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Man Rams Truck Into Two Cars For Blocking His Driveway

A still from CCTV footage showing Passakorn’s car ramming into the Honda City sedan on Nov. 30, 2019.
A still from CCTV footage showing Passakorn’s car ramming into the Honda City sedan on Nov. 30, 2019.

SAMUT PRAKAN — A driver who rammed his pickup truck into cars blocking his driveway in a clip that went viral over the weekend turned himself in to the police on Monday.

Passakorn Petchlumli, 42, said he lost his temper after waiting an hour for the owners to move their cars from the front of his friend’s house inside a gated community in Samut Prakan on Saturday night.

“I admit my fault. I couldn’t control my anger that night,” Passakorn said. “I’m willing to take responsibility for the damages, but I don’t want to confront the victims right now.”

In a now-deleted clip posted by one of the victim’s friends, the Honda City sedan and the Chevrolet pickup truck can be seen parked opposite the house.

A few minutes after, Passakorn is be seen returning to his car before he crashed into the trunk of the sedan twice, damaging the car and a pickup truck in front of it. Passakorn then fled from the scene.


“Please share this,” Facebook user Puy Narin Puttarun wrote. “The community chairman said everyone can park there because it’s a common area. We didn’t block his house, but we don’t know why he did this.”

Passakorn’s friend, Wanlop Pinmon, 40, said he asked his friend to come over to his house to help him with the moving. Once Passakorn arrived and found the cars obstructing the driveway, he said he attempted to contact the owners of the cars in the village’s Line group but received no response.

“They live on Soi 1, but my house is on Soi 6. I don’t understand why they don’t park their cars in front of their house,” Wanlop said. “We went into arguments before, but they still behaving the same.”

Bang Pu police chief investigator Samai Chaloenraj said both men were charged with colluding in causing property damage. They were released on bail. 

This is not the first time that parking in front of someone’s home has taken a destructive turn. Last year, two women vented their fury at a pickup truck parked in front of their house by smashing it with an axe. The court gave them suspended their jail terms and 12,000 baht fines for damages.

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DSI Say Some Bones at Nat’l Park Don’t Match Missing Activist

A file photo of Porlajee “Billy” Ray Chongcharoen’s family.
A file photo of Porlajee “Billy” Ray Chongcharoen’s family.

BANGKOK — The Department of Special Investigation said Sunday that some of the bone fragments found at a national Park may not belong to the missing Karen community rights activist as it had claimed earlier.

DSI said the bone fragments do not share the same DNA with mother of Porlajee “Billy” Ray Chongcharoen, whom investigators said was abducted and murdered in 2014. The news came just days after a high-ranking official charged with the murder accused the DSI of forging evidence against him and his aides.

But department chief Paisit Wongmuang said at least one piece of the human remains found at Kaeng Krachan National Park was already proven to belong to Porlajee.

“Preliminary investigation found that nine bone fragments do not belong to Porlajee,” Paisit said. “We will consult with forensic officers in detail to differentiate them with the fragment of skull, which we have already confirmed that its DNA matched with Porlajee’s mother.”

Paisit did not speculate who the bones might belong to. A spokesman for the DSI could not be reached for comment as of publication.

A total of 20 bone fragments were found in May inside a partially submerged 200-liter oil tank at the national park in Phetchaburi province. The DSI said at the time the bones belonged to Porlajee.

The department later filed murder charge against four men, including then-director of Kaeng Krachan National Park Chaiwat Limlikhit-aksorn and three of his aides. Chaiwat denied the allegations.

Chaiwat also told the media that the DSI forged test results of the bone fragments to falsely implicate him.

The four suspects are currently released on bail.

Activists had previously accused then-director Chaiwat of engineering the disappearance of the Karen activist. He and his aides briefly detained Billy on April 17, 2014 to reprimand him for “wild honey theft,” but insisted they later released him without harming him.

Billy, a campaigner for community rights, has not been seen ever since the alleged detention.

Related stories:

Suspects in Karen Activist Death Freed on Bail

4 Arrest Warrants Issued for Death of Karen Activist

Bones at Nat’l Park Belong to Missing Karen Activist: DSI

Karens Demand Answers About Missing Activist

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A Guide for X’Mas 2019 Celebration in Bangkok (That Doesn’t Involve Malls)

A Nativity play in progress at a school in Chachoengsao in 2018. Image: Saint Louis Chachoengsao

Top: A Nativity play in progress at a school in 2018. Image: Saint Louis Chachoengsao / Facebook

It’s hard to find what resembles traditional Christmas in Bangkok, where semblances of holiday cheer come with sales tags attached and Christmas trees are stacks of “modern art” hung with logos of sponsors. But we did give it a try and compile the following guide for X’mas normies who prefer the “old ways.”

Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree

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Christmas fair at Santa Cruz Church, Bangkok. Image: วัดซางตาครู้ส โบสถ์ซางตาครู้ส กุฎีจีน / Facebook

Travel back in time to the roaring ’20s at the Santa Cruz Church in a historic Thai-Portuguese community, where outdoor jazz performances and swing dance will take place on Christmas Eve.

Admittance to the “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree: Swing Dance at Kadeejeen – Khlongsan” event is free. Bangkok Swing dance group is set to shimmy to music by Mahidol University jazz bands. The event runs from 6:30pm to 10pm. There will also be a Christmas market and lucky draws. 

Choose for Me, Old Santa Claus

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A lucky winner gets a car at Assumption Christmas Fair in 2018. Image: Assumption College / Facebook.

Try your luck (possibly) win big prizes at soi dao, or lucky draws in Christmas fairs like the one at Assumption College in Bangrak district on Dec. 20. Running all day from 08.30am until 6pm, the carnival resembles a Buddhist temple fun fair, with carnival games, lucky draws, and stalls set up by students. Tickets will be 150 baht.

Not to be outdone, St. Louis Church in Silom also recently announced that up to 20,000 tickets for its Christmas fair soi dao draw will be sold this year. The church also promised more prizes than last year. The party starts 6pm on Dec. 24. 

Jingle Bell Rock

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Retrospect performs at Assumption Christmas Fair in 2018. Image: Assumption College / Facebook.

Enjoy a concert at the Assumption Christmas Fair on Dec. 20. This year’s lineup includes hip-hop artist Fukking Hero, Foolstep, Whal & Dolph, Sweet Mullet, and Safeplanet. See the full schedule below:

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German punk-slash-medieval chanson band Kopi Kaputa as well as the Mercy Center’s Children Choir will also play German Christmas carols at the Goethe Institute’s German Christmas Market on the weekend of Dec. 7 and Dec. 8.

Across the Chao Phraya River, a children choir performance and a charity market will take place at Chang Chui on Dec. 22. Proceedings from the event will be donated to schoolchildren in need in Chonburi province, organizers say.

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Bonus non-Bangkok content: Thai Christians in northeastern are famed for their nighttime Christmas Star Procession – known by locals as hae dao – where hundreds of glittering floats carry big and small recreations of the Star of Bethlehem, very much like Buddhist Lent parades in the region. 

Christmas Star Procession at St Michael’s Cathedral in Sakon Nakhon Christmas will take place nightly from Dec. 23 to Dec. 25. Similar processions will also be held Dec. 24 at Wat Ban Song Khon in Mukdahan, and on Dec. 25 at St Michael’s Church in Yasothon.

O Come All Ye Faithful

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A Christmas mass at Holy Redeemer Church in Bangkok in 2013. Image: Father Ray Foundation

Some churches in Bangkok offer English-language services for their Christmas Eve and Christmas Day religious services. 

Holy Redeemer Church (Catholic) will hold its English-language Christmas Eve mass 05.30pm and 11.00pm on Dec. 24. Christmas Day mass for non-Thai speakers will be at 9.45am, 11.00am and 05.30pm. 

Meanwhile, Christ Church on Sathorn Road has a host of Anglican events lined up: a Christmas carol service at 6pm on Dec. 15, and a Christingle service on 6pm on Christmas Eve, with the first Christmas communion at 11:15pm. Christmas Day service is at 10am. 

To Kids From 1 to 92

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Image: Evangelical Church Bangkok

Starry Starry Night family Christmas event will feature real animals in a nativity scene. It 10:30am to 3pm on Saturday Dec. 14 at the Evangelical Church of Bangkok. Pony riding included. 

A children’s nativity event will also be held 10am on Dec. 8 at Christ Church. 

Later We’ll Have Some Pumpkin Pie…

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Image: IKEA

The much beloved IKEA Family Julbord Christmas Buffet Dinner will take place from 5pm to 7pm, and 7:30pm to 9:30pm on Dec. 20 at IKEA Bang Na and IKEA Bang Yai. 

IKEA Family Card holders can book a buffet ticket for themselves and a friend at 299 baht per person from now through Dec. 15. After that, the price is 399 baht per person. 

Holiday Inn Silom: Christmas Eve dinner at The Brassiere costs 1,165 baht, but book online before Dec. 8 to get a discounted price of around 680 baht. Christmas Day buffets, both lunch and dinner, cost 1,047 baht, and book ahead for a discounted price of 590 baht. 

Now I Have a Machine Gun, Ho-Ho-Ho!

Head to BKK Screening Room to relive the heartwarming nostalgia of all-time Christmas classic: Die Hard. The film screens 6.30pm on Dec. 12. Check the mini-theatre’s website for other Christmas movies like Sleepless in Seattle, When Harry Met Sally, Elf, and Ghostbusters.

For a different kind of hardcore, the Russian Embassy is hosting a screening of “Stilyagi” (“Hipsters”), a 2008 Russian musical film about the 1950s Soviet youth subculture that celebrated American dress and dance, rebelling against Communist youth officials, at 6:30pm Dec. 23 at Iconsiam. Admittance is free. Subtitles in English.

To go back further in Russian history, the wintry epic “Doctor Zhivago” (1965) by David Lean is screening with Thai subtitles 1:30pm Dec. 22 at the Bangkok Screening Room.

Walking in a Winter Wonderland

Sip on mulled wine and munch on stollen at Goethe’s German Christmas Market in the city, to be held from 4pm to 10pm on Dec. 7, and 4pm to 8pm on Dec. 8 at the Goethe-Institut Thailand in Sathorn Soi 1.

Fifty booths, including one run by the German embassy, will be selling German and international food, and there will be workshops for kids and adults alike to bake vanilla crescents and make Christmas decorations out of upcycled trash. There’ll also be a second-hand flea market. Talk about being red and green! 

RIS Swiss Section, a German school in Bangkok, will also hold their German Christmas market from 2pm to 10:30pm on Dec. 18. Food, kid workshop, performances, Satna, and a raffle

But for the French in Bangkok, Christmas comes early this year – stock up on French gifts, food, and wine at the Marché de Noël on Dec. 12 to 15 at Siam Paragon. Visitors who spend up to 2,000 baht will have a chance to win a free round trip ticket to France.

Did we miss any amazingly merry events? Let us know in the comments, or drop us an email to spread that cheer!

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A Week of Slightly Cooler Weather Ahead in Thailand

Tourists atop Phu Chi Fa in Chiang Rai on Jan. 27, 2019.
Tourists atop Phu Chi Fa in Chiang Rai on Jan. 27, 2019.

BANGKOK — Starting Tuesday through the next week, Thailand’s temperatures will inch down enough for Bangkokians to pretend to shiver in fashionable windbreakers.

While the Thai Meteorological Department said that Bangkok as well as the central and eastern regions should see temperatures lower 6C to 8C to 15C to 20C starting Tuesday until Dec. 10, an independent meteorologist recommended people curb their enthusiasm.

“It’s just one week of cool weather, and then it will go back to being hot. Expect 3 to 4 Celsius lower temperature during the day. We are all asleep when it gets really cool,” Seree said. “Bangkokians don’t need to prepare very much.”

Seree said the momentary cold was from a high pressure system moving in from China. The Thai Meteorological Department expects Bangkok to see lows of 16C to 20C, and highs of 27C to 30C.

The North and Isaan should brace for a plunge of 8C to 10C to 10C to 15C, according to the state weather department, while mountains in the regions should see 2C to 10C as well as frozen dew.

“The ten-Celcius drops are seen on mountaintops, not in hot Bangkok,” Seree said.

Southern provinces should expect less rain than usual, or a 20 to 40 percent, during this period.

State meteorologists predicted in October that Thailand’s winter will last through mid-February.

Monday, Kritsiam Kongsatree, Doi Inthanon National Park director, said that tourists were flocking to the Chiang Mai mountain park to watch the sunrise, feel the frog and touch some frosted leaves, as temperatures dropped to 5C on the Kew Mae Pan nature trail.

Meanwhile, Khon Kaen governor Somsak Jangtrakul issued a warning that temperatures would be as low as 10C, so people should stock up on outerwear and exercise more.

Khon Kaen locals buying outerwear on Dec. 2, 2019.
Khon Kaen locals buying outerwear on Dec. 2, 2019.

Related stories:

2019 Winter Will be Colder and Longer, Met Says

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Opinion: If You Need Proof of How Police Failed Pattani, Just Look at Its Traffic

Security officers patrol on Nov. 11, 2019, in Pattani province.

By Eskel Gorov

With recent national interest moving towards judicial reforms in the southern border provinces, I’d like to also call attention to the Royal Thai Police, particularly in Pattani city.

What I will do, though, is not so much offer up a review of the internal actions and attend it with some suggested solutions. That would cut too closely to security sector reforms and would require a simultaneous deep dive into the conflict itself – especially the greed and grievance motivations. This must be a task for the Thai-speaking community.

Instead, I’d like to give a brief snapshot of dysfunction that is objectively and readily apparent to any visitor to Pattani. I do this with several years of work experience living in other conflict affected areas, both inside and outside the region.

After living in Pattani downtown (Muang Pattani) for many months, I still cannot figure out what services the police render to the community.

To be sure, they have a heavy presence all throughout the city: there are checkpoints on most roads, with only some of which are manned by the police, but traffic police can be seen all over. Notwithstanding, I have almost never seen any individual officer who is not ignoring his surroundings and glued firmly to his phone—imagine the personal security risks this represents in their lack of environmental awareness.

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A file photo of traffic police in Pattani

The only exception to this practice is when they detain young men aged between 16 and 34 so that they can do a roadside investigation. That’s it.

To understand why this is odd, it should be fit into the context of traffic in the city. Now, I have lived in pretty much every region in Thailand and all over the world, including places where homes and roads remain bombed-out, but can say without question that Pattani City has the worst driving culture of them all.

In a sense, I suppose it would be easy to blame motorists for inattention or discourtesy, but if you observe closely, you start to understand that this stems from the lack of policing.

For example, while there are traffic lights at most major intersections, they are usually disabled throughout the day and night. Instead of an orderly control of traffic, motorists experience a chaotic cluster of simultaneously selfish and apprehensive cars and motorbikes all attempting to navigate the roads.

What would you get at rush hour or during a rainstorm is a deathtrap that far exceeds the normal risks of a Thai road. A reasonable person then would wear a helmet, right? Not so much.

For some who do, particularly Malayu men, they can expect to be stopped by the police and told to stop wearing their helmets because it interferes with the police surveillance. This is despite the fact that motorbike drivers are legally required to wear helmets.

On the rare and unpredictable occasion that traffic lights are engaged, they are run on timers that make motorists wait for more than 2.5 minutes. The result? Motorists generally ignore the lights so that they can make illegal manoeuvres to continue on their way.

Top: CCTV footage of a road accident in Pattani in July 2019. 

And why shouldn’t they? They know full well that there is no officer on patrol to enforce the law. Essentially, in Muang Pattani, there are no traffic laws. What remains, then, is a portrait of a city adapting to a legal vacuum. This makes some people cautious or timid, while others are aggressive assholes.

I have even observed motorists speeding through crosswalks full of children and elderly pedestrians, despite having an officer attempting to halt traffic; no enforcement on behalf of the grandmother darting out of the way. Everyone knows that there is no authority in which to trust.

Back to why this is odd, this public sentiment is despite a fleet of traffic officers on duty at all times. Again, there is de facto no traffic oversight.

To offer a comparison, I recently lived in a city that was nearly levelled from airstrikes and still had ISIS cells in operation, complete with occasional car bombs. Even there, uniformed police and soldiers were at intersections directing traffic or holding the hands of children crossing the street to and from school. Quite stark.

I imagine if I was a traffic officer who was not deployed out with a mandate to enforce traffic laws, I’d be bored and hang out on my phone all day as well. I have been told by local people that the police are perceived as only interested in providing for their own security, meaning their presence is intended to preserve their presence. I predict that something is amiss in the command structure and it relates to the open secret that the deep south is considered a punishment assignment.

But whatever the cause, the result is that Thai taxes are flowing to the non-delivery of services.

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Embarking on a campaign of pacification under the government of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the first wave of soldiers arrive in Pattani in this May 2004 file photo.

Other than wasting funds, why should this matter? As I mentioned at the outset, conflict is principally driven by greed and grievances, among other factors. These have been studied by science for decades, across many contexts.

One thing that has been revealed is that a lack of fundamental services in a community is an aggravating factor that further perpetuates conflict.

Another one is the phenomena of how the increased visual presence of weapons and security personnel actually result in diminished community safety perceptions, which leads to a degradation of relations between security forces and the community that usually promotes tighter security measures, and thus weapons being more visually present.

This is a downward spiral of mutually reinforcing negative attributes that are difficult to reverse. From what I’ve observed in Muang Pattani, these are certainly concerns.

I’ll leave it to the many talented scholars on hand to discuss this all this more deeply, but I’ll leave it to you to discuss whether it is important enough to lend some of your attention. If you are sitting in Bangkok, or Udon Thani, or Ayutthaya, I urge you to spend some time to understand the deep south in terms that are beyond the IEDs and security operations.

There are large numbers of humans here, and their daily life is quite frustrating.

Note: These opinions expressed are personally held by the author, who is not affiliated with any organization or institution involved in deep south matters.

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White House Says It Won’t Participate in Impeachment Hearing

In this July 25, 2019, file phot, President Donald Trump speaks during a ceremony for new Secretary of Defense Mark Esper at the Pentagon. If there was one day that crystallized all the forces that led to the impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump, it was July 25. That was the day of his phone call with Ukraine’s new leader, pressing him for a political favor. Photo: Alex Brandon, File / AP
In this July 25, 2019, file phot, President Donald Trump speaks during a ceremony for new Secretary of Defense Mark Esper at the Pentagon.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House declared Sunday it would not participate in the first impeachment hearings before the House Judiciary Committee as Democrats prepared to approve their report Tuesday making the case for President Donald Trump’s removal from office.

The Democratic majority on the House Intelligence Committee says its report will speak for itself in laying out possible charges of bribery or “high crimes and misdemeanors,” the constitutional standard for impeachment. After receiving the report, the Judiciary Committee would prepare actual charges.

That committee’s first hearing was already set for Wednesday and was expected to feature four legal experts who will examine questions of constitutional grounds as the committee decides whether to write articles of impeachment against Trump, and if so, what those articles would be.

The White House was invited to attend the Wednesday hearing, but its counsel declined in a fiery letter released Sunday evening.

“This baseless and highly partisan inquiry violates all past historical precedent, basic due process rights, and fundamental fairness,” said White House counsel Pat Cipollone, continuing the West Wing’s attack on the procedural form of the impeachment proceedings. Trump himself was scheduled to attend a summit with NATO allies outside London on Wednesday.

Cipollone’s letter applied only to the Wednesday hearing, and he demanded more information from Democrats on how they intended to conduct further hearings before Trump would decide whether to participate in those hearings. House-passed rules provide the president and his attorneys the right to cross-examine witnesses and review evidence before the committee, but little ability to bring forward witnesses of their own.

Republicans, meanwhile, wanted Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, chairman of the Intelligence Committee, to testify before the Judiciary Committee, though they have no power to compel him to do so, as they joined the White House effort to try to cast the Democratic-led inquiry as skewed against the Republican president.

“If he chooses not to (testify), then I really question his veracity in what he’s putting in his report,” said Rep. Doug Collins, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee.

“It’s easy to hide behind a report,” Collins added. “But it’s going to be another thing to actually get up and have to answer questions.”

Schiff has said “there’s nothing for me to testify about,” that he isn’t a “fact” witness and that Republicans are only trying to “mollify the president, and that’s not a good reason to try to call a member of Congress as a witness.”

Coming after two weeks of public testimony and two months of investigation, the findings of the Intelligence Committee report were not yet publicly known. But the report was expected to focus mostly on whether Trump abused his office by withholding military aid approved by Congress and a White House meeting as he pressed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to launch investigations into Trump’s political rivals.

Democrats also were expected to include an article on obstruction of Congress that outlines Trump’s instructions to officials in his administration to defy subpoenas for documents or testimony.

Democrats were aiming for a final House vote by Christmas, which would set the stage for a likely Senate trial in January.

“I do believe that all evidence certainly will be included in that report so the Judiciary Committee can make the necessary decisions that they need to,” said Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a member of both the Intelligence and Judiciary committees.

She said Democrats had not yet finalized witnesses for the upcoming Judiciary hearings and were waiting to hear back from Trump on his plans to present a defense.

“If he has not done anything wrong, we’re certainly anxious to hear his explanation of that,” Demings said.

Trump has previously suggested that he might be willing to offer written testimony under certain conditions, though aides suggested they did not anticipate Democrats would ever agree to them.

“The Democrats are holding the most ridiculous Impeachment hearings in history. Read the Transcripts, NOTHING was done or said wrong!” Trump tweeted Saturday.

Democrats had pressed Trump to decide by Friday whether he would take advantage of due process protections afforded to him under House rules adopted in October for follow-up hearings, including the right to request witness testimony and to cross-examine the witnesses called by the House.

“If you are serious about conducting a fair process going forward, and in order to protect the rights and privileges of the President, we may consider participating in future Judiciary Committee proceedings if you afford the Administration the ability to do so meaningfully,” Cipollone said in the Sunday letter.

“Why would they want to participate in just another rerun?” asked Collins, D-Ga., noting that the Judiciary Committee previously heard from constitutional scholars on impeachable offenses during special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation.

“This is a complete American waste of time of here,” said Collins, who is calling on the committee chairman, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., to expand the witness list to include those sought by Republicans. “This is why this is a problematic exercise and simply a made-for-TV event coming on Wednesday.”

Still, Republican Rep. Tom McClintock of California, a Judiciary Committee member, said he believes Trump would benefit if he presents his own defense.

“I think it would be to the president’s advantage to have his attorneys there. That’s his right,” he said.

McClintock said he doesn’t believe Trump did anything wrong in the July 25 call with Zelenskiy that is at the heart of the investigation.

“He didn’t use the delicate language of diplomacy in that conversation, that’s true. He also doesn’t use the smarmy talk of politicians,” McClintock said.

To McClintock, Trump was using “the blunt talk of a Manhattan businessman” and “was entirely within his constitutional authority” in his dealings with Ukraine’s leader.

Collins appeared on “Fox News Sunday” and Demings and McClintock were on ABC’s “This Week.”

___

Story: Hope Yen. Associated Press writers Zeke Miller and Jill Colvin contributed to this report.

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China Suspends Hong Kong Visits by US Navy, Sanctions NGOs

A protester holds a placard carrying an American flag during a rally in Hong Kong, Sunday, Dec. 1, 2019. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — The Chinese government has decided to suspend reviewing applications to visit Hong Kong by U.S. military ships and aircraft starting Monday, foreign ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said.

China will also take sanctions against some U.S. non-governmental organizations (NGOs) for their role in the disturbances in Hong Kong, Hua said at a press conference.

The NGOs include the National Endowment for Democracy, National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, International Republican Institute, Human Rights Watch and Freedom House.

A lot of facts and evidence have shown that the aforementioned NGOs supported anti-China rioters in Hong Kong in various ways, abetted their extreme and violent criminal behavior and incited separatist activities for “Hong Kong independence”, Hua said, adding that these organizations bear major responsibilities for Hong Kong’s chaotic situation and should be sanctioned and pay their price.

The spokesperson said the United States has seriously violated the international law and basic norms governing international relations, and interfered in China’s internal affairs by signing the so-called Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019 into law despite China’s firm opposition.

“China urges the U.S. to correct its mistake and stop meddling in Hong Kong affairs or interfering in China’s other internal affairs by any word and act,” Hua said.

China will take further necessary actions in accordance with the development of the situation to firmly defend the stability and prosperity of Hong Kong and safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests, she said.

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Quake-Shattered Chinese National Park Resumes Normal Operation

Nuorilang Waterfall in the Jiuzhaigou National Park in southwest China's Sichuan Province. (Xinhua/Liu Kun)

CHENGDU (Xinhua) — Jiuzhaigou National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage site famous for its spectacular waterfalls, has resumed normal operation after two years of post-quake reconstruction recovered 85 percent of the park.

Starting from Thursday, the scenic spot has been open to individual tourists. The maximum number of daily visitors has been adjusted from 8,000 set in September to 20,000.

On Aug. 8, 2017, a 7.0-magnitude quake forced the national park to close. The Jiuzhai Huanglong Airport also halted services.

The airport reopened on August 8. The local authorities said the transport capacities of all three air and road traffic routes linking to the mountainous scenic spot have resumed or even exceeded the pre-earthquake level.

According to the Jiuzhaigou administration bureau, visitors can use shuttle bus services or go hiking when visiting the lush forests, serene plateau lakes and Tibetan cultural sites such as Taru Temple in the park.

The bureau reminds visitors that they should book tickets in advance on the park’s website with their real names since there is no ticket window at the scenic spot.

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4 Pandas Adapt Well to First Winter on Qinghai Plateau

Image: Xinhua

XINING (Xinhua) —  Four giant pandas can be seen playing at the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Wild Zoo in northwest China, as they are adapting well to their first winter on the plateau.

The rare species native to warm and humid Sichuan Province in southwest China became the first pandas to settle down in the plateau city of Xining, capital of Qinghai Province, in June.

The panda house in the zoo is the largest of its kind in China. The zoo is open to visitors in winter.

Xining, with an altitude of over 2,260 meters above the sea level, has entered its coldest time of the year with the daily low temperature averaging minus 10 degrees Celsius.

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Image: Xinhua

However, the pandas do not just idle in their enclosures enjoying the luxuries of temperature control, floor heating and humidified air. During the day, they venture out rolling in the snow and digging for bamboo shoots buried in the snow by their keepers.

The keepers said the pandas have fully adapted to the climate on the plateau, and all their health indexes are normal.

Experts said the panda settlement on the plateau can help expand the species’ adaptive range of living. Researchers will continue to follow their health conditions at high altitudes.

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Burkina Faso Leader Says 14 Slain in Attack on Church

A soldier stand guards outside the Splendid Hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, Saturday, January 16, 2016 (File Photo). Photo: Sunday Alamba / AP
A soldier stand guards outside the Splendid Hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, Saturday, January 16, 2016 (File Photo). Photo: Sunday Alamba / AP

Hantoukoura, BURKINA FASO (AP) — The president of the West African nation of Burkina Faso has confirmed that 14 people were killed in an attack on a Protestant church in the country’s east.

Going on Twitter, President Roch Marc Christian Kabore said Sunday that he condemned “the barbaric attack” in the town of Hantoukoura. He said several people also were wounded.

Kabore offered his “deepest condolences to the bereaved families and wish a speedy recovery to the wounded.”

Islamic extremists have been active in Burkina Faso since 2015. Jihadists have attacked police stations and churches across the country’s north but also recently have struck in the east.

The president of the West African nation of Burkina Faso has confirmed that 14 people were killed in an attack on a Protestant church in the country’s east.

Going on Twitter, President Roch Marc Christian Kabore said Sunday that he condemned “the barbaric attack” in the town of Hantoukoura. He said several people also were wounded.

Kabore offered his “deepest condolences to the bereaved families and wish a speedy recovery to the wounded.”

Islamic extremists have been active in Burkina Faso since 2015. Jihadists have attacked police stations and churches across the country’s north but also recently have struck in the east.

In October, gunmen generally believed to be Islamic extremists attacked a convoy carrying employees of a mining company in that region, killing at least 37 people.

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