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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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King’s Police Commandos Join Hunt for Robber Who Murdered 3

Mourners on Jan. 13, 2020, attend a cremation ceremony of a 2-year-old boy killed in the Jan. 9, 2020, gold store robbery in Lopburi province.

BANGKOK — A senior police commander on Monday praised a commando unit attached to His Majesty the King for its participation in an ongoing manhunt for a man responsible for last week’s deadly robbery.

Deputy commander of the Central Investigation Bureau Maj. Gen. Torsak Sukvimol visited the Ratchawallop Police Retainers, King’s Guards 904 and conveyed his moral support for the unit to swiftly identify and locate the robber, media reports say.

Reports say Torsak also raised concern to the commandos that the gunman, who killed three people including a 2-year-old boy during his heist on Thursday, is considered to be armed and extremely dangerous.

Read: Police Slam ‘Cosplayers’ of Lopburi Robber Who Killed 3

Ratchawallop Police Retainers are a special tactical unit who answers directly to His Majesty the King. The elite bodyguards are responsible for a variety of high-profile tasks, from providing security to the Royal Family to training local police in VIP protection.

Maj. Gen. Torsak, who was appointed as head of the unit in early 2019, ordered the Ratchawallop Police Retainers to join the manhunt for the unidentified gunman on Jan. 10. The police unit was instructed to assist local police in the operation, and closely monitor the progress.

Nearly a week after the bloody heist in Lopburi province, police have yet to identify the perpetrator. The masked gunman shot five people in total, killing three of them, inside a department store before making off with about 500,000 baht worth of gold necklaces.

Investigators are also appealing to any bystanders or motorists close to the area when the shooting took place to come forward with clues that might help them.

Related stories:

Police Hunt For Suspect Who Killed 3 in Lopburi Gold Heist

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Officials Confirm 1st Case of Coronavirus From China’s Wuhan

Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul is given a tour on Jan. 6, 2020, at a hospital in Bangkok where Chinese tourists suspected of contracting coronavirus are being quarantined.

BANGKOK (AP) — A Chinese visitor to Thailand has been confirmed to be infected with a new strain of coronavirus that has been linked to a pneumonia outbreak in central China, health officials said Monday.

The U.N.’s World Health Organization said Thai officials have reported that a traveler from the Chinese city of Wuhan has been hospitalized in Thailand with the virus.

The outbreak of the virus has been traced to Wuhan, where it affected several dozen people who had been to a major meat and seafood market.

Thai Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said it appears to be the first confirmed case of the virus found outside China, the Bangkok Post newspaper and other Thai media reported.

He identified the infected tourist as a 61-year-old woman whose symptoms were detected on arrival at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport last Wednesday. Her coronavirus was confirmed Sunday by a laboratory test, Anutin said.

She has been treated at an isolation ward at a state health facility outside of Bangkok, and no longer has any fever or respiratory symptoms, he said.

Eight other people with possible symptoms have also been held at the facility, he said, but none has been confirmed to have the virus.

A statement issued Monday by the Geneva-based World Health Organization said it is working with officials in Thailand and China following the report of the confirmed case outside China. The agency says its director-general is consulting with the agency’s emergency committee, which generally decides whether viral outbreaks merit an expanded response from health authorities.

“The possibility of cases being identified in other countries was not unexpected, and reinforces why WHO calls for ongoing active monitoring and preparedness in other countries,” the agency said. “WHO reiterates that it is essential that investigations continue in China to identify the source of this outbreak and any animal reservoirs or intermediate hosts.”

The virus is not believed to be spread by human-to-human contact.

Officials in Wuhan said over the weekend that a total of 41 people were suffering from pneumonia caused by the new coronavirus and a 61-year-old man had died — China’s first known death from the virus.

China says the cause of the Wuhan outbreak remains unknown but has sought to play down speculation that it could be a reappearance of the SARS epidemic, which killed hundreds in 2002 and 2003.

Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses, some of which cause the common cold. Others found in bats, camels and other animals have evolved to cause more severe illnesses.

Common symptoms include a runny nose, headache, cough and fever. Shortness of breath, chills and body aches are associated with more dangerous kinds of coronaviruses, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Nearly 40,000 Bangkokians Seek Treatment for Respiratory Illnesses

File photo of a dust-choked Bangkok

BANGKOK (Xinhua) — The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration’s (BMA) Health Department on Monday released a report indicating that nearly 40,000 people in the city’s two main districts have sought medical treatment for respiratory illnesses at its hospitals since September last year.

Furthermore, the BMA’s Environment Department also reported on Monday the unsafe levels of particulate matters in the two districts, and have urged residents to wear a mask outdoors.

“Bangkok’s two main districts, Phra Nakhon and Wang Thonglang, have indicated its PM2.5 at 31-54mg per cubic meter of air in the past 24 hours while the safe threshold is at 50mcg,” the BMA Environment Department said.

Read: Greater Bangkok Coughs, Squints as PM2.5 Reaches Hazardous Levels

“PM2.5 was at 54mcg at Phra Nakhon district and 52mcg at Wang Thonglang district.”

Meanwhile, BMA permanent secretary Silapasuay Raweesaengsoon said the BMA ordered its Taksin Hospital, Charoenkrung Pracharak Hospital and Klang Hospital to open their air pollution clinics to treat people.

From Sept. 27 last year to Jan. 9 this year, 38,803 people sought treatment for illnesses related to smog at hospitals under the supervision of the BMA, the BMA Health Department said.

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Hostel Featuring Multilingual Group Chat to Open in Tokyo

TOKYO (Kyodo) — A hostel opening next week in Tokyo’s Ueno district, a popular destination for foreign tourists, is hoping its guests from around the world will get chatting with each other by encouraging them to use a multilingual real-time translation app.

The “Q Stay and lounge,” which will welcome its first guests on Jan. 20, is the first accommodation facility in Japan to create chances for customers to communicate in different languages via the Kotozna Group Chat smartphone app, according to LS Corp., the operator of the hostel.

Continue reading the story here

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UN Issues Stamp Sheet for Chinese Lunar New Year

UNITED NATIONS (Xinhua) — The United Nations Postal Administration (UNPA) has issued a special-event stamp sheet to celebrate the Chinese Lunar New Year.

The sheet, which was officially issued on Friday, consists of 10 stamps of a denomination of 1.20 U.S. dollars each, with the UN logo on the left and a paper-cut image of the rat on the right, as the Chinese lunar year for 2020 is the Year of the Rat.

The rat sits in gold-colored flowers against a red background — the two traditional colors for the Chinese Lunar New Year, or Spring Festival, the most important holiday for Chinese around the world. This year’s Spring Festival falls on Jan. 25.

The tab of the stamp and background design feature artwork designed by Yin Huili of China, said the UNPA.

This is UNPA’s 11th sheet issued for its Lunar New Year stamp series.

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Trump’s Retweet of Doctored Pelosi-Schumer Photo Offends Muslims

Image: D0wn_Under / Twitter

NEW YORK (AP) — President Donald Trump circulated a fake image on Monday depicting congressional Democrats’ top-ranked leaders in traditional Muslim attire in front of the Iranian flag, drawing criticism that he was promoting Islamophobic tropes.

The manipulated photo retweeted by Trump showed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer in Muslim garb with the caption: “The corrupted Dems trying their best to come to the Ayatollah’s rescue #NancyPelosiFakeNews.”

Trump, a Republican, had previously faulted Democrats for criticizing his administration’s targeted killing of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani, but his use of Muslim imagery as part of that effort drew pushback from Muslim American advocates.

“The image is a hodgepodge of anti-Muslim tropes and garb from many traditions including some that are frequently used to stereotype and attack Muslims,” Madihha Ahussain, special counsel at the nonprofit group Muslim Advocates, said in a statement. “It’s disappointing but not surprising that the president would use his massive Twitter platform to spread this kind of harmful, ignorant, anti-Muslim bigotry.”

Wa’el Alzayat, CEO of the Muslim American group Emgage Action — named for its mission to engage Muslim Americans — also criticized Trump’s decision to amplify the doctored photo of Pelosi and Schumer. “There’s no place for it, irrespective of political differences,” he said in an interview.

Schumer tweeted his own pushback to Trump, asking: “How low can you go?”

The image that Trump retweeted has been circulating on the internet for a few days. The Twitter account that Trump got it from has a history of tweeting in both English and Persian about Iranian issues, promoting pro-Trump content and criticizing U.S. Democrats.

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham defended Trump’s retweet of the image, telling Fox News on Monday that the tweet was intended to show Democrats “have been parroting Iranian talking points, and almost taking the side of terrorists and those who were out to kill the Americans.”

Democrats have raised questions about the Trump administration’s rationale for ordering the Soleimani killing, warning about the resulting heightened tensions with Iran. But no Democrats have praised Soleimani, and Pelosi herself described him last week as a “terrible person” who “did bad things.”

___

Associated Press writer Amanda Seitz in New York contributed to this report.

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Tsunami-Stricken God of Luck Statue Pulled From Sea

SENDAI (Kyodo) — A statue of Ebisu, the Japanese god of fishermen and luck, was pulled from the sea Tuesday and will be given a new home near the Miyagi Prefecture port from which it was swept during the devastating 2011 tsunami.

Pulling in a sea bream — an auspicious symbol in Japan — and overlooking Kesennuma Bay from the northeastern Japan port, the 1.5-meter-high Ebisu statue erected in 1988 was popular with tourists and locals hoping its powers would bring a good catch and safe passage of vessels.

Continue reading the story here

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