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German Railway Company Says Greta Thunberg’s Photo Misleading

BERLIN (AP) — Climate activist Greta Thunberg and Germany’s national railway company created a tweetstorm Sunday after she posted a photo of herself sitting on the floor of a train surrounded by lots of bags.

The image has drawn plenty of comment online about the performance of German railways.

Thunberg posted the tweet late Saturday with the comment “traveling on overcrowded trains through Germany. And I’m finally on my way home!”

But German railway company Deutsche Bahn suggested that Thunberg may not have spent the whole time sitting on the floor. And the 16-year-old Swedish activist later sought to draw a line under the matter by tweeting that she eventually got a seat and that overcrowded trains are a good thing.

Some Twitter users expressed pity for Thunberg for not being able to get a proper seat on the train for the long ride home from Madrid, where she was attending the U.N. climate change conference. Others wished her a safe trip home after months of traveling by trains and boats to different climate events in Europe and the United States.

Thunberg doesn’t fly on planes because it’s considered harmful to the climate. Last week, she was named Time magazine’s Person of the Year for her efforts to prod government and others to take faster actions in fighting climate change.

Deutsche Bahn, which used to be famous for its punctuality, has come under fire in recent years for delays, last-minute train cancellations and expensive ticket fares.

In Deutsche Bahn’s first reply to the teenager’s initial tweet, the company wished her a good trip back home and adding that “we continue working hard on getting more trains, connections and seats.”

Later, however, the railway company wrote in a statement to the media that Thunberg had a seat in first class between Kassel and Hamburg and that other members of her team were already sitting in first class from Frankfurt onwards.

In the photo on Twitter, Thunberg is sitting on the floor at the end of a rail car with her back leaning against a suitcase, staring out of a window. There’s an empty food box next to her and more suitcases and backpacks piled up by her side.

Later on Sunday, Deutsche Bahn tweeted twice more in regard to Thunberg’s train travels through Germany.

In the first tweet, the company thanks the teenager for supporting Deutsche Bahn’s battle against climate change and pointed out that the train she used had been running 100% on eco-friendly electricity.

In the second tweet, however, Deutsche Bahn seemed to suggest that Thunberg hadn’t spent the entire train ride sitting on the floor.

The company pointed out to the teenager that “it would have been even nicer if you had also reported how friendly and competently our team served you at your seat in first class.”

Thunberg later tweeted that the fact she didn’t first sit in a seat wasn’t meant as a knock against Deutsche Bahn.

She wrote that “this is no problem of course and I never said it was. Overcrowded trains is a great sign because it means the demand for train travel is high!”

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Mighty Bernie at Bat? Sanders Makes Pitch for Minor Leagues

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., hits a baseball after a meeting with minor league baseball players and officials at FunCity Turf, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2019, in Burlington, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

BURLINGTON, Iowa (AP) — Take Bernie out to the ball game?

Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate, is aggressively opposing a Major League Baseball plan to cut 42 minor league teams across the country after 2020. Among the targeted are the Vermont Lake Monsters, the Single-A affiliate of the Oakland Athletics in his hometown, Burlington.

Defending low-profile ball clubs in far-flung places more fervently than anyone in the crowded Democratic presidential field allows Sanders to potentially win over a largely untapped 2020 constituency: baseball fans.

Sanders briefly took batting practice Sunday on an indoor turf field as representatives from three small-town Iowa teams looked on: the Quad City River Bandits, the Clinton LumberKings and the Burlington Bees, the local club in this town on the Mississippi River. In August, Sanders played softball with reporters on the state’s corn field-ringed “Field of Dreams,” the set of the Hollywood hit of the same name. And he has tapped a former Harvard second baseman, Faiz Shakir, to run his campaign.

Sanders shed his signature suit jacket to take swings in a sweater over a dress shirt. With a staff member slow-pitching, the senator dribbled a few grounders to his left, then lifted a ball in the air in the same direction, before joking that he was aiming another grounder off his bat at CNN reporter who should have dived to stop it. After about six hits, he dropped the bat and said “OK, that’s it.”

“For all the major league scouts, if I don’t make it to the presidency, I’m available,” Sanders joked.

Taking the diamond demonstrated physical stamina for a 78-year-old who recently had a heart attack, while also letting Sanders press a larger political point about rich owners putting profits ahead of the national pastime. But it also shows off a softer side of someone most known to supporters and detractors alike for being a democratic socialist and backing progressive policy proposals such as “Medicare for All.”

“The guys who own the teams are billionaires,″ Sanders said told The Associated Press interview earlier this week, adding that baseball “is not an institution that is hurting financially. And you can see that by, just in the last few weeks, seeing major league teams signing star baseball players for as much (as) $324 million.”

That refers to the New York Yankees recently signing free-agent pitcher Gerrit Cole to a reported 9-year, $324 million contract.

MLB is negotiating a new agreement with the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, the governing body of the minors. The initial contraction proposal primarily would impact lower-level teams in short-season leagues. Sanders met last month with Commissioner Rob Manfred to decry the plan and the senator sent him a letter Saturday, arguing that baseball “has to be considered more than just the bottom line.”

“Baseball is not just another business,” Sanders said during the interview. “There’s a reason the president of the United States throws out the first pitch of the season, why baseball is considered a national pastime.”

After the initial Sanders-Manfred meeting, MLB issued a statement saying it “understands that we have an obligation to local communities to ensure that public money spent on minor league stadiums is done so prudently and for the benefit of all citizens.”

But it added: “MLB also must ensure that minor league players have safe playing facilities suitable for the development of professional baseball players, are not subjected to unreasonable travel demands, are provided with compensation and working conditions appropriate for elite athletes, and have a realistic opportunity of making it to the major leagues.”

Some minor league players have filed a federal class-action suit charging that many players earn less than $7,500 per year, violating minimum wage laws.

More than 100 members of Congress from both parties have signed a separate letter to Manfred opposing shutting down minor league teams. So far, though, Sanders is alone among the Democratic presidential hopefuls loudly opposing the idea.

“He’s the only one I hear talking about it,” said J.D. Scholten, who pitched professionally in Canada and for Iowa’s independent Sioux City Explorers. Scholten challenged longtime Republican Rep. Steve King in 2018 and is trying again to unseat him.

“I think it kind of fits into his overall message of, right now, a lot of the way our lives are being shaped by wealthy people who are dictating a lot of these things at the top, and the people at the bottom are being left behind,” said Scholten, who also played basketball this past week with another White House hopeful, businessman Andrew Yang.

Sanders said before Sunday’s batting practice that Congress could intervene if baseball goes through with its contraction plan. He noted the sport’s antitrust exemption and the public dollars some teams have received to build stadiums, and cited lucrative television contracts that he said are “sometimes designed in unusual ways.”

“So I think there is a lot Congress can do to protect baseball for ordinary Americans and I think that is what you’re going to see being done in a bipartisan matter,” Sanders said. “I hope it doesn’t have to come to that.”

Scholten said he tells crowds at town halls while campaigning that he’ll answer questions about anything, including baseball.

“My baseball background gets talked about quite a lot. I’m actually kind of surprised. I haven’t played in 10 years, was a paralegal for a decade and nobody talks about that,” Scholten joked.

Sanders’ baseball ties predate his 2020 campaign. He visited with the Los Angeles Dodgers during spring training in 2018 and, as he was recovering at home following his Oct. 1 heart attack, Sanders’ campaign released video of the candidate batting balls around his backyard.

The senator grew up loving the Brooklyn Dodgers until they moved to Los Angeles when he was 16. He now roots for the Boston Red Sox, like a lot of New Englanders.

While running for the first elected office he won, mayor of Burlington in 1981, Sanders says he thinks he remembers campaigning on landing a minor league team. He says “we worked extremely hard” to accomplish just that.- bringing a Cincinnati Reds affiliate to town three years later.

“Everybody found it amusing because the name was the Vermont Reds,” Sanders, noting his proud leftist streak, chuckled.

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‘We Will Not Retreat,’ Thanathorn Says at Protest, Promising Another Next Month

Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks to hundreds of his supporters at a much anticipated rally on BTS skywalk above Pathumwan Intersection on Dec. 14, 2019.

Top: Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks to hundreds of his supporters at a much anticipated rally on BTS skywalk above Pathumwan Intersection on Dec. 14, 2019.

BANGKOK — Future Forward leader Thanathorn Juangruangruangkit told several thousands of his supporters at a rally Saturday evening that the people would no longer put up with political injustice.

“We come together today in a show of force, to show that we will not retreat and will not put up with things any longer,” Thanathorn said. “This is not a day to protect the Future Forward, but a day to to protect the future of all Thais.”

Organizers and police have yet to estimate the number of people who participated in a protest called upon by Thanathorn on BTS skywalk above Pathumwan Intersection today, but reporters at the scene believed there were at least 3,000 demonstrators.

“Today is just a taste of it. An hour is enough … once we’re done, we will go home,” Thanathorn said to the angry and jubilant crowd who crammed the elevated walkway close to MBK shopping mall.

Read: ‘People Are Celebrating NYE,’ Prayuth Slams Thanathorn’s Protest Call

He urged his supporters to show up next month at the “Run Against Dictatorship” running event against Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, which is scheduled to take place on Jan. 12. He also hinted that “a real, bigger rally” will take place in the future.

Also present at the rally were other key Future Forward leaders including party’s sec-gen Piyabutr Saengkanolkkul, spokeswoman Pannika Wanich, and rising-star MP Pita Limjaroenrat – who addressed the crowd in English.

Pita Limjaroenrat, center, speaking to protesters.
Pita Limjaroenrat, center, speaking to protesters.

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The protesters were holding placards and shouting chants “long live democracy, dictatorship get out.” Many also flashed the anti-junta “three-finger salute.”

Thanathorn’s abrupt plea for a “flash mob” apparently appealed to the youths; the call of mobilization was made on his social media platforms, saying “it’s time for the new generation to step into reality.” Hashtags related to the protest had been trending on Twitter since yesterday.

Among the crowd was a 22-year-old student, who said he came out today to protest against “distorted democratic processes.”

“I felt something fishy since the election,” Phurin Wonglomnil said. “I came out today in support of the person who spoke out against those who have taken away our rights and freedom.”

Asked if he feared any legal retaliation from the government, Phurin said no.

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“This is the beginning of the moment when people can express their freedom of expression,” he said. “It’s our right under the Constitution.”

Members of other generations also joined the rally, including the 37-year-old woman who asked not to be named due to fear of repercussions from her employers. She said she came all the way from Phuket just to join today’s “flash mob”.

“Future Forward is about to be dissolved and it’s clear why,” Nam, who wore Future Forward’s bandana said. “I want to be part of a show of force, to let them know that there are people watching and not taken in by their propaganda.”

Prior to today’s rally, several coalition politicians, including PM Prayuth himself, urged Thanathorn not to resort to street protests. Phalang Pracharath Party’s spokesman Thanakorn Wangboonkongchana said Friday the protest could escalate to another political crisis and suggested the mobilization is “selfish.”

Although Thanathorn did not explicitly mention his loan case as a reason for the rally, political observers speculated that his call was made in response to the Election Commission’s petition to the Constitutional Court to dissolve the party for violating election laws by accepting 191-million baht loan from Thanathorn.

If found guilty, Thanathorn and 14 other party executives could be banned from politics for at least five years.

Around 150 police officers were deployed to watch over the protest. The protest went generally peacefully – with a minor clash that broke out between the police and protesters at around 5.40pm – and they dispersed at around 6pm.

Additional reporting Pravit Rojanaphruk

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Songkran for UNESCO List: Gov’t Eyes Joint Submission With China

People celebrate the water-sprinkling festival at a square in Jinghong City, Dai Autonomous Prefecture of Xishuangbanna, southwest China's Yunnan Province, April 15, 2019 (Xinhua/Shao Bin)

BANGKOK — After the UN recognized Thai massage as the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, the government said Friday it would submit traditional Thai New Year festival to the list next year. 

The submission of Songkran, which typically involves days of rowdy water fights, to the prestigious list will be jointly made with the Chinese government, because the southern region of China also has a similar tradition, culture minister Ittipol Khunpluem said. 

Similar to Thailand, the Dai ethnic group in China’s Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture celebrates New Year in mid-April and sprinkles water on each other for good fortunes. The Dai are believed to be closely related to the Thais, who know them as Tai

Ittipol said other neighboring countries who also celebrate local variants of Songkran, such as Laos and Cambodia, will be invited to jointly submit the festival to the UNESCO for its consideration as well. 

In its latest entry announced on Friday, the UN’s cultural body recognized Thai massage as something to be preserved for future generations.

According to UNESCO, the practice has its “roots in self-care in Thai peasant society of the past, [where] every village had massage healers whom villagers would turn to when they had muscle aches from working the field”.

Related stories:

See Unusual Songkran Celebrations Around Thailand (Photos)

Khon of Thailand, Khol of Cambodia Recognized by UNESCO

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Opinion: Confessions of a Thai “Nation-Hater”

Warong Dechgitvigrom receives a membership jacket for the Action Coalition for Thailand upon joining the party on Nov. 23, 2019.

A new malice is threatening Thailand. Those in fear call members of the new cult “nation-haters” or phuak chang chart in Thai.

 This new threat was not espoused by anonymous political loonies, but led by former senior Democrat Party member Warong Dechgitvigrom, once a contender for the party’s top leadership. Warong recently defected to another party known for its hardline pro-establish stance, the Action Coalition for Thailand. 

It wasn’t just an empty rhetoric, either. Warong and his supporters went as far as pushing for what he called a “anti-patriotism bill” to punish nation-haters.

But what is this supposed “cult” of nation-haters all about?

In essence, some conservative Thais feel that there are fellow Thais who hate their very own country and actively seek to harm it.

To these concerned individuals, the threat comes from within, from those who kept criticizing Thailand and wanting to see a change in Thai society. Full-disclosure, this writer has been accused on social media as a nation-hater as well.

Warong went into some details on Facebook earlier this month to explain what he and his supporters thought of nation-haters.

The veteran politician warned that those who call for democracy yet hate their own country “will only cause trouble.” As in Hong Kong, which is witnessing a protracted protest against Beijing’s rule, these nation-haters sow division in society and drag foreign powers to interfere in domestic political affairs, Warong said.

“Thailand is cultured and possesses beautiful traditions, love and generosity among its people that is an envy of foreigners. We must help look after these and not fall for the propaganda of those who hate their own nation and cited democracy as a pretext,” the 58-year-old Warong wrote.

He added, “Do not allow these nation-haters to be emboldened, and then everything in the country will be better.” 

In another recent Facebook posting, the self-made prophet spells out the tenets of nation-haters, in which he referred to as believers in “anti-patriotism”. It includes five principles.

First, nation-haters are against the monarchy and often attack it.

Second, nation-haters do not promote religions.

Third, nation-haters dismiss its own cultures and traditions as archaic. They also look down on Thailand with disdain. 

Fourth, nation-haters invite foreign powers to meddle in internal affairs and expose the country’s weaknesses to foreigners.

Fifth, nation-haters undermine confidence in the judicial system and do not accept the court’s rulings.

His description of nation-haters was widely reported by the press, shared nearly 700 times on Facebook, and met with over a thousand Facebook reactions.

 It seems that in Warong’s ideal world, Thailand must be static and parochial – not dynamic and progressive or true to itself. To be a Warong’s patriot, one must accept the status quo and regard Thai culture as beyond reproach. 

To be a patriot in Warong’s eyes, one must not speak the truth about Thailand’s ill to foreigners, no matter how ill Thai society may have become.

I concede that Warong loves Thailand, but he probably does so in a very myopic and monopolistic way. 

I would not call Warong a true patriot, for one should be open-minded and tolerant to competing ideas about how best to love and move the country forward – which includes taking the views of others, including contradictory views into consideration in good faith.

No one should wield an authority on how best to love one’s motherland. It’s unfortunate that it may not have occurred to Warong that perhaps other Thais, even some foreigners, do care for Thailand as well, and as much as he does, but they may have a different plan for the future of the country and disagree on what is considered an ideal, or at least desired, Thailand.

Branding those who disagree with him as nation-haters is nothing but an attempt to monopolize patriotism, if not nationalism, by a group of increasingly insecure Old Guards who have lost the plot. 

They can no longer maintain the narrative they want to impose on Thailand, particularly among the disillusioned youngsters who have become much more vocal on social media. 

Dear Warong, I love Thailand, too. And just because we may have a different vision on how Thailand ought to be in the future is no excuse for you to brand people like myself as nation-hater. 

My version of Thailand’s future happens to be more egalitarian, more transparent, democratic and free, and bereft of xenophobia. 

Please abandon your fear and have a dialogue with those who think differently from you, for they are your countrymen as well. 

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‘People Are Celebrating NYE,’ Prayuth Slams Thanathorn’s Protest Call

Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks in a March 26, 2019, press briefing at the party’s headquarters.
Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks in a March 26, 2019, press briefing at the party’s headquarters.

BANGKOK — Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha on Friday criticized the opposition leader’s call for a public protest in downtown Bangkok set to take place tomorrow.

Hours after Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangruangruangkit urged his supporters who “don’t want to tolerate” perceived injustice against his faction to come out in force, PM Prayuth suggested the mobilization is inappropriate, and advised Thanathorn to respect the law.

“Is it appropriate to rally at this moment, when people are celebrating the New Year’s Eve?” he said to reporters, with anger in his voice. “Isn’t it his personal problem? Why does he need to bother other people?”

Asked if he has ordered authorities to step up security measures, Prayuth said it’s not his job.

“I don’t need to order anything,” he said. “I don’t want to talk about the case either because I’m not responsible for the judiciary process.”

Thanathorn made his first-ever appeal for a mass protest Friday afternoon on his social media platforms, calling those who “don’t want to tolerate the current condition any longer” to gather on BTS skywalk at Pathumwan Intersection 5pm tomorrow.

“This is the time to make some noise,” Thanathorn wrote. “If you agree with me that it’s time for people to stand up and call for legitimacy and justice, meet me tomorrow.”

Political observers fear Thanathorn’s days in politics are numbered after the Election Commission announced that his 191-million baht loan to his party violated voting laws, and said it would ask the Constitutional Court to dissolve the Future Forward.

If found guilty, Thanathorn himself could be banned from politics for at least five years.

Metropolitan police chief Somprasong Yenthuam said 150 officers will be deployed to watch over the protest. He said the police have not received a request for public gathering from Thanathorn and it is too early to estimate the number of demonstrators expected to show up.

Maj. Gen. Somprasong added that Thanathorn would be charged with criminal offenses if he violates laws on public gatherings tomorrow.

Related stories:

Gov’t Allies Warn Future Forward Against Protests

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‘Khalid’ to Reunite with ‘Free Spirits’ in Bangkok Next March

Photo: Khalid / Facebook
Photo: Khalid / Facebook

Update: The promoter announced on Feb. 14, 2020 that the concert has been postponed until further notice due to travel restrictions in the region.

BANGKOK — Get ready to be young, dumb, and broke once again because American R&B singer Khalid is coming back to the capital next year.

For his second live gig in Bangkok, the 21-year-old wunderkind will kick off his Asia tour for his latest album “Free Spirit” on March 24, 2020 at Impact Arena. Tickets start at 1,800 baht and will be available online via Live Nation starting Dec. 15 from 10am.

The Gen Z icon is best known for his slow tempo, heartfelt vocals such as “Young Dumb & Broke,” “Talk,” and “Location.” He also featured in many recent hits like “Lovely” (with Billie Eilish), “Silence” (with Marshmello), and “1-800-273-8255” (with Logic and Alessia Cara).

Khalid, born Khalid Donnel Robinson, rose to fame in 2016 when he released his debut single “Location,” which shoot up to the top of the US Billboard Hot 100 in 2017. He released his second album “Free Spirit” in April, which also soared to the top of the US Billboard Hot 200.

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Street Food Fairs at Yaowaraj, Silom, and Khaosan Roads This Weekend

Yaowarat Road in 2015. Photo: Juan Antonio Segal / Flickr
Yaowarat Road in 2015. Photo: Juan Antonio Segal / Flickr

BANGKOK — Parts of bustling Chinatown will be closed to traffic and transform into an open-air market Friday and through the weekend.

Deputy Bangkok governor Sakoltee Phattiyakul said two lanes on Yaowaraj Road will be turned into a “walking street” for pedestrians to try out different street food vendors on Friday and Saturday from 5pm to midnight.

On Sunday, cars will be banned on the whole section between the Chalermburi and Ratchawong intersections from 7pm to midnight, where 40 more street food vendors will be allowed to take the street.

In addition to Chinatown, downtown office workers and tourists will be able to roam Silom Road on Sunday from noon to 10pm and binge on street food from famous restaurants across the capital. There will also be vendors selling Bangkok-made goodies, OTOP folk products, and indy crafts.

The open-air market on Silom Road will repeat every third Sunday of each month through May as part of the government’s effort to attract more tourists and boost the economy, Sakoltee said.

Backpackers’ haven Khaosan Road will also be closed on Monday from 5pm to 2am. A stage will be set up in front of Chana Songkhram Police Station, where partygoers can watch traditional performances like khon, muay thai, and even Thai cooking shows.

Similar events may be expanded to other areas like Khlong San should these destinations have proven to be a success, the deputy governor said.

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Google Says Thais Curious About Free Money, N95 Masks, Hong Kong

A football team practices while wearing N95 masks in January 2019.

BANGKOK — Throughout 2019, Thais’ Google searches were filled with searches for soap operas, overseas holiday destinations, as well as the government’s tourism incentive program.

The guilty pleasures of a nation, in this case Thailand’s love for lakorn, shopping, and celebrity dramas cannot be hidden when mass amounts of Internet searches are recorded and examined, as it was when Google revealed its top results for Thailand in 2019. 

The “Chim, Shop, Chai” or Taste, Shop, Use scheme, where a 1,000 baht handout to 10 million people to spend on local tourism, topped both the most-searched overall term and how-to categories. Four of the remaining most-searched terms were all lakorns. 

Despite Google Year in Search’s theme being about heroes, Thailand’s results did not include a category of people searched about. People still loved to read about other people, of course – especially in terms of sensational news like a promotional model who was drugged and killed while on the job in September.

New categories include popular shops, domestic tourism, and international tourism.

1Top Search Keywords

A promotional image of Chim, Shop, Chai program.

“ชิมช้อปใช้” (Chim, Shop, Chai) a government scheme to boost tourism that allowed 10 million citizens to spend 1,000 baht at some restaurants and shops, as well as made them eligible for tax rebates. The scheme was so popular that the government launched two more rounds of the scheme.

“กรงกรรม” (Cage of Karma) 1967, Nakhon Sawan. Ranee “Bella” Campen plays a prostitute who enters Thai-Chinese family, to the rage of her mother-in-law. Family drama and black magic ensue.

“เมียน้อย” (The Mistress) The struggles of a gangster’s mia noi, enduring rape, physical abuse, and so on. 

“ใบไม้ที่ปลิดปลิว” (Leaves on the Wind) A transgender woman sets off on a path of revenge after cruel family members caused her mother’s death. 

“หัวใจศิลา” (Heart of Stone) The son of a mia noi rebels against his dad’s abusive mia luang and makes his way up the social ladder.

2Domestic News

A still from CCTV footage showing Rachadech Wongtabutr carrying Thitima’s unconscious body up the elevator at his condominium on Sept. 16. Photo: Thitima Noraphanpiphat / Facebook

ข่าวลัลลาเบล (Death of model Thitima “Bell” Noraphanpiphat)”

ข่าวออฟฟี่ แม็กซิม (Sex scandals of a Maxim model that broke in June)”

ข่าวน้องโยโย่ (The sexual assault of a 14-year-old girl by her father’s friend)”

ข่าวป๊อบ ปองกูล (Singer Pongkool “Pop” Suebsun was found to have been cheating on his wife with another woman for a decade)

ข่าวปุ๊กกี้ ปริศนา (90s singer Prissana “Pukky” Praisaeng arrested for transnational drug trafficking)”

3International News

Japanese clean up after the typhoon. Image: Associated Press

Japanese storm (Typhoon Hagibis)

Pabuk storm

Asteroid hitting Earth (Always good to be careful!)

Seungri 

Hong Kong

4Shops

Food at Nhong Rim Khlong. Image: Wongnai

ร้านหน่องริมคลอง Nhong Rim Khlong, a Thai restaurant in Ekkamai 21

ร้านกาแฟชายทุ่ง Chai Thung Coffee, a coffee shop founded by Princess Sirindhorn in Pathum Thani

ร้านวรรณระยอง Wan Rayong, a chain of wholesale discount stores in Rayong that participate in the Chim, Shop, Chai scheme

ร้านภูฟ้า Phufa, a shop owned by Princess Sirindhorn selling Royal Project products

ร้านป้าบุญล้อม Pa Boonlorm, a Samut Prakan restaurant popular for its 499 baht seafood buffets

5Lakorn

A screencap from Cage of Karma

“กรงกรรม” (Cage of Karma)

“เมียน้อย” (The Mistress)

“ใบไม้ที่ปลิดปลิว” (Leaves on the Wind) 

“หัวใจศิลา” (Heart of Stone)

“มธุรสโลกันตร์” In the forests of the Sakae Krang River delta, a forest bandit leader must marry a reluctant city girl. 

6How-to

Thais vote in the election on March 24, 2019.

How to register for Chim, Shop, Use

How to vote

How to track a Kerry package

How to wear a N95 mask

How to withdraw money from state welfare cards

7International tourist destinations

A file photo of Georgia. Image: Expedia

Georgia Following a low-cost airline’s announcement to launch flights from Bangkok

Singapore

Hong Kong

India

China

8Domestic tourist destinations

A New Year Day ceremony at the “death railway” in Kanchanburi province.

Kanchanaburi

Nakhon Nayok

Chiang Mai

Chanthaburi

Surat Thani

9Songs

“รักติดไซเรน” (My Ambulance) With 140.8 million views and counting on YouTube, there’s a very high chance you’ve heart this pop-rap hit, whether wittingly or unwittingly. The celebrity-studded MV is filmed at EmQuartier mall as well. What could be more Thai?

“ธารารัตน์” (Thararat) Hip-hop artist Youngohm’s hit, coupled with a vintage-themed MV, has 190 million views on YouTube. 

“ชอบแบบนี้” (I Like It This Way) a romantic pop-rock song by 17-year-old singer Nhamtoey Sabaengbin with 233 million plays on YouTube

“งัดถั่งงัด” (Ngud Tung Ngud) It’s not a Top 5 songs playlist without one luk thung banger! 176 million views.

“แก้มน้องนางนั้นแดงกว่าใคร” (Your Cheeks Are Redder than All Others) Soulful and touching, Kiankai and Wanitch band’s gentle love song (12 million for an audio video, 44 million for a live version) has been covered extensively. 

Related stories:

Time-Travel Love, Wild Boars, Wonton: What We Searched for in 2018

Descendant of Nanjing Massacre Survivor Hosts Talks in Japan

TOKYO (Xinhua) — Ge Fengjin, son of Ge Daorong, a survivor of the Nanjing Massacre, held a testimony meeting here on Wednesday night to convey the truth about the Nanjing Massacre in 1937 and remind people to never forget history.

At the invitation of a few local civil groups, Ge Fengjin shared his father’s story at the meeting to mark the 82nd anniversary of the Nanjing Massacre. About 100 people attended the meeting.

Ge Daorong, a survivor of the massacre, was only 10 years old when Nanjing fell to Japanese invaders. He survived by escaping into the Safety Zone during the mass killing, but his three uncles did not.

Since the 1980s, he has devoted himself to sharing his story. As he gets older, his son has taken over.

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An Japanese newspaper article reporting “The Contest To Cut Down 100 People” — a competition in which two Japanese soldiers challenged one another to massacre as many people in Nanjing as possible.

“On Dec. 13, 1937, the Japanese invaders occupied Nanjing and carried out the deadly Nanjing massacre, killing 300,000 of our compatriots, including my family members,” said Ge Fengjin.

As descendant of a survivor of the Nanjing Massacre, he said he should not only remember the painful history, but also has the responsibility to tell the truth and testify to the the mass-killing, adding that he wants more young people to know and remember this part of history.

Sun Zhaiwei, an expert on the Nanjing Massacre and researcher at Jiangsu Provincial Academy of Social Sciences, delivered a speech themed “The solemn truth of Nanjing Defense Battle” at the meeting.

He introduced the historical background of the Nanjing Massacre, the historical truth of the Nanjing Defense Battle, from three aspects: “the capture of Nanjing is the established goal of the Japanese army,” “the heroic fight of Chinese soldiers” and “the important historical position of the battle”.

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Ge Fengjin, son of Ge Daorong, a survivor of the Nanjing Massacre, holds a testimony meeting to convey the truth about the Nanjing Massacre, in Tokyo, Japan, Dec. 11, 2019. (Xinhua/Du Xiaoyi)

Reviewing the truth of the battle is not to continue the hatred, Sun said, but to learn from the historical experience, be vigilant to the resurgence of Japanese militarism which has brought disasters to mankind, and work together to strive for and maintain lasting world peace.

Shota Naito, a postdoctoral fellow majored in history from Japan’s Meiji University, told Xinhua that he has been attending the testimony meeting of the Nanjing Massacre in Tokyo every year since 2015.

Each year, the organizers invite various people to talk about the massacre in different places and perspectives, which offers a rare opportunity to learn about the truth of history in Japan, he said, adding that he is concerned that some people in Japan do not know the truth of history, and some even attempt to falsify history, forget history and deny the existence of the Nanjing Massacre.

“Every time I listen to the stories with tears in my eyes, I feel sorry (for the Chinese people),” he said.

The Nanjing Massacre took place after the Japanese troops captured the city on Dec. 13, 1937. Over six weeks, they killed about 300,000 Chinese civilians and unarmed soldiers in one of the most barbaric episodes of World War II.

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