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Pope’s Cousin Takes Star Turn in Thailand as Papal Whisperer

In this photo released by The Royal Household Bureau, Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn talk to Pope Francis, his cousin Ana Rosa Sivori, and Thai Queen Suthida at Dusit Palace Thursday, Nov. 21, 2019, in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: The Royal Household Bureau via AP
In this photo released by The Royal Household Bureau, Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn talk to Pope Francis, his cousin Ana Rosa Sivori, and Thai Queen Suthida at Dusit Palace Thursday, Nov. 21, 2019, in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: The Royal Household Bureau via AP

BANGKOK (AP) — She made him wait for her while she chatted with Thailand’s king and queen. She chided him for only visiting Bangkok and not the “real Thailand.” And she got a chuckle out of “Jorge” when she took her time translating his off-the-cuff Spanish for local priests and nuns to understand.

Sister Ana Rosa Sivori has taken something of a star turn during her second cousin’s visit to Thailand, assuming an unprecedented role for a woman as papal whisperer and translator, who doesn’t seem fazed that her charge is Pope Francis.

Usually papal aides are men, and they stay in the shadows, showing wallflower-like deference to the leader of the 1.2-billion strong Catholic Church. Not so Sivori, who treats Francis with the respect owed a pope but nevertheless displays the confidence and chutzpah of a no-nonsense nun who has spent more than a half-century ministering to Thailand’s faithful.

Sivori, a 77-year-old member of the Salesian order, is an assistant principal at a Salesian school in Udon Thani, in northeast Thailand. She arrived in the country in 1966 as a young sister from Argentina, where her father and Jorge Mario Bergoglio’s mother were first cousins.

She has said her father knew early on that there was something special about “Jorge,” a sentiment that spread to the rest of the family.

“He always said ‘No one touches Jorge.’ He had a special affection for him,” Sivori told Italian journalists before the trip.

It’s apparently mutual: Francis sends Sivori handwritten letters regularly, and he prepares packages of books for her to read, with envelopes that he addresses himself.

Sivori lamented that Francis would only visit Bangkok, saying its skyscrapers and luxury hotels were by no means representative of the rest of the country. The “real Thailand” was outside the capital, she said.

Francis set the tone of their time in Bangkok when he descended from his Alitalia charter on Wednesday afternoon.

Before even greeting Surayud Chulanont, the former prime minister and head of King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s Privy Council who was dispatched to the airport to welcome him, Francis broke diplomatic protocol to give Sivori a kiss on each cheek as she waited at the foot of the stairs.

That informality carried through the rest of their time together, with Sivori taking the place of the local bishop in Francis’ car as he went from appointment to appointment. Based on their body language, she was giving him pointers and details at each stop.

The visuals were striking, given Francis has no female advisers and usually has a cleric by his side whispering in his ear.

Francis has long insisted that the Catholic Church is “female” and that women should have a more prominent role in leadership positions.

That he finally let a woman upstage him a bit was remarkable, especially in a country known for the many women and girls who are trafficked and exploited.

Sivori’s starring role peaked Thursday afternoon, when she joined Francis for his private meeting with King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida at the royal palace.

Sivori translated, and at one point even stepped in front of Francis to describe the gifts he had brought the king. Later during their talks, she cheerfully relayed to the pope what the king had said and appeared to even help out the king’s own translator.

At the end of their visit, Francis bade the royals farewell and made his way down the stairs to the waiting car.

Sivori, though, remained at the palace entrance, chatting for nearly a minute with the royal couple while Francis waited for her.

Eventually, she finished her own goodbyes and took her place next to him in the back seat.

Francis appeared to rib her the next day when Sivori was translating his remarks to nuns and priests at St. Peter’s Parish outside Bangkok.

As he tends to do when speaking to a religious audience, Francis deviated from his prepared text and urged the nuns to allow themselves to be “surprised” by the joys and sorrows of their vocation.

Sivori took a few seconds to write down his comments before beginning the translation. The delay prompted Francis to look at her, raise his eyebrows and gesture for her to get on with it.

Their silent exchange Friday drew laughs from the pews and a heartfelt chuckle from the pope, who apologized for not being able to speak directly to his flock.

Story: Nicole Winfield

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Borderless Modern Mediterranean at Michelin Plate-Winning ‘Quince’

Wagyu Beef in Betel Leaf
Wagyu Beef in Betel Leaf

BANGKOK — This restaurant in Chidlom proves that Mediterranean cuisine can be borderless, though there may be fine dining price wall in between.

For three years in a row, Quince was not only listed in the Thailand Michelin Guide, but awarded the Plate distinction for exceptional food. Quince dares to use Asian spices to unleash the full flavor of modern Mediterranean dishes, a creative amalgam, just like its Thai-South African chef.

“We don’t limit ourselves to certain side of Mediterrenean cuisine at Quince. We’re trying to play around a wide variety of cooking styles and ingredients here,” chef Charlie Jones said.

After moving from the former Sukhumvit 45 branch where the restaurant first opened in 2012, Quince recently found its new home in the stylish Siri House, sharing the same roof as comfort food café Luka and elegant cocktail bar Jacqueline.

Inside, frequent fine diners may find the interior uninspiring. The dining area is dimly lit, burnished with loft-style wood, metal furnishings, and a large open kitchen. But once you’re seated, the bland setting is forgivable with exceptional service as the wait staff tuck in the chair for you and place the glass precisely on the X mark engraved on the table.

Quince’s entire menu fits on one piece of A4 paper, and includes Thai-influenced Mediterranean dishes (Note: the prices indicated here are exclusive of 7 percent VAT and 10 percent service charge).

A meal at Quince begins with bite-sized appetizers like Salmon Roe Tartlet (150 baht per piece). The shortcrust savoury pastry and sweet yuzu curd goes seamlessly well with the salty salmon roe and smoked sour cream.

 Salmon Roe Tartlet (150 baht per piece)
Salmon Roe Tartlet (150 baht per piece)

Seafood lovers will love Hay-smoked Hamachi (390 baht). Thin slices of smoked Japanese amberjack sit in a creamy purée of fennel and blood orange. The citrus fruit downplays the fish with its slightly sour, fruity aroma.

Hay-smoked Hamachi (390 baht)
Hay-smoked Hamachi (390 baht)

Need more swanky bites? The Sublime Oyster, 150 baht per piece, are fished in Geay in southwestern France and are served on pebbles with condiments like red wine sauce and the staple nam jim seafood.

However, we don’t find the dish to be exalted enough for its name, since it was literally just a raw oyster.

The Sublime Oyster (150 baht per piece)
The Sublime Oyster (150 baht per piece)

A more adorned per-piece item is the Wagyu Beef in Betel Leaf (110 baht per piece). A small chunk of juicy Wagyu beef is rolled in an aromatic betel leaf and flavored with smoked Sriracha sauce. It’s served on top of a sheet of flour, which you roll up, trapping together the wagyu-betel roll, pickled kohlrabi, and fried shallot rings.

Wagyu Beef in Betel Leaf (110 baht per piece)
Wagyu Beef in Betel Leaf (110 baht per piece)

The Crab Salad and Brioche (380 baht) is a slice of brioche bread generously packed with crab meat in Thai herbal sauce that reminds one of nam jim seafood sauce, and topped with smoked avocado. The dressing is creamy and hidden with notes of Thai spices.

Crab Salad and Brioche (380 baht)
Crab Salad and Brioche (380 baht)

BBQ Baby Octopus (330 baht), not too chewy or too doughy, is enveloped in butter, a Spanish cold soup ajoblanco made of Jerusalem artichoke, and spicy paprika. Some tongues may say the dish is spicy, but for us it’s just pungent.

BBQ Baby Octopus (330 baht)
BBQ Baby Octopus (330 baht)

The Wood Roasted Prosun Farm Coquelet (830 baht) is not a just a roasted young chicken. The chef said the whole, free range baby chicken is marinated with brine and herbs, dry-aged to make the skin crisp while leaving the meat tender, before being stuffed and roasted with smoking hay.

The dish is served in a closed pot to keep its homey bonfire aroma before your server lifts the lid and the smoke envelope you. A skillet of salad with grilled tomatoes and potatoes comes as a side dish, but if you want carbs with protein, order the Not So Mashed Potatoes (230 baht) that comes with no gravy as it is already perfected with truffle butter.

Wood Roasted Prosun Farm Coquelet (830 baht)
Wood Roasted Prosun Farm Coquelet (830 baht)

The meal concludes with complimentary cocktail jelly bears made from vodka with Coke and the bracingly bitter Negroni.

Cocktail jelly bears
Cocktail jelly bears
A Day in Newport (360 baht)
A Day in Newport (360 baht)

Options for drinks are taken care of by Jacqueline, not Kennedy’s wife, but the bar upstairs. We went for a refreshing, fruity sweet A Day in Newport (360 baht) that mixes lychee, lime, and lavender with gin and cointreau.

If the cocktails fail to impress you, browse through the extensive 13 page-long wine list that covers a little bit of everything from the Old and New Worlds.

Overall, Quince produces a fruitful culinary experience for those who are not afraid of modern forms and daring flavors in Mediterrenean cuisine. Just don’t expect the 150-baht-per-pieces to be as zesty Thai food. And bring a thick wallet.

“Our food can be robust as we focus on the cooking techniques, especially with flames and smoke,” chef Charlie said.

Chef Charlie Jones.
Chef Charlie Jones.

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Officials Say Gov’t MP Poultry Farm Encroaches on Public Land

Phalang Pracharath MP Parina Kraikup speaks to reporters on Nov. 22, 2019.

BANGKOK — Forest officials on Monday said they confiscated a chicken farm owned by a coalition politician for intruding on public lands.

Officials said they also are planning to file a complaint of land encroachment against Phalang Pracharath MP Parina Kraikup. Investigators said parts of her farm sits on forest area and public land reserved for impoverished farmers.

Forest Department director Attapon Charoenchansa said no one was present at the farm when officials arrived this morning, and the animals were already moved away. He declined to confirm whether the farm will be shut down immediately.

The 46-rai plot that allegedly encroached on the protected area is part of nearly 690-rai land plot where Parina has her chicken and cattle farm. Attapol said the rest of the area could be confiscated if officials ruled it located within the forest reserve.

If found guilty, Parina faces up to 15 years in jail. When questioned about the matter today, Deputy PM Prawit Wongsuwan said he will not interfere with the investigation.

The scandal first broke earlier this month when opposition politicians and activists filed complaint against Parina. The lawmaker has yet to make a comment on today’s confiscation of her chicken farm.

The disputed land plot appeared on Parina’s list of assets she disclosed to the national anti-graft body when she became an MP following the March election.

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Movie About Thai Rescuing Rohingya to Screen at Film Fest

BANGKOK — Thailand’s only film to win Best Film at the Venice Film Festival will have a rare screening in the country this Friday.

“Manta Ray” (2018) will screen 8:30pm Friday as part of the Global Migration Film Festival running Friday through Saturday at the Bangkok Screening Room.

Critically-acclaimed, award-winning arthouse films by Thai directors are rarely, if never, screened in the country. “Manta Ray,” or “Kraben Rahu,” tells the story of a Thai fisherman who rescues and nurses a mute Rohingya man.

In an interview with Khaosod English after his big win, director Phuttiphong Aroonpheng said his fellow Thais’ hatred of Rohingya spurred him to create the film. 

“What really struck me was how many people, including my friends, aggressively hate the Rohingya. I know that Thai people normally look down on people from our neighboring countries, but those kind of insults never caused a crisis this bad,” Phuttiphong said.

The Global Migration Film Festival 2019 is organized by the UN International Organization for Migration. 

Read: Thai Director on Rohingya and a Crisis of Hate

The four other films in the festival also expand on the theme of compassion for migrants and refugees. “Angkar” (2018), screening 7pm Friday, is a documentary about Cambodian who fled the Khmer Rouge returning from France to the places they used to live.

“The Tower” (2018) is a Norwegian animated film about a Palestinian girl who lives in a refugee camp in Lebanon, generations after they left Israel after its founding, and will be screened 2pm on Saturday.

Multiplied in transition is the documentary “Shelter: Farewell to Eden” (2019), about a Filipino transgender person who leaves the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, goes to Libya, and then Europe. “Shelter” will be screened at 4:15pm Saturday.

The last film of the fest, Mexican documentario “Purgatorio: A Journey into the Heart of the Border” (2013) will be screened 6:45pm Saturday and takes a look at migrants trying to cross the Mexico-US border.

This year’s film fest is the third to be held. Last year’s featured the debut of a documentary about hundreds of women marrying Danish men.

Films are subtitled in English, and admission is free. Tickets can be reserved 30 minutes before each screening, on a first-come, first-served basis. The Bangkok Screening Room is reachable from MRT Lumphini.


 

Related stories:

Thai Director on Rohingya and a Crisis of Hate

Thai Compassion For Rohingya Wins Big in Venice

Doc on Thai-Danish Love Part of Diaspora Film Fest

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Police Say Ambulance Driver Dozes Off, Killing Patient

Wrecked ambulance after the accident on Nov. 25, 2019.
Wrecked ambulance after the accident on Nov. 25, 2019.

NAKHON RATCHASIMA — An ambulance en route to deliver a patient home struck into a tree on Monday morning, killing the patient and wounding her relatives, police said.

Ambulance driver Kittipoom Imsuk, 42, apparently dozed off behind the wheel before crashing the vehicle on the side of Mittraphap Road in Korat, local police chief Col. Thanatsan Muangi said by phone.

Though the investigation is ongoing, Thanatsan of Non Daeng Police Station said Kittipoom might have dozed off after a long journey throughout the night.

The patient, Somporn Nawongsa, 41, died at the scene, where three of her relatives and the driver sustained serious injuries, according to the police.

The ambulance was hired to transport Somporn from a hospital in Chonburi back to her home in Nong Khai province, police said.

Accidents involving ambulances were frequent enough for the Ministry of Public Health to impose a speed limit of 80 kmph on medical vehicles operating in non-emergency assignments back in April.

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Thaksin’s Son Acquitted of Money Laundering

Panthongtae “Oak” Shinawatra at the court on Nov. 25, 2019.

BANGKOK — A court on Monday found the son of former PM Thaksin Shinawatra not guilty of money laundering charges, sparing him from jail term.

Panthongtae “Oak” Shinawatra was acquitted by the Central Criminal Court for Corruption and Misconduct Cases, where the majority judges said there was no sufficient evidence to implicate him in the charges.

Prosecutors accused Panthongtae of involvement in a loan scandal by Krung Thai Bank and receiving 10 million baht in cheque. He was charged with conspiring to launder money.

Panthongtae embraced his lawyers upon hearing the verdict and left the court without speaking to reporters.

The 41-year-old is widely considered to be a possible successor to Thaksin’s political dynasty.

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K-Pop Star Goo Hara Found Dead at Her Seoul Home

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — K-pop star and TV celebrity Goo Hara was found dead at her home in Seoul on Sunday, police said.

Police said an acquaintance found the 28-year-old dead at her home in southern Seoul and reported it to authorities.

The cause of death wasn’t immediately known. Police refused to provide further details.

Goo made her debut in 2008 as a member of the girl group Kara, which had big followings in South Korea, Japan and other Asian countries. She later worked as a solo artist and appeared on many TV shows.

In May, Goo was reportedly found unconscious at her home and was hospitalized.

She was embroiled last year in public disputes with an ex-boyfriend who claimed to be assaulted by her. Goo accused the man of having threatened to circulate a sex video of her. The case made her the subject of tabloid fodder and malicious online messages.

In October, another K-pop star and actress, Sulli, was found dead at her home near Seoul. The 25-year-old was known for her feminist voice and outspokenness that was rare among female entertainers in deeply conservative South Korea. Before her death, she appeared in a TV show and spoke out against online backlash she received over her lifestyle.

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K-Pop ‘f(x)’ Star Sulli Found Dead at 25

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Thai Fans Despair Over Death of K-Pop Idol 

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Former Yunnan Party Chief Indicted for Bribery

Qin Guangrong

BEIJING (Xinhua) — Qin Guangrong, former Party chief of southwest China’s Yunnan Province and a former senior national legislator, has been indicted on charge of bribe-taking, the Supreme People’s Procuratorate (SPP) said Monday.

Qin was accused of taking advantage of his former positions in Yunnan to seek profits for others and accepting vast sums of money and gifts in return, according to the SPP statement.

Qin’s case was handed over to the procuratorate of Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province in southwest China, for review and prosecution upon the designation of the SPP after the National Supervisory Commission concluded the investigation, it said.

Qin will stand trial in the Chengdu Municipal Intermediate People’s Court, it added.

The SPP said the prosecutors had informed the defendant of his litigation rights, interrogated him and listened to the defense counsel’s opinions.

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As Internet Restored, Online Iran Protest Videos Show Chaos

In this Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2019 file photo, traffic passes a building that was set ablaze during recent protests over government-set gasoline prices rises, in Tehran, Iran. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi, File)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Machine gun fire answers rock-throwing protesters. Motorcycle-riding Revolutionary Guard volunteers chase after demonstrators. Plainclothes security forces grab, beat and drag a man off the street to an uncertain fate.

As Iran restores the internet after a weeklong government-imposed shutdown, new videos purport to show the demonstrations over gasoline prices rising and the security-force crackdown that followed.

The videos offer only fragments of encounters, but to some extent they fill in the larger void left by Iran’s state-controlled television and radio channels. On their airwaves, hard-line officials allege that foreign conspiracies and exile groups instigated the unrest. In print, newspapers offered only PR for the government or had merely stenographic reporting at best, the moderate daily Hamshahri said in an analysis Sunday.

They don’t acknowledge that the gasoline price hike Nov. 15, supported by its civilian government, came as Iran’s 80 million people already have seen their savings dwindle and jobs scarce under crushing U.S. sanctions. President Donald Trump imposed them in the aftermath of unilaterally withdrawing America from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

Authorities also have yet to give any overall figures for how many people were injured, arrested or killed during the several days of protests that swept across some 100 cities and towns.

Amnesty International said it believes the unrest and the crackdown killed at least 106 people. Iran disputes that figure without offering its own. A U.N. office earlier said it feared the unrest may have killed “a significant number of people.”

Starting Nov. 16, Iran shut down the internet across the country, limiting communications with the outside world. That made determining the scale and longevity of the protests incredibly difficult. Some recycled days-old videos and photographs as new, making it even more difficult.

Since Saturday, internet connectivity spiked in the country, allowing people to access foreign websites for the first time. On Sunday, connectivity stood nearly at 100% for landline services, while mobile phone internet service remained scarce, the advocacy group NetBlocks said.

The restoration brought messaging apps back to life for Iranians cut off from loved ones abroad. It also meant that videos again began being shared widely.

Recently released videos span the country. One video from Shiraz, some 680 kilometers (420 miles) south of Tehran, purports to show a crowd of over 100 people scatter as gunfire erupts from a police station in the city. One man bends down to pick up debris as a person off-camera describes demonstrators throwing stones. Another gunshot rings out, followed by a burst of machine gun fire.

In Kerman, some 800 kilometers (500 miles) southeast of Tehran, the sound of breaking glass echoes over a street where debris burns in the center of a street. Motorcycle-riding members of the Basij, the all-volunteer force of Iran’s paramilitary Guard, then chase the protesters away.

Another video in Kermanshah, some 420 kilometers (260 miles) southwest of Tehran, purports shows the dangers that lurked on the streets of Iran in recent days. Plainclothes security forces, some wielding nightsticks, drag one man off by the hair of his head. The detained man falls at one point.

“Look, (the agents) wear styles like the youth,” one man off-camera says, swearing at them.

On Sunday, it remained unclear if and how widespread any remaining demonstrations were. The acting commander of the Revolutionary Guard, Gen. Ali Fadavi, repeated the allegation that America was behind the protests, without offering any evidence to support his claim.

“Why did (the Americans) get angry after we cut off the internet? Because the internet is the channel through which Americans wanted to perform their evil and vicious acts,” Fadavi said. “We will deal with this, Islamic Republic supporters, and our proud men and women will sign up to make a domestic system similar to the internet with operating systems that (the Americans) can’t (control) even if they want.”

That likely refers to what has been known as the “halal net,” Iran’s own locally controlled version of the internet aimed at restricting what the public can see. The system known as the National Information Network has some 500 government-approved national websites that stream content far faster than those based abroad, which are intentionally slowed, activists say. Iranian officials say it allows the Islamic Republic to be independent if the world cuts it off instead.

But while Fadavi earlier said the protests were put down in 48 hours, he also acknowledged the scope of the unrest by comparing it to Operation Karbala-4, one of the worst military disasters suffered by Iran during its bloody 1980s war with Iraq.

That scope could be seen in one video. In the capital, Tehran, footage earlier aired by the BBC’s Persian service shot from a car purports to show a tableau of violence on Sattarkhan Street, as anti-riot police officers clashed with protesters.

In the video, a woman’s scream rises over the shouts of the crowd as plainclothes security forces wearing white surgical masks accost one man, who puts his hands up to his face and hunches over to shield his body. Men walk backward to watch the chaos amid police with batons and riot shields, then run.

A woman in a green headscarf argues with one anti-riot police officer in front of a car.

“What do you say?” the police officer asks.

“He kicked my car,” she responds.

“Move,” the police officer orders. “Whom do you want to blame in this situation?”

Someone chases a man in front of a bank as people curse. The car makes a right-hand turn onto another street. A police officer off-camera shouts: “Come here!”

“Go, go, go!” a woman in the car cries out.

The car speeds away, passing burning debris. The clip ends. It lasts only 35 seconds.

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China’s High-Speed Railway to Reach 35,000 KM By Year-End

Photo taken on Oct. 29, 2019 shows a bullet train running through the fields of Gula Township of Binyang County, south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. (Xinhua/Lu Boan)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China’s high-speed railway network will continue to top the world with an estimated length of 35,000 km by the end of this year, said China Railway.

The total length of China’s railways will exceed 139,000 km by the end of 2019, according to the company.

In 2019, China’s railways are estimated to record 3.6 billion passenger trips, up 92 percent from 2012.

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Stewardesses and passengers celebrate the fifth anniversary of the operation of the Xinjiang section of the Lanxin high-speed railway on the train D8804 from Urumqi to Hami in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Nov. 16, 2019. (Xinhua/Ding Lei)

Bullet trains are expected to handle 2.31 billion passenger trips, a 3.4-fold increase from 2012.

Overseas projects like the China-Laos railway, Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway and Hungary-Serbia railway made solid headway this year, garnering global prestige for China’s railways.

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