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Trump Acquittal Confronts Dems With Election-Year Choices

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., holds a news conference the morning after the impeachment of President Donald Trump ended in acquittal, at the Capitol in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2020. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump’s impeachment ended with a reminder of why House Speaker Nancy Pelosi resisted the idea for so long — an acquittal everyone saw coming, followed by a bombastic presidential victory lap and a bump in his poll numbers just as the 2020 campaign officially began.

Now Democrats have to decide how to navigate the legislative and political landscape that they’ve helped reshape.

Pelosi’s nationally televised ripping of her copy of Trump’s State of the Union address Tuesday night underscored the acrid atmosphere that will make partisan cooperation on any issue difficult. Major legislative compromises were always going to be hard this election year, but the impeachment fight only deepened partisan bitterness and made progress less likely.

“Because we have to,” No. 2 House Democratic leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland said when asked how Congress and Trump could cooperate on health care and other issues. He added, “I’d be foolish to be optimistic because we have not done that so far.”

Democrats must also decide how vigorously to continue investigations, including into impeachment’s focus: Trump’s effort to pressure Ukraine’s leaders to bolster his reelection by seeking dirt on rival Joe Biden. The GOP-controlled Senate acquitted Trump on Wednesday of both articles of impeachment, with Utah Sen. Mitt Romney the sole lawmaker defying party lines.

Former White House national security adviser John Bolton could still have damaging information about Trump and has expressed a willingness to testify if subpoenaed. House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., told reporters Wednesday that House panels would likely summon Bolton and pursue other Trump probes as well.

“When you have a lawless president, you have to bring that to the fore, you have to spotlight that,” Nadler said.

Even as they consider the path ahead, neither Pelosi nor Democrats controlling the House are second-guessing their decision to impeach Trump.

Pelosi stood as a bulwark against impeachment for months as pro-impeachment sentiment rose steadily in her caucus, but when Trump’s dealings with Ukraine came to light in September, the floodgates were forced open.

“Once Ukraine happened, we had no choice but to proceed,” said Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt.

“And had we not (acted),” Welch added, “there would have been a huge price to pay politically.”

While that’s a popular view with Democrats’ dominant liberal wing, many think an overemphasis on Trump investigations risks feeding the Republican narrative that overreaching Democrats are obsessed with pursuing him. They also worry about detracting from Democrats’ focus on pocketbook issues that helped them capture House control in the 2018 elections.

“I’m hoping that’s a side show, and the big show is let’s work for the American people” on issues like health care and infrastructure,” said Rep. Lou Correa, D-Calif., co-chairman of the Blue Dog Coalition, which represents around 25 moderate House Democrats.

Assessing impeachment’s political impact ahead of November’s elections is at least as fraught.

Democrats say say despite Trump’s acquittal, the trial trained prolonged attention on his sordid behavior and lashed GOP senators to him with their votes absolving him. They say that will weaken their reelection bids of GOP senators in swing states like Colorado, Maine and Arizona.

“This reinforced the view that Trump is unethical and lacking in integrity,” said Democratic pollster Geoffrey Garin. “And it’s exposed a number of Republican senators as hacks beholden to the president and Mitch McConnell,” the Senate majority leader from Kentucky whom Democrats love to target.

Republicans counter that the effort has electrified GOP voters just months before Election Day, citing a Gallup Poll showing Trump with a 49% job approval rating, the highest of his presidency. They say Pelosi made tactical errors that exposed Democrats’ impeachment drive as a blatantly political exercise, in the process weakening more than two dozen House Democrats from Trump-won districts.

“The President has his highest approval rating since he’s been in office,” said Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. “I can tell you as a poll watcher who’s looking at polls in certain Senate races every one of our people in tough races, every one of them, is in better shape today than they were before the impeachment trial started.”

Republicans were especially critical of House Democrats’ decision to not fight more in the courts to obtain testimony and documents. Democrats said they dropped such efforts because Trump could have forced legal battles lasting months, effectively derailing the impeachment effort. Republicans said that decision made it easy to portray Democrats as caring less about a serious investigation than politics.

“You didn’t even bother to pull all the levers,” said Scott Jennings, a longtime political adviser to McConnell.

Many Democrats say there would have been no way to prevent Republicans from complaining that the investigation was political and lacked sufficient evidence.

“They’d have said that if you’d produced volumes more evidence,” said John Lawrence, Pelosi’s chief of staff for eight years ending in 2013.

And while Democrats collected compelling evidence against Trump, they made the mistake of thinking they’d win by appealing broadly to voters, said Brendan Buck, a GOP consultant who’s advised congressional leaders. Republicans prevailed by aiming their arguments at the GOP’s core conservative supporters, a tactic that has driven Trump’s presidency.

“Democrats seemed to play by the old rules and the president played by the new rules,” Buck said.

One moderate House Democrat said Democrats facing difficult reelection fights from Trump-leaning districts think Pelosi made tactical decisions that could jeopardize them.

That includes her one-month delay in formally sending the House’s impeachment articles to the Senate. That fed the GOP argument that the effort was political, said the Democrat, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe private conversations.

This Democrat said lawmakers also recoiled at Pelosi’s decision to sign the impeachment articles and distribute pens as mementos to colleagues. The Democrat said voters in their districts often cited that televised ceremony as evidence that impeachment was politically motivated.

“They ran as, ‘I’m not just a regular Democrat, I’ll reach across party lines,’” said former Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., who once ran the House GOP’s campaign organization. “And here they are impeaching the president like this.”

One thing many from both parties agree on: By November, impeachment could well be superseded by other issues and will likely be conflated into an overall referendum on Trump.

“My honest guess is that the public will very rapidly turn to kitchen table issues,” said former Rep. David Obey, D-Wis.

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Japan Finds 41 More Cases on Ship as Virus Alarm Doctor Dies

Dr. Li Wenliang

BEIJING (AP) — Japan on Friday reported 41 new cases of a virus on a cruise ship that’s been quarantined in Yokohama harbor while the death toll in mainland China rose to 636, including a doctor who got in trouble with authorities in the communist country for sounding an early warning about the disease threat.

Two docked cruise ships with thousands of passengers and crew members remained under 14-day quarantines in Hong Kong and Japan.

Before Friday’s 41 confirmed cases, 20 passengers who were found infected with the virus were escorted off the Diamond Princess at Yokohama near Tokyo. About 3,700 people have been confined aboard the ship.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced Thursday that Japan will deny entry of foreign passengers on another cruise ship heading to Japan — Holland America’s cruise ship Westerdam, on its way to Okinawa from Hong Kong — because of suspected virus patients found on the ship.

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The cruise ship Diamond Princess is docked at Yokohama Port, near Tokyo, Friday, Feb. 7, 2020. Japan on Friday reported 41 new cases of a virus on the cruise ship that’s been quarantined. About 3,700 people have been confined aboard the ship. (Sadayuki Goto/Kyodo News via AP)

The new immigration policy takes effect Friday to ensure border control to prevent the disease from entering and spreading further into Japan, Abe said.

Meanwhile, a newborn discovered infected 36 hours after birth has become the youngest known patient. The number of people infected globally has risen to more than 31,000.

Dr. Li Wenliang, 34, had worked at a hospital in the epicenter of the outbreak in the central city of Wuhan. He was reprimanded by local police for “spreading rumors” about the illness in late December, according to news reports. The outbreak has spread to some two dozen countries, triggering travel restrictions and quarantines around the world and a crisis inside the country of 1.4 billion.

The World Health Organization tweeted: “We are deeply saddened by the passing of Dr Li Wenliang. We all need to celebrate work that he did” on the virus.

Within a half-hour of announcing earlier Friday that Li was in critical condition, the hospital received nearly 500,000 comments on its social media post, many of them from people hoping Li would pull through. One wrote: “We are not going to bed. We are here waiting for a miracle.”

Li was among a number of medical professionals in Wuhan who tried to warn colleagues and others when the government did not, The New York Times reported earlier this week. It said that after the mystery illness had stricken seven patients at a hospital, Li said of them in an online chat group Dec. 30: “Quarantined in the emergency department.”

Another participant in the chat responded by wondering, “Is SARS coming again?” — a reference to the 2002-03 viral outbreak that killed hundreds, the newspaper said.

Wuhan health officials summoned Li in the middle of the night to demand he explain why he shared the information, and police later forced him to sign a statement admitting to “illegal behavior,” the Times said.

“If the officials had disclosed information about the epidemic earlier,” Li said in an interview in the Times via text messages, “I think it would have been a lot better. There should be more openness and transparency.”

A baby born last Saturday in Wuhan and confirmed positive just 36 hours after birth became the youngest known person infected with the virus, authorities said. But precisely how the child became infected was unclear.

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In this Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020, photo, medical workers in a protective suit help patients who diagnosed with the coronaviruses as they arrive at a temporary hospital which transformed from an exhibition center in Wuhan in central China’s Hubei province. (Chinatopix via AP)

“The baby was immediately separated from the mother after the birth and has been under artificial feeding. There was no close contact with the parents, yet it was diagnosed with the disease,” Zeng Lingkong, director of neonatal diseases at Wuhan Children’s Hospital, told Chinese TV.

Zeng said other infected mothers have given birth to babies who tested negative, so it is not yet known if the virus can be transmitted in the womb.

China finished building a second new hospital Thursday to isolate and treat patients — a 1,500-bed center in Wuhan. Earlier this week, another rapidly constructed, 1,000-bed hospital in Wuhan with prefabricated wards and isolation rooms began taking patients.

Authorities also moved people with milder symptoms into makeshift hospitals at sports arenas, exhibition halls and other public spaces.

All together, more than 50 million people are under virtual quarantine in hard-hit Hubei province in an unprecedented — and unproven — bid to bring the outbreak under control.

In Hong Kong, hospital workers demanding a shutdown of the territory’s border with mainland China were still on strike. The territory’s leader Carrie Lam announced a 14-day quarantine of all travelers entering the city from the mainland starting Saturday, but the government has refused to seal the border entirely. Taiwan has said it will refuse entry to all non-citizens or residents who have recently visited Hong Kong, Macao or China beginning Friday.

Testing of a new antiviral drug was set to begin on a group of patients Thursday, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. The drug, Remdesivir, is made by U.S. biotech company Gilead Sciences.

From Europe to Australia and the U.S., universities that host Chinese students or have study-abroad programs are scrambling to assess the risks, and some are canceling opportunities and prohibiting student travel.

Central banks in the Philippines and Thailand have cut their interest rates to fend off economic damage from the outbreak in China, the world’s second-biggest economy, with 1.4 billion people. China is a major source of tourists in Asia, and corporations around the world depend on its factories to supply products and its consumers to buy them.

The organizers of the Tokyo Olympics again sought to allay fears that the 2020 Games could be postponed or canceled because of the crisis.


Yamaguchi reported from Tokyo. Associated Press writer Foster Klug in Yokohama, Japan, contributed to this report.

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Monsoon Valley Wine Rises to the Position of Thailand’s Top Wine Producer With 300 Prestigious International Accolades

Inarguably Thailand’s top wine producer, Monsoon Valley Wine, under SIAM WINERY CO., LTD, has earned more than 300 internationally renowned prestigious awards, bringing pride and joy to Thailand as the Thai wine producer with the most awards and exceptional wines with high standard to the world.

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Since its winemaking inception in 2001, Monsoon Valley Wine has started producing wines from international grape varieties in Monsoon Valley Vineyards in Hua Hin, Prachuab Khiri Khan Province. With heavy nod to high quality, Monsoon Valley Wine is crafted by experienced winemakers from SIAM WINERY, making the wines exceptional in both the taste and the uniqueness. Monsoon Valley Wine is praised and acknowledged by world renowned wine luminaries and has received numerous accolades from within Thailand and also from wine contests in international level.

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So far, in various collections under Monsoon Valley Wine brand has won over 300 awards from prestigious wine competitions around the world, including Decanter World Wine Awards from the UK, Mundus Vini The Grand International Wine Award from Germany, AWC Vienna International Wine Challenge from Australia, Cathay Pacific Hong Kong International Wine and Spirit Competition from Hong Kong and Japan Wine Challenge from Japan.

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The most lauded wine from Monsoon Valley Wine is Monsoon Valley Shiraz, which has been awarded 47 accolades, including two golds from international awards. The second most lauded wine is Monsoon Valley Colombard, whose one among 43 awards is a gold medal from prestigious international award.

The wine with the most gold medals is Monsoon Valley Cuvée De Siam Rouge. With striking bottle label designed by National Artist Thawan Duchanee, Monsoon Valley Cuvée De Siam Rouge received five gold medals from three awards, namely Mundus Vini The Grand International Wine Award in Germany, AWC Vienna International Wine Challenge in Austria and Cathay Pacific Hong Kong International Wine and Spirit Competition in Hong Kong.

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As the Thai wine producer, Monsoon Valley Wine is proud to make a mark in the international wine industry, showcasing premium wine with exceptional tastes and finest quality from Thailand to wine lovers over the world. The 300 awards under Monsoon Valley Wine’s belt is a solid statement of Thai wines that have reached widely recognized international standard.

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Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park Hosts “Marquis Arts and Crafts Market” to Showcase Thailand’s Authentic Arts, Crafts and Organic Produce

Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park is preparing to host a unique event that will showcase organic local produce and the colorful arts, classical crafts of Thailand’s ethnic communities.

In partnership with Lofty Bamboo and Green Net, two responsible Thai companies that are certified by the World Fair Trade Organization (WFTO), the hotel will stage the “Marquis Arts and Crafts Market” from 14-16 February 2020, giving guests and local residents the chance to purchase a wide variety of products, responsibly and sustainably produced by indigenous people in remote regions of Thailand.

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Lofty Bamboo will help to shine a spotlight on the rich culture and intricate workmanship of Thailand’s hilltribes, including the Lisu and Karen, which have resided in the mountainous border regions of northern and western Thailand for centuries. By creating a supply chain for their products – including clothing, silks, dyed fabrics, bags, silverwork, jewelry, woven baskets, sandals, accessories, beads and more – the company is harnessing skills that have been passed down through generations and helping to keep ancient traditions alive. Some of the suppliers, such as Baan Nong Ling Weaving Group and Wipawadi Beads Accessory Group, specialize in providing employment for ethic women.

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Green Net Cooperative meanwhile, is dedicated to promoting fair trade and organic agriculture in Thailand and beyond. Guests at the Marquis Arts and Crafts Market will be able to purchase an extensive selection of organic products from small-scale Thai producers and responsible farms, including mulberry tea, coffee, rice, coconut oil, soy sauce, cashew nuts and even organic cotton t-shirts.

“We are delighted to join forces with Lofty Bamboo and Green Net to host the second Marquis Arts and Crafts Market at Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park. This event will offer a wonderful opportunity to demonstrate the culture and creativity of Thailand’s indigenous groups, and the kingdom’s amazing natural produce. In line with Marriott International’s global CSR program, ‘Serve360: Doing Good in Every Direction,’ we strive to make a difference to local people everywhere we operate. This marketplace will generate additional revenue for Thailand’s traditional communities, while also creating long-term benefits for people in remote rural regions,” said Simon Bell, General Manager, Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park.

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The Marquis Arts and Crafts Market will take place from 10.00 hrs. to 20.00 hrs. on 14-16 February 2020, on the M Floor of Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park.

Lofty Bamboo currently operates three shops in Bangkok. For more information, please visit www.loftybamboo.com. To learn more about Green Net, please visit www.greennet.or.th.

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Awaken Desires With Valentine Breakfast Tea

Arouse your senses with TWG Tea’s Valentine’s special, the Valentine Breakfast Tea. An aromatic black tea with the lingering scent of sun-ripened fruits, the soft amber infusion is beaded with pieces of fruit like luminous tears of joy.

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Created in the spirit of high fashion and the creative designers of haute couture, the Valentine Breakfast Tea is a romance that you never realised you needed. Each tea blend is thoughtfully designed and curated, reflecting an excellence of content and packaging.

As sweet and enveloping as love itself, it makes for an impeccable cup of morning tea with your loved one.

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The Valentine Breakfast Tea in the Haute Couture Tea Collection® is encased in a gift box and retails at 1,360 baht.

Capturing an essence of love with TWG Tea Valentine’s Special, served in a romantic dessert set to delight the taste buds of your significant other.

Express your love with a heart-shaped millefeuille layered with vanilla bavarian, raspberry jelly and Green Beauty Tea infused cream.

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Add a sweet touch of lovely roses made of Bain de Roses Tea infused cream with vanilla sponge and lychee-longan filling layered with raspberry compote; financier with 1837 Black Tea filling and butter cream; and divine chocolate brownies with mixed nut feuilletine and milk chocolate cremeux infused with Billet Doux Tea.

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Rose Boudoir Set is priced at 450 baht and is exclusively available during 7 – 29 February 2020 at TWG Tea Salon & Boutique in The Emporium and Siam Paragon.

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Health Minister: Banning Chinese Tourists is Not a Solution

Police hand out face masks to Chinese tourists in Surat Thani province on Jan. 30, 2020.

BANGKOK — Public health minister Anutin Charnvirakul on Thursday said imposing a travel ban on Chinese nationals would not help the government’s fight against coronavirus epidemic.

Speaking at today’s news conference, Anutin said the infection is still being reported even in countries and territories that restricted or closed their borders to Chinese travelers. Instead of a travel ban, the minister said the government will focus on health screening and medical treatment.

Anutin said a decision not to impose travel restriction on Chinese nationals will also be “a positive result” to Thai-Chinese relations in the future.

His announcement is a U-turn from his previous attempt to propose a suspension of visas on arrivals for Chinese tourists to the Cabinet. That proposal was also rejected by the Cabinet.

Approximately 10.9 million Chinese nationals visited Thailand in 2019, contributing the largest chunk of tourism revenues for the kingdom.

Thailand counted 25 patients infected with coronavirus so far, though eight of them have already recovered and been discharged from hospital, officials said.

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Opinion: How Coronavirus Lays Bare Gov’t Inefficiency, China-Bashing

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha gestures at the media during his inspection visit to Suvarnabhumi Airport on Jan. 29, 2020.

While Thai health professionals have won worldwide praise for their success in treating coronavirus patients, our politicians may need a serious lesson in managing national crisis.

Think about how health minister Anutin Charnvirakul first tried to downplay the deadly virus as “just another flu” in the early days of the outbreak. He also said there was no need to screen tourists from other Chinese cities other than Wuhan, only to go back on his word a few days later after a public outcry.

And even though Thai officials like to recite the feel-good slogan of “Thailand and China, one family” (中泰一家亲), the country had to wait for over a week before it could evacuate Thai citizens stranded in the locked down city of Wuhan.

Around two dozen countries managed to retrieve their citizens before our government could finally get our people back on Tuesday. Without a generous offer from AirAsia to supply the flight for free, a hundred forty Thais would likely have to wait even longer.

By the time the plane arrived in Wuhan on Tuesday, two Thais had high fever and were not allowed to leave the city. One couldn’t help but wonder if the government had acted faster, those two might have been home by now.

Anutin also tried a PR stunt by pledging to escort the evac team to Wuhan personally, a promise he later withdrew. The result should have been easily predictable, since the presence of him would have caused even more arrangements for Chinese authorities to deal with.

That’s not to mention what if Anutin became infected as a result of his trip to Wuhan or had to spend weeks in quarantine. How would the Ministry of Public Health function without its head? How embarrassing would that be?

And just as PM Prayut Chan-o-cha scolded the media for reporting shortages of face masks, the reality outside Government House was unfolding in an opposite direction.

Face masks quickly ran out. Those that remain on sales became a luxury. Although the government did scramble to place a price control over those masks and other sanitation items, the effort was weeks behind.

My own attempts to secure one during my futile shopping trip was met with either a “Sold Out” sign or an outrageously expensive price tag.

Sinophobia?

Now let’s move on to another issue that deserves an earnest discussion: China-bashing.

Even before the outbreak of coronavirus, some Thais – and expats – have already become increasingly anxious and suspicious by the growing influence of China in the kingdom.

The causes of alarm range from growing business clout and “Chinese tourists everywhere!” to the environmental impacts from Chinese-built dams on the Mekong River, where livelihoods of millions of Thais and Laotians depend on.

There were even doubts over the allegiance of Bangkok-based multinational corporations like CP Group, who has a massive business stake in China.

Some netizens also saw a conspiracy theory when Government House decorated its gate and fence with Chinese red lanterns to welcome the Chinese Lunar New Year – a practice adopted by PM Prayut in 2018.

And when the coronavirus outbreak struck Thailand, there was online furor over photos of what appeared to be Chinese tourists carrying cartons of face masks from Thailand back home, just as the Thais are living with the shortage.

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Image: CM108

This came on top of Thai government’s insistence that there will be no travel ban on Chinese from entering or leaving the country, leading some to fear that this could make the kingdom more vulnerable to the virus.

On social media, China-bashing intensified over the past week as infection spread to two dozen countries around the world.

“When are we gonna protest to chase out the [Thai] government which is more considerate towards China than Thailand?” political activist Ekachai Hongkangwan, himself a Thai-Chinese, asked his followers on Facebook earlier this week.

Graffiti artist Headache Stencil went further and put up a picture of Thai map on a wall painted in red with Chinese stars.

“We are Thai people, second class citizens lower than Chinese citizens,” the viral post said. “If we’re gonna kiss their ass this much, I hope they send us a trickle of water down the Mekong. Thank you, Emperor Xi.”

These are worrying signs for the future of Sino-Thai relations. China will have to be careful in its approaches, or risk being demonized by the local population. Thais also have to be aware that China, if handled with tact, can be a good friend to our country.

It won’t be easy, however, because there are Thais who opt to view China as the “new” foreign imperialist enemy.

But if history has taught us anything in dealing with the French, the British, the Americans, the Burmese and the Vietnamese in the difficult era of colonialism a century ago, it is that it’s better to have a constructive relationship with foreign powers than just demonize them outright.

For this, Prayut was right when he said Thailand and China are not aiming for a short-term relationship. The simmering fear and even loathing of China won’t just go away with the virus months from now. It will pose a challenge for Thailand in the years ahead, if not beyond.

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‘Very Fest’ Lineup for March is Out: Joji, Niki, Bruno Major

Niki.

Update: The concert has been cancelled due to coronavirus concerns.

BANGKOK — The major headliners for this year’s Very Festival on March 14 include an Indonesian diva, Japanese-Australian R&B artist, and indie Britpop singer.

Niki, Joji, and Bruno Major will take the stage at the Very Festival Spring Break music fest on March 14 at the Thunderdome at Impact Muang Thong Thani.

Bruno Major is set to go on at 6pm, Niki at 7:45, and Joji at 9:15pm. Three more artists, yet to be announced, will go on at 1:30pm, 3pm, and 4:30pm, respectively.

Tickets cost 2,800 baht. Doors open at noon.

Niki, or Nicole Zefanya, is a 21-year old Indonesian singer known for singles like “lowkey” and “Indigo.”

Joji, or George Kusunoki Miller, pivoted from YouTube comedy to R&B and lo-fit hits such as “Slow Dancing in the Dark” from his “Ballads 1” album.

Bruno Major’s gentle ballads include “Easily” and those in his “A Song for Every Moon” album.

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Court Halts Controversial Chao Phraya Promenade Project

A rendering of the proposed Chao Phraya broadwalk.
A rendering of the proposed Chao Phraya broadwalk.

BANGKOK — Opponents of the government’s plan to build a concrete promenade along the Chao Phraya River on Thursday welcomed the news that a court ordered the project to be halted.

The Administrative Court on Wednesday ordered City Hall to cease development of a 57-kilometer boardwalk along the river, citing a lack of permits. Yossapon Boonsom, founder of Friends of the River which spearheaded the opposition, said he considered the ruling a tentative win.

“It’s a good opportunity to step back and rethink about the project in a more inclusive manner,” Yossapon said. “It has to be built in accordance with the law, and more studies are needed to minimize impacts to the environment and relevant stakeholders.”

The court ordered City Hall to halt the project unless ordered otherwise after ruling that the officials have not secured appropriate building permissions for the construction.

City Hall had earlier been given permission to build on the river from the Marine Department as they declared the promenade as a river pier, which spares them from the contentious process of submitting a blueprint and environmental impact assessment for approval.

However, the court saw it otherwise, and regarded the project, which also includes bicycle lanes and sightseeing viewpoints, as a structure that requires a blueprint to be submitted prior to the development.

Yossapon said the group will continue to fight in the court until the project is completely folded.

“We will continue working with legal and urban development experts to strengthen our accusations in the lawsuit,” he said. “They still have a chance to appeal the order.”

The complaint was brought forward by the group in 2018, which accused City Hall and three other authorities of rushing the massive redevelopment project without proper study of its environmental and social impacts.

The 14-billion baht project, presented by the junta government as a new landmark for the capital, has been beset with opposition since it was first approved in 2015.

Activists also opposed the plan to extend concrete platforms 6 to 10 meters into the river, saying that the government has never consulted with residents who will be directly impacted by the structure, as well as criticizing its aesthetics.

Related stories:

River Activists Sue Over ‘Chao Phraya Promenade 2.0’

City Hall Continues ‘Canceled’ River Boardwalk Plan

Chao Phraya Boardwalk Plan Dead in the Water: Architects

Evictions Continue as Funds Set for Chao Phraya Promenade

Opponents, Proponents of Chao Phraya Boardwalk Open Fire

Locals Ready to be Evicted for Chao Phraya Boardwalk, Official Says

River’s Friends Float Hope for Public Hearings on 14B-Baht ‘Promenade’

Chao Phraya Promenade Should be Sent Back to Drawing Board, Architects Say

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Young Thais at Highest Risk for STDs, Health Official Warns

Campaigners dress up as condoms during an HIV and STD awareness rally in Khon Kaen province on Dec. 1, 2016.

BANGKOK — Thais, especially those under 25, are increasingly at risk of sexually transmitted diseases, a health official said Wednesday.

Gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia, chancroid, and venereal diseases in the lymph nodes among the young people appear to be on the rise, according to Atsadang Ruayajin, deputy director of the Department of Disease Control, who said the infection rates have been rising steadily since 2015.

While the average age group has 33.9 STD patients per 100,000 Thais, the number surges to 124.6 per 100,000 for the age group of 15 to 24.

Atsadang recommended using condoms as protection. He also advised the public to buy the appropriate condom size, store them properly, and refrain from wearing two condoms at once. And in case this somehow needs to be said, condoms must be disposed of properly after one use.

“Do not throw them into rivers or canals,” Atsadang said. In June 2019, a Facebook post of a canal filled with condoms in Bangkok Yai district drew widespread disgust.

For a comparison, prevalence of syphilis in the United States was at 35.3, chlamydia at 539.3, and gonorrhea at 179.1 per 100,000 people in 2017, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Atsadang’s announcement coincides with a heated online debate sparked by HIV awareness advocate Thitiwat “Pete” Sirasethakorn who urged those living with detectable viral load of HIV to have sex without condoms, in order to raise awareness about the Undetectable = Untransmittable UNAIDS principle. 

Thitiwat, who was diagnosed with HIV in 2015, said he hopes the gesture would educate the public that people living with undetectable HIV cannot transmit the virus sexually. He also plans to hold a workshop about the issue, where tickets would cost 500 baht each.

But his activism drew backlash from Thai medical experts, who warned that having sexual intercourse without condoms still carries a great risk of other STDs.

The New York State Department of Health recommends that only HIV-positive undetectable partners in a monogamous relationship should choose to forgo sexual protection.

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