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Big Protests Across Myanmar as UN Expert Fears Violence

Buddhist monks and nuns display pictures of detained Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi during a protest against the military coup in Mandalay, Myanmar on Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021. (AP Photo)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Demonstrators in Myanmar gathered Wednesday in their largest numbers so far to protest the military’s seizure of power, as a U.N. human rights expert warned that troops being brought to Yangon and elsewhere could signal the prospect for major violence.

U.N. rapporteur Tom Andrews said he was alarmed by reports of soldiers being transported into Yangon, the biggest city.

“In the past, such troop movements preceded killings, disappearances, and detentions on a mass scale,” he said in a statement issued late Tuesday by the U.N. Human Rights office in Geneva. “I am terrified that given the confluence of these two developments­ – planned mass protests and troops converging – we could be on the precipice of the military committing even greater crimes against the people of Myanmar.”

Fresh protests roiled Yangon, the second-largest city of Mandalay and the capital Naypyitaw, in defiance of an order banning gatherings of five or more people.

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Demonstrators gather close to Sule Pagoda to protest against the military coup in Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021. (AP Photo)

“Let’s march en masse. Let’s show our force against the coup government that has destroyed the future of youth and our country,” Kyi Toe, a spokesman for the National League for Democracy party of ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi, wrote on his Facebook page.

Wednesday’s turnout in Yangon appeared to be one of the biggest so far in the city. Protesters have adopted a tactic of blocking off streets from security forces by parking vehicles in groups with their hoods up and the excuse of having engine trouble.

In Naypyitaw, thousands including private bank employees and engineers marched down its wide boulevards, chanting for the release of Suu Kyi and President Win Myint.

Protesters also poured into the streets of Mandalay, where on Monday security forces pointed guns at a group of 1,000 demonstrators and attacked them with slingshots and sticks. Local media reported that police also fired rubber bullets into a crowd and that a few people were injured.

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A demonstrator on motor bike flashes the three-fingered salute against the military coup as she rides pass military vehicles parked along a road in Mandalay, Myanmar on Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021. (AP Photo)

The marches have been organized as part of a civil disobedience movement, spearheaded by medical workers and supported by many civil servants.

The Feb. 1 coup has brought an abrupt halt to Myanmar’s fragile progress toward democracy, as Suu Kyi’s party was about to begin a second five-year term after winning a landslide in November’s election. The military justified its takeover with allegations of widespread voting irregularities, though the election commission found no evidence of significant fraud. The junta says it will hold power for a year before holding new elections.

Police filed a new charge against Suu Kyi, her lawyer said Tuesday, a move likely to keep her under house arrest and further fuel public anger.

Suu Kyi already faced a charge of illegally possessing walkie-talkies. The new charge concerns a law that has been used to prosecute people who have violated coronavirus restrictions, lawyer Khin Maung Zaw told reporters after meeting with a judge. It carries a maximum punishment of three years in prison.

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Demonstrators display pictures of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi to protest against the military coup in Yangon, Myanmar Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021. (AP Photo)

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson issued a strong denunciation of the legal maneuver against Suu Kyi.

“New charges against Aung San Suu Kyi fabricated by the Myanmar military are a clear violation of her human rights,” he tweeted. “We stand with the people of Myanmar and will ensure those responsible for this coup are held to account.”

U.N. spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said the world body stood by its denunciation of the coup and has called for charges against Suu Kyi to be dropped and for her to be released.

For a third night in a row, the military ordered an internet blackout — almost entirely blocking online access from 1 a.m. to 9 a.m. It has also prepared a draft law that would tighten surveillance of cyberspace and criminalize many online activities.

While the military did not say why the internet was blocked, there is widespread speculation that the government is installing a firewall system to allow it to monitor or block online activity. Social media users have speculated widely that neighboring China, with extensive experience in censoring the internet, was giving technical assistance for such a project.

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Demonstrators display pictures of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi during a protest against the military coup in Mandalay, Myanmar, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021. (AP Photo)

China has so far not condemned the takeover. Some protesters have accused Beijing — which has long been Myanmar’s main arms supplier and has major investments in the country — of propping up the junta.

China’s Ambassador Chen Hai said Beijing wished the protesters and the military could solve their differences through dialogue, according to the text of an interview posted on the embassy’s Facebook page Tuesday.

“The current development in Myanmar is absolutely not what China wants to see,” he said.

Chen also denied that China was helping Myanmar to control its internet traffic and that Chinese soldiers were showing up on the Myanmar’s streets.

“For the record, these are completely nonsense and even ridiculous accusations,” Chen said.

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Protests Erupt in Spain After Rapper Jailed for Royal Insult

Rap singer Pablo Hasél is detained by police officers at the University of Lleida, Spain, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Joan Mateu)

LLEIDA, Spain (AP) — Violent street protests erupted in some Spanish cities on Tuesday night following the arrest of a rap artist who barricaded himself at a university with dozens of supporters to avoid prison and has portrayed his case as a fight for free speech.

In Barcelona, several thousand protestors set trash cans on fire and threw rocks at the police. Several stores and a bank were damaged amid chaotic scenes on one of the city’s main streets. Smaller demonstrations took place in Valencia and Palma de Mallorca, Spanish media reported.

A 24-hour standoff between police and Spanish rapper Pablo Hasél ended Tuesday when anti-riot officers arrested the artist shortly after dawn and escorted him out of Lleida University’s rectorate building. He and more than 50 supporters locked themselves inside the university in Spain’s northeastern Catalonia region at midday on Monday.

Hasél was sent to prison, where he’s set to serve a 9-month sentence for insulting the monarchy and glorifying terrorism.

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Rap singer Pablo Hasél is detained by police officers at the University of Lleida, Spain, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Joan Mateu)

The university barricade was the rapper’s latest effort to avoid serving his sentence and to draw attention to what he says is a campaign for freedom of expression. He has faced criticism and legal action over some of his statements, includes ones about the monarchy and the need for armed resistance.

“We will win! They will not bend us with all their repression, never!” the 32-year-old rapper said as he passed TV news cameras.

The case of Hasél, whose name at birth is Pablo Rivadulla Duró, has drawn increasing attention in Spain, with many members of the public, artists, celebrities and politicians showing their support and demanding a change in the country’s so-called “Gag Law.”

Spain’s left-wing coalition government also unexpectedly announced last week that it would change the country’s criminal code to eliminate prison terms for offenses involving freedom of expression. It did not specifically mention Hasél or set a timetable for the changes.

The rapper is no stranger to controversy. With an artistic opus that includes songs with strong anti-establishment criticism, he has seen his notoriety amplified among the wider Spanish public with every run-in with authorities.

Having faced charges on at least four occasions for assault, praising armed extremist groups, breaking into private premises or insulting the country’s monarchy, in 2014 he was given a suspended 2-year prison term. But in a new case tried in 2018, judges handed him a reduced sentence of 9 months behind bars for a song about former King Juan Carlos I and 64 tweets he posted between 2014 and 2016.

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Rap singer Pablo Hasél, background, is surrounded by his supporters as police officers arrest one of the activists at the University of Lleida, Spain, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Joan Mateu)

The tweets straddled the line between opinion and calls to violent insurrection, with several mentions of ETA and Grapo, two now-defunct armed extremist groups in Spain. In the song, Hasél rapped about corruption tied to the former monarch but also talked about him as a wife-beater, a drunk, head of a mafia mob and a frequent user of prostitution.

Spain’s National Court on Monday rejected his latest appeal to be kept out of prison. Judges said the sentencing came on the back of a suspended one and that offenders need to serve prison time if they relapse.

Sparing Hasél from imprisonment, the court said, would be “discriminatory” to other convicts, adding that the campaigning around his case could be used to change laws in parliament but that courts needed to apply the existing criminal code.

“I won’t allow them to tell me what I have to think, feel or say,” Hasél told The Associated Press late Monday. “This serves me as an extra stimulus to keep writing the same songs.”

Jordi Dalmau, head of the Mossos d’Esquadara police for western Catalonia, said Hasél’s arrest, which involved dismantling barricades of desks and benches blocking the building’s entrance, had been carried out “with normality” and the activists did not resist. The rapper had refused last week to voluntarily respond to a summons to show up for prison.

Before being hurled into a police car, he shouted to supporters “Death to the fascist state!”

Over 200 artists, including film director Pedro Almodóvar and actor Javier Bardem, had signed a petition last week in support of the rapper. Amnesty International noted that Hasel’s case was the latest in a string of trials of artists and social media personalities under the 2015 Public Security Law introduced by a conservative government.

Valtònyc, another rapper sentenced on similar grounds in 2018, fled to Belgium, where judicial authorities have rejected Spain’s extradition request. Other recent cases have involved puppeteers purveying political satire and bloggers joking about assassinations of the 1939-1975 authoritarian regime of Gen. Francisco Franco.

The Spanish government’s eleventh-hour proposal to change the criminal code under the law is being rejected by the conservative and far-right opposition.

But Tuesday’s arrest also caused a new political storm in the ruling left-wing coalition led by Socialists from their smaller partner, the far-left United We Can (Unidas Podemos) party.

“All those who boast of this “full democratic normality” and consider themselves progressive should feel ashamed,” the party tweeted Tuesday. “Will they cover their eyes? There is no progress if we refuse to acknowledge the current democratic deficits.”

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Parra reported from Madrid. AP journalists Renata Brito in Barcelona and Ciarán Giles and Aritz Parra in Madrid and contributed to this report.

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Marriott Bonvoy Mobile App Refreshed To Offer a More Inutitive and Personalized Experience in Anticipation of Increased Desire for Travel

Marriott Bonvoy, the highly awarded travel program from Marriott International, has released a redesigned, more intuitive version of its mobile app in anticipation of increased desire and demand for travel this year.

Featuring new travel shopping options based on inspiring destinations and access to more experiences to book, such as premium vacation rentals from Homes & Villas by Marriott International as well as destination tours and activities, the app will offer members even more personalized recommendations and offers to maximize their points earned when traveling and even when they are not.

As the centerpiece of the company’s mobile-first mindset, the Marriott Bonvoy app ensures guests receive the best available rate; enjoy program benefits such as exclusive member rates and accruing points for stays; and enables members to customize their experience. The app will make it easier for guests to choose a contactless option for check-in and check-out, easy access to mobile keys, and the ability to request services and amenities via chat and mobile requests.

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“The enhanced Marriott Bonvoy Mobile app is a must-have travel companion. It simplifies the travel planning process, allows for the most frictionless experience before and during your stay and gets smarter the more you interact with it,” said Leigh Zarelli, Senior Vice President Digital, Marriott International.

“Only the Marriott Bonvoy Mobile app offers travelers so much whether it is the breadth of global accommodations — from 7,500 hotels among our 30 brands to home rentals — destination experiences and relevant and customizable content for travel inspiration. Through tailored, displayed offers, members can learn how to earn hundreds of thousands of points just by booking stays, or going about their daily lives’ grocery shopping, ordering takeout or buying items for their home.”

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***For APAC and MEA: Members now can access a QR code in the app that can be scanned at select on-property restaurants to earn and redeem points for food and beverage purchases.

An ever-expanding travel program, Marriott Bonvoy connects 30 extraordinary hotel brands with 7,500 properties located in 132 countries & territories, 20,000 premium and luxury vacation home rentals, and tens of thousands of tours & activities enabling members countless ways to earn and redeem points for a perfect and personalized travel experience.

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The refreshed Marriott Bonvoy mobile app provides front and center, easy access to points earning opportunities, as well as the ability to sign-up for and earn points with the Marriott Bonvoy co-brand credit cards, providing additional ways beyond the stay for members to earn points.

The app is available in seven languages – English, Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Chinese. Four additional languages will be added later this year including Italian (April), Russian (May), Portuguese (June) and Arabic (August). The improved app experience launches first on Apple’s iOS operating system which accounts for most Marriott Bonvoy app users followed the Android operating system later this year.

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Princess of Naradhiwas University Launched Research and Development Project of Cannabis for Medical Innovation

The ceremony MOU signing of research and development project of cannabis for medical innovation between Princess of Naradhiwas University (PNU) and Smart Medical Development Co., Ltd. (SMD) was held at the council meeting room, office of the president building, Princess of Naradhiwas University, located in Kok Kian, Muang Narathiwat, Narathiwat province.

Asst.Prof. Dr. Jongrak Plasai, Chairman of PNU Council, said “this MOU signing (on 17 February 2021) aims to research cannabis as the medical herb and further develop it to be economic crops in order to increase the commercial value. The participation of SMD and Phramongkutklao College of Medicine as the network can build confidence as well. I believe that the research process will generate knowledge and integrate more work because SMD is active in academia, technology and innovation. This takes an important role in benefiting and upgrading PNU to have an opportunity to do research with international organizations.”

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Assoc.Prof. Dr. Rossukon Sangmanee, President of PNU, said “regarding the government policy on cannabis for medical and scientific use in 2019, PNU and SMD have cooperatively created a project on the basis of accuracy and law. This MOU signing will cover planting, developing and exchanging the knowledge of medical cannabis to keep up with the global situation and society, including the commercial development.”

Dr. Korathon Yaowarat, researcher of Phramongkutklao College of Medicine, said “PNU is ready for this project and has the network to drive this project. Phramongkutklao College of Medicine, Thailand Center of Excellence for Life Sciences (TCELS) and Thailand Institute of Scientific and Technological Research (TISTR), also SMD have the network in ASEAN and European Union. In the future, we will be able to develop the herbal product with the innovation, which will help enhance entrepreneurs in Narathiwat province, Start-Ups and SMEs, and support students to become new entrepreneurs to launch into commercial.”

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Mr. Keerakit Sapvisut, Managing Director of SMD, said “SMD has jointed venture with a Japanese company to start a business selling health products in Japan, and has networks in Korea and many other countries. In Thailand, SMD and our affiliates also sell soil and organic fertilizers for growing cannabis. SMD also serves as a consultant for other cannabis growers. Regarding this MOU signing with PNU, SMD sees the opportunity to plant and develop the products made of cannabis, hemp and kratom from upstream, midstream and downstream. SMD is ready to provide the support about the technology on planting, extracting, developing the products for the medical and commercial benefit, including transferring and exchanging the knowledge to university personnel and students, and promoting career creation and income generation for the localities of Narathiwat province.”

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Mr. Weon Sek Choi, Managing Director of SMD, Operational and Soil Expert, said “the aim of SMD is to use the rich history Thailand has with traditional medicine while aiming for absolute quality of what we wish to produce. With our partnerships in Japan and Korea, we are not just looking at this venture as a plan for importing and exporting but also as a viable way to bring medical tourism to Thailand in the immediate future. We are striving as well to not just cultivate cannabis and hemp but also just as important, to achieve responsible genetics with the help of the community. With the correct genetics that are suitable for the climate and region, we will be able to provide a future for growers within Thailand by providing educational opportunities to learn sustainable and organic farming practices.”

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Asst.Prof. Dr. Vichai Lamsutthi, Senior Advisor of SMD, said “we see the opportunity to drive the medical cannabis and commercial cannabis products to the global market by using the principle of ‘Marketing Leads Production’. Importantly, we will plan and produce the cannabis which has high CBD (Cannabidiol) but low THC (Tetrahydrocannabinol) so that Thailand will have our own cannabis seeds, which helps reduce imports from abroad. Then, we can develop the cannabis products to cure disease for people in Narathiwat province and other provinces at the low cost. The health cannabis products will be more accessible; and the economic value will increase.”

In this regard, Doctor Sathaporn Sincharoenkit, Deputy Doctor of Narathiwat Provincial Public Health, Police Major General Narin Busaman, Narathiwat Provincial Police Commander, Narathiwat Provincial Industrial Office, Chairman of Narathiwat Chamber of Commerce, executives of Princess of Naradhiwas University, Chief Executive of Kok Kian Subdistrict Administrative Organization, Kok Kian Subdistrict Headman, the business advisor team of SMD. and other involved people attended this ceremony.

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Critics Bewildered by Court’s Denial of Bail for Protest Leaders

Demonstrators march to call for reforms of the monarchy and abolition of lese majeste law on Rama IV Road, Bangkok, on Oct. 26, 2020.

BANGKOK — Lawyers and opponents of the royal defamation law on Tuesday questioned an appeal court’s decision to deny a bail release to four protest leaders on the grounds that their speeches about the monarchy “hurt” the feelings of Thai people.

The Court of Appeals on Monday rejected the bail requests submitted by the four suspects: Arnon Nampa, Parit “Penguin Chiwarak, Somyot Prueksakasemsuk, and Patiwat “Bank” Saraiyam. The ruling meant the four activists are likely facing a lengthy pre-trial detention under royal insult charges for their protest on Sept. 19.

While the bail rejection was somewhat expected by many, lawyers who represented the four said they were nevertheless surprised by the language of the court ruling, which appears to affirm their guilt even before the cases went before the judges.

“Their actions result in damages to the monarchy, which is widely revered and worshiped, and hurt the feelings of Thai loyal subjects without harboring any fear of the laws,” part of the statement said. “And their actions also encouraged members of the public to violate the laws.”

Read: Activists Issue Call for ‘Major Protest’ After 4 Leaders Jailed

Yaowalak Anuphan, head of Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, said the language amounted to passing a judgment on the four activists before a trial could be convened.

“It wasn’t in accordance with the laws at all. If they claim that the alleged wrongdoing is a serious crime, then people accused of murders won’t get bail either,” Yaowalak, whose organization represents the activists pro bono, said by phone.

“Secondly, by saying that they may repeat the offense, that’s a judgement made in advance,” she said. “Thirdly, the part about hurting the feeling of loyal subjects, that’s a deliberation that was beyond the case.”

Sawatree Suksri, a law lecturer at Thammasat University and a critic of the lese majeste law, also said the court document’s language is highly unusual, because it implied that the four were already found guilty.

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Parit “Penguin Chiwarak, Arnon Nampa, Somyot Prueksakasemsuk, and Patiwat “Bank” Saraiyam flash the three-finger salute on Feb. 9, 2021.

“It was only a request for a temporary release. It hasn’t reached a trial to find out whether they are guilty or not,” Sawatree said by phone. “Yet in the document, the court already mentioned the nature of the case.”

She added, “I’ve never seen anything like this.”

Human rights lawyer Sarawut Pratoomraj expressed a similar view, and added that he’s not convinced why the four activists should not be granted bail.

“Usually, in every other case, if there’s no credible evidence that the defendants may interfere with the evidence, flee the country, or threaten the witnesses, the court would grant them bail,” Sarawut said. “The activists are not some influential people.”

Both Sarawut and Yaowalak also questioned why the court ruling that denied bail to the four protest leaders did not bear the name of the presiding judge – the omission is very unusual, they said.

At least 58 people have been charged with royal defamation, or lese majeste, since police launched a crackdown on people accused of insulting the monarchy back in November. Violators face up to 15 years in jail per count.

Although the letter of the law only bans threats or insults made toward key members of the Royal Family, a large number of suspects were charged with the offense for increasingly vague reasons, like wearing a traditional Thai costume and feigning to pay respect to a group of pro-democracy activists.

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2 More COVID Deaths Reported, Anutin Insists Vaccine On the Way

A COVID-19 testing station in Pathum Thani on Feb. 12, 2021.

BANGKOK — Two more COVID-19 deaths were reported as the government faced a no-confidence vote from the opposition for its alleged mishandling of the coronavirus pandemic on Tuesday.

Speaking to reporters before the parliamentary session, health minister and deputy prime minister Anutin Charnvirakul said he was confident that the health ministry’s efforts to contain the pandemic over the past year would hold up during the debate. Anutin, who had a series of gaffe under his belt, was marked as the prime target by the opposition for its broadsides.

“How can people who aren’t doing work related to the vaccine know as much as people who are working?” Anutin said. “I’ve been working since COVID-19 first broke until now, that’s why the situation is under control.”

Anutin also said that the first lot of Sinovac vaccines would arrive on Feb. 24, after a series of delays. The opposition has often criticized the government for its management of the pandemic, which saw a second wave of infections fanning out of a shrimp market in Samut Sakhon in December.

The health minister said the crisis would have been worse without the government’s efforts to curb the virus.

“All of this is possible due to the work of medical officials, nurses, Ministry of Health officials, health volunteers, and citizens,” Anutin told reporters. “At least, I’m lucky I’m not being accused of corruption, so thank you to the opposition for that.”

Opposition politician Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit had raised doubts over the government’s efforts to secure vaccines through a palace-owned company in January. Anutin replied to Thanathorn via an open letter a few days later, stating that the government’s purchase of 61 million AstraZeneca doses and 2 million Sinovac doses “are the best choice for Thais and Thailand.”

Two additional deaths related to the coronavirus were announced on Monday, pushing the pandemic death toll to 82.

The first is a 62-year-old vegetable vendor from Ubon Ratchathani who had pre-existing conditions of diabetes, liver disease, and high blood pressure. She died on Sunday.

The other is a 78-year-old man from Samut Sakhon who caught the disease from his daughter. He died on Saturday.

The government pandemic center announced 72 new confirmed cases on Tuesday, 48 of them from active case-finding operations. No new deaths were reported.

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Netizens Poke Fun at Royai Thai Police English Exam

“How is the Royal Thai Police spelled in English?” reads this police exam prep question posted Feb. 15, 2021. Image: Police General Staff and Crime Suppression Exam Questions / Facebook

BANGKOK — A question in the police force entrance examination is making rounds on social media on Tuesday for its mind-boggling challenge: how do you spell the Royal Thai Police in English?

The question was revealed on Police General Staff and Crime Suppression Exam Questions, a Facebook page that often posts samples of questionnaires applicants to the force would face when they sit for an exam.

“How is the Royal Thai Police spelled in English?” reads the question in Thai. The multiple-choice answers are: “A. Royai Thai Police. B. Royal Thai Poilce. C. Royal Thai Police. D. Royal Tai Police.”

(Perhaps the final option was a reference to the Tai peoples, who are part of ethnic groups such as Tai Yai, Tai Lue, among others.)

Netizens spared no firepower in mocking the exam question, which had more than 4,600 reactions, 1,700 comments, and 4,000 shares as of publication time.

“This level of difficulty is just right for the amount of intelligence of people in the organization, because you don’t need to use your brain at all in this job,” wrote user Cheerlaya Rachprakhon, in a comment that was liked more than 1,600 times.

User Manasawan Nas Yo Nomklom offered another answer: “E. Hua Kwai Thai Police,” which means “buffalo head.”

“Do you guys also have exam questions for following orders, counting coins, chewing pellet food, peeing in litter boxes?” wrote user RxWasatorn Maksuwan.

“The name is Royal but your salary doesn’t come from Royal,” wrote user Sasina Toophom, referring to the taxpayer-funded force.

The harsh sentiment reflects a new low of trust in the police felt by many younger social media users, who were left appalled by police beating of a volunteer medic during Saturday’s protest. The medic was later charged with breaking the Emergency Decree’s ban on protests, even though he maintained he was not a demonstrator.

To be fair, on the same day the police exam prep page showed more complicated English quiz questions, such as conversation phrases and study sheets on using the subjunctive case.

Thailand ranks 89 out of 100 countries in the English Proficiency Index, one of the lowest in the world. English education in Thai public schools is often found to be lacking

Related stories:

Teacher Slaps Students for Not Doing English Homework, Gets Off Scot-Free

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2 More Chinese Coast Guard Vessels Enter Japan’s Waters

Kyodo file photo of the Senkaku islands.

NAHA (Kyodo) — Two more Chinese coast guard vessels entered Japan’s territorial waters near the China-claimed Senkaku Islands on Tuesday, prompting Tokyo to lodge a protest over repeated intrusions following Beijing’s enactment of a new law that allows its coast guard to use weapons against foreign ships.

The two vessels intruded into the waters near the group of uninhabited islets in the East China Sea at around 4:15 a.m., joining two other Chinese coast guard boats that had entered the waters Monday, according to the Japan Coast Guard.

Continue reading the story here

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Myanmar Security Forces Intensify Crackdown on Protesters

A man is held by police during a crackdown on anti-coup protesters holding a rally in front of the Myanmar Economic Bank in Mandalay, Myanmar on Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. (AP Photo)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Security forces in Myanmar pointed guns toward anti-coup protesters and attacked them with sticks Monday, seeking to quell the large-scale demonstrations calling for the military junta that seized power this month to reinstate the elected government.

More than 1,000 protesters rallied in front of the Myanmar Economic Bank in Mandalay, the country’s second-largest city, when at least 10 trucks full of soldiers and police arrived and immediately started firing slingshots toward the protesters, according to a photographer who witnessed the events.

The soldiers and police then attacked the protesters with sticks, and police could be seen aiming long guns into the air amid sounds that resembled gunfire. Local media reported that rubber bullets were fired into the crowd and that a few people were injured. Police also were seen pointing guns toward protesters.

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A soldiers holds a long firearm during a crackdown on anti-coup protesters holding a rally in front of the Myanmar Economic Bank in Mandalay, Myanmar on Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. (AP Photo)

In the capital, Naypyitaw, protesters gathered outside a police station, demanding the release of a group of high school students who were detained while joining anti-coup activities.

One who managed to escape told reporters that the students — thought to range in age from 13 to 16 — were demonstrating peacefully when a line of riot police suddenly arrived and began arresting them. It wasn’t clear exactly how many students were rounded up, but estimates put the figure at between 20 and 40.

Earlier Monday, Myanmar’s military leaders extended their detention of deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi, whose remand was set to expire and whose freedom is a key demand of the crowds of people protesting the Feb. 1 coup.

Suu Kyi will now be remanded until Feb. 17, when she will likely appear in court by videoconference, according to Khin Maung Zaw, a lawyer asked by Suu Kyi’s party to represent her. The Nobel laureate remains under house arrest on a minor charge of possessing unregistered imported walkie-talkies.

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Protesters hold signs that read “#Save Myanmar” next to soldiers deployed outside the Central Bank of Myanmar building in Yangon, Myanmar on Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. (AP Photo)

Suu Kyi’s extended detention is likely to further inflame tensions between the military and the protesters who have taken to the streets of cities across the Southeast Asian nation seeking the return of the government they elected.

Protesters gathered across Myanmar on Monday, following a night in which authorities cut the country’s internet access and increased the security presence in major cities in a bid to curtail demonstrations.

Thousands of engineers marched in the streets of Mandalay, chanting and holding signs that read, “Free our leader,” “Who stands with justice?” and “Stop arresting people illegally at midnight.”

In Yangon, the country’s most populous city, fewer protesters gathered amid the internet loss and reports of military vehicles on the streets. Nevertheless, more than 1,000 anti-coup demonstrators were outside the Central Bank of Myanmar building, where there were also military trucks full of soldiers, riot police, water cannon trucks and armored personnel carriers.

Demonstrators carried placards that read “#SupportCDM #SaveMyanmar.” CDM refers to the civil disobedience movement that has seen doctors, engineers and others in Myanmar refuse to work until the military releases elected political leaders and returns the country to civilian rule.

Some protesters posed for photographs in front of military vehicles while holding red signs that read “Join in CDM.”

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An anti-coup protester dressed in a Batman costume holds a sign that reads: “End the dictatorship in Myanmar” while standing on a vehicle parked next to an armored personnel carrier deployed outside the Central Bank of Myanmar building in Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. (AP Photo)

When the military seized power, it detained Suu Kyi and members of her government and prevented recently elected lawmakers from opening a new session of Parliament. The junta, led by Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, said it stepped in because the government failed to properly investigate allegations of fraud in last year’s election, which Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party won in a landslide. The state election commission refuted that contention, saying there is no evidence to support it.

The military justified its move by citing a clause in the 2008 constitution, implemented during military rule, that says in cases of national emergency, the government’s executive, legislative and judicial powers can be handed to the military commander-in-chief.

It is just one of many parts of the charter that ensured the military could maintain ultimate control over the country it ruled for 50 years following a 1962 coup. The military is allowed to appoint its members to 25% of seats in Parliament and it controls several key ministries involved in security and defense.

An order on Sunday that appeared to be from the Ministry of Transport and Communications told mobile phone service providers to shut down internet connections from 1 a.m. to 9 a.m. Monday. It circulated widely on social media, as did a notice said to be from service provider Oredoo Myanmar containing the same details.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres reaffirmed “the unwavering support of the United Nations to the people of Myanmar in their pursuit of democracy, peace, human rights and the rule of law” and called on the military to allow U.N. special envoy Christine Schraner Burgener to visit Myanmar “to assess the situation firsthand,” U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said.

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A policeman aims a slingshot towards an unknown target during a crackdown on anti-coup protesters holding a rally in front of the Myanmar Economic Bank in Mandalay, Myanmar on Monday, Feb. 15, 2021. (AP Photo)

Schraner Burgener spoke to Myanmar’s Deputy Commander-in-Chief, Soe Win, on Monday and conveyed Guterres’ growing concern at the military’s increasing use of force and arrests of political leaders, government officials and others, Haq said.

The U.N. envoy also reiterated Guterres’ call to ensure the right to peaceful assembly and that demonstrators are not subjected to reprisals, Haq said.

“She has conveyed to the Myanmar military that the world is watching closely, and any form of heavy-handed response is likely to have severe consequences,” Haq said.

On Sunday, ambassadors from the United States and Canada and 12 European nations called on Myanmar’s security forces to refrain from violence against those “protesting the overthrow of their legitimate government.”

“We support the people of Myanmar in their quest for democracy, freedom, peace, and prosperity,” they said in a joint statement.

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WHO Authorizes AstraZeneca’s COVID Vaccine for Emergency Use

In this file photo dated Saturday, Jan. 30, 2021, a Moroccan nurse administers the Oxford AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to a health worker, at Cheikh Khalifa Hospital in Casablanca, Morocco. (AP Photo/Abdeljalil Bounhar)

TORONTO (AP) — The World Health Organization has granted an emergency authorization to AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine, a move that should allow the U.N. agency’s partners to ship millions of doses to countries as part of a U.N.-backed program to tame the pandemic.

In a statement Monday, the WHO said it was clearing the AstraZeneca vaccines made by the Serum Institute of India and South Korea’s AstraZeneca-SKBio.

The WHO’s green light for the AstraZeneca vaccine is only the second one the U.N. health agency has issued after authorizing the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in December. Monday’s announcement should trigger the delivery of hundreds of millions of doses to countries that have signed up for the U.N.-backed COVAX effort, which aims to deliver vaccines to the world’s most vulnerable people.

“Countries with no access to vaccines to date will finally be able to start vaccinating their health workers and populations at risk,” said Dr. Mariângela Simão, the WHO’s Assistant-Director General for Access to Medicines and Health Products.

The coronavirus has infected more than 109 million people and killed at least 2.4 million of them. But many countries have not yet started vaccination programs and even rich nations are facing shortages of vaccine doses as manufacturers struggle to ramp up production.

The AstraZeneca vaccine has already been authorized in more than 50 countries, including Britain, India, Argentina and Mexico. It is cheaper and easier to handle than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which needs deep-cold storage that is not widespread in many developing nations. Both vaccines require two shots per person, given weeks apart.

Last week, WHO vaccine experts recommended the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine for people over age 18, including in countries that have detected variants of COVID-19.

But that was contrary to the recommendation from the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which said countries that had identified a virus variant first seen in South Africa should be “cautious” in their use of the AstraZeneca vaccine, suggesting that other shots be prioritized instead.

The AstraZeneca vaccine forms the bulk of COVAX’s stockpile and concerns were recently raised after an early study suggested it might not prevent mild and moderate disease caused by the variant first seen South Africa. Last week, South Africa scaled back its planned rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine, opting instead to use an unlicensed shot from Johnson & Johnson for its health care workers.

COVAX has already missed its own goal of beginning coronavirus vaccinations in poor countries at the same time that shots were rolled out in rich countries. Numerous developing countries have rushed in recent weeks to sign their own private deals to buy vaccines, unwilling to wait for COVAX.

WHO and its partners, including the vaccines alliance GAVI, have not said which countries will receive the first doses from COVAX. But an initial plan showed a handful of rich countries that have signed multiple private vaccine deals, including Canada, South Korea and New Zealand, are also scheduled to receive early doses from COVAX.

Some public health experts called that “very problematic” and attributed it to COVAX’s flawed design, which allowed donor countries to double dip by purchasing vaccines from the program while also signing their own commercial deals.

“Canada has ordered enough doses to supply their population about five times over and now they’re looking to accept their share of doses from COVAX, which would otherwise be given to poor nations,” said Anna Marriott, health policy lead for Oxfam International.

WHO chief scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan has said rich countries that have signed up to receive vaccines from COVAX won’t have their requests denied.

“The COVAX facility is not going to penalize countries,” she said in early February.

After pledging more than $400 million to COVAX last year, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said it was always his country’s intention to get vaccines through COVAX.

Marriott said rich countries planning to take doses from COVAX should reconsider their intentions, given their earlier calls of support for the effort’s goal of equal access to vaccines for all the world’s nations, rich or poor.

“It seems quite hypocritical,” she said. “Rich countries with their own supplies should make the right call and not take vaccines from countries who are really in a dire situation.”

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This story corrects that doses will be shipped by the WHO’s partners, not AstraZeneca’s partners.

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