This image from video shows a hearing from the 394th Judicial District Court of Texas. (Texas Department of Criminal Justice via AP)
ALPINE, Texas (AP) — A West Texas judge has a word of caution to those attending court hearings via Zoom: Always check for filters before logging on.
Judge Roy Ferguson’s warning comes after an attorney accidentally joined a Tuesday video conference of a civil forfeiture court hearing while using a Zoom filter that made him appear like a fluffy white kitten.
“I’m here live. I’m not a cat,” Presidio County Attorney Rod Ponton said.
“I can see that,” replied Ferguson, whose district covers five counties in West Texas, including the town of Marfa from which Ponton was calling.
The short video clip, which was shared online by Ferguson, ends with others coaching the attorney on how to remove the cat filter.
The judge said on Twitter: “These fun moments are a by-product of the legal profession’s dedication to ensuring that the justice system continues to function in these tough times. Everyone involved handled it with dignity, and the filtered lawyer showed incredible grace. True professionalism all around!”
In an interview, Ponton said he has fielded calls from around the world and has been booked for national television.
“I always wanted to be famous for being a great lawyer. Now I’m famous for appearing in court as a cat,” he told The Associated Press.
Protesters run after police fire warning-shots and use water cannons to disperse them during a protest in Mandalay, Myanmar on Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Police cracked down on demonstrators opposing Myanmar’s military coup, firing warning shots and shooting water cannons to disperse crowds that took to the streets again Tuesday in defiance of new protest bans.
Reports of many injured demonstrators drew strong concern from the U.N.’s office in Myanmar.
“According to reports from Nay Pyi Taw, Mandalay and other cities, numerous demonstrators have been injured, some of them seriously, by security forces in connection with the current protests across the country,” the U.N. said.
“The use of disproportionate force against demonstrators is unacceptable,” said Ola Almgren, the U.N. resident coordinator in Myanmar.
Protesters flash the three-fingered salute, a symbol of resistance, during a protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
Water cannons were used in Mandalay, Myanmar’s second-biggest city, where witnesses said at least two warning shots were fired in early attempts to break up the crowd. Gunfire could be heard on videos from the city, some of which showed riot police flailing wildly with their batons at people trying to flee. Reports on social media said police arrested more than two dozen people there.
Police also used water cannons in the capital, Natpyitaw, for a second day and fired shots into the air. Police were reported to have also shot rubber bullets at the crowd in Naypyitaw, wounding several people. Photos on social media showed an alleged shooter — an officer with a short-barreled gun — and several injured people. Protesters posted photos online of bullet casings they said they found at the scene.
Unconfirmed social media reports circulated of shootings with live rounds and deaths among the protesters, with the potential of sparking violent retaliation against the authorities — an outcome proponents of the country’s civil disobedience movement have warned against. The AP was unable to immediately confirm the reports.
Police in riot gear march to take a position to block demonstrators at an intersection during a protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
The weekly magazine 7Day News reported on Twitter that a 19-year-old woman was shot by police in Naypyidaw and was undergoing emergency surgery at the city’s main hospital. It cited Min Thu, the local chairman of the National League for Democracy party of ousted national leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
Security forces on Tuesday night raided the NLD’s national office in Yangon, following raids of regional party offices last week that the party called illegal. NLD spokesman Kyi Toe wrote on his Facebook page that army personnel took documents and computer hardware.
The protesters are demanding that power be restored to the deposed civilian government and are seeking freedom for Suu Kyi and other governing party members detained since the military took over and blocked the new session of Parliament from convening on Feb. 1.
In this image taken from a video aired on Monday, Feb. 8, 2021, Myanmar Commander-in-Chief Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing speaks in Naypyitaw, Myanmar. (Myawaddy TV via AP)
The growing defiance is striking in a country where past demonstrations have been met with deadly force and are a reminder of previous movements in the Southeast Asian country’s long and bloody struggle for democracy. The military used deadly force to quash a massive 1988 uprising against military dictatorship and a 2007 revolt led by Buddhist monks.
The protests were banned by decrees issued Monday night for some areas of Yangon and Mandalay that made illegal rallies and gatherings of more than five people, along with motorized processions, while also imposing a 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew. It was not clear if restrictions were imposed for other areas. Violators could be punished by up to six months in prison or a fine.
Demonstrations were also held in other cities Tuesday, including Bago — where city elders negotiated with police to avoid a violent confrontation — and Dawei, and in northern Shan state.
Protesters regroup after police fired warning-shots and use water cannons during a protest in Mandalay, Myanmar on Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
In Magwe in central Myanmar, where water cannons were also used, unconfirmed reports on social media said several police officers had crossed over to join the protesters’ ranks. Police in Naypyitaw and Pathein, west of Yangon, were also said to have switched sides. The AP was unable to immediately confirm the reports.
Crowds also gathered in Yangon, the country’s biggest city where thousands of people have been demonstrating since Saturday, despite a heightened security presence. No violence was reported.
Police, not soldiers, appeared to have been deployed to stop the demonstrations, a small indicator of restraint by the military government. The army has a record of brutality in crushing past revolts as well as in fighting ethnic minorities in border areas seeking self-determination. It also has been accused of carrying out genocide in its 2017 counterinsurgency campaign that drove more than 700,000 members of the Muslim Rohingya minority across the border to seek safety in Bangladesh.
Protesters sitting on a road blocked by police in riot gear flash the three-fingered salute, a symbol of resistance, during a protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
State media for the first time on Monday referred to the protests, saying they were endangering the country’s stability.
“Democracy can be destroyed if there is no discipline,” declared a statement from the Ministry of Information read on state television station MRTV. “We will have to take legal actions to prevent acts that are violating state stability, public safety and the rule of law.”
However, the military commander who led the coup and is now Myanmar’s leader made no mention of the unrest in a 20-minute televised speech Monday night, his first to the public since the takeover.
Campaigners with National League for Democracy party flags gather at an intersection in Yangon, Myanmar, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing instead repeated claims about voting fraud that have been the justification for the military’s takeover, allegations that were refuted by the state election commission. He added that his junta would hold new elections as promised in a year and hand over power to the winners, and explained the junta’s intended policies for COVID-19 control and the economy.
The general’s remarks, which included encouragement for foreign investors, did nothing to assuage concern in the international community.
U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said the U.S. condemned violence against the protesters and reiterated the U.S.’s earlier calls for the military to restore power to the elected government. “The international community is attempting every avenue to ensure that democracy and civilian leadership is restored in Burma,” Price said in Washington, using Myanmar’s former name.
Protesters regroup after police shot warning-shots and use water cannon to disperse them during a protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. (AP Photo)
The U.N.’s Human Rights Council, based in Geneva, will meet Friday to consider the human rights implications of the crisis. Britain and the European Union spearheaded the request for the special session, which will amount to a high-profile public debate among diplomats over Myanmar and could lead to a resolution airing concerns or recommendations of international action.
New Zealand suspended all military and high-level political contact with Myanmar, Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta announced Tuesday in Wellington, adding that any New Zealand aid should not go to or benefit Myanmar’s military government.
“We do not recognize the legitimacy of the military-led government and we call on the military to immediately release all detained political leaders and restore civilian rule,” Mahuta said. New Zealand was also placing a travel ban on the military leaders.
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Associated Press writers Jamey Keaten in Geneva and Nick Perry in Wellington, New Zealand, contributed to this report.
Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL (CPF) was ranked Silver Class distinction in S&P Global’s Sustainability Yearbook 2021, one of the world’s most comprehensive publications providing in-depth analysis on corporate sustainability. The prestigious ranking that affirms the Company’s commitment towards global-level sustainability as “Kitchen of the World”.
Mr. Wuthichai Sithipreedanant, Senior Vice President – Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable Development of CPF, said this achievement reflects CPF’s position in the international stage as the company with outstanding performance and records of sustainable development.
“The distinction is a milestone of CPF’s path towards sustainable growth. It reflects the Company’s outstanding performance in sustainability as the Sustainability Yearbook is a very reliable source for international organizations’ sustainability records. The distinction will help raise confidence in CPF among stakeholders across the world,” he said.
S&P Global is specialized in sustainability-related investment. It collaborated with Dow Jones Sustainability Indices (DJSI) in assessing the sustainability performance of the world’s largest companies in 61 industries. Annually, S&P Global selected outstanding companies for the Sustainability Yearbook. CPF joined DJSI questionaire and won Silver Class distinction as its scor is within a range of 1% to 5% of the industry’s top-performing company’s score.
The recognition affirms CPF’s commitment to operate accordingly to the sustainable development principles that highlight “ESG” (environmental, social and governance) in all countries where CPF operates. The commitment follows CPF’s 3 sustainability pillars – “Food Security, Self-Sufficient Society and “Balance of Nature”. It also supports the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), to raise the quality of life of all and strike the economic, social and environmental balance. CPF strives to continually improve sustainability performance, to overcome challenges and achieve long-term resilience.
BANGKOK — A 37-year-old man was charged with the royal insult, or lese majeste, for allegedly mocking the monarchy at a shopping mall in December, his lawyer said Monday.
Pawat Hiranpon was accused of feigning to genuflect and saying “Long Live Your Majesties” at Siam Paragon on Dec. 20 when several pro-democracy activists were walking past him, according to the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights. The group represents individuals who face charges under the lese majeste offense, which carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison, per count.
Police considered Pawat’s behavior to be a mocking reference to the Royal Family, the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights said. Pawat is said to be the 58th person to have been charged with lese majeste since November, according to the group.
Prachatai news site reported that the complaint was filed against Pawat by a member of the Thai Phakdee, a hardline pro-monarchy network.
A statement released on Monday by a group of United Nations Special Rapporteurs on human rights also expressed concern over the increasingly harsh enforcement of the lese majeste law.
“We have repeatedly emphasized that lèse-majesté laws have no place in a democratic country,” the U.N. experts said in their statement. “Their increasingly harsh application has had the effect of chilling freedom of expression and further restricting civic space and the enjoyment of fundamental freedoms in Thailand.”
“We are profoundly disturbed by the reported rise in the number of lese majeste prosecutions since late 2020 and the harsher prison sentences,” they said.
“We call on the authorities to revise and repeal the lese majeste laws, to drop charges against all those who are currently facing criminal prosecution and release those who have been imprisoned for the exercise of their rights to freedom of expression and of peaceful assembly.”
PM Prayut Chan-o-cha presides over an agreement signing ceremony between Siam Bioscience and AstraZeneca at Government House on Nov. 27, 2020.
BANGKOK — It’s been nearly three months since Siam Bioscience struck a technology sharing deal with AstraZeneca to make coronavirus vaccines in Thailand, yet not a single photo of the production line was ever released to the public.
Despite its prominent role as the sole producer of vaccine against COVID-19 in the kingdom, Siam Bioscience continues to wrap itself in a shroud of mystery, even as calls for greater transparency are growing.
A representative of the company appeared only once during a news conference held at the public health ministry last month, after which all the questions for the company were answered by government officials. No media tour was ever allowed inside its facilities to see the vaccine being made either.
“We want to focus on the production of vaccines for now,” Siam Bioscience’s managing director Songpon Deechongkit said in an interview Friday, when asked why there’s a need for such secrecy.
Songpon also turned down Khaosod English’s request to visit Siam Bioscience’s factory for the vaccine. He said the plant is currently off limits to the media since all personnel are preoccupied by their responsibility to meet the deadline.
“We are not able to accommodate media requests at the moment,” Songpon said by phone.
Siam Bioscience’s no-media policy is a notable exception in Thailand, where every major project undertaken by government agencies and private companies is shown to reporters for promotional purposes, from new train stations to river cleanups.
It also highlights the persistent obscurity in the government’s plans for the vaccine drive against COVID-19. No one knows exactly when the first shot will be made, or why the government pins almost all of its hope on Siam Bioscience – a small firm that had no previous experience of manufacturing a vaccine.
This undated photo issued by the University of Oxford shows of vial of coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, in Oxford, England. (University of Oxford/John Cairns via AP)
The country’s vaccine strategy relies mostly on AstraZeneca vaccines being produced by Siam Bioscience under a technology sharing deal that was signed at the Government House in November.
Siam Bioscience is wholly owned by the palace, as underscored by the formal signing ceremony on Nov. 27, which was attended by PM Prayut Chan-o-cha and representatives from the Royal Household Bureau.
The company is expected to produce 26 million doses that are set to be used in public inoculations starting in June. Songpon said the first batch of production already began at the company’s factory in Nonthaburi’s Bang Yai district in December, and the second batch is currently underway.
“Once we complete the fifth batch of production, we will submit the results to the Food and Drug Administration for approval,” Songpon said.
Due to the ban on media access to the production plant, there is virtually no way to independently verify the claim.
The last time the media corps was allowed to set foot inside Siam Bioscience’s facility was in June, when health minister Anutin Charnvirakul visited to inspect the manufacture of COVID-19 screening kits. But that was months before the vaccine production was supposed to start.
Health minister Anutin Charnvirakul during his visit to Siam Bioscience’s plant on June 1, 2020.
The company’s website said officials from several organizations, including the Thai Red Cross and the National Health Security Office, have been touring the vaccine factory over the past few months, but there were little details.
For instance, the Red Cross visit was logged in late January with only several photos, and nothing else. The same goes for the visit by the National Health Security Office in November. Neither shows any production line or equipment for the vaccine production.
The scarcity of information has fed skepticism over the company’s ambitious goal.
“I think they couldn’t make it. They’re so new,” said Boon Vanasin, the owner of Thonburi, a private hospital chain. “The production of vaccines is very complicated. I believe it will be delayed for at least three months.”
In a Facebook Live aired last month by opposition politician Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, he questioned the government’s overconfidence Siam Bioscience as its sole supplier.
“Are we pinning too much hope on AstraZeneca and Siam Bioscience?” Thanathorn said in his broadcast. “Is this deal going to cost the country’s opportunity in considering other options which could help expand vaccine coverage and availability?”
The government’s response to Thanathorn was to file criminal charges against him, accusing him of “defaming the monarchy” and “distorting information.”
Per a request by the Division of Special Investigation, a court also ordered social media platforms to remove Thanathorn’s post, citing “breach of national security,” though the order was overturned on Monday.
Royal Noble Consort Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi greets a crowd of wellwishers at the Grand Palace in Bangkok on Nov. 1, 2020.
BANGKOK — The Royal Household Bureau on Sunday published a drawing by His Majesty the King, which bears his royal consort’s insignia.
The picture is said to depict a large building with Thai-styled roof and a “happy family” who follows the principle of “self-sufficiency economy” popularized by his father, the late King Bhumibol.
“A happy family living in accordance with a sufficiency economy is the root of a strong nation,” the Bureau of the Royal Household wrote on its website Sunday. “His Majesty the King bestowed a drawing of a cartoon of a happy family amidst fertile fields, as art for life fulfillment of Thais.”
The personal emblem of Royal Noble Consort Sineenat Wongvajirapakdi can be seen, arranged sideways, on the left hand side of the drawing.
A blue-yellow heart is pictured on a flag on the roof, as well as on the buildings. Text at the top says “Inherit, Conserve, Continue.”
Another drawing, featuring couples farming in rice fields, feeding fish, and making organic fertilizer was also published by the Royal Household Bureau on Thursday. This one features His Majesty the King’s royal emblem.
Construction workers install new structures at the Democracy Monument on Feb. 7, 2021.
BANGKOK — A major renovation project is underway at the Democracy Monument, a historic landmark that has been largely sealed off from the public in recent years.
Dozens of workers could be seen laboring throughout the day and night on Sunday, laying down concrete slabs and metal structures. A senior official at the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration said the renovation is purely for aesthetic purposes, and not designed to prevent the protests that often took place in the area.
“We are making a slope to place decorative flowers on. It will look beautiful from the road,” Public Parks Office director Yongtawee Photisa said by phone Monday. “There’s no other intention. It’s not related to politics at all.”
Yongtawee said the construction is scheduled to be completed on Wednesday.
Construction workers install new structures at the Democracy Monument on Feb. 7, 2021.
“Political protesters who get permission to hold protests can still convene at the monument. There won’t be any barriers. There will still be four paths leading up to the monument through the flowers,” he said.
Among the diverse arrangement of flowers planned for the monument would be red and pink cockscombs, the park director said, adding that no damage was done to the historic site.
“We aren’t doing anything to change or damage the monument itself,” Yongtawee said. “The monument will be even more beautiful.”
Democracy Monument has been the site of many demonstrations throughout Thailand’s modern history. But plants and metal barriers were put there by the City Hall and the police in June 2018, apparently to prevent pro-democracy protesters from gathering at the monument.
During a large rally against the government in October, scores of demonstrators dismantled the obstacles around the memorial in a bid to “reclaim” the symbol of Thailand’s progress toward democratic rules.
The City Hall recaptured the area soon after, and the “garden” was back in no time.
BANGKOK — The city of Bangkok on Monday welcomed a new skytrain station on Sathorn Road – one of the “ghost stations” which have been included in the fare since 1999 but never actually built.
Saint Louis Station, named so for a Catholic church and a hospital in the area, will serve commuters traveling between Chong Nonsi and Surasak. It was originally named Suksa Witthaya, after a local school that no longer operates today.
Other prominent venues in the vicinity of BTS Saint Louis include the Myanmar Embassy, Bangrak Hospital, and the Apostolic Nunciature Embassy of the Holy See.
Saint Louis was one of the two “ghost stations” in the BTS system map, the other being the Sena Ruam station, which was meant to separate Ari from Saphan Kwai. There is no information when Sena Ruam will be built.
BTS initially insisted that its fare was calculated on distance and not number of stations, but an audit by the Office of the Ombudsman in May 2020 confirmed that commuters were indeed charged for passing through those two non-existent stations for years.
A raccoon appears on a street in Osaka's Minami area on Feb. 3, 2021. (Kyodo)
TOKYO (Kyodo) — A raccoon was spotted roaming in central Osaka past midnight earlier this month, in a rare sighting highlighting how measures against the coronavirus have left one of the country’s busiest entertainment districts deserted late at night.
The wild animal, photographed by a Kyodo News cameraman, emerged from the shadows in the early hours of Wednesday in a narrow cobbled street around Hozenji temple in Osaka’s Minami district.
A Buddhist nun flashes the three-fingered salute as protesters gather outside the Hledan Center in Yangon, Myanmar Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. (AP Photo)
YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — A protest against Myanmar’s one-week-old military government swelled rapidly Monday morning as opposition to the coup grew increasingly bold.
The protesters at a major downtown Yangon intersection chanted slogans, raised a three-finger salute and carried placards saying “Reject the military coup” and “Justice for Myanmar.” Starting with a few hundred people, the crowd exceeded a thousand by midmorning and cars passing by honked their horns in solidarity.
Some smaller groups broke off from the main protest and headed to the Sule Pagoda, a past rallying point for major protests against previous ruling juntas. Monday’s action followed a protest Sunday involving tens of thousands of people demonstrating to demand the release of deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi and other top figures from her National League for Democracy party.
Protesters flash the three-fingered salute while holding cardboard signs as they gather outside the Hledan Center in Yangon, Myanmar on Monday, Feb. 8, 2021. (AP Photo)
The growing protests are a sharp reminder of the long and bloody struggle for democracy in a country that the military ruled directly for more than five decades before loosening its grip in 2012. Suu Kyi’s government, which won a landslide election in 2015, was the first led by civilians in decades, though its power was limited by a military-drafted constitution.
During Myanmar’s years of isolation under military rule, the golden-domed Sule Pagoda served as a rallying point for political protests calling for democracy, most notably in during a massive 1988 uprising and again during a 2007 revolt led by Buddhist monks.
The military used deadly force to end both of those uprisings, with estimates of hundreds if not thousands killed in 1988. While riot police have watched the protests this past week, soldiers have been absent and there have been no reports of clashes.
Police security fix road barricades blocking protesters in Yangon, Myanmar on Sunday, Feb. 7, 2021. (AP Photo)
Several videos posted online Sunday that were said to be from the town of Myawaddy, on Myanmar’s eastern border with Thailand, showed police shooting into the air in an evident effort to disperse a crowd. There were no signs of panic and no reports of injuries.
Showing little fear, protest crowds have grown bigger and bolder in recent days, while remaining nonviolent in support of a call by Suu Kyi’s party and its allies for civil disobedience.
An intermittent communication blockade in recent days was a stark reminder of the progress Myanmar is in danger of losing. During Myanmar’s decades of military rule, the country was internationally isolated and communication with the outside world strictly controlled.
Staff wearing medical scrubs flash the three-fingered salute outside Asia Royal Hospital as they watch protesters march in Yangon, Myanmar on Sunday, Feb. 7, 2021. (AP Photo)
The elected lawmakers of Suu Kyi’s party met in an online meeting Friday to declare themselves as the sole legitimate representatives of the people and asked for international recognition as the country’s government.
The military has accused Suu Kyi’s government of failing to act on its complaints that last November’s election was marred by fraud, though the election commission said it had found no evidence to support the claims.