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Chiang Mai police arrest Chinese man on expired student visa

Chiang Mai police arrest Chinese man on expired student visa

CHIANG MAI — 28 February 2026, Immigration police in Chiang Mai have arrested a Chinese national for overstaying his student visa, officials said.

Investigators from the Chiang Mai Immigration Office joined forces with the Investigation Division of Immigration Bureau Region 5 to inspect an area along Sirimangkalajarn Road in Suthep subdistrict, Mueang district, after receiving a tip-off that a foreigner was staying in the kingdom unlawfully.

Officers arrested one Chinese man on a charge of “being a foreigner remaining in the kingdom after permission had expired”. He was informed of the charge and his legal rights before being handed over to investigators at Phu Phing Ratchaniwet Police Station for further legal proceedings.

The suspect admitted he had been staying in Thailand on a Non-ED visa, issued to foreigners studying at accredited educational institutions in the country. After his permitted stay expired, he failed to depart or apply for an extension within the required period, leading to his arrest, officials said.

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Thai FM says global community silent on Cambodia’s claims

Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow

BANGKOK — Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow on 27 February briefed members of the diplomatic corps on the outcome of his visit to France and participation in the high-level segment of the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC), saying the international community has not reacted to statements made by Cambodia regarding Thailand.

Sihasak said he had met with the UNESCO Director-General, the French foreign minister and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and delivered an intervention in Geneva. A key focus was the Thailand–Cambodia situation. He said Thailand had sought to explain efforts to move bilateral relations forward, noting that in direct talks Cambodia had expressed a similar stance. However, he voiced disappointment that Cambodia’s public statements, including allegations that Thailand had encroached on territory, contradicted private discussions and did not reflect the facts.

He expressed concern over what he described as inaccurate information in Cambodian reports, saying Thailand had attempted to look ahead and rebuild ties, but Cambodia’s remarks had forced Bangkok to adjust its tone in response. “We prefer to speak constructively, but when Cambodia makes such statements, we must respond — even if we do so in a civil manner,” he said.

Sihasak stressed that Thailand’s primary objective at the HRC was to highlight online crime as a serious human rights violation affecting lives and property. He said Thailand presented factual information and did not attribute the problem to political instability or rule-of-law shortcomings in any country. Nevertheless, he said Thailand had again been compelled to address the bilateral issue after Cambodia repeated previous claims. Failing to respond would have left Thailand facing allegations alone, he added.

He said Thailand remains committed to restoring relations but cannot do so unilaterally. Cambodia, he said, has conveyed differing messages in various forums and media. He suggested Cambodia’s statements may be aimed at domestic audiences or at creating external pressure on Thailand by invoking the international community.

However, Sihasak noted that the global community has not expressed any position on Cambodia’s remarks. He said this likely reflects an understanding that the matter is best resolved bilaterally and that outside involvement could complicate the situation — a position consistent with Thailand’s preference for direct negotiations without external pressure.

Asked about next steps, Sihasak said “the ball is now in Cambodia’s court”, adding that Phnom Penh faces a choice between a peaceful path or one leading to conflict and loss. While Thailand is not afraid to defend its sovereignty, he said it would choose an approach that benefits both sides and avoids further damage.

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Natty of Kiss of Life draws buzz in Korea with chud Thai appearance

Natty of the K-pop girl group Kiss of Life has drawn widespread attention in Thailand and South Korea after appearing in traditional Thai dress, or chud Thai, while introducing simple everyday Thai phrases in a recent clip shared online.

The video quickly went viral, generating strong engagement from Korean fans who praised her elegant look in Thai attire and expressed curiosity about Thailand’s language and culture. Several commenters said the clip encouraged them to learn basic Thai, while others hoped to see other members of Kiss of Life try on Thai costumes in future content.

One Korean fan wrote that they had recently travelled to Bangkok and Pattaya during the Lunar New Year holiday, describing the trip as enjoyable thanks to the kindness of local people. Another said Thai members of Korean idol groups often have unique charm and asked Natty to continue posting Thai-language lesson videos.

Some comments highlighted the perceived femininity and elegance of the Thai language, with fans saying it sounded even more charming when spoken by Natty. Others noted that her Korean pronunciation carries a slight Thai intonation, which they found endearing.

Natty, a Thai national, has been active in the Korean entertainment industry for several years and continues to attract attention for promoting Thai culture alongside her music career.

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Most Thais lack six-month emergency savings, BOT says

BANGKOK, 26 February 2026 — Bank of Thailand said 77.3% of Thais have emergency savings covering less than six months, while more than 86% have not planned for retirement or are unable to follow through with their plans.

In its 2024 report, the central bank said overall financial literacy among Thais has improved steadily and is above the OECD average. However, many people still lack understanding of interest and compound interest.

Although 91.5% of respondents reported saving money, most do not have sufficient emergency funds, reflecting irregular or inadequate long-term savings. The BOT said emergency savings are a key foundation for long-term financial security, helping households manage debt during income shocks and increasing the likelihood of achieving retirement goals.

Use of basic financial services, particularly deposits and money transfers, has increased. However, take-up of other products such as credit cards, insurance and investments remains low and is declining. Credit usage has also fallen across all occupational groups, partly due to tighter lending standards amid economic conditions.

The findings underscore a structural gap between saving behaviour and long-term financial preparedness, despite improvements in financial knowledge.

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Khao Soi ranks second in TasteAtlas world noodle list

Northern Thai noodle curry soup with chicken (Khao Soi Kai)

Thailand’s Khao Soi has been ranked No.2 in the 2026 “Best Rated Noodle Dishes in the World” by TasteAtlas, placing the Northern Thai specialty among the top noodle dishes globally.

The coconut curry noodle soup is known for its rich broth made with coconut milk and red curry paste, served with egg noodles and a choice of chicken, beef or pork. It is topped with crispy fried noodles and accompanied by condiments such as lime, pickled cabbage, shallots and chilies.

The top spot went to Yokohama-style ramen from Japan, a thick-noodle ramen in a tonkotsu soy-based broth. The rankings also featured a strong showing from Asian noodle dishes, including other Japanese ramen varieties, China’s Lanzhou lamian and Biáng biáng noodles, Vietnam’s pho, Southern Vietnamese beef noodle salad and grilled pork meatballs with vermicelli, as well as Singapore’s char kway teow.

Khao Soi’s high placement reflects the growing international recognition of Northern Thai cuisine, with the dish now widely regarded as one of Thailand’s most iconic noodle offerings.

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CPF advances as an innovation-driven organization, wins 5 Future Trends Awards 2026

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CPF) has strengthened its position as a global AgriTech leader after winning five major honors at the Future Trends Awards 2026. The achievement reflects the company’s progress under its “Kitchen of the World” vision, delivering high-quality food to more than 4 billion consumers worldwide through its Sustainovation strategy, which integrates innovation, advanced technology, and sustainability.

CPF received five awards: Leader of Leaders, Leader of People, Student Love (18–22 years), Young Professional Love (23–35 years), and The Most Innovative. The awards were accepted at Bhiraj Hall, BITEC Bangna by Mr. Prasit Boondoungprasert, Chief Executive Officer of CPF, together with the company’s management members.

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Under Mr. Prasit’s leadership, CPF continues its journey toward becoming a world-class AgriTech organization by applying technologies such as AI and IoT across its end-to-end food value chain. The company operates in 17 countries across five continents, with revenue of approximately THB 580 billion and more than 135,000 employees, guided by the Sufficiency Economy Philosophy and the Three-Benefit Principle.

CPF also continues to elevate Thailand’s food industry globally through initiatives such as the “Thai Food Mission to Space,” highlighting chicken products certified to the Space Food Safety Standard aligned with NASA requirements. At the core of this success is strong investment in people, supported by programs including CPF Hack the Future, CPF KM Excellence Awards, and the Business Transformation Program—reinforcing CPF’s commitment to becoming a future-ready, innovation-driven organization.

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Pakistan is in ‘open war’ with Afghanistan after latest strikes, defense minister says

Afghan Taliban soldiers walk along the main road on the Afghan side of the Torkham border crossing with Pakistan in Torkham, Afghanistan, Friday, Feb. 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Wahidullah Kakar)

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan considers itself in an “open war” with neighboring Afghanistan, Pakistan’s defense minister said Friday, in the worst escalation of violence since a Qatar-mediated ceasefire in October.

The comments by Defense Minister Khawaja Mohammad Asif came after Afghanistan launched a cross-border retaliatory attack on Pakistan overnight that saw Islamabad hit back with airstrikes on Kabul.

Asif said in an X post that Pakistan had hoped for peace in Afghanistan after the withdrawal of NATO forces in 2021 and expected the Taliban, which seized power in the country, to focus on the welfare of the Afghan people and regional stability.

Instead, he said that the Taliban had turned Afghanistan “into a colony of India,” Pakistan’s regional archrival with which it has periodically engaged in wars, clashes and skirmishes since gaining independence from British colonial rule in 1947. India has had improved ties with Afghanistan recently, offering to enhance bilateral trade, to the annoyance of Islamabad.

“Our patience has now run out. Now it is open war between us,” he said. There was no immediate reaction from Afghan officials.

Afghan authorities in the eastern Nangarhar province said that fighting was ongoing in the Torkham border area Friday morning. The province’s information directorate said that Pakistani mortar fire hit civilian areas in Torkham, including a refugee camp which had been evacuated overnight. In response, Afghanistan was targeting Pakistani army posts across the border, it said.

‘Exporting terrorism’

The defense minister accused Afghanistan of “exporting terrorism.” Islamabad frequently levies the allegation at its western neighbor as militant violence has surged in Pakistan, accusing Afghanistan of supporting the Pakistani Taliban, or TTP, and outlawed Baloch separatist groups. The TTP is separate from but closely allied with Afghanistan’s Taliban. Pakistan accuses the TTP of operating from inside Afghanistan, a charge both the group and Kabul deny.

Pakistan has frequently accused neighboring India of backing the outlawed Baloch Liberation Army and the Pakistani Taliban, allegations New Delhi denies.

Asif’s comments came hours after Pakistan carried out airstrikes in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, as well as in Kandahar in the south and Paktia province in the southeast, according to Pakistani officials and Afghanistan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid. Pakistan says the strikes were in retaliation for the Afghan cross-border attacks.

Retaliatory strikes

Afghanistan said that its military launched its attack late Thursday into Pakistan along the border in six provinces, in retaliation for deadly Pakistani airstrikes on Afghan border areas Sunday.

“In response to the repeated rebellions and insurrections of the Pakistani military, large-scale offensive operations were launched against Pakistani military bases and military installations along the Durand Line,” Mujahid said on X on Thursday night. The two countries’ more than 2,600-kilometer (1,600-mile) long border is known as the Durand Line, which Afghanistan hasn’t formally recognized.

Both governments have issued sharply differing casualty claims and said that they inflicted heavy losses on the other. The claims couldn’t be independently verified.

Afghanistan’s Defense Ministry said overnight that 55 Pakistani soldiers had been killed, including some whose bodies were taken into Afghanistan, and that “several others were captured alive.” It said thateight Afghan soldiers were killed and 11 wounded. The ministry said that it destroyed 19 Pakistani army posts and two bases, and that the fighting ended around midnight, about four hours after it began Thursday.

Pakistani Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said that two Pakistani soldiers were killed and three wounded.

Mosharraf Ali Zaidi, a spokesperson for Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, denied that any Pakistani soldiers had been captured. He said on X that at least 133 Afghan fighters were killed and more than 200 wounded. He also said that 27 Afghan installations were destroyed and nine fighters captured. He didn’t specify where the casualties occurred, but said that additional losses were estimated in strikes on military targets in Kabul, Paktia and Kandahar.

Tension has been high between the two neighbors for months, with deadly border clashes in October killing dozens of soldiers, civilians and suspected militants. The violence followed explosions in Kabul that Afghan officials blamed on Pakistan. Islamabad, at the time, conducted strikes deep inside Afghanistan to target militant hideouts.

Qatari-mediated ceasefire ended the fighting, although the two sides still occasionally traded fire across the border. Several rounds of peace talks in Istanbul in November failed to produce a formal agreement.

International calls for restraint

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres urged both sides to protect civilians as required under international law and “to continue to seek to resolve any differences through diplomacy,” U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said in a statement.

Russia called for an immediate halt to the fighting and for a diplomatic resolution to the conflict, Russian diplomat Zamir Kabulov told Russian news agency Ria Novosti. Kabulov, who is Russian President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy for Afghanistan, said that Moscow would consider mediating between the two countries if requested to do so, according to Ria Novosti.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi urged Pakistan and Afghanistan to resolve their differences through dialogue during Ramadan, “a time of self-restraint and solidarity in the Islamic world.” He said that Tehran is ready to assist in facilitating dialogue between the two countries.

Refugees at the border

Pakistani authorities said that dozens of Afghan refugees at the Torkham border had been relocated to safer places.

Pakistan launched a sweeping crackdown in October 2023 to expel migrants without documents, urging those in the country to leave of their own accord to avoid arrest and forcibly expelling others. Iran also began a crackdown on migrants at around the same time.

Since then, millions have crossed the border into Afghanistan, including people who were born in Pakistan decades ago and had built lives and created businesses there.

Last year alone, 2.9 million people returned to Afghanistan, the U.N. refugee agency has said, with nearly 80,000 having returned so far this year.

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Thai air force chief meets Myanmar junta leader

Air Chief Marshal Seksan Kanta, commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Air Force, visited Naypyitaw on 27 February for talks with Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, the Thai military said.

The trip came a day after a junta warplane bombed a market in Ponnagyun Township, Rakhine State, an area controlled by the Arakan Army, killing 18 civilians, mostly women and children. Two days earlier, airstrikes on Myinmu Township in Sagaing Region left nine people dead, including a child under five.

A day before the visit, the Royal Thai Air Force said Seksan also held discussions with senior Myanmar Air Force commanders in Naypyitaw to strengthen ties and elevate security cooperation. The talks focused on confidence-building at the air force level, expanding training and personnel development, and enhancing coordination among commanders to boost readiness and support stability along the border.

According to junta media, both sides discussed joint air force training and broader military cooperation. Min Aung Hlaing described the December–January election as a “success”, portraying the military as a “permanent guardian” of democratisation in Myanmar and claiming voters participated voluntarily without major protest.

The Royal Thai Air Force said it remains committed to professionalism and to advancing security cooperation for national interests and regional stability.

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Five-legged calf draws lottery hopefuls in Sukhothai

Five-legged calf draws lottery hopefuls in Sukhothai

SUKHOTHAI — 27 February 2026, A newborn calf with five legs has drawn crowds of curious neighbours and lottery hopefuls to a house in Sukhothai province.

The calf was born at 111/7, Moo 6, Ban Mon Khiri, in the Muang Kao subdistrict of Mueang district, Sukhothai. Villagers flocked to see the unusual animal, whose fifth leg protrudes from the nape of its neck and hangs down from the crest.

Miss Sukontha, 31, the calf’s owner, said the male calf, named “Thung Ngern Thung Thong”, roughly “Money Bags”, was born on 22 February and is now five days old. Despite the anomaly, it is healthy and energetic.

She said the extra limb extends from the poll of the neck and is accompanied by a small sac-like lump, inspiring the calf’s name. The animal is affectionate, playful and enjoys running around with people, she added.

Sukontha said she sells lottery tickets at the Mae Ya Shrine cave and keeps more than 30 cattle at home, with her parents helping to care for them. She said she had previously won lottery prizes for more than 10 consecutive draws and believes the calf was born to bring good fortune. She has no plans to sell it and intends to raise it for the rest of its life.

Lottery enthusiasts have been noting the house number, the calf’s birth date and the number of its legs as potential winning numbers for the next draw.

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Thai Airways posts 30.9 billion baht profit in 2025

Thai Airways International reported a net profit of 30.94 billion baht for 2025, marking a sharp turnaround from the previous year’s loss and underscoring a sustained recovery in the aviation sector.

Chief Executive Officer Chai Eamsiri said total revenue, excluding one-off items, reached 190.28 billion baht, up 1.2% year-on-year and exceeding pre-pandemic 2019 levels. Operating expenses, excluding special items, rose 2% to 149.44 billion baht in line with higher flight frequencies and passenger volumes, despite lower average jet fuel prices. Earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) stood at 40.84 billion baht, while EBITDA totalled 53.88 billion baht.

Including special items, the airline posted a net gain of 782 million baht, mainly from aircraft lease terminations and foreign exchange gains, partly offset by asset impairments, derivative losses and financial costs under TFRS 9 amounting to 13.15 billion baht. As a result, Thai Airways recorded a net profit of 30.94 billion baht, equivalent to earnings per share of 1.09 baht, compared with a loss per share of 6.26 baht in 2024.

As of 31 December 2025, total assets rose 3.9% to 304.06 billion baht, while total liabilities fell 7.6% to 228.15 billion baht. Shareholders’ equity increased significantly to 75.91 billion baht, up more than 30 billion baht from a year earlier. Cash and cash equivalents, including short-term investments, stood at 123.56 billion baht, reflecting strengthened liquidity.

Passenger revenue remained the core driver, with revenue passenger kilometres (RPK) rising 8.3% and average cabin factor improving to 79.2%. The airline carried 16.46 million passengers, up 2% year-on-year, while air cargo volumes expanded by 8–9%.

Looking ahead, the carrier said it will continue its “Network Line” strategy to diversify revenue across regions and reduce exposure to geopolitical risks. The company has hedged about 50% of its fuel consumption to manage cost volatility. In 2026, Thai Airways plans to take delivery of 14 Airbus A321neo and four Boeing 787-9 aircraft, operate 62 routes globally, launch a Bangkok–Amsterdam service in July and increase frequencies to Auckland, China and India.

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