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Ultraroyalist Hospital Director Says New Hires Must Disclose Social Media Accounts

Maj. Gen. Rienthong Nanna, right, and Mongkutwattana Hospital.

BANGKOK — An military officer who runs a private hospital on Tuesday announced he would only hire employees who share the same pro-establishment views as his, and said job applicants must give up their social media accounts for screening.

In a series of online posts, Maj. Gen. Rienthong Nanna said Mongkutwattana Hospital will not support or have any business dealings with those who insult the monarchy or have ill intention toward the country.

“From today onwards, applicants to Mongkutwattana Hospital must show their personal information on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media as part of their job application. I will not accept personnel whose ideologies are opposed to mine,” Rienthong wrote.

He said hiring those with different political views was like “allow ungrateful parasites to take host” in his hospital.

Apart from running the family-owned hospital, Rienthong is the founder of an ultraroyalist activist group that publicly identified those suspected of defaming the Royal Family and called for legal prosecution against them.  

His campaign drew criticism from the progressive circles, who accused Rienthong of modern-day witch-hunting. Some supporters of the Redshirts movement and the opposition’s Future Forward Party also threatened to boycott Mongkutwattana Hospital in retaliation to its director’s political activism.

Writing online yesterday, Rienthong challenged his detractors to steer clear of his business.

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Thailand’s 2020 Exports Expected to Shrink up to 2.4%

A file photo of PM Prayut Chan-o-cha and his economy adviser Somkid Jatusripitak.

BANGKOK (Xinhua) — Thai exports this year is expected to shrink by 0.9-2.4 percent this year, said a Bangkok academic institution on Tuesday in a news briefing.

Further more, our assessments indicate that Thailand would export 244.23 billion U.S. dollars’ worth of goods in 2020, with the Thai baht appreciating to a six-year high, said Aat Pisanwanich, director of the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce’s (UTCC) Center for International Trade Studies.

The director also noted that the strong baht, the U.S.-Iran tension and the slowdown in global economy will have direct impacts on Thailand’s exports.

On the other hand, the UTCC forecasts the Thai economy will grow by 2.7-3.7 percent this year.

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FAA Investigating Delta Jet Fuel-Dumping on Schoolkids

Firefighters allow parents into Park Avenue Elementary School where multiple people were treated for jet fuel exposure in Cudahy, Calif., on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2020. A jet returning to LAX dumped its fuel over the neighborhood and the school. Affected people at the school were treated for skin and eye irritation. No patients were transported to hospitals. (Scott Varley/The Orange County Register via AP)

CUDAHY, Calif. (AP) — Federal authorities will investigate why an airliner with engine trouble dumped jet fuel over a densely populated area of Southern California while making an emergency return to the airport, dousing dozens of schoolchildren in a smelly vapor.

Delta Air Lines Flight 89 to Shanghai, with 181 passengers and crew on board, turned back to Los Angeles International Airport only minutes after taking off Tuesday.

The pilot reported a compressor stall in the right engine — damage to a jet turbine that can occur through malfunction or when a foreign object such as a bird hits an engine. The damage can reduce engine thrust or, in worst cases, lead to a fire. Planes can take off weighted down for their journey, but if they must land early because of an emergency, it can be necessary to dump fuel so that the aircraft is lighter to avoid damage.

Air traffic control asked the aircrew if they wanted to return to LAX immediately or remain over the ocean “to hold and burn fuel,” according to a recording of the radio communications.

“We’re going to go ahead,” the pilot or co-pilot responds. “We’ve got it back under control. … We’re not critical.”

“OK, so you don’t need to hold or dump fuel or anything like that?” the controller asks.

“Ah, negative,” the pilot responds.

But the plane did later dump fuel, possibly while preparing to make a final turn before descending.

The fuel sprayed out of the plane in two lines and descended at midday in the city of Cudahy and nearby parts of Los Angeles County, about 13 miles (21 kilometers) east of the airport. It fell on five elementary schools, officials said.

The fuel, described by fire officials as a vapor, caused minor skin and lung irritation to 56 children and adults but nobody was taken to the hospital and the only decontamination required was soap and water, officials said.

Diego Martinez, a sixth-grader at Park Avenue Elementary in Cuday, said he and his classmates were outside for physical education class when they saw the airplane flying low overhead.

“It was very close,” he said.

Shortly afterward, the air filled with the pungent odor of fuel.

“It was very strong, the odor,” the 12-year-old said.

Diego wasn’t doused but some of his friends complained that their skin was itching.

Some teachers at Park Avenue had headaches from the smell, said Antonio Buenabad, area representative for the United Teachers Los Angeles union.

“They were anxious to get home and shower because the stench was very strong,” he said of the teachers.

Delta Air Lines said the aircraft landed safely after releasing fuel, “which was required as part of normal procedure to reach a safe landing weight.”

The internet was quickly clogged with people questioning the decision and suggesting that the pilot could have shut down the engine, retained the fuel and landed with one working engine at some risk of damage to the plane.

The Federal Aviation Administration said it is investigating.

“There are special fuel-dumping procedures for aircraft operating into and out of any major U.S. airport,” the FAA said in a statement. “These procedures call for fuel to be dumped over designated unpopulated areas, typically at higher altitudes so the fuel atomizes and disperses before it reaches the ground.”

However, pilots can deviate from the rules in an emergency for safety reasons, said Doug Moss, a retired airline captain and owner of AeroPacific Consulting, LLC, an aviation consulting firm based in Reno, Nevada.

The pilot could have stayed over the ocean to dump his fuel but that could have taken a half-hour up to an hour, Moss said.

Moss said when there is a compressor stall, the crew can’t determine how much damage was done internally to the engine.

“The fan blades may have separated and cut into the fuel lines, leaving an uncontrollable fire as a future possibility,” Moss said.

“He’s flying an airplane with a damaged engine that may be on fire,” Moss said. “So he has to make the decision: Do I spend the time to dump fuel or do I put this thing on the ground as soon as I can? You’re not going to kill anyone by dumping fuel.”

“There’s no dereliction of duty. Everybody’s trying to do the best they can but it’s a fast-paced, dynamic ballgame and there’s not a lot of time to think … lives are at stake,” Moss said. “He got it on the ground safely. Unfortunately, there was collateral damage. People got gas poured over them.”

Cornell said 31 children and adults were affected by the fuel dump at Park Avenue school and another 12 at 93rd Street Elementary school. The rest of those affected were at other schools.

___

Associated Press reporters John Antczak and Christopher Weber contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

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Giant Panda “Yi Yi” Celebrates Second Birthday in Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR (Xinhua) — Fans and tourists from Malaysia and abroad on Tuesday celebrated the second birthday of Yi Yi, the second giant panda that was born inMalaysia.

Born in January 2018, Yi Yi, whose name means friendship in Chinese, is the second offspring of her parents, Xing Xing and Liang Liang, who arrived in Malaysia in 2014.

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Rights Group Says China Is Trying to Silence Critics Abroad

In this April 27, 2019, file photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping waves as he arrives for a press conference at the closing of the Belt and Road Forum at Yanqi Lake on the outskirts of Beijing. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

NEW YORK (AP) —The head of Human Rights Watch said Tuesday the Chinese government has not only constructed “an Orwellian high-tech surveillance state” at home but is using its growing economic clout to silence critics abroad.

Kenneth Roth accused China of carrying out “the most intense attack on the global system for enforcing human rights since that system began to emerge in the mid-20th century.”

He warned that if human rights aren’t defended, the world could face “a dystopian future in which no one is beyond the reach of Chinese censors” and a global rights system so weakened that it can no longer serve “as a check on government repression.”

Roth held a news conference at the United Nations Correspondents Association in New York after being denied entry to Hong Kong, where he had been scheduled to release the rights group’s annual report. It begins with his keynote essay entitled, “China’s Global Threat to Human Rights.”

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said Monday: “It is China’s sovereignty to allow one’s entry or not.”

He indicated that Human Rights Watch is among organizations that support and instigate “anti-China activists … to engage in radical violent crimes, and incite separatist activities hyping Hong Kong independence.” He added: “These organizations deserve sanctions and must pay a price.“

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric, asked Tuesday about Roth’s denial of entry to Hong Kong, said: “In principle, we support the rights and work of human rights defenders around the world.”

Chinese diplomat Xing Jisheng, who attended the U.N. press launch, spoke at the end calling the report “very prejudicial,” saying it has “fabrications” and telling journalists “we completely reject the content.”

Xing said the government has made every effort to advance human rights in China and any human rights report that doesn’t mention that 700 million Chinese people have escaped from poverty over the last 40 years “fails to be balanced and neutral.”

Roth responded saying the report does mention “the emancipation of the Chinese people” and asked: “What did we get wrong? If there’s something wrong we will change it.”

In the essay, Roth said the Chinese Communist Party is “worried that permitting political freedom would jeopardize its grasp on power” and “is running scared of its own people.”

“The consequence under President Xi Jinping is China’s most pervasive and brutal oppression in decades,” he said.

Roth pointed to the closure of the “modest opening” that existed briefly in recent years for Chinese people to express themselves, civic groups shut down, independent journalism gone, online conversations curtailed, ethnic and religious minorities facing severe persecution, and severe challenges to Hong Kong’s limited freedoms under “one country, two systems.”

To avoid a global backlash against its surveillance, internet censorship and oppression at home, Roth said the government is trying to undermine international institutions designed to protect human rights.

It is increasingly targeting critics of rights violations, “whether they represent a foreign government, are part of an overseas company or university, or join real or virtual avenues of public protest.”

Using its economic clout and influence and sometimes its veto in the U.N. Security Council, Roth said, China has sought to block United Nations measures “to protect some of the world’s most persecuted people.”

He cited China’s failure to support Syrian civilians facing indiscriminate airstrikes by Russian and Syrian planes, Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslims who faced murder, rape and arson at the hands of Myanmar’s army, Yemen’s civilians facing bombardment by a Saudi-led coalition, or Venezuelans suffering “economic devastation due to the corrupt mismanagement of Nicolas Maduro.”

Human rights organizations say up to 1 million ethnic Uighur Muslims in China’s western Xinjiang region have been detained in camps where they are subjected to political indoctrination and pressured to give up their religion. The Associated Press reported last year that some are forced to work in factories, and tracked clothing made in one camp to an American sportswear company.

Roth criticized U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, saying despite the U.N.’s central role in promoting human rights, he has been “unwilling to publicly demand an end to China’s mass detention of Turkic Muslims, while heaping praise on Beijing’s economic prowess” and its “Belt and Road” infrastructure construction initiative for Asia and beyond.

Roth stressed that “no other government is simultaneously detaining a million members of an ethnic minority for forced indoctrination and attacking anyone who dares to challenge its repression.”

“And while other governments commit serious human rights violations, no other government flexes its political muscles with such vigor and determination to undermine the international human rights standards and institutions that could hold it to account,” he said.

Roth said the report shows that China isn’t the only threat to human rights, pointing to serious violations by the warring parties in Syria and Yemen..

He also cited “autocratic populists” who come to power by demonizing minorities and retain it by attacking independent journalists, judges and activists who try to provide checks and balances on their rule.

“Some leaders, such as U.S. President Donald Trump, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, bridle at the same body of international human rights law that China undermines, galvanizing their publics by shadow boxing with the `globalists’ who dare suggest that governments everywhere should be bound by the same standards,” Roth said.

He lamented that some governments that once could be counted on to sometimes defend human rights “have largely abandoned the cause.”

But even against this backdrop, Roth said, China stands out.

“The result for the human rights cause is a `perfect storm’ — a powerful centralized state, a coterie of like-minded rulers, a void of leadership among countries that might have stood for human rights, and a disappointing collection of democracies willing to sell the rope that is strangling the system of rights that they purport to uphold,” he said.

Nonetheless, Roth said “much can still be done to defend human rights worldwide from Beijing’s frontal attack.”

He urged governments, companies, universities, international institutions and others to stand with people in China and from China who are struggling to secure their rights.

Roth said governments and international financial institutions should offer human rights-respecting alternatives to China’s “no strings” loans and development aid. He said government should “deliberately counter China’s divide-and-conquer strategy for securing silence about its oppression.” And he said universities and companies should promote “codes of conduct” with strong standards for dealing with China

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Japan Urges China to Adhere to Int’l Norms Ahead of Xi’s Visit

In this Sept. 12, 2018, file photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, shakes hands with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during a meeting on the sidelines of the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok, Russia. (Xie Huanchi/Xinhua)

TOKYO (Kyodo) — Japanese Defense Minister Taro Kono on Tuesday urged Beijing to respect international norms and work toward addressing his country’s concerns over increasing Chinese maritime assertiveness ahead of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Japan next spring.

Kono took aim at China during his speech at a think tank in Washington, where he has been visiting to meet with Defense Secretary Mark Esper to discuss the tense situation in the Middle East and other issues.

Continue reading the story here

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Warren, Sanders Spar Over Her Claim He Said Woman Can’t Win

Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, left, watches as Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., answers a question Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2020, during a Democratic presidential primary debate hosted by CNN and the Des Moines Register in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Elizabeth Warren stood behind her charge that Bernie Sanders said a woman could not defeat Donald Trump, making an energetic case for a female nominee in a Tuesday night Democratic debate that raised gender as a core issue in the sprint to the Iowa caucuses.

“Look at the men on this stage. Collectively they have lost 10 elections,” Warren exclaimed, noting that she and Sen. Amy Klobuchar had won every election they ever ran.

Sanders firmly denied Warren’s accusation and said it was “incomprehensible” to believe he would suggest a woman couldn’t become the president.

“Of course a woman can win,” he said. “I don’t know that that’s the major issue of the day.”

Just six candidates gathered in Des Moines, each eager to seize a dose of final-days momentum on national television before Iowa’s Feb. 3 caucuses. The sudden “he-said, she-said” dispute over gender involving two longtime allies, Sanders and Warren, loomed over the event, though it was not a focus in the debate’s earliest moments.

Specifically, Warren charged publicly on the eve of the debate that Sanders told her during a private 2018 meeting that he didn’t think a woman could defeat Trump, a claim tinged with sexism that Sanders vigorously denied. Amid an immediate uproar on the left, there were signs that both candidates wanted to deescalate the situation.

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The feuding on other topics, including war and foreign policy expanded to include nearly every candidate on stage by night’s end.

Sanders has recently stepped up his attacks on former Vice President Joe Biden over Biden’s past support of the Iraq War, broad free-trade agreements and entitlement reform, among other issues. Minnesota Sen. Klobuchar, who has had several strong debates, looked for opportunities as she remained mired in the middle of the pack in polling. Billionaire Tom Steyer faced criticism that he’s trying to buy his way to the White House.

And with two surveys showing Pete Buttigieg losing support in Iowa, the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, needed a breakout moment to regain strength before the caucuses.

Trump, campaigning in neighboring Wisconsin just as Democrats took the debate stage, tried to encourage the feud between Sanders and Warren from afar.

“She said that Bernie stated strongly that a woman can’t win. I don’t believe that Bernie said that, I really don’t. It’s not the kind of thing Bernie would say,” Trump said.

Earlier in the night, the candidates sparred over Iraq, war and foreign policy, although they were largely united against Trump’s leadership on such issues.

Sanders drew a sharp contrast with Biden by noting that Sanders aggressively fought against a 2002 measure to authorize military action against Iraq.

Sanders called the Iraq invasion “the worst foreign policy blunder in the modern history of this country.”

“I did everything I could to prevent that war,” Sanders said. “Joe saw it differently.”

Biden acknowledged that his 2002 vote to authorize military action was “a mistake,” but highlighted his role in the Obama administration helping to draw down the U.S. military presence in the region.

Several candidates condemned Trump’s recent move to kill Iran’s top general and his decision to keep U.S. troops in the region.

“We have to get combat troops out,” declared Warren, who also called for reducing the military budget.

Others, including Buttigieg, Biden and Klobuchar, said they favored maintaining a small military presence in the Middle East.

“I bring a different perspective,” said Buttigeg, who was a military intelligence officer in Afghanistan. “We can continue to remain engaged without having an endless commitment to ground troops.”

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Peoples and Superville reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Bill Barrow in Des Moines contributed to this report.

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Talk About Climate, LGBT, and Tyrants at Bangkok Creative Fest

Image: Bangkok Edge / Courtesy
Image: Bangkok Edge / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Writers, activists, journalists, and artists will gather next month at a riverside mansion to share provocative ideas and lead workshops that seek to inspire.

Thought-provoking festival “Bangkok Edge” returns for a third year on Feb. 1 with more than 50 activities. They range from talks and exhibitions to concerts for visitors to binge on ideas on a variety of hot social issues like climate change, LGBT rights, and even dictatorship.

Highlights of the two-day intellectual treat include discussions on world affairs by international writers such as Dutch historian Frank Dikotter, who will deconstruct the cult of personalities of dictators. Also in attendance will be Oxford professor Peter Frankopan, who will talk about the “New Silk Road” and the rise of China.

If those two seem to be a bit far from you, Thai thinkers like Nanticha Ocharoenchai will share her experience of heading Climate Strike Thailand; Monthon Jira will reveal her secrets behind the success of Wonderfruit Festival; and columnist Voranai Vanijaka will reflect his latest commentary on our society.

Feeling of being stalked by Facebook? A workshop will show you how algorithms are increasingly controlling our lives. Or feeling the need to exercise green thumb? The Scholars of Sustenance will teach you how to cook with leftovers, while Precious Plastic will demonstrate how to revive plastic waste into useful products.

Exciting new stuff will also be launched at the event, including the Thai inaugural screening of “Mekong 2030,” a series of short films from five ASEAN directors about the devastating fate of Mekong River, and the launch of a new book about all the things unique to Bangkok by expat Thai expert Philip Cornwel-Smith.

Folk singer Hugo and indie wunderkind Phum Viphurit will perform at the event on Feb. 1, while singers Leew Ajariya and Apaporn Nakornsawan will take the stage for some lively luk thung country music on Feb. 2.

All discussions and workshops will be conducted in Thai and English, with bilingual moderators to interpret between the two languages. The full list of activities and speakers can be viewed online.

Bangkok Edge Festival will be held at Museum Siam and Chakrabongse Villas on Maharat Road from Feb. 1 to 2. The event will open from noon to 11pm. The venue is reachable from MRT Sanam Chai. Admission is free.

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Princess Sirindhorn Issues Seasonal Greetings for Year of the Rats

Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn hangs a Chinese styled lantern on Yaowarat Road to celebrate 2019's Chinese New Year on Feb. 5, 2019.

BANGKOK — A sister of His Majesty the King on Tuesday released a seasonal greetings card written in Thai and Chinese to celebrate the upcoming Chinese New Year, which falls on Jan. 25.

In the card published online by the palace, Her Royal Highness Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn wrote 鼠兆丰年, or shǔ zhào fēngnián, meaning “Many rats bring a good harvest,” in reference to the zodiac Year of the Rat in Chinese calendar. She added a Thai translation next to the phrase.

The 64-year-old princess appeared to be making a wordplay to a common Chinese idiom 瑞雪兆丰年, or ruì xuě zhào fēng nián, which means “A timely snow promises a good harvest.”

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Palace-run store Phufa said today it would be selling red polo shirts emblazoned with the slogan and a drawing made by Princess Sirindhorn. The shirts will be available at a booth in front of Tien Fah Foundation during the Chinese New Year fair on Jan. 25 and Jan. 26, the store said.

Proceeds will go to an initiative that helps impoverished children in the countryside, according to Phufa.

In September 2019, Princess Sirindhorn received a medal of friendship from President Xi Jinping in Beijing to celebrate her efforts to promote Chinese culture and relations between the two nations.

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Fall of Skywalkers: ’1917′ Ends ‘Star Wars’ Box-Office Reign

This image released by Universal Pictures shows George MacKay, center, in a scene from "1917," directed by Sam Mendes. (François Duhamel/Universal Pictures via AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — It took the Great War to finally take down “Star Wars.”

Director Sam Mendes’ World War I story “1917” brought in $36.5 million in its first weekend of wide release, easily topping the box office and ending the three-week reign of “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” which brought in $15 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Universal’s expansion strategy worked beautifully for “1917,” as the film went from just 11 screens in its first two weeks to more than 3,400 on the weekend after it won Golden Globes for best director and best drama film, and just before Monday’s Academy Award nominations, where it’s likely to get nods in several categories.

“This is the blueprint for how to perfectly execute the platform release for a potential Oscar nominee and Oscar winner,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for Comscore.

While the epic wartime feel of “1917,” which was shot and edited to appear as though it was done in a single take, makes it a natural for major awards, its triumphs at the Golden Globes were a surprise over other dramas including “The Irishman” and “Marriage Story.”

“I hope this means that people will turn up and see this on the big screen, the way it was intended,” Mendes said at the Globes ceremony. Those hopes weren’t unfounded.

A good weekend was expected for the film, but it shot past those expectations.

“It’s the not like the kids were clamoring for a World War I trench drama,” Dergarabedian said. “A film like this could have easily slipped off the radar.”

With its previous two-week take, “1917” has now earned $39.2 million in the U.S. and Canada and over $60 million globally. That’s of course dwarfed by Disney’s total domestic take of $478.2 million for “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” which is on the verge of reaching $1 billion globally after four weeks.

“Jumanji: The Next Level” was in third place in its fifth week of release for Sony with earnings of $14 million, and has totaled more than $257 million domestically.

Sony has a smaller sort of hit in “Little Women,” which could also make a mark at Monday’s Oscar nominations and continues its strong run for a film of its kind, bringing in another $7.65 million to put it in the sixth spot with a total of $74 million after three weeks.

The usual January box-office blahs were in effect for the week’s new releases.

“Like a Boss,” Paramount’s comedy starring Tiffany Haddish and Rose Byrne, finished in a fourth-place tie at $10 million with “Just Mercy.”

“Underwater,” 20th Century Fox’s deep-sea adventure starring Kristen Stewart, brought in a tepid $7 million and finished below “Little Women.”

“For newcomers, this is usually not a bountiful time for the box office,” Dergarabedian said. “It’s usually about the holdovers and awards-season contenders.”

The tied-for-fourth $10 million finish was better news for Warner Bros.′ smaller-budgeted “Just Mercy,” which stars Michael B. Jordan in the true story of an attorney appealing a murder conviction, and like “1917” was expanded from just a few screens to a few thousand in its third weekend.

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