

Despite the shocking violence the day before, protesters returned to the streets Thursday to denounce the military’s Feb. 1 takeover — and were met again with tear gas.

The international response to the coup has so far been fitful, but a flood of videos shared online showing security forces brutally targeting protesters and other civilians led to calls for more action.

The United States called the images appalling, the U.N. human rights chief said it was time to “end the military’s stranglehold over democracy in Myanmar,” and the world body’s independent expert on human rights in the country urged the Security Council to watch the videos before meeting Friday to discuss the crisis.

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Anti-coup protesters discharge fire extinguishers to counter the impact of the tear gas fired by police during a demonstration in Yangon, Myanmar Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

The coup reversed years of slow progress toward democracy in Myanmar, which for five decades had languished under strict military rule that led to international isolation and sanctions. As the generals loosened their grip in recent years, the international community lifted most sanctions and poured in investment.

U.N. special envoy for Myanmar, Christine Schraner Burgener, described Wednesday as “the bloodiest day” since the takeover, when the military ousted the elected government of leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

More than 50 civilians, mostly peaceful protesters, are confirmed to have been killed by police and soldiers since then, including the 38 she said died Wednesday.

”I saw today very disturbing video clips,” said Schraner Burgener, speaking to reporters at the U.N. in New York via video link from Switzerland. “One was police beating a volunteer medical crew. They were not armed. Another video clip showed a protester was taken away by police and they shot him from very near, maybe only one meter. He didn’t resist to his arrest, and it seems that he died on the street.”

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Anti-coup protesters standing behind barricades standoff with a group of police in Yangon, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

She appeared to be referring to a video shared on social media that begins with a group of security forces following a civilian, who they seem to have just pulled out of a building. A shot rings out, and the person falls. After the person briefly raises their head, two of the troops drag the person down the street by the arms.

In other footage, about two dozen security forces, some with their firearms drawn, chase two people wearing the construction helmets donned by many protesters down a street. When they catch up to the people, they repeatedly beat them with rods and kick them. One of the officers is filming the scene on his cell phone.

In yet another video, several police officers repeatedly kick and hit a person with rods, while the person cowers on the ground, hands over their head. Officers move in and out of the frame, getting a few kicks in and then casually walking away.

While some countries have imposed or threatened to impose sanctions following the coup, others, including those neighboring Myanmar, have been more hesitant in their response. The sheer volume of violent images shared Wednesday, along with the high death toll, raised hopes that the dynamic could change.

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People carry the coffin of Kyal Sin for burial in Mandalay, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on Thursday urged all of those with “information and influence” to hold military leaders to account.

“This is the moment to turn the tables towards justice and end the military’s stranglehold over democracy in Myanmar,” she said.

State Department spokesman Ned Price said the U.S. was “appalled” at the “horrific violence,” and the U.N.’s independent expert on human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, said the “systematic brutality of the military junta is once again on horrific display.”

“I urge members of the UN Security Council to view the photos/videos of the shocking violence being unleashed on peaceful protesters before meeting,” he said on Twitter.

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Anti-coup protesters flash a three-fingered sign of resistance during a demonstration in Yangon, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

The Security Council has scheduled closed-door consultations for Friday on calls to reverse the coup — including from U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres — and stop the escalating crackdown.

But Justine Chambers, the associate director of the Myanmar Research Center at the Australian National University, said that while the graphic images would no doubt lead to strong condemnations — action on Myanmar would be harder.

“Unfortunately I don’t think the brutality caught on camera is going to change much,” she said. “I think domestic audiences around the world don’t have much of an appetite for stronger action, i.e. intervention, given the current state of the pandemic and associated economic issues.”

Any kind of coordinated action at the U.N. will be difficult since two permanent members of the Security Council, China and Russia, would almost certainly veto it.

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A man holds a picture of Kyal Sin during her burial in Mandalay, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

Even if the council did take action, U.N. envoy Schraner Burgener cautioned it might not make much of a difference. She said she warned Myanmar’s army that the world’s nations and the Security Council “might take huge strong measures.”

“And the answer was, ‘We are used to sanctions and we survived those sanctions in the past,’” she said. When she also warned that Myanmar would become isolated, Schraner Burgener said, “the answer was, ‘We have to learn to walk with only a few friends.’”

Wednesday’s highest death toll was in Yangon, the country’s biggest city, where an estimated 18 people died. Video at a hospital in the city showed grieving relatives collecting the blood-soaked bodies of family members. Some relatives sobbed uncontrollably, while others looked in shock at the scene around them.

Protesters gathered again Thursday in Yangon. Police again used tear gas to try to disperse the crowds, while demonstrators again set up barriers across major roads.

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Anti-coup protesters hide behind shields as polices use tear gas during a demonstration in Yangon, Myanmar, Thursday, March 4, 2021. (AP Photo)

Protests also continued in Mandalay, where three people were reported killed Wednesday. A formation of five fighter planes flew over the city on Thursday morning in what appeared to be a show of force.

Protesters in the city flashed the three-fingered salute that is a symbol of defiance as they rode their motorbikes to follow a funeral procession for Kyal Sin, also known by her Chinese name Deng Jia Xi, a university student who was shot dead as she attended a demonstration the day before.

As part of the crackdown, security forces have also arrested well over a thousand people, including journalists, according to the independent Assistance Association for Political Prisoners. On Saturday, at least eight journalists, including Thein Zaw of The Associated Press, were detained.

He and several other members of the media have been charged with violating a public safety law that could see them imprisoned for up to three years.

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CP Foods and LPN Foundation Continue To Give Away Foods for Migrant Workers Nationwide

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods) in collaboration with the Labor Rights Promotion Network (LPN) Foundation have stepped up to deliver 30,000 high-quality eggs for migrant workers in multiple provinces across Thailand.

The donated eggs will be packed in a survival bag for migrant people in Bangkok, Samut Sakhon, Trat, Rayong, Chachoengsao, Chiang Mai and Tak provinces in order to make sure that migrant people received sufficient supports. A handover ceremony at LPN headquarter was joined by Mr. Sompong Srakaew, director of LPN, and Mr. Sornkrit Wattasiri, Senior Vice President at CP Foods.

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The food donation is a part of “CPF Food from the Heart against COVID-19” project, an on-going humanitarian aid program initiated by CP Foods to help vulnerable groups, including migrant workers, who are directly and indirectly impacted by the global pandemic.

Mr. Sompong said that, despite the government eased most of restrictions, there are still many of foreign workers who lost their income and being unemployed as a result from COVID-19 outbreak. The foundation, therefore, has made relief efforts with help from its long-time partners. For example, CP Foods, which prior to this activity, donated 30,800 packs of ready-to-eat meals and 40,000 eggs to the foundation for aiding migrant communities, particularly from Myanmar, under quarantine in Samut Sakhon province and many other areas across the country. This allows them to gain access to safe and nutritious foods.

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“Covid-19 outbreak affects the livelihoods of migrant workers and their families in many ways. The cooperation between LPN and CP Foods will enabled them to access to safe food supplies and other necessities, ensuring there are enough supports for them in this difficult time,” said Mr. Sompong.

Aside this project, CP Foods has made multiple relief efforts. The company, in collaboration with partners like the Ministry of Public Health, Government agencies, communities and NGOs, brings together the expertise as a leading food producer to deliver safe food supplies to healthcare workers and vulnerable groups that have been affected by the virus epidemic since early 2020.

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Also, Charoen Pokphand Group and CP Foods donated “CP surgical mask” to embassies of Myanmar, Vietnam, Cambodia and Lao PDR to distribute to migrant workers and expats amid the new wave of the COVID-19.

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