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Activist Charged for Attacking Russian Man During Protest

Activist Narathiwat Khamma, in the foreground, argues with Vladislav Timokin during a protest on Nov. 8, 2020.
Activist Narathiwat Khamma, in the foreground, argues with Vladislav Timokin during a protest on Nov. 8, 2020.

Update: Organizers of the rally apologize for the assault.

PATTAYA — Police on Tuesday said an activist was charged with physical assault after he headbutted a Russian expat who interrupted a pro-democracy rally in the resort city of Pattaya.

Narathiwat Khamma attacked Russian national Vladislav Timokin during the Sunday evening’s gathering on Jomtien Beach, Pattaya City Police superintendent Khemmarin Pissamai said by phone. Narathiwat was released on a bond set at 10,000 baht on the same day.

Investigators will press more charges against him if doctors deemed Timokin was seriously harmed, Col. Khemmarin added. Timokin was seen reeling back with a bloodied nose after Narathiwat headbutted him.

The incident is a rare case of violence associated with the ongoing anti-government protests, which have remained largely peaceful since they broke out in July. PM Prayut himself criticized the assault in today’s news conference at Government House.

“Foreigners are not related to this matter,” PM Prayut said. “Even though there was some verbal [disagreement], it’s not right to attack him like that. It damages the reputation of Thailand and all Thai people.”

The Prime Minister continued, “I have already said that political difference is normal in democratic principles. We have to co-exist.”

Videos posted on social media show Narathiwat and Timokin exchanging heated words during the pro-democracy rally on Sunday evening. Timokin was observing the protest with his young daughter.

“Did you talk normally to me?” Narathiwat could be heard saying in the video, before he headbutted Timokin in front of the child.

“You can go fuck yourself!” the activist said to Timokin, who was bleeding from his nose. He was given first aid care at the scene. Both Timokin and Narathiwat were later taken to a police station.

Narathiwat being taken away by police.
Narathiwat being taken away by police.

After his release, Narathiwat told reporters that Timokin walked into the rally and asked what the demonstrators were protesting. He said the conversation soon descended into a quarrel when Timokin began to scold the protesters as “trash” and blamed them for pulling down the economy.

“It was a decent exchange of opinions until he called us trash,” the activist said. “He said the protests damaged the economy. I argued that the economy was not good well before the protests, but he told me that it’s normal for him since he could still afford a 1,000 baht meal.”

“He then pointed fingers at protesters and called them a virus. I approached him and he then challenged me as seen on the video,” Narathiwat continued.

Protesters gather at a pro-democracy rally on Jomtien Beach on Nov. 8, 2020.
Protesters gather at a pro-democracy rally on Jomtien Beach on Nov. 8, 2020.

Organizers of the rally later released a statement saying they were sorry for the violence.

“The People’s Party of Pattaya would like to apologize to the public and demonstrators. 

We have to clarify that the incident was caused by provocation and shouting of curse words from a foreign man, which prompted one of the speakers to lose control of his temper and knocked the foreigner’s face with his head. 

However, the cause does not excuse the misbehavior that followed. We therefore would like to apologize to everyone through this statement.”

Pattaya police chief Khemmarin said Narathiwat’s court date will be set at a later time.

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Japan Film Fest to Add Whimsy to Bangkokians’ November

“Talking the Pictures” (2020).

BANGKOK — A bevy of award-winning Japanese films will screen at a downtown mall through November. 

The Japanese Film Festival is organized by the Japan Foundation. It will be hel at House Samyan theater from Friday through Nov. 22. Opening the festival on Wednesday is “Talking the Pictures” (2019), a charming historical film set during the silent era about an aspiring voice actor.

All films will be screened with both Thai and English subtitles. Check the full schedule for the 15 films in the festival on the House Samyan website

Screenings include such as “Gone Wednesday” (2020) about seven different personalities living in one body, “Voices in the Wind” (2020) about a 17-year-old who revisits the town where her family was killed in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, as well as four short stop-motion animation films by Takeshi Yashiro featuring heartstring-tugging fantasy creatures. 

Tickets cost 160 baht for adults, 140 baht for House Samyan members, and 120 baht for students. 

The films will also be screened online from Nov. 20 to 29 for free and require online registration. See the schedule here. Films are only available for 24 hours from the scheduled starting times. 

House Samyan is on the fifth floor of Samyan Mitrtown, reachable from MRT Sam Yan.

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Biden Presidency: Beijing Hopes ‘U.S. Will Meet China Halfway’

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with then U.S. Vice President Joe Biden in Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 17, 2017. Image: Xinhua/Lan Hongguang.

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China will follow international customary practices over the U.S. election result, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson said Monday.

Spokesperson Wang Wenbin made the remarks at a press briefing when asked about when China will send a congratulatory message.

“We noticed that Mr. Biden has declared election victory. We understand the presidential election result will be determined following the U.S. laws and procedures,” Wang said.

“We always believe China and the United States should strengthen communication and dialogue, manage differences on the basis of mutual respect, expand cooperation based on mutual benefit, and promote the sound and stable development of China-U.S. relations,” the spokesperson said.

Wang said China’s position on relevant issues is consistent and clear, adding that China is firmly determined to safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests.

“We hope the new U.S. government will meet China halfway,” he added.

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Candidate Concessions Have Been Colorful, Funny — or Absent

In this Nov. 3, 1976, file photo, President Gerald Ford, speaking with a hoarse voice in the White House press room in Washington, concedes defeat to Jimmy Carter. (AP Photo)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Losing presidential candidates have conceded to their opponents in private chats, telegrams, phone calls and nationally televised speeches. Al Gore conceded twice in the same race. President Donald Trump isn’t expected to concede at all — not even with a tweet.

There’s no law that says he has to concede, but if he doesn’t, Trump will be the first presidential candidate in modern times to ignore a tradition that has marked peaceful transitions throughout American history.

Most concessions are gracious — less about the loser and more about closure for the country. Others have a little dry humor mixed in.

After failing to win reelection in 1992, George H.W. Bush quoted Winston Churchill and said he had been given the “Order of the Boot,” according to presidential historian Michael Beschloss. Bush said he could accept defeat because of his “deep devotion to the political system under which this nation has thrived for two centuries.”

The concession tradition had a hiccup in 2000 when Gore called George W. Bush to concede and then called him back to recant as the results from Florida went sideways.

Their tight campaign ended with the Florida vote in limbo.

“Let me make sure I understand,” Bush told Gore on the phone. “You’re calling me back to retract your concession?”

When Bush was declared the winner after the Supreme Court halted further recount action, Gore delivered his second concession.

“Just moments ago I spoke with George W. Bush and congratulated him on becoming the 43rd president of the United States. And I promised him that I wouldn’t call him back this time,” Gore said.

Democratic and Republican candidates in the presidential primaries give concession speeches too. In 1976, after he lost the race to be the Democratic presidential nominee, congressman Morris Udall quipped, “The voters have spoken — the bastards.”

Most concession speeches are about mending the country.

After his loss in 2008, Republican Sen. John McCain said: “The American people have spoken, and they have spoken clearly. A little while ago, I had the honor of calling Sen. Barack Obama to congratulate him on being elected the next president of the country that we both love.

“I urge all Americans who supported me to join me in not just congratulating him, but offering our next president our goodwill and earnest effort to find ways to come together.”

Richard Nixon, who lost to John F. Kennedy in 1960, said in his concession speech: “One of the individual features of America is that we have political contests — that they are very hard-fought as this one is hard-fought. And once the decision is made, we unite behind the man who was elected.”

When Jimmy Carter lost in 1980, he said matter-of-factly, “The people of the United States have made a choice and, of course, I accept that decision.”

Bob Dole had to concede in more than one race, but he did so both times with his trademark humor.

After Gerald Ford and Dole lost the 1976 presidential election to Carter and Walter Mondale, Dole, quipped: “Contrary to reports that I took the loss badly, I want to say that I went home last night and slept like a baby — every two hours I woke up and cried.”

Dole fell back on humor again in 1996 during his concession speech following his loss to Bill Clinton. When Dole talked of having just congratulated Clinton, he had to discourage boos from the crowd.

He later hushed a particularly raucous supporter by smiling and joking, “You’re not gonna get that tax cut if you don’t be quiet.”

Trump isn’t the only candidate to be disgruntled after a loss.

President John Adams was glum, too. He was elected the nation’s second president in 1796, but failed to win reelection.

“Adams was very bitter after losing the election of 1800,” said John Vile, a political science professor at Middle Tennessee State University who wrote a book about presidents and their words of victory and concession. “He slipped out of Washington, D.C., the morning of or the night before the election. He did not stay for the inauguration.”

Vile said in all fairness, there was no clear precedent at the time about what Adams was supposed to do. “But it was interpreted at the time that, at least, he was really unhappy,” he said.

Vile said the tradition of acknowledging defeat started in the late 1890s when Democrat William Jennings Bryan sent Republican William McKinley a telegram of congratulations. It read, “We have submitted the issue to the American people and their will is law.”

Vile said he thinks the funniest concession came from Thomas Dewey, who lost to Harry S. Truman in 1948. In his concession, Dewey likened himself to a corpse and told the story about a drunk at a wake.

As a practical joke, the inebriated man’s friends laid him in a coffin, his hands folded on his chest holding a lily. In the morning, he awoke confused.

“‘If I am alive, what am I doing in this coffin?’” Vile said the man wondered. “‘If I am dead, why do I have to go to the bathroom?’ It was sort of a humorous way of letting people know that he was still alive and that it was going to be OK.”

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Japan Minister Bashes Trump Over Refusal To Accept Election Loss

President Donald Trump dances after speaking at a campaign rally at Prescott Regional Airport, Monday, Oct. 19, 2020, in Prescott, Ariz. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

TOKYO (Kyodo) — Japan’s land minister said Tuesday he posted, then deleted, a tweet criticizing U.S. President Donald Trump’s refusal to accept defeat in last week’s election.

“A sitting president making accusations of election fraud and insisting he will ‘never give up.’ Am I the only one seeing this and thinking, what kind of dictatorship is this? Where has our role model for democracy gone?,” Kazuyoshi Akaba wrote.

Continue reading the story here.

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China Gears up for World’s Largest Online Shopping Festival

Alibaba Group Generated RMB268.4 Billion (US$38.4 Billion) of GMV During the 2019 11.11 Global Shopping Festival

HONG KONG (AP) — Chinese consumers are expected to spend tens of billions on everything from fresh food to luxury goods during this year’s Singles’ Day online shopping festival, as the country recovers from the pandemic.

The shopping festival, which is the world’s largest and falls on Nov. 11 every year, is an annual extravaganza where China’s e-commerce companies, including Alibaba, JD.com and Pinduoduo, offer generous discounts on their platforms. Last year, shoppers spent $38.4 billion on Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms Tmall and Taobao.

This year’s festival will be closely watched as a barometer of consumption in China, which is just beginning to bounce back from the coronavirus pandemic after months of lockdown earlier in the year.

Analysts expect Chinese consumers to spend more on imported products and foreign luxury brands, since many Chinese tourists were unable to travel internationally due to the coronavirus pandemic and tightened travel restrictions.

A survey by consulting firm Oliver Wyman found that 86% of Chinese consumers are willing to spend the same as or more than during last year’s Singles’ Day festival.

“In the last six months or so, wealthy households have actually spent more money,” said Sean Shen, customer and strategy competence leader for EY in Greater China. “We also see that purchases of luxury segment products are increasing because of the international travel restrictions.”

Sales of electronic goods and health and wellness products are also expected to rise, as more people work from home and pay more attention to their health amid the pandemic, according to a report by consultancy Bain & Company.

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A delivery man passes by an ad for the Nov. 11 Sales Day in Beijing, China on Oct. 28, 2020. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

To help merchants cope with the impact from the coronavirus, online platforms have extended the shopping festival period this year in hopes of boosting sales.

Both Alibaba and JD.com, the country’s two biggest e-commerce companies, began offering discounts on Oct. 21, three weeks ahead of Nov. 11. Some brands and merchants that slashed their prices booked hundreds of millions of yuan (tens of millions of dollars) in sales just hours into the shopping festival.

Tang Chenghui, an electrical engineer who lives in Beijing sees Singles’ Day as an opportunity to stock up on snacks and imported products such as milk from Australia. Ahead of the festival, Tang pre-ordered 3 boxes of duck eggs, 10 packets of soybean milk powder, two boxes of yogurt, coffee and wine.

“I’m buying more snacks this year because I’ve just moved into a new apartment and have enough storage space to stockpile the snacks I like,” said Tang. “Some of these products are really cheap during the Singles’ Day discounts.”

Unlike Black Friday and Cyber Monday in the U.S., Singles’ Day in China is not just about deep bargains. Alibaba pioneered the concept of Singles’ Day and holds an annual gala on Nov. 11 with celebrity performances to entertain shoppers.

E-commerce sales via livestreaming and Alibaba’s annual gala are part of a “shoppertainment” trend which blends shopping with entertainment in order to become more appealing and engaging to shoppers.

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Residents wearing masks to protect from the coronavirus stand near an ad promoting the Nov. 11 Sales Day in Beijing on Sunday, Nov. 8, 2020. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

Mini games within online shopping platforms entice shoppers with deeper discounts while encouraging them to spend more time within the app.

“Because of COVID-19, brands and retailers have doubled down on e-commerce and livestreaming commerce to drive growth, and it will show strongly on (Singles’ Day) this year,” said Wang Xiaofeng, a senior analyst at Forrester.

But while millions of shoppers spend hours on mini games hoping to snag better bargains, some are irked by the complexities required to win such discounts.

“Black Friday discounts tend to be better, and they are more straightforward,” said Liu Zhirou, a 27 year-old Beijing-based accountant. “Now, I still ask my friends to help me buy things from the U.S. during Black Friday.”

“The rules around Singles’ Day discounts now are getting more and more complicated,” she said. “I usually just spend my money on Black Friday, and buy less on Singles’ Day.”

AP researcher Chen Si in Shanghai contributed to this report.

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CP Foods To Speed up Payment for Small Business Suppliers

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods) will reduce credit terms to 30 days in an effort to increase liquidity for its all suppliers, which consisting of around 3,000 – 4,000 small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

The effort aims at helping SMEs jobs and stimulating Thai economy in the post-COVID-19 pandemic in a response to the government policy.

Mr. Prasit Boondoungprasert, CEO at CP Foods, said COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented disruptions to all business sectors, especially the SMEs, which has been hit hard facing cash flow and liquidity challenges.

In order to help suppliers in this difficult situations, CP Foods and its products including CP, CP Freshmart and BKP brands, will shorten its payment period for suppliers, helping them to get paid within 30 days after receiving the goods or services.

The 30-day payment term will give positive impact to an overall Thai economy as suppliers will benefit from better cash flow and liquidity.

“The company is willing to help its business partners. At present, CP Foods has already given a 30-day credit term to a number of partners. We are accelerating our payment process to ensure 100% of suppliers received the same Credit Term. This will make the business run smoother, protecting thousands of jobs across many related sectors as a consequence. “said Mr. Prasit.

CP Foods operates agro-industrial and food businesses with approximately 3,000- 4,000 SME partners, mainly supplying raw materials, ingredients, packaging and products, etc. These are critical for making quality and sufficient foods to consumers worldwide.

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Pfizer Says Early Data Signals COVID-19 Vaccine Is Effective

Medical personnel at work in the intensive care unit of the hospital of Brescia, Italy, Thursday, March 19, 2020. (Claudio Furlan/LaPresse via AP)

Pfizer says an early peek at its vaccine data suggests the shots may be 90% effective at preventing COVID-19, indicating the company is on track later this month to file an emergency use application with U.S. regulators.

Monday’s announcement doesn’t mean a vaccine is imminent: This interim analysis, from an independent data monitoring board, looked at 94 infections recorded so far in a study that has enrolled nearly 44,000 people in the U.S. and five other countries.

Pfizer Inc. did not provide any more details about those cases, and cautioned the initial protection rate might change by the time the study ends. Even revealing such early data is highly unusual.

“We’re in a position potentially to be able to offer some hope,” Dr. Bill Gruber, Pfizer’s senior vice president of clinical development, told The Associated Press. “We’re very encouraged.”

Authorities have stressed it’s unlikely any vaccine will arrive much before the end of the year, and limited initial supplies will be rationed.

“We need to see the data, but this is extremely promising,” said Dr. Jesse Goodman of Georgetown University.

He ticked off many questions still to be answered including how long the vaccine’s effects last and if it also protects older people as well as younger people.

If Pfizer’s vaccine ultimately pans out, “it’s going to be a while before this has a major impact at the population level,” said Goodman, a former chief of Food and Drug Administration’s vaccine division.

The interim results were “an interesting first signal,” but questions remain, said Marylyn Addo, head of the tropical medicine unit at UKE hospital in Hamburg, Germany.

Global markets, already buoyed by the victory of U.S. President-elect Joe Biden, exploded on the news from Pfizer. All major markets in Europe, where infections have soared, are up 5%. In the U.S., Dow futures also rose 5% and were up about 1,400 points just over two hours before the opening bell.

The shots made by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech are among 10 possible vaccine candidates in late-stage testing around the world — four of them so far in huge studies in the U.S. Another U.S. company, Moderna Inc., also has said it hopes to be able to file an application with the FDA later this month.

Volunteers in the final-stage studies, and the researchers, don’t know who received the real vaccine or a dummy shot. But a week after their second required dose, Pfizer’s study began counting the number who developed COVID-19 symptoms and were confirmed to have the coronavirus.

Because the study hasn’t ended, Gruber couldn’t say how many in each group had infections. Doing the math, that would mean almost all the infections counted so far had to have occurred in people who got the dummy shots.

Pfizer doesn’t plan to stop its study until it records 164 infections among all the volunteers, a number that the FDA has agreed is enough to tell how well the vaccine is working. The agency has made clear that any vaccine must be at least 50% effective.

No participant so far has become severely ill, Gruber said. Nor could he provide a breakdown of how many of the infections had occurred in older people, who are at highest risk from COVID-19.

Participants were tested only if they developed symptoms, leaving unanswered whether vaccinated people could get infected but show no symptoms and unknowingly spread the virus.

FDA has required that U.S. vaccine candidates be studied in at least 30,000 people. In addition to adequate numbers of older adults, those studies must also include other groups at high risk, including minorities and people with chronic health problems.

And it told companies they must track half their participants for side effects for at least two months, the time period when problems typically crop up. Pfizer expects to reach that milestone later this month, but said Monday no serious safety concerns have been reported.

Because the pandemic is still raging, manufacturers hope to seek permission from governments around the world for emergency use of their vaccines while additional testing continues — allowing them to get to market faster than normal but raising concerns about how much scientists will know about the shots.

The FDA’s scientific advisers last month said they worry that allowing emergency use of a COVID-19 vaccine could damage confidence in the shots and make it harder to ever find out how well they really work. Those advisers said it’s critical these massive studies are allowed to run to completion.

___

AP writers Frank Jordans and Charles Sheehan contributed to this report.

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Police Admit Teargas Was Used in Protest Crackdown

Police disperse pro-democracy protestersclose to Pathumwan Intersection on Oct. 16, 2020.

BANGKOK — A senior police officer on Monday acknowledged that a teargas agent was employed when riot police fired their water cannons at pro-democracy demonstrators in October. 

Reversing previous claims by police commanders that the water was not laced with any teargas chemicals, deputy chief of 2nd Crowd Control Division Chawalit Runsiri told a parliamentary hearing that the water used in the Oct. 16 crackdown contained both color pigments and teargas. 

“It was used only once to disperse the gathering,” Lt. Col. Chawalit said at the meeting with the House Committee on Human Rights. “It was not harmful to demonstrators.”

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Police crackdown on pro-democracy protesters on Oct. 16, 2020.

The meeting was called by committee chairman and Senator Somchai Sawangkarn to probe the police’s insistence that no irritants were mixed with the high pressure sprayed on protesters on Oct. 16. 

Although demonstrators, journalists, and other eyewitnesses reported feeling a burning sensation on their faces and smelling teargas chemicals during the crackdown, police officials soon disputed their accounts. 

“The police did not carry any weapons, only shields and batons,” police spokesman Kissana Phattanacharoen said on Oct. 16, shortly after the crackdown. “The blue water seen by the media is a routine chemical for crowd control, not teargas.” 

He doubled down on the claim on the following day. 

“No rubber bullets or teargas were used,” Col. Kissana said. “The demonstrators felt a stinging sensation in their eyes because of some chemical in the blue water.” 

heaven on earth ๒๐๑๑๐๔
A news report by Daily News quote police officials as saying that rumors about use of teargas on Oct. 16, 2020, were “fake news.”

Speaking to the parliamentary meeting today, Lt. Col. Chawalit from the riot police unit said the police resorted to using teargas because the protesters did not leave the protest site after officers used only water.

“When the situation failed to resolve, we employed teargas to disperse the crowd,” he said. “Security officers conducted themselves based on universal standards, legal framework, and situations at the time.” 

Police officials attempted to muddle the water again on Sunday night after a riot police water truck opened fire on demonstrators close to the Grand Palace. 

Police insisted the cannons were only aimed at the sky to create droplets of water on the demonstrators, but videos and photographs of the incident show the high pressure water being launched directly at the protesters at times. 

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Prayut Congrats Biden as Thai Fangirls Fall for Republican Newcomer

Left: Madison Cawthorne. Right: President-elect Joe Biden gestures to supporters Saturday, Nov. 7, 2020, in Wilmington, Del. Photo: Andrew Harnik / AP

BANGKOK — Current and past leaders of Thailand are sending messages of congratulations to President-Elect Joe Biden while some netizens are falling head over heel for a newly elected Republican congressman. 

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, who came to power through a military coup and a highly disputed election, said on Monday that he has instructed the foreign affairs ministry to prepare for establishing a diplomacy with the new American administration. 

“Even though many policies may change, we must adapt and create balance in our region, not just in Thailand, but in ASEAN,” Prayut told reporters. 

Minister of Finance Arkhom Termpittayapaisith also said Monday that Biden’s platform on increasing the minimum wage could spell good news for Thailand, because investors could decide to outsource work overseas to the region, including Thailand. 

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Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020, in Wilmington, Del. Democratic vice presidential candidate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., stands at left. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

In an official letter published by the Thai government on Sunday, Gen. Prayut congratulate Biden and his running mate Kamala Harris for “the trust you have earned from American voters.” 

“With the long-standing ties of friendship between our countries dating back more than 200 years, Thailand as the first treaty partner of the United States in Asia takes pride in our strategic partnership which contributes to our mutual benefit and the region’s peace, stability and prosperity,” the letter said. 

It went on, “On behalf of the Government and the people of the Kingdom of Thailand, I wish you every success and look forward to working closely with you and your Administration to further enhance our cooperation at all levels.”

Former Prime Ministers Thaksin Shinawatra and Yingluck Shinawatra also heap praises on Biden for his election victory. Both of the politician siblings are currently living in Dubai. 

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President-elect Joe Biden gestures to supporters Saturday, Nov. 7, 2020, in Wilmington, Del. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

“We in Thailand continue to attach great importance to our relationship with the United States, our important partner and ally,” Thaksin wrote in a message. “As all the Asian people we are very much looking forward with great optimism to working closely with your administration in tackling the challenges that are facing us today.”

The former PM, who was ousted in the 2006 coup while he was in New York, added, “I am confident that under your leadership we would be able to make our two region relations more vigorous and healthier.”

His sister Yingluck wrote, “As we are in unprecedented times we do hope that your presidency would work closely with our region in overcoming these challenges and making our relations to reach its full potential in all aspects.”

Heartthrob-Elect? 

Over the weekend, Thais also had a brief fangirl moment for Republican congressman-elect Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina. At 25, Cawthorn is the youngest person elected to the Congress since Jed Joseph Jr. in 1965. 

But it wasn’t Cawthorn’s conservative policies that attracted unlikely fans in Thailand, but his athletic look and youthful energy. 

“If he is my husband, I will quit watching PornHub,” a Facebook comment said. The government ordered a blanket ban on the popular porn website earlier this month. 

“He kind of looks like the quarterback in high school that’s in love with himself,” Facebook user Nontham Nahub wrote. 

Facebook user Sikharin Kasitin also compared the paraplegic Cawthorn to the lead in the romantic movie, “Me Before You” (2016). Cawthorn was injured in a 2014 automobile accident, which left him partially paralyzed. He was 18 at the time. 

But the more politically aware netizens take offense at Cawthorn’s track record, like his unwavering support for President Donald Trump, allegations of sexual misconduct, and his vacation photos taken at Adolf Hitler’s holiday home that were seen by some as inappropriate. 

“Stop fangirling just because he’s handsome and white. He has all the qualities of a Trump supporter: obsessed with Nazis, sexually harassed women, and bragged about how he almost got to learn at Annapolis even though he never did,” wrote Facebook user Nattakrita Lionella Reyjavinski.

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