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Analysis: After Months of Calm, Thailand Challenged by Virus Outbreak

Workers wear face masks as they sort fishes at a seafood market in Nakhon Pathom on Dec. 22, 2020.

BANGKOK (AP) — After managing against the odds to keep the coronavirus largely in check for most of the year, Thailand has suddenly found itself challenged by an expanding outbreak among migrant workers on the doorstep of the capital, Bangkok.

The surge of cases in Samut Sakhon province threatens to undo months of efforts to contain the virus and hasten recovery of Thailand’s ailing economy.

Cases related to the outbreak have already been found in more than a dozen other provinces, including Bangkok. Officials in the capital ordered existing safety measures, such as social distancing, mask wearing and checking for fevers, to be more strictly observed at markets, temples, parks and entertainment venues.

Contact tracing has found suspected cases for testing as well as areas to be disinfected. At a mall in central Bangkok’s popular Siam Square shopping area, three shops visited by a Thai woman who tested positive were temporarily closed for deep cleaning, as was a food court at the nearby MBK mall.

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A worker wearing a face mask to help prevent the spread of coronavirus prepares an artificial Christmas tree outside a shopping mall that would normally be busy with foreign tourists in Bangkok on Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020. (AP Photo/Adam Schreck)

The new wave of coronavirus cases abroad already means Thailand’s economic rebound will be slowed as the world economy will take longer to recover, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said in a televised speech Tuesday evening.

“What we have seen now is that being too relaxed about COVID precaution measures can lead to greater economic suffering,” he said.

Prayuth said the situation means Thailand must tread carefully as it relaxes rules for admitting visitors from other countries — an approach that could hinder efforts to revive the country’s lucrative tourism industry, whose business dried up after the country closed to regular passenger flights from overseas in early April.

Shortly before the latest outbreak was found last week, a new expanded list of countries whose tourists would be allowed in under tight restrictions was issued, and the idea of shortening a mandatory 14-day quarantine on arrival was under discussion.

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A Buddhist monk wearing a face covering to help prevent the spread of coronavirus waits for a bus along Sukhumvit Road in Bangkok on Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020. (AP Photo/Adam Schreck)

Thailand’s 576 new cases of the coronavirus reported on Sunday — a 13% increase to Thailand’s previous overall total of 4,907 — was the country’s biggest daily spike. For months, nearly all of the cases detected were in people already in quarantine after arriving from abroad.

More new cases reported Monday and Tuesday have pushed Thailand’s total to 5,716. Virtually all were migrant workers in Samut Sakhon or otherwise linked to a big seafood market in the province. Health officials said 44% of the migrant workers and people with direct links to the market who have been tested so far were found to be infected, though most did not display symptoms.

The seafood market was sealed off over the weekend, and other local restrictions were imposed, including a night curfew, the banning of travel out of the province and the closing of many public places. Late Tuesday night, two neighboring provinces also imposed lockdown measures, including bans on New Year’s celebrations. The seaside resort city of Pattaya also cancelled plans for public celebrations.

The Center for COVID-19 Situation Administration on Wednesday declared 23 provinces — almost a third of the total — to be high risk based on vendors identifying where their major customers were from.

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In this Dec. 20, 2020, file photo, a guard with a face-shield stands near a shrimp market in Samut Sakhon, south of Bangkok. (AP Photo/ Jerry Harmer, File)

Even though cases related to the seafood market have spread around the country, Prayuth expressed confidence Thailand “can continue to be among the least affected countries in the world by this terrible disease.”

World Health Organization chief Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has several times praised Thailand’s handling of its coronavirus crisis, citing in a September tweet “A whole of society & whole of government response, extensive testing, contact tracing, community engagement, & nationwide mobilization of community #healthworkers.”

Prayuth’s declaration in March of a state of emergency allowed his government also to implement measures ranging from lockdowns and censorship to making mask wearing mandatory and banning sales of alcohol to fight the virus.

The chairman of the Federation of Thai Industries, Supan Mongkolsuthree, said that due to the new outbreak, Samut Sakhon’s industrial sector was facing estimated losses of around 1 billion baht ($33.1 million) per day.

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Few shoppers are seen at Mahachai Seafood Market in Samut Sakhon province on Dec. 20, 2020.

Supan said the federation opposes lockdown measures in other areas, because the problem was localized and the government could contain it.

Thai Union Group and Charoen Pokphand Foods, both major seafood producers with operations in Samut Sakhon, said they expect little or no disruption to their supply chains.

The origin of the latest outbreak is not yet clear, but virtually all the new cases involve migrant workers from Thailand’s neighbor Myanmar working in the seafood industry.

Low-wage migrant labor powers much of Thailand’s economy, from factories to fishing and construction. According to Thailand’s Labor Ministry, there are more then 233,000 documented migrant workers in Samut Sakhon in addition to an unknown number working illegally. There are an estimated 4 million to 5 million foreign workers in Thailand, according to the U.N.-affiliated International Organization for Migration.

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A health worker in protective clothing collects nasal swab sample from a man to test for COVID-19 in Samut Sakhon, South of Bangkok, Thailand, Sunday, Dec. 20, 2020. (AP Photo/ Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul)

Despite efforts at regularizing their status, many migrant workers are taken to Thailand by human traffickers and then forced to work in conditions of near slavery for small businesses, as a 2015 investigation by The Associated Press found when it looked into some of the hundreds of shrimp peeling sheds hidden in plain sight on residential streets or behind walls with no signs in Samut Sakhon.

The workers’ Myanmar origins have already led to finger-pointing over the current outbreak, since a coronavirus outbreak that began in August in Myanmar’s western state of Rakhine spread to the commercial capital, Yangon, and then farther east to the border with Thailand.

Thai authorities tried to limit cross-border traffic, but the frontier is notoriously porous. In early December, cases that originated in Myanmar were found in northern Thailand. They were Thais who had returned from stays in Myanmar and evaded border controls that would have forced them to quarantine. At least two flew south to Bangkok before they could be traced.

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Health workers record migrant workers ahead of collecting nasal swab samples from them to test for COVID-19 in Samut Sakhon, south of Bangkok, Thailand, Sunday, Dec. 20, 2020. (AP Photo/ Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul)

Yet a segment of popular opinion blames migrant workers who allegedly sneaked into Thailand for the new outbreak.

“This latest flare-up of infections in Samut Sakhon is primarily due to such illegal immigrants,” Prime Minister Prayuth said Tuesday, without providing evidence.

Activists for migrant workers frame the situation differently, and point out that two other Southeast Asian countries, Singapore and Malaysia, have also had large outbreaks among migrant workers.

“Migrant workers across Asia continue to remain at high risk of contracting and spreading COVID-19 due to their inability to practice social distancing both at their labor intensive workplaces and at their crowded and often insanitary living accommodation,” said Andy Hall, a migrant worker rights specialist working across Asia.

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Virus Resurgence Spreads to 13 Provinces, PM Hints Tougher Measures

Health workers prepare test kits in Nonthaburi on Dec. 22, 2020.
Health workers prepare test kits in Nonthaburi on Dec. 22, 2020.

BANGKOK — The mass coronavirus outbreak at a seafood market in Samut Sakhon has now spread to at least 13 provinces as of Tuesday, officials said.

The latest count includes 9 cases in Bangkok, 8 each in Samut Songkhram, Nakhon Pathom, and Pathum Thani; 7 in Samut Prakan and Suphan Buri; 3 in Saraburi; 2 each in Kamphaeng Phet, and Phetchabun; and 1 each in Chachoengsao, Phetchaburi, Uttaradit, and Phuket, according to provincial health offices.

All of the cases are traced back to the shrimp market in Samut Sakhon, where at least 1,063 people, mostly migrant workers, have tested positive for the coronavirus.

In a televised speech on Tuesday evening, PM Prayut Chan-o-cha said that the government’s pandemic response center will discuss later this week whether more measures are needed to curb the spread of infection.

He did not specify how they will be played out.

“I may have to impose additional measures, especially the New Year celebrations,” Prayut said. “If we’re too lax, the COVID-19 will cause more damage to the economy and that will affect us all.”

Samut Sakhon Gov. Veerasak Vijitsaengsri said health officials performed a total of 6,156 tests so far, in which 242 more people tested positive on Tuesday. The search would be expanded to other surrounding communities in the province where migrant workers reside, he added.

“Ninety percent of the patients are migrant workers,” Veerasak said. “However, things are looking up since the infection rate is now lowered from 40 to 27.91 percent.”

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Security officers search a truck for any foreign nationals who cross the borders illegally in Prachuap Khiri Khan on Dec. 22, 2020.

The governor also urged Thai residents to have compassion for migrant workers who are currently quarantined in their dorms.

“The Myanmar people living in the Central Shrimp Market are not convicts. They are not criminal suspects. They did nothing wrong,” the governor said at a news conference. “The important thing right now is we have to take care of them, to make sure they are safe.”

He dismissed reports on social media that some Myanmar workers broke out of their quarantines. Photos posted online show what is claimed to be a breach in the wall surrounding the flats where the migrant workers live, with a caption saying the workers smashed their way through the wall.

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But Veerasak said the hole was a result of the structure crumbling down long before the pandemic broke out, and the authorities received no words of any workers fleeing the quarantines so far.

“I’d like to ask people outside the wall to think of the people behind the wall,” Veerasak said. “All this news that is spreading, if Thai people see it, Myanmar people see it, too … Please be considerate. We have to lessen the stress they are feeling.”

Thailand now records more than 5,700 cases of coronavirus since the pandemic broke out in January, though a majority of the patients have already recovered. Officials said 60 people have died of the virus.

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Health workers question migrant workers about their travel history in Phuket province on Dec. 22, 2020.

Sophon Iamsirithavorn, director of the health ministry’s communicable disease division, said there is a greater rate of infection in areas around the shrimp market in Samut Sakhon because of its crowded environment.

“The rate of infection at the epicenter is as high as 44 percent because it is a crowded community,” Sophon said. “However, the rate of infection is three times lower two kilometers away from the epicenter at 8 to 14 percent.”

He also dismissed the possibility of local outbreaks in other provinces, saying that the transmission is still limited to family members of the patients who visited the shrimp market.

“Infections in other provinces are still limited to family members of those who visited the shrimp market,” Sophon said. “We found no further transmission from the patients.”

Related stories:

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‘It’s Over,’ Outbreak Dashes Last Hopes for Year-End Tourism, Festivities

The empty Rainbow Wooden Bridge area on Dec. 22, 2020 in Samut Sakhon. Photo: Pornphan Wongde / Courtesy

Top: The empty Rainbow Wooden Bridge area on Dec. 22, 2020 in Samut Sakhon. Photo: Pornphan Wongde / Courtesy

SAMUT SONGKHRAM — The eponymous Auntie Jai of Jay Jai restaurant in Samut Sakhon looked out over the sea, where a rainbow-colored bridge stuck out into the ocean, empty of any visitors.

The scenic bridge is one of the most popular attractions in the province, aside from its massive Mahachai Market. But the new outbreak of coronavirus linked to the market is now driving away visitors, not just in Samut Sakhon either.

“It’s never gotten to the point before when there’s literally no people here,” Pornphan “Jay Jai” Wongde said by phone. “Normally, it’s packed on Sundays, but I counted and there were literally three or four cars in the morning. Since then, no one’s come.”

She went on, “I only had three customers on Saturday, so I closed my restaurant on Sunday. I knew as soon as I heard the news that I had to close. I can’t risk getting COVID since I have small kids and an old dad.”

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The closed Jay Jai Restaurant on Dec. 22, 2020 in Samut Sakhon. Photo: Pornphan Wongde / Courtesy

Alarms were raised when an unnamed 67-year-old seafood vendor tested positive for the coronavirus on Thursday. At least 1,000 more were found with the virus since, most of them migrant workers at Mahachai Market.

The outbreak is not only a disaster for the province’s fishery industry – analysts believe Samut Sakhon is losing as much as 1 billion baht per day since lockdown measures were introduced – fears of the virus also snuffed out tourism across Thailand in the month that many businesses have hoped for a last-ditch effort to revive spending.

Seaside towns along the Gulf of Thailand that rely on drive-through destinations saw barely any visitors. Countdown events, New Year fairs, and light shows have been cancelled in provinces as far away as Khon Kaen and Yala. A number of tourist attractions were also closed down to avoid gatherings.

“All the vendors are complaining since they can’t sell at all,” said Pornphan, the owner of Jay Jai restaurant. “Even local people won’t go outside to buy things. Everyone is so afraid since the numbers are so scary.”

Countdown to Calamities

Many tourism and events operators have been pinning their hopes on the New Year season in December, which typically sees travel rushes and numerous celebrations taking place every year.

But the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration on Sunday canceled all government-sponsored countdown events in the capital, citing threats posed by the coronavirus.

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A police officer throws a ballon at a crowd of revelers at the countdown celebration in front of CentralWorld shopping mall on Dec. 31, 2018.

Although privately held celebrations can still go ahead, like in shopping malls and hotels, organizers are required to seek permission from City Hall. The announcement soon led to either cancellations or downscaling at notable venues – Mega Bangna said it will no longer host a countdown party, while Asiatique’s countdown will still go ahead, though without a concert.

Outside Bangkok, countdown events and shows were cancelled in Yala, Nakhon Phanom, Koh Samui, Nakhon Ratchasima, Khon Kaen, Rayong, and Pattaya.

More cancellations are expected; the Tourism Authority of Thailand announced on Tuesday afternoon it is deliberating on whether to scuttle all of its 18 New Year’s Eve events across Thailand.

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Health workers conduct coronavirus tests at a market in Chiang Rai on Dec. 22, 2020.

Alcohol sellers and seasonal beer gardens are also affected; December is usually the most popular month of outdoor drinking due to the relatively mild weather.

“The effect on sellers has been quite extreme since all the events, beer gardens, and parties are cancelled,” Thai Alcohol Beverage Business Association sec-gen Thanakorn Kuptajit said. “This was supposed to be the selling season. By volume, 20 to 25 percent of alcohol is sold during this time.”

He continued, “Of course, we understand that the state wants to stop infections. We also want that. But there should also be regulations to help the industry.”

The regulations, however, seem to be taking a different direction. A new amendment to the alcohol law that came into effect on Dec. 7 places a blanket ban on all online sales of booze and advertising, crippling the industry even further.

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Security officers talk to customers at a bar in Bangkok’s Thong Lor neighborhood on July 1, 2020, the first day of reopening for nightlife venues amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“The government needs to reconsider this. I think selling alcohol online is a great method of social distancing,” Thanakorn said. “People who still want to drink alcohol despite the lack of events will want to drink at home, so there should be online selling.”

Kasikorn Bank’s research center estimates that scrapping New Year celebrations in Bangkok alone could result in a combined loss of 15 billion baht.

The tourism sector is also set to experience a whopping 17 billion baht in lost revenues due to delays or cancellations of trips during the New Year vacation season.

Costly Name Confusion

Located about 30 kilometers from Bangkok, Samut Sakhon is the gateway for travellers heading southwest toward cities and resort towns along the Gulf of Thailand, like Samut Songkhram, Phetchaburi, Hua Hin, Prachuap Khiri Khan, and beyond.

Needless to say, the impact from the outbreak in Samut Sakhon is inescapable for its neighbors, who already suffered throughout much of the year due to border shutdowns and subsequent loss of foreign visitors.

The owner of Tub Tieng Shoes, a bag fixing and cobbler shop at the world-famous Maeklong Railway Market, where goods are sold on the train track itself, said she’s never seen the bazaar this empty since she opened her shop 11 years ago.

“Many shops are closed. Even if they’re open like us, there’s absolutely no customers,” the vendor said by phone. “Some people who fixed bags and shoes with us said that they would come pick up their items after the new year.”

Jantip, who runs Jantip Clothing shop at the market, said that businesses there could still recover after the first wave of coronavirus earlier this year but this second blow could be a death knell for many.

The similar-sounding names of places in Samut Sakhon and Samut Songkhram don’t help either. “Some people misunderstand and think that Mahachai and Maeklong are the same place!” Jantip said.

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Part of the Amphawa Floating Market seen on Dec. 22, 2020. Photo: Angkhana Phippayanurak / Courtesy

About 7 kilometers further west in Samut Songkhram is the Amphawa Floating Market, once packed with visitors from all over Thailand and overseas. A man answering the phone at the number listed for the weekend market said that the shops had to close because government officials asked them to, and then hung up, even after repeated calls.

Angkhana Phippayanurak, who runs the Sri Amphawa souvenir T-shirt shop at the market, said that the market saw very few shoppers this past weekend.

“Normally this time of the year we get lots of visitors due to the good weather,” she said. “But now, some people are confusing Samut Sakhon with Samut Songkhram.”

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Cicada Market on Dec. 19, 2020. Photo: Cicada Market / Facebook

Further south, a 159-kilometer driving distance from Mahachai Market, is the Cicada Market in Hua Hin. In normal times, the market is a magnet for Bangkokians and expats of Hua Hin, especially the Scandinavians, Germans, and British.

“Since Taweesin announced the news the mood of vacationing was killed,” market manager Satorn Onkaew said, referring to pandemic response center spokesman Taweesin Visanuyothin.

Satorn said many travellers are afraid of catching the virus at gas stations and rest stops along the driving routes, most of which pass through Samut Sakhon.

“It’s not just us who have fewer visitors, but the entire town. People are moving their hotel bookings,” he said. “It’s over for tourism this year.”

Related stories:

Bangkok Restaurant Owner, 2 Hawkers Test Positive for Coronavirus

Seafood Vendors, Restaurants Hung Out to Dry by Virus 2nd Wave

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Report Says Samut Sakhon Virus Surge Exceeds 1,000 Cases

People line up for coronavirus tests in Samut Sakhon province on Dec. 22, 2020.

BANGKOK — At least 242 more people tested positive for coronavirus in Samut Sakhon province, a statement released by health officials said Tuesday morning.

The province’s case number now exceeds 1,000 since its first infection was confirmed on Thursday. The 242 new cases were found among the 1,063 people who were given coronavirus tests by local health workers, the statement said.

It added that 6,156 people were tested so far since the outbreak became apparent over the weekend.

The government’s coronavirus response center is scheduled to make an official news conference on the matter later today.

Officials have said that almost all of the new patients found in recent days are migrant workers in the seafood industry in Samut Sakhon, about 34 kilometers southwest of Bangkok.

Most foreign workers in Samut Sakhon are from neighboring Myanmar, which has seen a surge in coronavirus cases that began in August. All migrant workers are now banned from leaving or entering Samut Sakhon, and dorm buildings where the workers live are sealed off by security officers.

The government said in a statement, written in Thai and Burmese, that the migrant workers in Samut Sakhon should stay put where they are, and they will receive food and water throughout the 14 days of quarantine. There will be no legal repercussion against them, the statement said.

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Bangkok Restaurant Owner, 2 Hawkers Test Positive for Coronavirus

A man receives a coronavirus test in Bangkok on Dec. 21, 2020.

BANGKOK — More coronavirus cases were reported in Bangkok and its outskirts as of Tuesday morning, all of them associated with the large outbreak at a seafood market in Samut Sakhon.

They include the owner of a popular seafood restaurant in Thonburi, two Samut Prakan natives who hawk their vegetables and seafood throughout northern Bangkok, and two seafood vendors at a market in the northwestern suburb of Pathum Thani.

Writing in an online post, Somsak Pu-Ob 2 restaurant said its owner, ‘khun Ratt,’ tested positive for coronavirus after visiting a shrimp market in Samut Sakhon. The page admin also noted that the virus test – taken at Phyathai 3 Hospital – wasn’t free in spite of the government’s announcement that anyone who recently traveled to Samut Sakhon was eligible for free coronavirus lab tests.

“We also want to ask the authorities why the test costs money, even though we went to Samut Sakhon,” wrote the admin, who identified herself as the owner’s daughter. “Our restaurant has to close down temporarily for 14 days.”

Read: Seafood Vendors, Restaurants Hung Out to Dry by Virus 2nd Wave

Samut Sakhon has recorded at least 800 cases of coronavirus since a 67-year-old vendor at the province’s sprawling seafood bazaar tested positive on Thursday. It remains unclear how she contracted the virus.

Health officials also said two hawkers from Samut Prakan were found infected with coronavirus – a 39-year-old man and his 37-year-old wife who recently bought seafood in Samut Sakhon. The pair reportedly drove around multiple parts of Bangkok on their vehicle, a pum puang truck, to sell their wares prior to testing positive.

Venues visited by the pair include Wat Chotikaram, Wat Tuek, Wat Bang Aoi Chang, Ram Intra, and Ku Bon Road. The vehicle driven by the two was identified as white pickup truck, license plate number 8631 Samut Prakan.

A market at Wat Sa Bua in Pathum Thani was also shut down by public health authorities on Monday evening upon the discovery that two vendors there were infected with the virus. Both of them have a history of travels to the fish market in Samut Sakhon, reports said.

The recent surge in virus cases shattered Thailand’s record of having near zero transmissions for months since May. The country’s tally of total coronavirus infections currently stands at about 5,300, including 60 deaths.

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Actress Aiding Reform Protests Charged With Insulting Monarchy

Pro-democracy protest fund-raiser Inthira Charoenpura outside Bang Khen Metropolitan Police Station, Bangkok, Thailand, Monday, Dec. 21, 2020.

BANGKOK (AP) — A well-known actress who is one of the most high-profile supporters of Thailand’s pro-democracy protest movement answered a police summons Monday charging her with violating the country’s harsh law against defaming the monarchy, even though she is not known to have spoken publicly about the royal institution.

Inthira “Sai” Charoenpura, who is also a singer, has drawn both praise and criticism for giving material support and raising funds for the student-led movement. Along with seven protest leaders, she presented herself at a police station in Bangkok to hear charges that they had violated the country’s lese majeste law, which calls for a prison term of three to 15 years for defaming the king or members of his immediate family.

The law, known as Article 112, has long drawn criticism for its harshness and terms that let anyone file a complaint, allowing its use for partisan political purposes. Its use against Inthira appeared to be unprecedented since she was not directly tied to any comments about the monarchy. She has helped provide food, protective gear and other equipment for the protest rallies over several months that have attracted thousands of people.

Charging Inthira “sets a very disturbing precedent,” said Sunai Phasuk, a researcher for New York-based Human Rights Watch, adding that it now seems that being an accessory to any actions that Thai authorities consider to be offensive to the monarchy are punishable. “So now the net is being cast very wide, much wider than ever before,” he said.

Inthira refused to sign a legal document acknowledging she has been charged.

“It is ridiculous that I supplied food and got this charge. Does it mean anybody can face the same situation if they are not on the government’s side?” Inthira said. “I am not worried. I will continue supporting the rallies no matter what.”

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Pro-democracy protest leaders from left, Panupong Jadnok, Parit Chiwarak, Panusaya Sithijirawattanakul, and protest fund-raiser Inthira Charoenpura walk to Bang Khen Metropolitan Police Station, Bangkok, Thailand, Monday, Dec. 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

She said that as a consequence of supporting the rallies, about 70% of her work had been canceled.

Article 112 has not been invoked for almost three years, after King Maha Vajiralongkorn informed the government that he did not wish to see it used. But it was revived last month after Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha announced that all laws would be employed to prosecute protesters who failed to respect other people’s rights and liberties.

The legal aid group Thai Lawyers for Human Rights has tallied at least 35 individuals who have been charged under the lese majeste law since Nov. 24.

Although Inthira is not cited for any remarks about the monarchy, other protest leaders have been outspoken in their criticism of the institution, which they are demanding be reformed to make it accountable. They consider it a feudal institution unsuitable for a democratic state and accuse it of wielding too much power.

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Pro-democracy protest leaders from left, Parit Chiwarak, Panupong Jadnok and Arnon Nampha, confront a policeman outside Bang Khen Metropolitan Police Station, Bangkok, Thailand, Monday, Dec. 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

The protest movement has had three core demands: that Prayuth step down because they believe he was elected unfairly; that the constitution be amended to make it more democratic; and that the monarchy be reformed.

In recent weeks, protest leaders have put the focus on the monarchy, which is the most sensitive issue. Many Thais treat the monarchy with reverence, considering it an untouchable institution that is the heart and soul of the nation.

Until the middle of this year, when the protesters raised the issue, public criticism of it was unprecedented, There has been a sharp reaction from royalists, including the military, a dominant force in Thai politics, which considers defense of the monarchy to be one of its main missions.

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Japan’s Defense Budget for 2021 Hits New High Amid China Threats

File photo shows an F-15 fighter jet taking off from a Japan Air Self-Defense Force base in Naha, Okinawa Prefecture, in April 2015. (Kyodo)

TOKYO (Kyodo) — The Japanese government approved Monday a record defense budget for fiscal 2021 totaling 5.34 trillion yen ($51.6 billion) as it seeks to introduce longer-range missiles capable of attacking enemy vessels from outside their firing range, amid security challenges posed by China.

The draft budget is up 0.5 percent from fiscal 2020, including outlays linked to hosting the United States’ military bases, and has hit a record high for the seventh consecutive year as the country beefs up its ability to also deal with North Korea’s missile and nuclear threats.

Continue reading the story here

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Biden Gets COVID-19 Vaccine, Says ‘Nothing To Worry About’

President-elect Joe Biden receives his first dose of the coronavirus vaccine from Nurse partitioner Tabe Mase at Christiana Hospital in Newark Del., Monday, Dec. 21, 2020, from nurse practitioner Tabe Mase. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

NEWARK, Del. (AP) — President-elect Joe Biden on Monday received his first dose of the coronavirus vaccine on live television as part of a growing effort to convince the American public the inoculations are safe.

The president-elect took a dose of Pfizer vaccine at a hospital not far from his Delaware home, hours after his wife, Jill Biden, did the same. The injections came the same day that a second vaccine, produced by Moderna, will start arriving in states. It joins Pfizer’s in the nation’s arsenal against the COVID-19 pandemic, which has now killed more than 317,000 people in the United States and upended life around the globe.

“I’m ready,” said Biden, who was administered the dose at a hospital in Newark, Delaware. The president-elect rolled the left sleeve of his turtleneck all the way up to his shoulder, then declined the option to count to three before the needle was inserted into his left arm.

“You just go ahead anytime you’re ready,” he told the nurse practitioner who administered the shot.

Biden emphasized the safety of the vaccine, and said President Donald Trump’s administration “deserves some credit” for getting the vaccine distribution process “off the ground.”

“I’m doing this to demonstrate that people should be prepared when it’s available to take the vaccine,” he added. “There’s nothing to worry about.”

He noted, however, that distributing the vaccine is “going to take time,” and urged Americans to take precautions during the holiday season to avoid the spread of the virus, including wearing masks.

“If you don’t have to travel, don’t travel,” he said. “It’s really important.”

Biden also thanked health care workers, and offered praise and an elbow bump to Tabe Mase, the nurse practitioner who administered his first dose of the vaccine.

Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and her husband are expected to receive their first shots next week.

Other top government officials have been in the first wave of Americans to be inoculated against COVID-19 as part of the largest largest vaccination campaign in the nation’s history.

Vice President Mike Pence, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other lawmakers were given doses Friday. They chose to publicize their injections as part of a campaign to convince Americans that the vaccines are safe and effective amid skepticism, especially among Republicans.

President Donald Trump is discussing with his doctors the timing for taking the vaccine, the White House has said. He tweeted earlier this month that he was “not scheduled” to take the vaccine but that he looked “forward to doing so at the appropriate time.”

The White House has offered another reason for waiting, saying Trump was showing support for the most vulnerable to get the vaccine first.

Trump was hospitalized with COVID-19 in October and given an experimental monoclonal antibody treatment that he credited for his swift recovery. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory board has said people who received that treatment should wait at least 90 days to be vaccinated to avoid any potential interference.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, and other experts have recommended that Trump be vaccinated without delay as a precaution.

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Colvin reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Jonathan Lemire in New York contributed to this report.

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The Thai Red Cross Society Steps up Humanitarian Efforts Against a New Wave of COVID-19

The Thai Red Cross Society has shifted in full swing, taking up direct actions in providing relief packages and humanitarian assistance to victims, medical personnel, hospital staff, administrative officials and volunteers who are on the front line in containing the spread of COVID-19 after more than 600 people were tested positive in Samut Sakhon Province over the weekend.

Mr. Grisada Boonrach, Director of the Thai Red Cross Chapters Administration Office, said all Red Cross officials in Samut Sakhon and adjacent provinces and districts are engaged in a massive humanitarian effort to assist the local residents in the prime affected areas and to monitor the possible spread of the virus to nearby districts.

“We are doing our part, which is humanitarian support for the courageous men and women on the front line, risking their lives to contain the spread of COVID-19,” Mr. Grisada said. “This is a major challenge for Thailand. But I believe if everybody does his part, we can get through this together,” Mr. Grisada added. The majority of the 694 persons who were tested positive in Samut Sakhon were migrant workers.

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Mr. Grisada insisted that this is a humanitarian concern, and officials and the public should not be concerned about ethnicities or nationalities of the victims because the virus knows no boundary. Director Grisada said the new wave of the outbreak suggested the likelihood of finding more infections stemming from the shrimp market where a 67-year-old Thai woman became the first to be detected with the virus earlier this week. Eight other infections have been linked to her, including three family members and five market workers, according to reports. Among the items distributed by the Thai Red Cross Society were 4,000 relief packages for families in the locked down communities. “This is just the first round. More relief packages are ready,” Mr. Grisada said.

Director Grisada expressed his appreciation for King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, the Thai Red Cross Society, for donating 2,000 PPE outfits and 10,000 N95 protective masks for medical personnel working in Samut Sakhon. The first batch of 10,000 protective masks was donated by the Charoen Pokphand Foundation, he said.

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Founded in 1893, the Thai Red Cross Society is a national charitable organization undertaking humanitarian activities in keeping with the Fundamental Principles of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. It strictly follows its core missions – grievance relief, quality of life promotion, disease treatment and suffering eradication. It serves public benefit and can be relied upon by people.

The Thai Red Cross Society’s Royal Patron is His Majesty the King while its President is Her Majesty Queen Sirikit the Queen Mother and its Executive Vice-President is Her Royal Highness Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn.

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Activists Weigh on Future of Protests as COVID Makes a Return

Pro-democracy activists wear face coverings during a protest in front of Bang Khen Police Station on Dec. 21, 2020.

BANGKOK — Leaders of the pro-democracy protests that sought to oust PM Prayut Chan-o-cha appear undecided on Monday how their campaign would proceed, given the recent spikes in the number of coronavirus cases.

A crowd of about 200 people showed up in front of Bang Khen Police Station in Bangkok this morning as planned to show their solidarity with eight activists who have been charged with royal defamation, or lese majeste. One of them, Panupong Jadnok, said no coronavirus infection has been traced to the demonstrations he and other activists organized.

“Over the past months that we have been on the streets, no one has ever caught the virus from attending a protest,” he said. “People can take care of themselves, unlike the government who always let their guard down.”


At least 800 coronavirus cases have been reported in Samut Sakhon since Thursday – all of them traced to one of the busiest seafood markets. More infections are expected in the coming days as health workers are putting hundreds of people to coronavirus tests.

Dates for the next major protest are yet to be announced, though activists have suggested it will be held after the New Year.

“It will not affect our movement,” Panupong said when asked by a reporter about the second wave of domestic outbreak.

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Protest in front of Bang Khen Police Station on Dec. 21, 2020.

But another prominent activist, Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, said it is still unclear whether the protests will take place as planned. He also urged the government to evenly enforce health measures across all mass gatherings.

“It depends on the situation,” Parit said. “I also find it strange that the government is banning this and that like a concert earlier this month, but not royal events which are also crowded.”

The growing anxiety over the coronavirus surge, which health officials said has now spread across five provinces including Bangkok, was already felt among pro-democracy activists Roi Et. Organizers of an anti-government rally scheduled in the northeastern province for this Thursday said the event was postponed indefinitely for safety reasons.

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Protest in front of Bang Khen Police Station on Dec. 21, 2020.

“We’re not only concerned about ourselves, but also others in the province who may be affected should the outbreak break out in Roi Et,” leader of the Free Youth Roi Et group who identified himself as Parn said.

He also concerned that the authorities may point a finger at the demonstrators as scapegoats in an event of possible local outbreak.

“It also falls on the same date the Royal Noble Consort Sineenat is expected to pay a visit to the province,” Parn said. “Moreover, the province will also hold a mass dance of over 24,000 participants next week. There will be large gatherings, but if there’s an outbreak, authorities will certainly lay the blame on us.”

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Pro-democracy protest in front of the Siam Commercial Bank headquarters in Bangkok on Nov. 25, 2020.

Physician and former Pheu Thai MP Tossaporn Serirak, who works as a field doctor in protest sites, said he supports the idea of withholding demonstrations until the situation returns to normal.

“Demonstrators should be socially responsible as well. I ask every party to cancel any mass gatherings for the next 14 days,” Tossaporn said. “I talked to some of the leaders and most of them agreed with the idea.”

Panupong the activist also seized on the latest virus outbreak to criticize the government and health minister Anutin Charnvirakul for failing to control the situation.

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Protest in front of Bang Khen Police Station on Dec. 21, 2020.

“Stop using the coronavirus as an excuse to crack down on dissent,” Panupong said. “They’re blaming the people for the clumsiness of PM Prayut Chan-o-cha’s administration. It also shows that the Emergency Decree they’ve been implementing for ages failed to contain the virus.”

Student-led protests against PM Prayut initially broke out in February, but they were later abandoned amid the outbreak of coronavirus in March.

Demonstrations resumed with even larger turnouts in July after the pandemic subsided. The movement is calling for Prayut’s resignation, charter amendments, and monarchy reforms.

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