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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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Police Defend Firing Live Rounds to Warn Protesters

Screenshots of police officers holding a gun during a commotion at Nang Loeng Police Station on Feb. 13, 2021. Photo: @Fthepol & @lovepuy42 / Twitter

BANGKOK — The top commander of Bangkok police force said a police officer was behaving properly when he shot live rounds over the weekend in a bid to fend off a crowd of pro-democracy protesters.

The policeman, who remains unidentified as of Monday, pulled out his handgun and fired a series of shots into the air at Nang Loeng Police Station on Saturday night. Metro police commander Phukphong Phongpetra said on Monday the officer had no choice but to defend himself and the precinct.

“There’s a disturbance in front of the police station so police officers had to shoot into the air to stop it,” Lt. Phukphong said by phone.

But his deputy, Piya Tawichai, said an investigation was launched into the policeman’s action to see whether he reacted proportionally.

“The Metropolitan Police Bureau has ordered an investigation,” Maj. Gen. Piya told reporters. “We will let you know the result. But let me affirm that police have regulations when it comes to performing their duties. Any violators will be punished.”

At the time of the shooting, Nang Loeng Police Station was under siege from dozens of protesters who demanded answers over the news that shots were fired on two demonstrators on Ratchadamnoen Avenue and the gunman was taken inside the station.

The confrontation was tense, and at one point the protesters appeared to be on the verge of storming the police station.

In a video widely shared on social media, a policeman could be seen drawing his handgun and firing it into the night sky, causing protesters to scramble for cover and shout at the police in fury.

“Back off, or else we will shoot,” a voice on the police’s speakerphone could be heard saying.

It was the first time live ammunition was used during a protest since the anti-government rallies broke out in July. Several officers from a crowd control unit were armed with rifles during the crackdown on protesters earlier on Saturday night, but police said the weapons were not actually used.

Two Protesters Shot

Investigators have yet to identify the assailants who fired the shots at the two protesters on Saturday night; one was shot in front of a McDonald’s branch in front of Democracy Monument, another was shot while chasing after the gunman at Phan Fa Bridge.

The two were identified as vocational students who belonged to one of security details run by the protesters.

“They are now in stable condition,” Jean, an activist who represents the “Vocational Students for Democracy” group, said by phone. “Two shootouts took place that night and the assailants remain at large.”

Police later arrived at the scene and escorted a person said to be the shooter out of the convenience store, where he was taking shelter, to the nearby Nang Loeng Police Station. Protesters followed him there and the commotion ensued.

But metro police commander Phukphong said Monday the suspect turned out to be unrelated to the shooting.

“He’s not the shooter,” Lt. Gen. Phukphong said Sunday. “Eyewitness testimonies and CCTV footage found that he was at the convenience store to buy some food. We are trying to identify the real assailants.”

Nang Leong police superintendent Nimit Nuponthong said police are looking into the shootouts, though he refused to give more details about the case.

“We’re conducting investigations,” Col. Nimit said by phone before he hung up.

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Anutin: First Lot of Sinovac Vaccines to Arrive Feb. 24

Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul speaks to reporters on Feb. 15, 2021.

BANGKOK — Health minister Anutin Charnvirakul on Monday announced the first shipment of Chinese-made COVID-19 vaccines will arrive in Thailand next week.

Anutin said 200,000 doses of vaccines developed by Sinovac will leave the manufacturing plant in China on Saturday and they will be flown into Thailand within Feb. 24 – though he added an ominous warning that the delivery could be delayed if there is any unforeseen complication.

“If nothing goes wrong, they will be sent to Thailand by Feb. 24,” Anutin said. 

Read: Firm Says Vaccine Production Has Started, But Won’t Let Media See It

The minister said the shots could be administered within this month as soon as they pass inspection from the Department of Medical Services – a big if, since the vaccine has yet to be approved by the Food and Drug Administration, who has the final say over the matter.

But Anutin claimed the drug regulator has already confirmed to him that they got all the necessary documents.

“There’s no delay,” Anutin said. “Everything goes according to plan. We are trying to expedite it.”

Pledges about the country’s vaccination program are often made by health officials only to be broken days later.

The government previously said public registration for the vaccine would open within January, and the first doses would be given out to frontline health workers on Feb. 14. Neither came to pass. Anutin blamed supply disputes in Europe for the delays.

Thailand’s vaccine strategy relies mostly on AstraZeneca vaccines being produced domestically by Siam Bioscience, though the government is also importing vaccines from abroad to fill the gap before locally made vaccines could be rolled out.

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Who Wins? People Without Smartphone Forced to Queue up for ‘WeWin’ Subsidy

In Prachuap Khiri Khan, huge crowds of people lined up at the Krung Thai bank's Bang Saphan branch to apply for government subsidy funds, with queues spilling out onto the street. on Feb. 15, 2021.

UBON RATCHATHANI — Residents without smartphones, most of them elderly people living in rural areas, are queuing up in droves Monday to register for a government shopping subsidy worth 7,000 baht.

The handout, called Rao Chana or “We Win,” became available for smartphone users starting Jan. 29, but an offline registration for the program only opened nationwide on Monday. The result is massive queues at the branches of Krung Thai Bank – the sole bank chosen by the government for its subsidy – across the country throughout the day.

“I’m worried that I won’t get the money,” Pa Kanarong, 79, said. Since she didn’t own any smartphone, the elderly woman had to start lining up at Ubon Ratchathani city’s Krung Thai bank branch early in the morning.

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Applicants queue up at the Krung Thai branch on Chayangkoon Road in Ubon Ratchathani.

Many residents spent hours in the line only to be told to go home, since the bank can only process up to 100 queues per day. Krung Thai Bank also opened extra registration points in some provinces in a bid to reduce the crowd, like City Halls, temples, and markets – but that didn’t seem to solve the problem of long queues.

“So many people came, and there was no organization. Everyone was rushing to get inside,” Pha Kenaphumi, 78, said in front of a branch of Krung Thai in Phayao province.

At Bang Bua Tong branch in Nonthaburi, an elderly woman named Noi was in tears because she said bank tellers verbally abused her. Noi said she queued up since 7am, but failed to register because the bank would only accept 100 applicants today.

“The officials were as ferocious as dogs. I’m a person, not a rock. My ears hear, my eyes see. Why can’t they just speak nicely?” she told reporters. “How would you feel, if your parents were treated like this?”


The Chaiyaphum city branch of Krung Thai Branch was crowded with elderly rural residents from various villages all over the province.

At one branch in Phetchabun province, the limit per day was as low as 60, prompting many in the queues to go home empty handed. Boonrawd Potibow, 71, said he joined the long line in front of the bank at around 7am.

“I can’t go to other branches, because I don’t have a car,” Boonrawd said. “Riding a sam lor [a three-wheeled tuk-tuk] is too expensive. I don’t have money to lose, and I’m afraid that going elsewhere will have queues full there as well.”

The man said he only receives the monthly stipend from the government for the retirees, and only owns an old phone that can only make and receive calls.

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Samruay, 70, shows the 3G phone she uses while queuing at the Provincial Community Hall in Pak Nam district in Samut Prakan, just to the south of Bangkok.

“If I get this money, then I can stock up on food,” he said.

Elderly residents in Korat said they had come as early as 5am, and even 3am. Many said they have smartphones, but were unable to successfully register online. Bank employees had to set up workstations in tents outside of the bank to accommodate them. Police officers were deployed to ease the flow of crowds and traffic at the Krung Thai branch in Phimai district.

Huge crowds of people also spilled onto the streets while they were queuing up at the Krung Thai branch’s Bang Saphan branch in Prachuap Khiri Khan.

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The queue for “We Win” registration at a Krung Thai Bank branch in Phetchabun.

Extension Teased

The first round of the “We Win” shopping handout was open to smartphone users from Jan. 29 to Feb. 12. Nearly 11 million people signed up for it. Registration for those without internet access or smartphones runs from Feb. 15 to Feb. 25.

Applicants must present a Thai ID card that has a microchip on it; those without one must register for a new card at the local district office first.

Successful applicants would receive 4,000 baht on March 5, then 1,000 baht for the next three Fridays, or March 12, 19, and 26.

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A man in the queue at the Ang Thong city bank branch of Krung Thai Bank gestures to a police officer.

The money cannot be withdrawn as cash, but has to be used as credits from their ID cards until May 31 at shops that participate in the shopping subsidy scheme and Thong Fah government stores, which sells food and household goods at low prices.

Although the online phase of the registration ran mostly smoothly, the government has clearly underestimated the number of people who have no smart phones.

Finance minister Arkhom Termpittayapaisith said the government would consider expanding the registration to other bank branches as well as extending the deadline, due to the huge queues seen today.

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Citizens crowd the entrance to Phayao City Hall, where Krung Thai Bank opens a registration for the “We Win” program on Feb. 15, 2021.

“We do not know how many more this group of people without smartphones is,” Arkhom told reporters.

In response to the criticism, PM Prayut Chan-o-cha said he would extend the registration deadline if it’s necessary.

Krung Thai Bank also urged people without internet access to sign up for the handout on other days instead of rushing to the bank in large numbers. Ironically enough, the statement was posted on the bank’s Facebook account.

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Citizens crowd the entrance to Phayao City Hall, where Krung Thai Bank opens a registration for the “We Win” program on Feb. 15, 2021.

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Beaten Medic Volunteer Charged With Breaking Emergency Decree

Volunteer medic Purapon Wongchiak, 19, lies on the ground after he was beaten by police near Sanam Luang on Feb. 13, 2021. Photo: Reuters
Volunteer medic Purapon Wongchiak, 19, lies on the ground after he was beaten by police near Sanam Luang on Feb. 13, 2021. Photo: Reuters

BANGKOK — A volunteer health worker who was beaten and detained by riot police on Saturday during clashes with anti-government protesters was charged with breaching the coronavirus emergency rule, his organization said Monday.

The Doctor and Nurse Association, which provides first aid services at protest sites, said Purapon Wongchiak suffered bruises and muscle aches after policemen kicked him off his motorcycle and repeatedly struck him with truncheons.

The group also said Purapon, 19, has yet to receive any medical attention while he is being held at a police base northeast of Bangkok.

“Purapon is due to appear in court via a video link today,” said one of the group’s leaders called Toon, who asked not to be identified by full name for fear of repercussion.

“His lawyer told me that he is expected to be released on bail this afternoon. He hasn’t seen any doctors and all he could do is to treat himself with what he got in his first aid kit.”

Purapon is one of the 11 people who were arrested during a crackdown on demonstrators near the Grand Palace on Saturday. If found guilty, Purapon faces up to two years in prison.

Police said eight of them faced six charges, which include breaking the Emergency Decree’s ban on mass gatherings and resisting arrests. Three other people were released after they were found to be “unrelated to the protest,” police said.

Photos and videos of Purapon being struck by police drew widespread condemnation on social media, but metro police commander Phukphong Phongpetra told reporters that Purapon was one of the demonstrators who incited violence earlier on Saturday night.

“We found that he is not a professional doctor or nurse,” Lt. Gen. Phukphong said on Sunday. “He was among the group that caused public disturbance.”

But Toon, the leader of the health volunteer group, said police were just trying to save their face for mistaking Purapon as a demonstrator. She also said that investigators even attempted to negotiate with Purapon to drop his lawsuit against the police who assaulted him, in exchange for being released without any charges.

“He is a trained volunteer who clearly identified himself,” Toon said. “The first group of riot police let him go, but then another group came and pushed him off the motorcycle. He went unconscious for a while.”

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A pro-democracy protester waves the national flag of Germany during a rally in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021.

She added, “[Purapong] was shocked by police actions because he had helped them in the past.”

Volunteer medics and rescue workers are often deployed to provide first aid assistance to protesters and security officers alike during demonstrations in the past months.

The Medical Council of Thailand issued a statement Monday asking every party to protect healthcare workers from harm at protest sites – though it refused to officially recognize volunteer first responders.

“We are not involved with politics. If one wants to become a volunteer healthcare provider, they must treat everyone equally,” Ittaporn Kanacharoen, sec-gen of the medical council, said at a news conference.

“We may not be able to say whether the cross symbol was forged or not, but we want them to truly be able to take care of citizen’s health,” he went on. “If there is a registration, it would build assurances for the people.”

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Pro-democracy protesters gesture to riot police during a rally in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021.

Saturday’s rally was originally held at the Democracy Monument to demand the release of four protest leaders who are being held at a remand prison on royal defamation charges.

Demonstrators then attempted to march to the City Pillar Shrine to pray for the spirits to bless the pro-democracy movement. They were met with riot police who set up barricades in front of the Supreme Court and several rounds of skirmish broke out.

Protest leaders later negotiated with the police, and they were eventually allowed to send representatives to perform a ritual in front of the shrine. Upon completing the ritual, protest leaders declared the end of the protest and most of the protesters began to disperse.

However, some hardline demonstrators refused to leave and began throwing rocks and water bottles at police officers. Police issued an ultimatum for the protesters to leave and began to make arrests of demonstrators seen in the area.

A series of loud bangs were also heard, but Bangkok police chief denied reports of tear gas and rubber bullets being used. Bangkok’s emergency medical service center said a total of 25 people were injured. Five of them were civilians, the rest police officers.

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Red paint thrown by pro-democracy protesters is splattered on the shields of riot police standing guard outside the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021.
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Pro-democracy protester wrote messages on police barricades during a rally in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021.
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A riot police officer runs with a rifle during a crackdown in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Feb. 13, 2021.

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Feb! March! March! Luk Thung Earworm About Calendar Vexes Netizens

Left, Ja R Siam sings “Twelve” in her YouTube video. Right, TikTok user @Papaparty_feelgood lipsyncs the song on TikTok.

BANGKOK — An earworm about the Thai months is wiggling its way across social media on Monday. 

“Twelve” (Sibsong or สิบสอง), a song by luk thung singer Nongpanee “Ja R Siam” Mahadthai, first made its breakout on TikTok, and now everyone from government officials to students are posting their own covers. 

“January, February, March, March, April,” the song goes, doubling on the month of March for some reason. “May, June, July. August, September, October, November. When it’s December, halaywangka, it’s January again.”

Halaywangka is a phrase said towards the beginning of a likay theater performance.  

Ja’s version of the song is actually a cover of the song “Indian Dance” by Porntipa Buranakijbamrung, a singer in the ‘50s, although the exact date of the song cannot be verified. 

Ja, 29, told Khaosod in an interview that she stumbled on “Twelve” while she was finding songs to cover on her YouTube channel and stay relevant during the pandemic shutdowns. 

“For singers, it doesn’t look like we will get work soon. My sister, who is my manager, sent it into the Line group and told me to listen to this song,” Ja said. “But part with the months really caught my attention, so I told the musicians to remake the music for this part only.”

Ja’s “Twelve” song, which was posted on Feb. 3 and as of press time has more than 3 million views.

As of Monday, there are more than 166,000 videos on the platform that use audio from the song. 

Before we let you see some of those covers, here’s a fun fact: Thailand began to adopt the solar calendar and its months in 1889. The names of the month refer to each of the 12 zodiac signs. 

Basement Karaoke’s page on Friday summarized the sentiment of being stuck with the months in one’s head with the Sad Pablo Escobar meme. 

 

@papaparty_feelgoodโสดมากี่เดือนละ ขอลองนับแปบ55555555555555555555555 ##สิบสอง ##นักพากย์ฟีลกู้ด♬ สิบสอง – จ๊ะ

@Papaparty_feelgood’s TikTok, which has 332,000 likes, is captioned, “When someone asked me how long I’ve been single.”

@maintwทั้งวันอ่ะ555555♬ สิบสอง – จ๊ะ


“Me all day at school.”

@noonim_07เลิกเรียนแล้ว คุณครูทำสื่อการสอนกันเร็วววว เทคนิคการสอนครูนิ่ม ครูบี ครูส้ม จ้าาา ##ครูโยตากล้อง ##มกรากุมพามีนามีษา ##ครูไทยเป็นคนตลก ##กดหัวใจให้หน่อย♬ สิบสอง – จ๊ะ

@healthmoph##ใส่แมสก์ ##เว้นระยะห่าง ##ล้างมือ วนไปจ้าาา 🛡🦠 🛡##covid19 ##โควิด ##สิบสอง ##กระทรวงสาธารณสุข ##การ์ดอย่าตก♬ สิบสอง – จ๊ะ

Even the Ministry of Health’s official TikTok (yes, they have one), covered the song with a caption, “When someone asks you how much longer there will be COVID-19.”

@wuunix11_เทคมีแบคทูไชน่าสักทีกูเหนื่อย!!!!!!! กูอยากเรียนปกติ!!!!!♬ สิบสอง – จ๊ะ

@Wuunix11_ applied the song to her COVID situation – being unable to return to China to continue her studies. Many students who had been studying overseas have had to return to Thailand for online learning instead.

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Say ‘Da’ to This Snug Russia-Themed Cafe in Sathorn

BANGKOK — Belka (meaning “squirrel” in Russian), is a cozy cafe in the city’s commercial center that brings out the милый (sweet, pleasant) in Russian culture through cute cakes.

Soft Tchaikovsky plays over the speakers as diners pour tea to go with slices of medovik, under framed maps and paintings of the world’s largest country. Despite its size and influence, there’s barely any establishment in Bangkok that pays homage to Russia, the cafe owner noted.

“There’s already so many Japanese and Korean-themed cafes,” owner Ranistha Chartisathian said. “Russia has a huge, diverse culture and many tourist attractions. Thais may have the perception that it’s a scary, unfriendly country. But Russians all love Thailand.”

She continued, “So I want Thais to get to know Russia. It’s not ruthless like you see in the movies.”

Ranistha, 30, opened the cafe on the Si Wiang Road in Sathorn neighborhood back in August, after her work as a tour guide for Thais going to Russia dried up due to the coronavirus pandemic.

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Medovik (90 baht).

Before the pandemic broke out, Ranistha led Thai tour groups across Russia and countries in the former Soviet Union, like Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and Georgia. The guide, who graduated from a university in Moscow, also explained Russian history and taking tourists to photo hotspots.

“I took Thais around to restaurants and cafes and arranged tour group’s menus, so I know what kind of Russian things appeal to Thais,” she said. “I looked for the cute parts of Russian culture and put it into this cafe.”

The star of Belka is by far the Medovik (90 baht), a honey cake made with delicate layers and sandwiched with sour cream, with a deep, rich honey taste. It was the cake we finished first with almost inhuman speed.

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Napoleon Cake (90 baht).

The Napoleon Cake (90 baht) is one adaptation by Ranistha. In Russia, she explained, Napoleon cakes can be served in large squares. She made the portion at her shop smaller, and added sour strawberry sauce to make sure it’s not too lian, or overly creamy or buttery-tasting, as well as a strawberry garnish to improve its IG-worthy appearances.

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Pavlova (120 baht).

The Strawberry Pavlova (120 baht) is a delightfully light, creamy meringue cloud that’s a pleasure to crack with a spoon, while the Eskimo Cake (120 baht) is a slightly salty cookie-base cream tart topped with chocolate.

Her souvenirs from travelling, such as matryoshkas, paintings, and books about Russia are part of the cafe’s decor, for customers to peruse. Did we have a little bit too much fun with the matryoshkas of Russia’s past political leaders? Yes.

“Russia and Thailand have a long relationship; our countries are brother and sister,” Ranistha said.

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The medovik cake next to books about Russia.

The low prices are due to the cafe’s proximity to the Bangkok Christian College School. Ranistha chose a squirrel for the name and mascot since it was one of the cuter-sounding animals in Russian, and one can actually see squirrels scrambling around the trees in the area.

Coffees, juices, and soda drinks run from 50 baht to 80 baht. We recommend the selection of hot teas (60 baht per pot), especially the playful, fruity White Tea with Pineapple.

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Eskimo Cake (120 baht).

Those hankering for something savory may enjoy the pork stroganoff (99 baht) – changed from beef to appeal to more Thais, or the non-Russian rice with baked chicken (79 baht).

The cosy cafe can sit about a maximum of 18. It’s usually populated in after-school hours by students and their parents. One memorable group of regulars is a half-Thai, half-Russian student and their Russian dad.

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Ranistha Chartisathian holds some Napoleon Cakes.

Belka is located on Si Wiang Road, connected to Sathorn Nuea Road by Pramuan Road. It’s a walking distance from BTS Surasak. The cafe is open from 10am to 7pm every day except Friday, but closes at 4pm on Sundays. This review is unsponsored and is based on a hosted visit.

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Impeachment Isn’t the Final Word on Capitol Riot for Trump

In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo President Donald Trump speaks during a rally protesting the electoral college certification of Joe Biden as President in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump’s acquittal at his second impeachment trial may not be the final word on whether he’s to blame for the deadly Capitol riot. The next step for the former president could be the courts.

Now a private citizen, Trump is stripped of his protection from legal liability that the presidency gave him. That change in status is something that even Republicans who voted on Saturday to acquit of inciting the Jan. 6 attack are stressing as they urge Americans to move on from impeachment.

“President Trump is still liable for everything he did while he was in office, as an ordinary citizen, unless the statute of limitations has run,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said after that vote. He insisted that the courts were a more appropriate venue to hold Trump accountable than a Senate trial.

“He didn’t get away with anything yet,” McConnell said. “Yet.”

The insurrection at the Capitol, in which five people died, is just one of the legal cases shadowing Trump in the months after he was voted out of office. He also faces legal exposure in Georgia over an alleged pressure campaign on state election officials, and in Manhattan over hush-money payments and business deals.

But Trump’s culpability under the law for inciting the riot is by no means clear-cut. The standard is high under court decisions reaching back 50 years. Trump could also be sued by victims, though he has some constitutional protections, including if he acted while carrying out the duties of president. Those cases would come down to his intent.

Legal scholars say a proper criminal investigation takes time, and there are at least five years on the statute of limitations to bring a federal case. New evidence is emerging every day.

“They’re way too early in their investigation to know,” said Laurie Levenson, a law professor at Loyola Law School and former federal prosecutor. “The have arrested 200 people, they’re pursuing hundreds more, all of those people could be potential witnesses because some have said ‘Trump made me do it’.”

What’s not known, she said, is what Trump was doing during the time of the riot, and that could be the key. Impeachment didn’t produce many answers. But federal investigators in a criminal inquiry have much more power to compel evidence through grand jury subpoenas.

“It’s not an easy case, but that’s only because what we know now, and that can change,” Levenson said.

The legal issue is whether Trump or any of the speakers at the rally near the White House that preceded the assault on the Capitol incited violence and whether they knew their words would have that effect. That’s the standard the Supreme Court laid out in its 1969 decision in Brandenburg v. Ohio, which overturned the conviction of a Ku Klux Klan leader.

Trump urged the crowd on Jan. 6 to march on the Capitol, where Congress was meeting to affirm Joe Biden’s presidential election, Trump even promised to go with his supporters, though he didn’t in the end. “You’ll never take our country back with weakness,” Trump said.

He also had spent weeks spinning up supporters over his increasingly combative language and false election claims urging them to “stop the steal.”

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U.S. Capitol Police with guns drawn stand near a barricaded door as protesters try to break into the House Chamber at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Trump’s impeachment lawyers said he didn’t do anything illegal. Trump, in a statement after the acquittal, did not admit to any wrongdoing.

Federal prosecutors have said they are looking at all angles of the assault on the Capitol and whether the violence had been incited. The attorney general for the District of Columbia, Karl Racine, has said that district prosecutors are considering whether to charge Trump under local law that criminalizes statements that motivate people to violence.

“Let it be known that the office of attorney general has a potential charge that it may utilize,” Racine told MSNBC last month. The charge would be a misdemeanor with a maximum sentence of six months in jail.

Trump’s top White House lawyer repeatedly warned Trump on Jan. 6 that he could be held liable. That message was delivered in part to prompt Trump to condemn the violence that was carried out in his name and acknowledge that he would leave office Jan. 20, when Biden was inaugurated. He did depart the White House that day.

Since then, many of those charged in the riots say they were acting directly on Trump’s orders. Some offered to testify. A phone call between Trump and House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy emerged during the impeachment trial in which McCarthy, as rioters stormed the Capitol, begged Trump to call off the mob. Trump replied: “Well, Kevin, I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are.”

The McCarthy call is significant because it could point to Trump’s intent, state of mind and knowledge of the rioters’ actions.

Court cases that try to prove incitement often bump up against the First Amendment. In recent years, federal judges have taken a hard line against the anti-riot law. The federal appeals court in Virginia narrowed the Anti-Riot Act, with a maximum prison term of five years, because it swept up constitutionally protected speech. The court found invalid parts of the law that encompassed speech tending to “encourage” or “promote” a riot, as well as speech “urging” others to riot or involving mere advocacy of violence.

The same court upheld the convictions of two members of a white supremacist group who admitted they punched and kicked counter-demonstrators during the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

It’s possible federal prosecutors will decide not to bring charges, and if Trump were indicted in one of the many other separate investigations, federal prosecutors could decide justice would be done elsewhere.

Atlanta prosecutors have recently opened a criminal investigation into Trump’s attempts to overturn his election loss in Georgia, including a Jan. 2 phone call in which he urged that state’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, to “find” enough votes to reverse Biden’s narrow victory.

And Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., is in the midst of an 18-month criminal grand jury investigation focusing in part on hush-money payments paid to women on Trump’s behalf, and whether Trump or his businesses manipulated the value of assets — inflating them in some cases and minimizing them in others — to gain favorable loan terms and tax benefits.

GOP Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who voted to acquit along with McConnell and 41 other Republicans, argued that because Trump is no longer in office, impeachment is not the right way to hold him to account.

“The ultimate accountability is through our criminal justice system where political passions are checked and due process is constitutionally mandated. No president is above the law or immune from criminal prosecution, and that includes former President Trump.”

___

Associated Press writers Jim Mustian and Michael R. Sisak in New York and Mark Sherman contributed to this report.

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U.S. Expresses ‘Deep Concerns’ Over WHO Probe Into Virus Origin

Members of a World Health Organization team leave their hotel for the airport at the end of their mission to investigate the origins of the coronavirus pandemic in Wuhan, China, on Feb. 10, 2021. (Kyodo)

TOKYO (Kyodo) — National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said Saturday the United States has “deep concerns” about the way the early findings were communicated following the World Health Organization’s investigation into the origins of the coronavirus in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.

“It is imperative that this report be independent, with expert findings free from intervention or alteration by the Chinese government,” Sullivan said in a statement, calling for China to “make available” the data it holds from the earliest days of the outbreak.

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Myanmar Rattled by Army Movements, Apparent Internet Cutoff

Anti-coup protesters hold posters with an image of deposed Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi as they gather outside the U.N. Information Office in Yangon, Myanmar, Sunday, Feb. 14, 2021. (AP Photo)

YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Sightings of armored personnel carriers in Myanmar’s biggest city and an internet shutdown raised political tensions late Sunday, after vast numbers of people around the country flouted orders against demonstrations to protest the military’s seizure of power.

Public concern has already been heightened for the past few nights by what many charge is the military’s manipulation of criminals released from prison to carry out nighttime violence and stir up panic.

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.” They condemned the arrests of political leaders and activists as well as the military’s interference with communications.

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In this image made from video by the Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB), two armored personnel carriers were seen traversing on a road in Yangon, Myanmar, Sunday, Feb. 14, 2021. (DVB via AP)

“We support the people of Myanmar in their quest for democracy, freedom, peace, and prosperity,” they said in a joint statement issued late Sunday night. “The world is watching.”

The military seized power on Feb. 1, detaining the country’s elected leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, and members of her government and preventing recently elected lawmakers from opening a new session of Parliament.

The junta, led by Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, said it was forced to step 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 found no evidence to support the allegations.

There was no official word about why armored personnel carriers traversed the streets of Yangon in broad daylight Sunday, making their way through busy traffic. As night fell, there were videos and other reports on social media of the movement of trucks packed with soldiers, and in the central city of Mandalay as well.

An order that appears 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. Several users contacted through other means confirmed that access though Myanmar’s broadband and mobile services were cut as scheduled.

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Mandalay University graduates hold posters that say “Stop arresting people illegally at midnight” “Save Myanmar” during an anti-coup protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, Sunday, Feb. 14, 2021. (AP Photo)

Monday holds the prospect of two flashpoints for the political standoff.

Suu Kyi remains under house arrest, but a remand order holding her on a minor charge of possessing unregistered imported walkie-talkies expires Monday and a court in the capital, Naypyitaw, is supposed to take action on her case. Her freedom is a major demand of the protest movement.

Khin Maung Zaw, a lawyer asked by Suu Kyi’s party to represent her, said he was uncertain if she would have a court appearance Monday, and it could be delayed by a day. He has not been able to make contact with Suu Kyi.

There is also the possibility that a young woman who was shot during a demonstration last week, also in Naypyitaw, will be declared legally dead. She has been on life support in a hospital in the capital, and unofficial memorial services were held for her Sunday at protests in Yangon and Mandalay, the country’s two biggest cities.

Large demonstrations were also held in Naypyitaw and far-flung corners of the country dominated by ethnic minorities.

Resistance also took place in cyberspace, as a group calling itself BrotherHood of Myanmar Hackers defaced the government’s Myanmar Digital News website, replacing content on its home page with words and pictures against the military takeover.

Protesters in Yangon again rallied outside the Chinese and U.S. embassies. They accuse Beijing of propping up the military regime and applaud Washington’s actions sanctioning the military. There were scattered appeals on Twitter for armed intervention by the United States.

Other protesters carried signs urging people to boycott businesses linked to the military.

Eight days of street demonstrations are estimated to have drawn hundreds of thousands of people to the streets despite the threat of six months’ imprisonment for violating an order banning gatherings of five or more people. The same order imposes an 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew.

Sunday’s activism took place after the ruling junta issued a new order suspending several basic civil liberties.

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Mandalay University graduates bow their heads as they hold posters with an image of Mya Thwate Thwate Khaing, a 19-year old woman shot by police on Feb. 9 in Naypyitaw, during an anti-coup protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, Sunday, Feb. 14, 2021. (AP Photo)

The order, issued late Saturday and published Sunday in state newspapers, suspends provisions in an existing law on security and privacy protection, allowing the authorities to carry out searches and make arrests without court warrants.

It also allows the interception of electronic and other communications without a warrant and permits the detention of detainees for more than 24 hours without court permission.

Civil servants have been very active in the protests, and social media postings on Sunday indicated that state railway workers have joined them, with some unconfirmed claims that they have gone on strike.

The public at large has been alarmed since the government last week declared an amnesty that led to the release of more than 23,000 convicts. There are many claims on social media that some have been recruited by the authorities to carry out violent activities at night in residential areas to spread panic, especially by setting fires. Some areas have responded by setting up their own neighborhood watch groups.

The truth of the allegations about government-directed thugs is difficult to verify, even with videos claiming to show their activities. There is historical precedent, as the military released convicts to carry out violence and cause chaos in 1988 during a failed popular uprising against a military dictatorship.

People have also been rattled by police raids carried out during curfew hours to seize individuals seen as opposed to the coup. In several cases, nearby residents rushed to the scene in such numbers that security forces abandoned their attempts to haul in their targets.

The independent Assistance Association for Political Prisoners says 400 people have been detained since the coup, with 375 still being held.

Detainees have included political leaders, government officials, civil servants, activists and student leaders. Medical personnel have been singled out because their community initiated the civil disobedience campaign against the military takeover and remains in its vanguard.

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