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19 Soldiers Quarantined After Virus Infection Linked to Drill

Military personnel join in the Final Planning Conference of the Cobra Gold joint military exercise on Nov. 6, 2020. Photo: Royal Thai Navy
Military personnel join in the Final Planning Conference of the Cobra Gold joint military exercise on Nov. 6, 2020. Photo: Royal Thai Navy

BANGKOK — The army on Thursday said 19 soldiers were placed under quarantine after they participated in a joint military exercise where a South Korean serviceman later tested positive for the coronavirus.

The 32-year-old soldier from the Republic of Korea attended the Cobra Gold drill in Rayong province from Nov. 3 to Nov. 5, and departed Thailand Sunday. He was diagnosed with the coronavirus upon his arrival in his home country, according to the Thai disease control department.

Army spokesman Santipong Thammapiya said they have identified Thai personnel who had been in close contact with the South Korean, and maintained that no one has been infected so far. They will be spending the next 14 days in quarantine in their accommodation, Lt. Gen. Santipong added.

“The army sent 19 men to attend the same meeting with the infected soldier,” Santipong said. “The army’s coronavirus response center has informed them of the relevant measures and they have been tested for infection.”

Walairat Chaifoo, a top epidemiologist at the Disease Control Department, said Wednesday the South Korean soldier entered Thailand on Oct. 17 and stayed in quarantine until Nov. 1, where he tested negative twice.

He then stayed at a hotel in Bangkok’s Sukhumvit area before departing to Rayong province on Nov. 2. Health officials would not identify the hotel by name.

The unnamed soldier participated in a strategy planning conference at an undisclosed hotel in Rayong’s Ban Chang district from Nov. 3 to 5, along with 201 people from Thailand, the United States, Indonesia, Australia, Singapore, Japan, China, and India.

Read: Army Admits 110 US Soldiers for Joint Exercise in Pandemic

He later returned to Bangkok and stayed at a hotel – officials have not specified where precisely – before flying back to South Korea on Sunday, Walairat said.

She added that it remains unclear whether the soldier caught the virus in Thailand or South Korea.

“We have to wait for test results from South Korea before we can reach the conclusion,” Walairat said.

Health officials are also questioning individuals who spent close contact with the soldier and asked members of the public to remain calm since he did not visit any public venues apart from those designated on his itinerary, Walairat said.

In today’s briefings, the government’s coronavirus response center said five new cases of infection were reported inside state quarantine. They include an individual returning from Germany, Sweden, Iran, Kenya, and Switzerland.

As of Thursday, 99 infected patients are being treated at hospitals, while 3,693 patients have recovered. The country’s cumulative case of infection now stands at 3,852.

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Grounded by the Pandemic, This Pilot is Now a ‘Grab’ Driver

Mahesak Wongpa in the cockpit as a pilot. Right, Mahesak drives his car in an interview with Khaosod.

BANGKOK — Mahesak used to taxi the skies, crisscrossing the globe as a pilot. Today, he’s taxiing the streets of Bangkok as a driver for a ride-hailing application.

Former first pilot Mahesak Wongpa, 50, is just one of the many victims in Thailand’s aviation business, which has been devastated by the coronavirus pandemic. Speaking to Khaosod during his shift, Mahesak said the epidemic forced him to take up a very different kind of driving job, and overcome his pride in the process. 

“Since my status has changed due to reality, I decided to get out of my comfort zone,” Mahesak said. “I don’t think of it as replacing the income I had as a pilot. It’s much less money, but it’s still money.

Mahesak declined to say in the interview which airline he worked for, but said that all of his flights were grounded back in March. He could no longer fly. Soon enough, he was let go from work.

“The skies were all closed, and everything was overcast. I knew I had to find something to do,” Mahesak wrote on Oct. 29 in a Facebook post. It went viral in no time. 

“I remembered that I still had one more skill since my teenage years – driving.”

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Photo: Mahesak Wongpa / Facebook

“I decided to sign up with Grab. The process was easy, but it was difficult to overcome my own feelings. I thought, ‘would people look down on me? ‘A pilot turned-Grab driver,’ and ‘If I run into someone I know, I would be so embarrassed,” he wrote.

But driving his first customer – from Lad Prao to Phahonyothin for a fare of 59 baht – gave him the encouragement to keep going. 

“I told myself, don’t think that it’s too little money. You have to use whatever skills you have,” he recalled in the interview with Khaosod. 

“There are many roads to success if you are brave enough to get out of your comfort zone.” 

Mahesak is among the three million Thais – at least – who are said to have lost their jobs since the virus struck in January. Almost a fourth of Thais still employed also feel insecure about their employment, a survey found. 

The aviation industry is one of the most hard-hit, alongside tourism. Debt-ridden national carrier Thai Airways has had to open a cafe, sell bags made from life vests, fry dough fritters, and even charter a holy flight to nowhere in order to make money. 

During a visit to the Thai Airways Cafe by a reporter, a pilot said that his job was mopping the floor.

Related stories:

A Fourth of Thais Fear Their Jobs are On the Line: Survey

Unemployment Figures Better Than Expected: Labour Minister

Thai Airways Lists Toothpicks, Napkins in 11.11 Sales

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Royalists Attacked a Car They Thought Thanathorn Was In (He Wasn’t)

Royalist protesters surround a white car thought to be carrying opposition politician Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit on Nov. 12, 2020 in front of Ravadee Hotel in Nakhon Si Thammarat.

NAKHON SI THAMMARAT — Police on Thursday declined to say whether a crowd of hardline monarchy supporters who mobbed and attacked a car thought to be carrying progressive politician Thanathorn Jungrungruangkit would be prosecuted. 

Thanathorn was touring Nakhon Si Thammarat to help a Move Forward Party candidate campaign for a local election, though the politician said he was not inside the vehicle surrounded by the ultraroyalists. When asked by reporters if the incident warrants a criminal investigation, a deputy national police chief declined to comment. 

“We cannot give any details at this time,” Gen. Damrongsak Kittiprapat said. “We have to collect evidence first. I will let you know later if those actions broke any laws.” 

Thanathorn, 41, was attending a meeting with Move Forward Party officials inside Ravadee Hotel when pro-monarchy hardliners gathered in front of the hotel’s entrance and exits. 

They pledged to look for Thanathorn, whom they believed to be conspiring against the monarchy and engineering the ongoing protests against PM Prayut Chan-o-cha. 

The royalists demanded that all vehicles exiting the hotel roll down their windows to identify the passengers. When one of the cars refused to open their windows, the protesters mobbed and heckled the vehicle. 

One person waved banknotes at the car to show a portrait of His Majesty King. Another struck the vehicle with a flagpole. 

Thanathorn later posted Wednesday evening that he wasn’t at the scene at all. 

“I was not in the car, and that wasn’t even my car. I’m worried about people who were unwittingly dragged into this,” he tweeted

Only Wanted to Talk? 

The blowback was almost immediate. A Twitter user who claimed to be the owner of the vehicle said there were five women inside the car when royalists besieged it, and they did not show themselves because they felt threatened by the hecklers. 

The user also said she will file charges against all individuals who caused damage to the car. 

But Col. Montien Baotong, chief of Nakhon Si Thammarat city police, said by phone Thursday that no one has filed any police complaint in regards to the scuffle so far. 

It was unclear what the royalists planned to do with Thanathorn if they discovered him inside the vehicle. But Arnon Meesee, leader of the royalist group involved in yesterday’s incident, told reporters that the protesters merely wanted to talk to Thanathorn.

“We just wanted to ask him why he came to Nakhon, and if he is really behind the movement to bring down the monarchy,” Arnon said. “The photos taken only show people trying to see who was in the car.” 

He insisted that the royalists were not engaging in violence.

“Who would put down the flag to go see inside the car? The flag was in-hand and there were so many people behind pushing. So the hand pushed in, and the flagpole came with it too,” Arnon said. 

Thanathorn was the founder of the Future Forward Party, a political faction that campaigned on progressive and liberal-leaning platforms. It was the second largest opposition party in the Parliament until a court disbanded it early this year, sparking waves of student-led protests that continued to this day. 

Conservative figures have routinely accused Thanathorn of supporting those protests and conspiring to bring down the monarchy, though he repeatedly denied those allegations. 

The politician was also followed and heckled when he showed up in Rayong on Monday and Samut Prakan on Tuesday.

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Thai Airways Lists Toothpicks, Napkins in 11.11 Sales

Photos: TG Warehouse / Facebook

BANGKOK — The once-glorious national carrier on Wednesday went onboard with Alibaba’s Single Day sales – the most popular online shopping day of the year – by offering wholesale discounts of its airplane cutlery. 

Thai Airways announced the sales through a Facebook page called TG Warehouse Sale, selling everything from its storehouse from branded toothpicks, plastic cups, bowls, espresso cups, cold napkins, tissue paper, and even foil food trays. 

The airline, which is going through bankruptcy rehabilitation, said the first lot of items were sold out by Wednesday afternoon.

“Thank you for your warm welcome to our sales debut on 11.11,” the page posted at 2pm. “We will quickly process your orders. For those of you who missed the opportunity, please follow our page as we will be back, better than ever.” 

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Photos: TG Warehouse / Facebook

Customers were invited to browse through the stock on the Facebook page’s shop, before filling out an order form via Google Forms. They can either wait for their items to be delivered or pick them up at Suvarnabhumi Airport.

Thai Airways, which has total liabilities of 332 billion baht, filed a restructuring plan back in May after a loss of passengers following the coronavirus pandemic that grounded its operations worldwide. 

Their efforts to make money during business reorganization include a cafe selling in-flight meals, selling dough fritters, bags made from life vests and slide rafts, and even a “holy” flight that flies over 99 sacred landmarks in the country. 

The pilgrimage flight on Nov. 30 is fully booked, the airline said. 

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Gov’t Defends Appointing Drug Convict Minister’s Wife to Office

A file photo of deputy agricultural minister Thammanat Prompow and his wife Thanaporn Sriwiraj.
A file photo of deputy agricultural minister Thammanat Prompow and his wife Thanaporn Sriwiraj.

BANGKOK — Deputy PM Wissanu Krea-ngam on Thursday insisted that the appointment of a wife of a minister who served four years in Australian prison for a drug trafficking conviction is totally legal. 

Thanaporn Sriwiraj, who’s married to deputy agriculture minister Thammanat Prompow, was assigned a position at the Prime Minister’s Office earlier this week, raising uproar from government critics. But Wissanu said the Prime Minister has sole power to appoint or remove any staff member at his own discretion. 

“It’s the Prime Minister’s quota,” Wissanu said. “Names can be nominated, but it’s the sole discretion of the Prime Minister to appoint or not appoint the position.”

Read: Thammanat Threatens to Sue Aussie Paper for Drug Allegation

Capt. Thammanat had said earlier that Thanaporn’s appointment was made under a “deal” with the outgoing incumbent, who reportedly resigned to help campaign for a candidate in the upcoming local election. 

Thammanat also said he was unaware of the nomination until the news broke on the media.

“It’s not my power,” Thammanat said. “I only learned about it from the media. I wasn’t really aware that the name nominated to the Cabinet was my wife because the surname didn’t catch my attention and no one said anything about it.”

When asked today whether such succession could be done, Wissanu the Deputy PM evaded the question and said it was the PM who made the decision to appoint Thanaporn.

“We wouldn’t say it like that,” Wissanu said. “The person who appointed her was the PM.”

Thammanat has been hit with controversies ever since he was nominated to the Cabinet last year.

The most serious allegation is a report from Australian media, which detailed how he was convicted of heroin trafficking in Australia back in 1993. Thammanat was imprisoned for four years, BBC’s Thai edition said, quoting court documents.

Despite a heap of evidence presented by the Australian press, Thammanat denied the allegations and insisted he was not involved in the crimes. 

In 2018, Thammanat reportedly announced his engagement with Thanaporn, who won the crown of 2016 Miss Thailand beauty pageant, though they did not register for marriage.

According to asset disclosure documents, Thanaporn owns 189 million baht worth of assets, which include a 12.35 karat diamond crown, 42 luxury handbags, and a Porsche sports car.

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Royalist Calls for Coup, Lawyer Replies With Complaints

Soldiers face off with reporters moments after the military stages a coup on May 22, 2014.
Soldiers face off with reporters moments after the military stages a coup on May 22, 2014.

BANGKOK — A lawyer and activist on Wednesday accused an ultraroyalist of inciting insurrection after he publicly called for the government to enact “special laws” that would amount to a military coup in order to protect the monarchy. 

Attorney Winyat Chartmontri lodged his complaint to the Dusit Police Station against Krit Yiammethakorn, the leader of the People’s Network for the Protection of the Monarchy group, who had said he would also petition the army chief to solve the ongoing political crisis by “shutting down” the country.

“I want the police to accept the case because this is an offense involving national security,” Winyat said. “I didn’t mean to intimidate Krit, it’s a clear act of wrongdoing.”

Winyat said he filed complaints on charges of sedition, instigating the armed forces to commit mutiny, and importing information deemed a threat to national security to the computer system.

The royalist group made the call for a coup during a counter-protest against the pro-democracy demonstrators in Bangkok on Sunday, where Krit said he would go to the army headquarters to hand an open letter to the army chief Gen. Narongphan Jitkaewthae on Monday morning.

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Ultraroyalist Krit Yiammethakorn speaks at a counter-rally on Ratchadamnoen Avenue in Bangkok, Nov. 9, 2020.

“I will submit an open letter to the army chief to call for a coup to shut down the country,” Krit said Sunday.

“I will also make a statement addressing the government, security authorities, and the armed forces to propose a solution for Thailand. We must help the nation and the government feed the right history to counter attempts by a certain group to distort it.”

When Monday came around, Krit went instead to Government House and submitted a petition urging PM Prayut Chan-o-cha to enact unspecified special measures to suspend constitutional rights to assemble and “deal” with the ongoing protests. 

However, other royalist movements seemed to distance themselves from Krit’s endorsement of a coup. 

The Center for People Protecting the Institution group, which consists of multiple royalist fractions including former polytechnic students, said Monday they disagreed with the idea since their main goal was to protect the monarchy.

“It’s just an idea from one of our members. It’s not associated with the group,” leader Tinnakorn Prodpai said. “I confirm that our objective is to protect the monarchy. We don’t want a coup or a shut down of Thailand.”

Krit himself also backed down and later said the letter was only meant to give moral support to the army for their role in protecting the monarchy.

When asked about the chance of the coup, army chief Narongphan told reporters Monday the probability is “below zero.”

The last military coup in Thailand was staged by PM Prayut in 2014 when he seized power from remnants of the elected government under Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

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Anutin Rejects Plan to Reduce Quarantine Period for Tourists

A bus leaves with Chinese tourists from Shanghai, who arrived at Suvarnabhumi airport on special tourist visas, in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2020. (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn)

BANGKOK (Xinhua) — Thai Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul on Tuesday reaffirmed that all incoming passengers into Thailand will still need to go through the 14-day mandatory quarantine.

There have been stakeholders from the state and private sectors who had been cheering for a reduction in the quarantine days from 14 to 10 days. However, the minister said the proposal will have to be put aside now.

Anutin said the Thai people in general expressed fear that the country will experience a second wave of COVID-19 infections as most of the newfound cases were imported.

In response to news regarding a Hungarian diplomat who was discovered by Thai health authorities to have contracted the virus on Monday, Anutin said he believed the diplomat had contracted COVID-19 from Hungarian foreign minister Peter Szijjarto while they were all on a state trip in Thailand.

“The Hungarian diplomat and his foreign minister were all in the same car and had a meal together,” Anutin said. “Also, 16 people in Thailand who were exposed to the Hungarians had returned negative tests.”

The health minister said although passengers are required to undergo COVID-19 testing and travel with Fit to Fly certificates, many had tested positive for the virus during their quarantine stay.

The ministry will maintain the quarantine period at 14 days to allay concerns among the public, Anutin stressed.

Thailand is reeling from a grim economy rocked by the COVID-19 fallout, but the safety of the Thai people is the top priority, the minister said.

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Pageant Queen Activist Files Complaint Over Doctored Anti-King Photo

Maria Poonlertlarp Ehren, right, at the Technology Crime Suppression Division on Nov. 10, 2020.
Maria Poonlertlarp Ehren, right, at the Technology Crime Suppression Division on Nov. 10, 2020.

BANGKOK — A former beauty pageant winner and supporter of the pro-democracy movement went to the police Tuesday to report that a photo of her at a protest was altered to contain messages defaming the monarchy.

Maria Poonlertlarp Ehren, who was crowned Miss Universe Thailand in 2017, visited the Technology Crime Suppression Division and filed cybercrime complaints against those who spread the doctored image. Maria said she tolerates different political opinions, but being criticized for what she did not do is unacceptable.

“I was saddened and deeply moved by the insults arising from the false information,” Maria said. “I have gathered evidence to press charges against eight Facebook users. I will pursue the case to the fullest extent and set an example for society.”

The doctored photo, which went viral on social media after pro-establishment accounts shared it, shows Maria holding a banner saying “I will not take any jobs until this country has no king.”

Left: the original photo. Right: the doctored photo containing messages defaming the monarchy. Photo: marialynnehren / Instagram
Left: the original photo. Right: the doctored photo containing messages defaming the monarchy. Photo: marialynnehren / Instagram

But Maria said the original photo was taken at Victory Monument on Oct. 17 with the sign that read “Justice for all.”

She said it was meant to demand PM Prayut Chan-o-cha to resign over a police crackdown on a pro-democracy rally the day earlier, in which water cannons were used on the protesters close to the Pathum Wan intersection.

“I don’t know who did it or why, but this is an attempt to instigate hatred,” Maria said. “This distorts the work I have been doing and it isn’t right.”

Siriwat Deepor, deputy chief of the Technology Crime Suppression Division, said investigators will identify individuals behind the posts. He said such action is punishable by the Computer Crime Act, as well as the defamation law.

Maria is one of the few celebrities who openly support and attend the ongoing protests, which call for PM Prayut’s resignation, charter amendment, and monarchy reforms. She was also vocal in the disappearance of activist Wanchalearm Satsaksit, who was allegedly kidnapped in June from his apartment in Cambodia.

At the final round of the Miss Universe contest in 2017, she was asked to name the most important social movement of her generation, in which she answered “young people.”

She lost the crown to Miss South Africa, Demi-Leigh Nel-Peters, who said it was the lack of equal pay when asked about the most important issue women face in the workplace.

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Future in the Cards: Thai Politics Reimagined in Tarot Symbolism

“2020” and “The Leader” cards. Images: Thai Political Tarot / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Flip over The Empress card – it’s a young female student protest leader. Wheel of Fortune becomes the replica of the missing 1932 revolution plaque. The High Priestess is a bald Buddhist nun. Three of Cups pays homage to an ‘alliance’ with activists in Hong Kong and Taiwan. 

Elements of the Thai political and social conflicts are being illustrated as tarot cards by a 29-year-old female artist on the Thai Political Tarot page – one of the thought-provoking and creative fanarts born in the student-led protests that gripped Thailand throughout 2020. 

“I like both politics and tarot,” the artist, who goes by the pen name Summer Panadda, said in an interview. “ So when the protests started, I started thinking how many scenes in real life were like the story of tarot.”

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“Tarot has elements from the experience of humanity, and I also think tarot makes the political situation easier to understand as well,” she said. 

Summer drew the cards from the Major Arcana and Minor Arcana and reinterpreted them to fit the Thai context. 

Nearly every issue that made the news in 2020 is covered, from the anti-government protests and the snail-pace investigation into Red Bull heir’s hit-and-run to kindergarten violence, fights for gender equality, and the viral “Milk Tea Alliance.” 

“It’s a year where everyone’s eyes are being opened in all aspects,” Summer said, adding that some astrologers even approached her with a request to use her decks for tarot reading sessions. 

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Image: Thai Political Tarot / Courtesy

The organic, crowdsourced nature of the pro-democracy movement is a ripe ground for memes, internet artworks, and other tributes created by online artists and netizens. 

The last major demonstration took place on Sunday, when thousands of protesters marched to the Grand Palace to submit their petitions asking for monarchy reforms to His Majesty the King.

They were blocked en route, and riot police turned water cannons against the protesters close to their destination. 

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Parents Demand 130 Mil. Baht in Damages Over Kindergarten Abuse

Lawyer Ronnarong Kaewpetch speaks to reporters after the arbitration hearing on Nov. 10, 2020.
Lawyer Ronnarong Kaewpetch speaks to reporters after the arbitration hearing on Nov. 10, 2020.

BANGKOK — Parents of young children beaten and mistreated by education workers at Sarasas Witaed Ratchaphruek School demanded a compensation of 130 million baht from the management, their lawyer said Tuesday.

Ronnarong Kaewpetch, who represented the parents of the assaulted children, said each of his clients demanded 5 million baht in damages for serial negligence and failure to prevent the abuses. School representatives were not present at today’s arbitration hearing hosted by the public prosecutor office.

“I don’t think the figure is overstated,” Ronnarong said. “The doctors still cannot confirm how long the trauma will last on the assaulted children.”

He added, “It doesn’t matter whether the school is sending a representative to negotiate or not. The prosecutors will indict the civil case accordingly.”

The privately run bilingual school has been embroiled in a criminal investigation since September, when a security camera footage of babysitter Ornuma “Kru Jum” Plodprong shoving kindergarten pupils to the ground before the eyes of other students went viral.

The clip soon ignited a wave of outrage on social media, as well as parents of other schools under the Sarasas chain, where similar incidents were also discovered. Ornuma was sentenced by a court to 195 days in prison last week, though she is currently out on bail.

Prosecutor spokesman Prayut Petchkhun said the school notified the office earlier on Friday that it declined to attend the hearing and wished the court to order the compensation.

“Today’s meeting is a voluntary process to reduce the caseload in courts,” Prayut said. “We will invite the school to attend another round of hearings, but if the school doesn’t wish to attend, we will give them legal advice instead.”

Last month, the Private Education Commission, which oversees the private schools, said the directors of the Sarasas Witaed Ratchaphruek School already paid compensation to some of the parents.

Ronnarong said his clients told him that the school refunded tuition fees for one semester, but it still owes parents the costs for physical and mental treatment, which the school promised to pay for.

According to the Office of the Attorney General, 19 cases were brought against education workers at Sarasas Witaed Ratchaphruek School over the charges of assault and child abuse.

Prayut the prosecutor spokesman said seven of the works have been tried by the court so far.

Related stories:

Sarasas School Violence: Victims’ Parents to File Class-Action Suit

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