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US Pilots Want More Training on Boeing Jet After Lion Air Crash

Boeing's first 737 MAX 9 jet at the company's delivery center before a ceremony transferring ownership to Thai Lion Air in Seattle in a March 2018 file photo. Photo: Elaine Thompson / Associated Press
Boeing's first 737 MAX 9 jet at the company's delivery center before a ceremony transferring ownership to Thai Lion Air in Seattle in a March 2018 file photo. Photo: Elaine Thompson / Associated Press

DALLAS, Texas — Southwest Airlines says its pilots will get more instruction on an automated anti-stall system on certain new Boeing jets, and American Airlines pilots are also seeking more training. The system is under scrutiny after a deadly crash in Indonesia.

The developments came Thursday after Boeing technical experts met separately with pilots from both airlines.

Indonesian investigators are probing whether pilots on an Oct. 29 Lion Air flight were overwhelmed when incorrect sensor readings activated the anti-stall system and automatically pushed the nose of their plane down. The Boeing 737 MAX plunged into the Java Sea, killing 189 people.

The anti-stall system differs from those in previous Boeing 737 models. Pilots at American and Southwest say Boeing didn’t explain the changes in the new plane’s operating manual.

Boeing says the MAX is safe and that there is a procedure for stopping the nose-down command. The Chicago-based company, however, is considering whether software changes in the anti-stall system are needed.

Modern planes use sensors outside the fuselage to measure airspeed and the pitch of the plane’s nose. The sensors can malfunction, however, and safety experts have suggested that Boeing will have to change the automated anti-stall system of the 737 MAX – which entered service last year – to prevent it from responding to a single erroneous reading.

Southwest Airlines said all of its pilots will get additional classroom and simulator training by the end of the year. Airline spokeswoman Brandy King said the training will include recognizing and reacting to situations in which the nose might be pointed too high, and unreliable sensor readings.

Boeing representatives met Sunday with leaders of the pilots union at Southwest. The union declined to comment on the meeting.

Dennis Tajer, an American Airlines pilot and spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association, said several members of his union met with Boeing’s lead engineer and chief test pilot for the 737 MAX on Tuesday in Fort Worth, Texas. He said they quizzed the Boeing experts on how erroneous readings from a single sensor could trigger the nose-down command.

American Airlines pilots who were already familiar with the 737 got 56 minutes of training on a tablet computer when learning to fly the MAX, and “it seemed to suffice,” said Tajer, who is a pilot himself, “but clearly there is more to this aircraft.”

A Boeing spokesman said the company always examines aircraft design and operation after any accident or incident.

“Boeing continues to evaluate the need for software or other changes as we learn more from the ongoing investigation,” said the spokesman, Charles Bickers.

A spokesman for American declined to say whether the airline had agreed to the union’s request for more training, saying only that the airline was working with the union.

United spokeswoman Megan McCarthy said, “We have the proper training in place for our pilots.”

At the end of October, Southwest had 26 Boeing 737 MAX jets, American had 16, and United Airlines had seven, according to Boeing figures.

Story: David Koenig

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Boca-River Libertadores Final Will Be Played in Madrid

ASUNCION, Paraguay — The rearranged Copa Libertadores final second leg between Boca Juniors and River Plate will be played in Madrid on Dec. 9, South American soccer’s governing body CONMEBOL said on Thursday.

Earlier, Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez had said his country would be willing to host the game.

The match was called off last Saturday when visiting Boca’s bus was attacked while on its way to Argentine rival River’s stadium, and several players were injured.

Fearing more violence, organizers decided earlier this week the game should be played in another country.

“In Spain we find the necessary tranquility…Madrid is the 10th safest city in the world and it has the largest Argentine community in Europe,” CONMEBOL president Alejandro Dominguez said on Thursday. “I don’t think the essence of the Libertadores will be lost because the game will be played in Spain.”

The cup honors those who helped liberate South America from Spanish rule.

Dominguez added the game would be staged at Real Madrid’s Bernabeu stadium at 8:30 p.m. Spanish time, and that Boca and River fans would be allowed in.

South American soccer’s governing body rejected a request by Boca to be declared winners, but has fined River USD$400,000 and ordered the club to play the next two CONMEBOL games behind closed doors.

The first leg ended in a 2-2 draw.

Story: Pedro Servin

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Elephant Fatally Stomps Driver After Car Strikes Its Legs

Police and wildlife officials hold back traffic while approximately 40 elephants emerge from the jungle in 2016 in Chanthaburi province’s Kaeng Hang Meao district.
Police and wildlife officials hold back traffic while approximately 40 elephants emerge from the jungle in 2016 in Chanthaburi province’s Kaeng Hang Meao district.

NAKHON NAYOK — A man was killed by a wild elephant after his speeding car hit the animal near a national park in northeastern Thailand, police said Thursday.

Police Lt. Col. Kemchat Paedkaew said the accident occurred at dusk Wednesday on a small road that has signs telling drivers to beware of wild animals that sometimes stray from Khao Yai National Park in Nakhon Nayok province.

“Elephants don’t come out during the day but they start coming out when it gets dark,” Kemchat said.

He said the driver was not from the area and failed to slow down when he encountered the elephant. When the vehicle struck the elephant’s back legs, the animal responded by stomping on the car, destroying the engine and killing the driver.

Kemchat says up to two people are killed by elephants each year in areas surrounding the park. The elephant struck in the crash was guided back into the park and is being looked after by officials there, he said.

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Indonesian Investigators Say Doomed Lion Air Jet ‘Airworthy’

Boeing's first 737 MAX 9 jet at the company's delivery center before a ceremony transferring ownership to Thai Lion Air in Seattle in a March 2018 file photo. Photo: Elaine Thompson / Associated Press
Boeing's first 737 MAX 9 jet at the company's delivery center before a ceremony transferring ownership to Thai Lion Air in Seattle in a March 2018 file photo. Photo: Elaine Thompson / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Investigators of the Oct. 29 crash of a Lion Air flight into the Java Sea say the Boeing 737 MAX aircraft was deemed airworthy when it made its final takeoff from Jakarta.

The officials summoned reporters Thursday to clarify comments made at a news conference the day before, where some media reported the investigators had said the plane was not airworthy when it took off.

“The NTSC and the Head of Aviation Communication never stated that Lion Air, Boeing 737-8 MAX aircraft registered PK-LQP, was not airworthy,” said investigator Nurcahyo Utomo.

The issue of airworthiness is crucial because of concerns over technical issues with the new Boeing 737 MAX that crashed and questions over the airline’s safety procedures.

Black box data showed the pilots fought against an automated system that pitched a Boeing jetliner’s nose down repeatedly because of a faulty sensor until they finally lost control. All 189 people aboard the flight between the Indonesian capital of Jakarta and a regional airport died in the disaster.

The National Transportation Safety Commission investigators were reporting this week on data from the aircraft’s black boxes. The preliminary report stopped short of placing blame for the crash – the investigation is continuing – but it provided new details about the pilots’ difficulties handling the highly automated jet and Lion Air’s inability to fix problems with sensors on the plane.

The investigators say the cockpit voice recorder, which is still missing and being searched for, is needed to understand what exactly caused the jet to plunge in the Java Sea just 11 minutes after takeoff.

On Wednesday, Utomo said the plane had experienced technical problems on four of the six flights before it crashed. On its penultimate flight from the Balinese capital of Denpasar to Jakarta, as during the final one, pilots struggled to prevent an automatic safety feature from forcing the nose of the aircraft down due to problems with its sensors.

The report released Wednesday noted that during the Denpasar to Jakarta flight a “stick shaker” activation – a warning signal to pilots – continued throughout the flight as the flight crew struggled and eventually succeeded to bring the aircraft under control.

“This condition is considered as an un-airworthy condition and the flight shall not be continued,” it said of that flight.

Utomo said that based on maintenance records, flight engineers had made repairs and run tests as needed.

“Based on the test results, the aircraft was declared airworthy, also when the plane departed from Jakarta, the aircraft was in airworthy condition,” he said.

Another investigator, Ony Suryo Wibowo, said there were special procedures to be followed when there are problems with an aircraft.

“But in principle, when the engineer has stated it’s airworthy, then it’s airworthy,” he said.

Wibowo said the pilot would make the final choice about whether or not to cancel or abort a flight, and the investigators were trying to understand how the pilot made his decision.

“When the plane is on the ground, the responsibility for airworthiness is on the engineer, and when the plane is in the air, the airworthiness is entirely in the pilot’s hands,” he said.

Experts say Boeing may need to change its new anti-stall system, perhaps developing an algorithm to disregard sensor readings that appear off-base.

The aircraft maker has a great deal at stake in defending its plane.

More than 200 MAX jets have been delivered to airlines around the world. Pilots at American Airlines and Southwest Airlines complained this month that they had not been given all information about the new automated anti-stall safety system on the MAX.

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Johnnie Walker Celebrates Near-Century-Long Relationship with Thailand at ‘Bangkok Bluemosphere’ (Sponsored)

Johnnie Walker celebrates its near-century-long relationship with Thailand at ‘Bangkok Bluemosphere’ on view from November 22 to 25 at Central Embassy Bangkok, chronicling the brand’s history right to the present.

Johnnie Walker, the world’s number one Scotch whisky, invites Thais to celebrate Johnnie Walker’s hallowed history of its presence in Thai life at the exhibition “Bangkok Bluemosphere”. On the opening day of the exhibition, Johnnie Walker Blue Label Bangkok Edition will be launched. This latest limited-edition of Johnnie Walker Blue Label comes in a magnificent bottle design that goes along well with its unique taste, this new bottle design is created specially for Thailand and Thai people. “Bangkok Bluemosphere” runs from November 22 – 25 at Central Embassy, Bangkok.

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In celebration of its near-century-long ties with Thailand that began in 1924 as well as the brand’s diverse cultural heritage, Johnnie Walker is mounting “Bangkok Bluemosphere” in a big way. The exhibition offers Thais a real trip down memory lane as it retraces the thriving relationship from the past to the present through different points of view as offered by the exhibition’s “time-travel tunnel”. The tunnel uses the magic of virtual reality to create an immersive art experience in which viewers can step into a simulated virtual world that mimics Bangkok in the 1920s. The exhibition aims to tell the story of the brand’s long-standing relationship with the Thai people.

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Furthermore, on this occasion Johnnie Walker Blue Label will launch its new spin-off from the Johnnie Walker Blue Label Pioneering Cities Limited Edition series, which celebrates the pioneering spirits and unique cultural heritage of the world’s great cities. The limited edition of Johnnie Walker Blue Label to be officially launched during the exhibition is ‘Bangkok Edition’. Thanks to Johnnie Walker’s commitment, the launch marks the delivery of yet another premium whisky in luxury design to consumers whose unique lifestyles have transformed the world’s greatest cities into the pioneering centres they are today.

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Mr. Alberto Ibeas, Managing Director of Diageo-Moet Hennessy (Thailand) Co Ltd says, “This exhibition aims to celebrate Johnnie Walker’s shared history with Thailand. The brand has been part of Thai life for almost a century. During the 4-day exhibition, viewers will bear witness to a bond of friendship between Johnnie Walker and the Thai people that is defined by the rich cultural heritage of both sides.

The exhibition takes a multidimensional approach to illustrating Johnnie Walker’s presence in Thailand. The exhibition includes the launch of Johnnie Walker Blue Label Bangkok Edition that has been produced to present a story of one of the world’s greatest cities like Bangkok. This latest edition combines contemporary art of the past and the present to create an elaborate graphic on the bottle exterior that is designed to celebrate impressive moments.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Bangkok Edition in a special design incorporates the delicate spirit of the artist, as befitting Johnnie Walker Blue Label, which is made from some of Scotland’s rarest Scotch whiskies. Only one in every10,000 casks with its exclusive quality, character and flavour has been selected for the blend to deliver the signature taste of Johnnie Walker Blue Label. This limited edition also comes in a luxurious packaging design that reflects its creator’s whisky crafting spirit. The Blue Label is the ideal, magnificent gift for any whisky enthusiast.

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Besides its signature flavour, Johnnie Walker Blue Label Bangkok Edition captures the story of Bangkok’s rich cultural heritage that is worthy of celebrating. The bottle displays an elaborately designed graphic that portrays Bangkok as a vibrant city where tradition and modernity exists side by side. The art depicts a striding elephant, one of Thailand’s familiar cultural icons, amid different architectural designs of buildings and other structures reflecting Bangkok’s lively character. Structures in the background include traditional Thai houses and Thai-style kites that fit well with modernity as represented by high-rise buildings.

The foot label on the bottle’s exterior displays the year 2467 of the Buddhist era in classic Thai lettering in reference to the year of Johnnie Walker’s debut in Thailand and its long-standing relationship with the Thai people up to this day.

Celebrate Johnnie Walker’s much prized history while exploring the aesthetic of taste and art on the packaging of Johnnie Walker Blue Label Bangkok Edition at the exhibition “Bangkok Bluemosphere” that runs from November 22 to 25 at Central Embassy.

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Shark Population Increases After Maya Bay Tourist Ban: Officials

Blacktip Reef sharks swim in 2011 in Bora Bora, French Polynesia. Photo: Supertoff / Wikimedia Commons
Blacktip Reef sharks swim in 2011 in Bora Bora, French Polynesia. Photo: Supertoff / Wikimedia Commons

KRABI — Six months after a famous bay was declared closed to tourists, its waters have seen an increase in the population of sharks, park officials said Thursday.

Worapot Lomlim, chief of Krabi province’s National Parks, said marine park officials had spotted more than 60 sharks in the area. He said the school of sharks appeared to be 100 centimeters to 120 centimeters long and weigh between 20 kilograms to 25 kilograms when they were spotted swimming as close as 2 meters from a once overcrowded beach.

When fully mature, Blacktip sharks can grow to a length of 2 meters. The animals seldom pose a danger to humans and are found in shallow seawater with tropical reefs. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the sharks is classified as near threatened.

A video taken earlier this month shows a large school of what officials identified as blacktip reef sharks around Maya Bay.

The famous bay – which was the setting of the famous movie “The Beach” starring Leonardo Dicaprio – has been closed to tourists since June. In October, the government announced its indefinite closure so nature could regenerate.

Park officials said the sharks were swimming in the area for as long as four hours in waters up to 30 centimeter deep the day they were spotted.

Worapot called the sight – captured in the near two-minute video – a “wonder” that has not been seen in decades.

He attributed it to the tourists ban, adding that many other rare marine creatures were returning to their original habitat in the area because they hadn’t been disturbed by tourists.

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Summoned by Police, Farmer Briefly Reunites with Smiling Buffalo

Surat Phaeoket embraces Tongkum on Thursday at Khan Na Yao Police Station.
Surat Phaeoket embraces Tongkum on Thursday at Khan Na Yao Police Station.

BANGKOK — After spending two days apart from his beloved buffalo, which authorities seized earlier this week, Surat Phaeoket rushed to the police station and past the media to cuddle the animal.

Surat, a farmer charged with serious fraud offenses for crowdfunding the purchase of his buffalo Tongkum, went Thursday to Khan Na Yao police station after he was summoned to present evidence that he had pure intentions in buying Tongkum.

“I never asked for people to send money to save Tongkum’s life. I asked for donations to help me buy him and have him with me forever,” Surat said. “If no one had helped me, I would have nothing left but memories, and my dreams of having a buffalo would be gone. When Tongkum’s not with me, my heart’s not with me.”

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“Tongkum! My child! Let’s go home together,” the farmer said while putting his forehead on Tongkum’s snout before leaving to give his testimony to the police.

Surat and Tongkum went viral earlier this month for their smiling online selfies. After the farmer crowdfunded and successfully bought the animal for 100,000 baht, Boonlert Kanpakdee – Tongkum’s former owner and a lesser local official in Chai Nat province – called Surat a beggar Monday for his online appeal.

Boonlert, accompanied by a famous ultra-conservative lawyer, handed the 100,000 baht to police. Tongkum was seized Tuesday and Surat was charged.

“I just wanted to create smiles for people and preserve kwai. I want society to know Chai Nat [province] and the farmer life,” Surat said.

Read: Farmer Who Bought Smiling Buffalo Charged With Fraud, Money Laundering

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Unless Surat can prove his good intentions in soliciting donations, Police Col. Singh Singhdet said the farmer was liable for wrongdoing. Since Thursday, Surat has been charged on four separate counts of fraud, money laundering and spreading false information online, crimes punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a 200,000 baht fine.

Singh said that of Surat’s frozen bank accounts, he received close to 160,000 baht in donations and used 100,000 baht to buy Tongkum.

Of the leftover 60,000 baht, Surat said he hasn’t used “a single baht” and wants donors’ input on what to do with it. Surat also thanked his fans for their continued support, which came in all forms – including a woven loincloth locals gave to him for his Thursday trip to Bangkok.

If Surat did not give a clear account and spoke confusingly, it could jeopardize his case, Singh said.

Read: Smiling Buffalo Seized by Police, Impounded as Evidence

According to Surat, Boonlert agreed that the farmer should own Tongkum.

“I’m sad about all that’s happened,” Surat said.

Surat asked for the live interview to end because Tongkum started to display signs of agitation from being surrounded by reporters.

On Thursday, Monk Phra Phuthipnithisorn Kongphokanan of Phetchaburi province’s Wat Maha Thatuworawihan went to Khan Na Yao Police Station to explain to police what it means to tai, or donate for a cause, according to Buddhist vocabulary.

Police say that Surat may have misled the public by claiming that Tongkum would be killed if Surat did not manage to buy him, and used the word “tai” to imply that in one of his Facebook posts. Surat denies writing the words in his online pleas for donations, but admitted to saying them during media interviews.

Phra Phuthipnithisorn said that if used with objects, tai means to help donate and get out of debt, such as getting items back from a pawn shop.

Read: Smiling Buffalo’s Former Owner Mad as Hell About Crowdfunded Sale

“But according to Buddhism, if tai is used with a living thing, it means to help that living thing escape from a life of suffering,” the monk said. “So in this meaning, donating for the buffalo’s life means freeing it from sadness and suffering.”

Still, Phra Phutipnithisorn said Surat’s earthly desire to obtain Tongkum could only be for his personal gain – not the greater good – and advised those who want to donate for livestock to only do so at charity organizations and temples. Phra Phutipnithisorn did not talk about crowdfunding.

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Monk Phra Phuthipnithisorn Kongphokanan talks to police on Thursday at Khan Na Yao Police Station.
Monk Phra Phuthipnithisorn Kongphokanan talks to police on Thursday at Khan Na Yao Police Station.
Col. Singh Singhdet on Thursday at Khan Na Yao Police Station.
Col. Singh Singhdet on Thursday at Khan Na Yao Police Station.

Related stories:

Farmer Who Bought Smiling Buffalo Charged With Fraud, Money Laundering

Smiling Buffalo Seized by Police, Impounded as Evidence

Smiling Buffalo’s Former Owner Mad as Hell About Crowdfunded Sale

Internet Saves Beautiful Man-Buffalo Friendship

With His ‘Smiley Buffalo’ to be Sold Off, Farmer Needs Internet’s Help

Chai Nat Man’s Lovely Kwai Friendship Warms Hearts

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Jim Gaffigan to Tell Food, Fat Dad Jokes on Bangkok Stage

BANGKOK — Expect a lot of food jokes and highs and lows of fatherhood when the king of “clean” comedy brings his world tour to Bangkok next year.

For the first time, Jim Gaffigan will appear on a Bangkok stage to rhapsodize about food, his “fatness,” joy and the horror parenting five children.

Jim Gaffigan’s Quality Time Tour starts at 8pm on March 22 at Scala Cinema. Tickets start at 1,800 baht and are available online. The standalone theater is located in Soi Siam Square 1 and can be reached from BTS Siam.

Gaffigan, 52, is an actor, producer and comedian whose many shows are featured on Netflix. His face can be recognized from “The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” “Portlandia” and “The Jim Gaffigan Show.” He’s also a New York Times best-selling author for his work “Dad is Fat.”

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Future Forward Fires Youth Wing Leaders Over Alleged Fund Misuse

Future Forward Party secretary general Piyabutr Saengkanokkul compaign in Rayong province earlier this week. Photo: Future Forward Party
Future Forward Party secretary general Piyabutr Saengkanokkul compaign in Rayong province earlier this week. Photo: Future Forward Party

BANGKOK — The Future Forward Party removed its youth wing leaders from their duties Wednesday after accusing them of misusing party funds, an allegation denied by one of the expelled leaders.

A party spokeswoman said the decision was made after it received complaints that the five party members misused funds allocated to the youth wing. But one of them, women’s rights advocate Wipaphan Wongsawang, called it an attempt to curb the wing’s independence.

Wipaphan also announced her resignation from the party in protest Wednesday night on a Facebook post which was later deleted.

She referred to a long debate “about the New Generation Network’s authority” and added that talks about budget abuse were intended to distort the facts.

The party’s youth wing is a subsidiary that encourages political participation of younger generations. An estimated 6 million people will be eligible to vote for the first time in February.

“I am saddened by the decision from those in power at the party. You must seriously reflect on where you are leading your people and what led you to this point,” Wipaphan wrote in the deleted post. She declined to comment when contacted.

Party spokesperson Pannika Wanich insisted the problem was the group’s abuse of funds.

“The party reiterates that it cannot ignore inappropriate use of funds because every baht of the budget comes from membership fees and donations from supporters, who wish the party to be an effectively managed and transparent political institution for the people’s benefit,” Pannika said in a Thursday statement.

Pannika added that the party’s accountant had produced evidence of the alleged inappropriate use of funding to the board and a unanimous decision had been made to remove the youth wing members.

Asked how much was misused, Pannika said such information can only be released if and when members of the fired youth wing allow it.

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Buddhist Authorities Hunt Monk For Being Too Ripped

Photos: Surasek Kwathijak / Facebook

BANGKOK — Less than a week after anonymous photos of a ripped monk went viral online, national Buddhism authorities are on the hunt for the man, who they say tarnished the religion’s image.

Narong Songarom, deputy director of the National Office of Buddhism said Thursday he had ordered national and provincial Buddhism officials to investigate and find the muscular monk’s identity.

“Against monkhood discipline, this man has put on clothes similar to monk robes and taken photos of himself with fit muscles online. Although not a grave error in the monk’s way, it is an earthly sin that invites societal criticism and damages Buddhism,” Narong said Thursday.

Narong said authorities were unaware if the man in the photo displaying his pecs and abs is a real monk or a layman cosplaying as one. He said the monk would be warned and punished for his behavior if found by local Buddhist authorities, in accordance with the Buddhism Act.

The National Office of Buddhism also asked the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society to stop the photo from being circulated online.

Other monks have pitched in their criticism of the monk and his six pack.

“Building muscles and putting photos up on social media like this is a monk that forgets his vows of monkhood,” Phra Payom Kalyano, abbot of Wat Suan Kaew in Nonthaburi, said. “It’s inappropriate because it invites criticism and tarnishes our religion. If you want to exercise and have have a muscular body just stay home instead of being ordained.”

Phra Payom said the incident was not a large enough offense for disrobing, however, because the monk could be “making his body strong to can carry out his monkhood duties better.”

“The best exercise for monks is meditation, collecting alms and cleaning temples,” he said.

The photos were originally posted Saturday by Surasek Kwathijak and have since been shared over 2,000 times. Surasek said he was just reposting photos he found on Twitter, and does not know the man in the photo or if he is really a monk.

“Going to the fitness isn’t a monk’s activity, but I’ll give it a pass just this once,” the caption reads. “Putting whey into your almsbowl.”

More than one thousand comments by netizens on the post are mostly humorous.

“Going to hell for this,” Yok Pluemchit wrote, tagging a friend. “Wiping up my saliva.”

“[He’s] opening a VIP ticket to hell,” wrote Pornphan Puangthong. “Hell seems like a better place to be now.”

Being ripped frowned upon, but being too large isn’t okay either. The Ministry of Health in May said that over half of monks are obese from being given junk food in almsbowls.

Monks in Thailand’s Theravada Buddhism are often restricted from publicly engaging in many acts. A film featuring a monk crying was censored earlier this month. Even a man who was about to be ordained was criticized online for taking photos commemorating the milestone in his life in May 2017.

Related stories:

Thai Film Minus Crying Monk Approved by Censors

Censors Pulled Thai Film Due to Crying Monk Scene

Thai Film Pulled Over ‘Sensitive’ Buddhist Scene

Please Don’t Feed Junk to Chunky Monks: HealthMin

Man Takes Dope Ordination Photos. Internet Cringes.

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