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US National Zoo Director Hails Cooperation With China on Pandas

WASHINGTON (Xinhua) — Giant pandas are a symbol of great partnership and friendship between the United States and China and the two sides’ knowledge-sharing and collaboration have made a great contribution to the species’ conservation, the U.S. National Zoo’s director has said.

Steven Monfort, director of the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, made the remarks during a recent interview with Xinhua, before U.S.-born giant panda Bei Bei’s departure from the zoo to China, scheduled for Tuesday.

The Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington D.C., also known as the U.S. National Zoo, received its first pair of giant pandas in 1972 as a gift from the Chinese government to mark the groundbreaking progress made in bilateral relations that year.

The arrival of the giant pandas at the zoo, which came several years earlier than the two nations officially established diplomatic ties, “was a very important symbol,” said Monfort.

“It was an opening and it was a way to increase awareness and understanding between our two countries,” he said. “In my mind, I can’t think of any other animal, any other wildlife species that has had such an important diplomatic position.”

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U.S.-born male giant panda Bei Bei is seen at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington D.C., the United States, on Nov. 11, 2019. (Xinhua/Liu Jie)

Over the years, giant pandas have also become a symbol for the National Zoo, as almost every visitor here comes to see the black-and-white fur balls, according to Monfort. Besides Bei Bei, his mother Mei Xiang and father Tian Tian also live in the zoo.

“They are a tremendous symbol for us,” the zoo director said. “They represent the magnificence of nature, people’s curiosity about wildlife and about nature.”

Monfort also believes the giant pandas are bringing more attention to the nature thanks to their popularity.

“While you’re here, you learn so much about all of the rest of the animals that we care for. We hope to inspire curiosity about nature and to draw people closer to nature so that they can care about it,” he said.

While speaking of the zoo’s cooperation with its Chinese partners, Monfort sounded very proud.

“If you think about it 47 years ago, neither country knew very much about pandas at that time,” he said. “The truth is we’ve grown our knowledge about the giant panda working together.”

The two sides are collaborating closely and extensively on the species’ preservation, health, nutrition, and reproduction, while studying how climate change might impact the design of giant panda reserves and technology for tracking them in the wild, among other things, according to the zoo chief.

“It’s a very extensive scientific collaboration that is everything from studying the individual animal and their health and their wellbeing all the way to understanding the ecosystems that they live in, the reserves where they live and training the next generation of professionals who will care for them and study them long into the future,” Montfort said.

“We are close friends with many of these people we’ve worked with,” he said. “I think we have excellent collaborative relationships on science, on training and we have friendships that have existed for decades. It’s something that we are very proud of.”

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U.S.-born male giant panda Bei Bei is seen at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington D.C., the United States, on Nov. 11, 2019. (Xinhua/Liu Jie)

Giant pandas, dubbed China’s national treasure, mainly live in Southwest China’s Sichuan Province as well as neighboring provinces of Shaanxi and Gansu.

The latest census in 2014 found there were 1,864 giant pandas alive in the wild, up from 1,114 decades ago. The number of pandas bred in captivity has reached 600 globally, China’s National Forestry and Grassland Administration announced earlier this month.

“It’s been a big success on both fronts, on both understanding the biology and sustaining the diversity of animals in human care, but also in sustaining animals in the wild,” said Monfort, adding that the population structure is very healthy, which means there will be giant pandas available to be reintroduced to the wild.

Despite the notable increase, the giant panda population remains vulnerable to threats from disease, climate change, and habitat loss.

Monfort agreed that it is imperative for the U.S. and Chinese sides to continue their productive relationship for a greater success in preserving giant pandas.

“Success means that we will have multiple free living populations that are sustaining and sustainable in terms of their reproduction and their health,” he said. “We still have a long way to go before we achieve that goal. But the trends are moving in the right direction.”

The currently-running cooperative breeding agreement was signed in 2000 between the National Zoo and the China Wildlife Conservation Association, initially with a 10-year term. After two five-year extensions, it will expire at the end of 2020.

Monfort said the National Zoo is “very interested in continuing this great relationship” and that he hopes discussions about how they can move forward onto the next phase of the agreement could begin early next year.

“We’ve been 47 years working together on giant pandas and we hope that we can work for another 50 years or more,” he stressed.

Bei Bei’s departure is in line with the terms of the agreement that requires all cubs born at the National Zoo be sent back to China after their fourth birthday.

Bei Bei turned four on Aug. 22. He will enter the breeding program when he reaches sexual maturity between five and seven years old.

Monfort said they are sad that Bei Bei is about to leave because the National Zoo has built a special relationship with him.

“Our animal keepers, they quite literally fall in love with these animals. But they also know that he plays a very important role in conservation. So we’re quite proud that he’s going to play that role,” the director said.

“If I could speak to him, I’d say: go forward and be a good sire, have many offsprings, be healthy and help contribute to the future of giant pandas in the wild,” he added.

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Tolerant Thailand to Welcome Pope, But Martyrs Tale Haunts

In this Saturday, Oct. 19, 2019, photo, a Catholic devotee kisses a sacramental with an image of the seven martyrs at cemetery during the 30th anniversary of the beatification of seven martyrs at Songkhon in Mukdahan province, northeastern of Thailand. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

SONGKHON, Thailand (AP) — When Pope Francis makes his first trip to Thailand this week, he will be visiting a country that welcomed Roman Catholic missionaries more than five centuries ago and whose Buddhist population remains strikingly tolerant of other religious beliefs.

But in 1940, as militarism and xenophobia were haunting the world, seven Catholic villagers in remote northeastern Thailand were executed for refusing to renounce their religion.

The “Seven Martyrs” were beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1989, making them eligible for eventual sainthood. They were the first Thais to be given the honor by the Vatican. The date of their beatification, Oct. 22, is marked annually in this village where they died, where there is a shrine and educational center for Catholics that is a regional landmark.

“For our history, we should not repeat the bad part but we should use it as a lesson, to move on, to build a new religious history, to bring all Thais together as brothers and sisters,” the Rev. Prayoon Phongphit, chancellor of the region’s archdiocese, said at this year’s ceremony.

The little-known story of the seven martyrs is more a political than religious tale.

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In this Saturday, Oct. 19, 2019, photo, Catholic devotees pulling a pedestal with images of the seven martyrs at Christ Church, Songkhon village, Mukdahan province, northeastern of Thailand. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

They were victims of a tide of nationalism, an opportunistic policy implemented by Thailand’s then-dictator to avenge slights from Western powers while modernizing the country on a Western model. The Western model it most closely resembled was Mussolini’s fascist Italy.

Thailand fended off being colonized by placating the neighboring colonial powers, Britain and France, with territorial and economic concessions. France whittled away at territory Thailand considered its own, annexing it to its French Indochina colonies of Laos and Cambodia.

Plaek Phibunsongkhram was one of the Thai army officers who in 1932 staged a revolution ousting an absolute monarch with the aim of modernizing the country. In 1938, he became prime minister and promoted the sort of ultranationalism then seen in Italy and Nazi Germany, seeking to expunge minority cultures with their languages and religions and unite all behind loyalty to king and nation and one religion, Buddhism.

Phibunsongkhram’s rise coincided with Japan’s military drive to build a Great East Asia empire. The Japanese promoted Asian chauvinism, an appeal to the people in British, French and Dutch colonies to throw off the yoke of their Western oppressors.

Events elsewhere, meanwhile, suggested that nationalistic strongman rule was the wave of the future, as the army of Japanese ally Germany overran most of Europe.

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In this Friday, Oct. 18, 2019, photo, a Catholic devotee prays in front of glass caskets containing the seven replicas of the Blessed Martyrs for Christians at the Christ Church in Songkhon village in Mukdahan province, northeastern Thailand. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

An emboldened Phibunsongkhram had Thailand attack the demoralized French forces in Laos and Cambodia in a bid to regain what he considered lost Thai territories.

To whip up support for the war, all things French were painted as threatening. Inside Thailand, French missionaries — and their churches and followers — were looked upon as the enemy within. Propaganda and policy were both used to try to purge the Catholic presence, mainly by forcing conversions to Buddhism and shuttering church properties.

“Catholics were the perfect symbol of imperialism and antithesis of national identity due to their association with France, their history of political intervention, and the fact that many converts were ethnic minorities,” Shane Strate, a history professor at Kent State University in the United States, wrote in a paper about the era.

Songkhon village in Mukdahan province, 550 kilometers (340 miles) northeast of Bangkok, was one of several Catholic settlements in the area. With a population of 500-600, it had a church, a church school, a French parish priest and two sisters from a convent in Laos, which lies just across the Mekong River from the province.

Six policemen were deployed to the village after Thailand attacked French Indochina in November 1940, and the officer in charge , Boonlue Muangkote, enforced the new nationalist order avidly. As villagers were pressured to renounce their Catholic faith and embrace Buddhism, the French priest, Father Paul Fige, was deported to Laos.

Boonlue pressed his campaign, apparently assuming the absence of their priest would break the villagers’ will. But Philip Siphong Onphitak, the village religious teacher, or catechist, assumed leadership of his flock, keeping up resistance until Dec. 16, when he was murdered in the jungle, reportedly by Boonlue.

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In this Friday, Oct. 18, 2019, photo, Catholic devotees pray at the Blessed Martyrs for Christians cemetery during the 30th anniversary of the beatification of seven martyrs at Songkhon village in Mukdahan province, northeastern Thailand. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Two sisters from the Lovers of the Holy Cross Congregation, Agnes Phila and Lucia Khambang, then took over the leadership, defying Boonlue’s increasingly strident demands to convert. After they failed to yield during a Dec. 22 showdown, they decided they were ready to die for their faith.

On Christmas night, Sister Agnes wrote a letter to Boonlue declaring their intention and calling on him to carry out his threats and “open the door to heaven to us.”

After the letter was delivered the next day, Boonlue had the sisters and a handful of devotees marched over to a cemetery, where they were shot. The dead included 59-year-old Agatha Phutta and three teenage girls: Cecilia Butsi, Bibiana Khampai and Maria Phon.

Boonlue was transferred in June 1941, but only in 1944, when the tide of war began to turn against Japan and Prime Minister Phibunsongkhram was forced to step down, was the persecution of Catholics halted.

At this year’s commemoration of the beatification, Rev. Prayoon read from Sister Agnes’s defiant letter in front of hundreds of the faithful.

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In this Friday, Oct. 18, 2019, photo, Catholic devotees hold candles during the 30th anniversary of the beatification of seven martyrs at Songkhon village in Mukdahan province, northeastern Thailand. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

“We are asking you to carry out your order with us. Please do not delay any longer. Please carry out your order. We are ready to return our lives to God who has given us our lives. We will not allow ourselves to be victims of devils and ghosts,” it said.

The crowd then moved to the cemetery, where statues of the martyrs are in a garden shaded by tall trees.

“We are so blessed. We are celebrating the 30th anniversary of the beatification here and Thailand will receive the pope’s visit. I am so proud,” said Elizabeth Boonsong Sitthi, a 62-year-old resident of neighboring Sakon Nakhon province who attends the ceremony almost every year and plans to be in the Thai capital Bangkok for Pope Francis’s events.

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Story: Tassanee Vejpongsa and Grant Peck. Peck reported from Bangkok.

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Criminal Charges Expected This Week Against Epstein Guards

This March 28, 2017, file photo, provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry, shows Jeffrey Epstein. (New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two correctional officers responsible for guarding Jeffrey Epstein when he took his own life are expected to face criminal charges this week for falsifying prison records, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.

The federal charges could come as soon as Tuesday and are the first in connection with Epstein’s death. The wealthy financier died at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York while awaiting trial on charges of sexually abusing teenage girls.

The officers on Epstein’s unit at the federal jail in New York City are suspected of failing to check on him every half-hour, as required, and of fabricating log entries to claim they had. Federal prosecutors offered the guards a plea bargain, but the AP reported Friday that the officers declined the deal.

The expected charges will be filed by federal prosecutors in Manhattan, who have been investigating Epstein’s Aug. 10 death. The people familiar with the matter insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly.

Both guards were working overtime because of staffing shortages when Epstein was found. The officers have been placed on administrative leave while the FBI and the Justice Department’s inspector general investigate the circumstances surrounding Epstein’s death.

The city’s medical examiner ruled Epstein’s death a suicide, but that hasn’t stopped conspiracy theories. A forensic pathologist hired by Epstein’s family to observe the autopsy has said authorities could help clear things up by being more transparent.

Epstein’s death ended the possibility of a trial that would have involved prominent figures, and it sparked widespread anger that he wouldn’t have to answer for the allegations. He had pleaded not guilty to sexually abusing girls as young as 14 and young women in New York and Florida in the early 2000s.

Even with his death, federal prosecutors in New York have continued to investigate the allegations against Epstein. The Justice Department has vowed to aggressively investigate and bring charges against anyone who may have helped him.

There is also a related investigation in Paris, where accusers are complaining police haven’t done enough to track down potential witnesses.

Epstein was placed on suicide watch after he was found July 23 on his cell floor with bruises on his neck. Multiple people familiar with operations at the jail have said Epstein was taken off suicide watch about a week before his death, meaning he was less closely monitored but still supposed to be checked on every 30 minutes.

Investigators believe those checks weren’t done for several hours before Epstein was discovered in his cell with a bedsheet around his neck, another person familiar with the matter told the AP.

The falsification of records has been a problem throughout the federal prison system, which has been plagued for years by systematic failures, from massive staffing shortages to chronic violence.

In an internal memo earlier this month, the Federal Bureau of Prisons’ new director, Kathleen Hawk Sawyer, said a review of operations across the agency found some staff members failed to perform required rounds and inmate counts but logged that they had done so anyway.

Staff members who are indicted by a grand jury will be placed on indefinite, unpaid suspension until the resolution of the criminal case, Hawk Sawyer wrote in the memo to top prison officials, a copy of which was obtained by the AP.

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Hays reported from New York. Associated Press writer Michael R. Sisak in New York contributed to this report.

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Judge Who Shoots Self Removed From Post

Court of Justice sec-gen Sarawut Benchakul visits Yala judge Khanakorn Pianchana in hospital on Oct. 6, 2019. Image: Court of Justice.

BANGKOK — A judge who shot himself in protest of alleged corruption was transferred from his post and placed under investigation Monday, officials said.

Khanakorn Pianchana was moved from his previous post in the southern province of Yala to Chiang Rai – Thailand’s northern province located about 1,700 km away – in an order signed by court officials today.

The order, issued by the Court of Justice, also placed Khanakorn under disciplinary review.

The judge shot himself inside a courtroom in October, moments after he acquitted five men of murder. In a statement prepared prior to the shooting, Khanakorn said he was forced by his supervisor to find the men guilty lest he faces a punishment.

Khanakorn was sent to hospital for an injury to his spleen, but he soon recovered and later left the hospital. He has not spoken to the media since the incident.

The incident sparked nationwide scrutiny into the country’s judicial impartiality, though court officials also maintained their works are transparent and free of any meddling.

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Drunk, Naked Russian Tries to Hijack a Yacht on Koh Samui: Police

Ianin Lev Aleksandrovich apologizes to the police after his arrest on Nov. 17, 2019.
Ianin Lev Aleksandrovich apologizes to the police after his arrest on Nov. 17, 2019.

KOH SAMUI — A Russian national was arrested Monday after attempting to steal a yacht while drunk and naked on the resort island of Koh Samui, police said.

Ianin Lev Aleksandrovich, 34, was charged with disturbing public order for the incident. Col. Thongchana Hankittikanjana of Bophut Police Station said the Russian man may also be charged with damaging properties if the yacht owner files a complaint.

According to the police, Ianin stopped his car on the pier on Sunday evening and began arguing with his wife. After some minutes of a loud quarrel, Ianin – who appeared to be drunk – reportedly walked towards the sea, took off his clothes, and jumped into the sea.

Police said he then swam toward a yacht anchored about 50 meters off the pier.

On the yacht, Ianin tried to steer the boat away, but was unable to ignite the engine, police said. Officers arrived shortly after, and they had to borrow a fishing boat to reach the boat and arrest Ianin, who struggled before he was subdued.

Once he was taken back to the shore, Bophut police chief Thongchana said, Ianin’s wife slapped him at his face. Ianin was taken to Samui tourist police station, where he began to sober up and declared “I love you, I love the boat,” police said.

It is not immediately clear if the couple has made up.

Altercations involving tourists and alcohol occasionally broke out on Samui Island. In 2016, a drunken British man was arrested after brandishing a knife at his hotel pool.

Ianin after he was taken to the shore.
Ianin after he was taken to the shore.
Police making arrest on a yacht.
Police making arrest on a yacht.
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Red Cross Fair’s Wholesome Fun and Charity Return to Lumpini

Princess Sirindhorn feeds a goat during an opening ceremony of 2019 Red Cross Fair on Nov. 15, 2019, at Lumpini Park in Bangkok.
Princess Sirindhorn feeds a goat during an opening ceremony of 2019 Red Cross Fair on Nov. 15, 2019, at Lumpini Park in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Binge on street food to your heart content and shop for charity goods at the annual Red Cross Fair running through Sunday at Lumpini Park.

For the second year, Bangkokians’ favourite bazaar is spanning all over the park’s 57-hectare area. The fair sees hundreds of booths selling a wide variety of products, handicrafts, and food from all the regions of Thailand at discounted prices, and of course, for the good cause to the Thai Red Cross Society.

The ten-day fair is divided into seven zones, but to help you navigate through the crowd, we have categorized some of the highlights below:

Hungry office ladies should come straight from their desks to the food market (marked orange on the map) where Thai regional food such as roast pork from Trang, Korat’s stir-fried noodles, and Isaan sausage are on sale.

Prefer something closer to home? Straight to Bangkok City Hall’s booth (No. 3.21) where 50 vendors from all the capital’s 50 districts are showcasing their best eats.

Childhood chocolate drink becomes a craze as long queues form at Ovaltine booths around the fair. The 60 baht ice-cold sugary drink comes with Instagramable, reusable cup.

Crafts and handmade products from trendy local producers are also offered at “Hipster Thai Market,” located below the yellow zone.

Try your luck for a chance of bringing home a car at raffles or take aim for targets at the Police’s (No. 5.8) or the Navy’s (5.5) booths, where visitors can shoot airsoft and training rounds.

Festival-goers who are fit and qualified may choose to contribute more to the Red Cross by donating blood at on-site donating center (No. 1.3).

The annual fair was first held in 1922 at Sanam Luang before moving to Saranrom Palace, the Queen Saovabha Memorial Institute (Snake Farm), and then Suan Amphon from 1957 to 2016. It was moved to the present location in 2018 after the palace revoked the rights to use its venue for the fair.

“Red Cross Fair 2019” is running from Nov. 15 to 24 from 10.30am to 10pm at Lumpini Park. The venue is reachable from BTS Sala Daeng, MRT Silom, or MRT Lumphini. Admission is free.

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Gov’t Allies Warn Future Forward Against Protests

Forward Party chairman Thanathorn Juangrungruangkit speaks at a rally on Nov. 16, 2019, in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Coalition politicians on Monday urged the opposition not to resort to any demonstration in response to a court verdict this week that would decide the fate of Future Forward Party chairman Thanathorn Juangrungruangkit.

Phalang Pracharath Party executive Puttipong Punnakan said a protest could worsen economic malaise afflicting Thailand, while a Democrat spokesman warned that criticizing the court decision might result in criminal charges.

“No one wants any inappropriate incident to happen,” Puttipong, who also serves as a digital economy minister, told reporters. “No one wants to see protest or anything that could lead to a burden on the public.”

He added, “Now that we have to fight with the slump in the global economy, we have to join hands together.”

Democrat Party spokesman Ramet Rattanachaweng said supporters of the Future Forward Party should think twice before attacking or harassing the judiciary for Wednesday’s verdict.

“Do not use methods like intimidating the Constitutional Court,” Ramet said. “No one knows what the court may decide, but whatever the result is, everyone must respect it. Otherwise, an endless cycle of unrest will follow.”

The complaint filed by the Election Commission and later taken up by the Constitutional Court accused Thanathorn of breaching voting laws by owning shares in media firms when he ran for the March 24 election.

If found guilty, Thanathorn faces up to 10 years in prison. He may also be banned from politics for a maximum of 20 years.

Thanathorn has repeatedly denied the allegations, saying he already sold those shares by the time he signed up to run for office.

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Police Hunt For Pattaya Gold Snatcher

A Russian tourist, center, reporting the crime to the police on Nov. 17, 2019.
A Russian tourist, center, reporting the crime to the police on Nov. 17, 2019.

PATTAYA — Police said Monday investigators are seeking two thieves who snatched two gold necklaces from a Russian tourist on Sunday night.

Deputy police spokesman Krissana Pattanacharoen said the Russian woman reported that her gold necklaces were stolen by the two men while she was tending to her child in a stroller on a road near Jomtien Beach. The two items were reportedly worth 75,000 baht.

The two suspects were riding a black motorcycle when they approached the victim from behind, Krissana said.

Pattaya police acting superintendent Thanapong Pothi said the police need more time to conduct an investigation, as there is no CCTV camera where the crime took place.

He believed the suspects were repeated offenders.

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Review: An Evolved Iceman? Kristoff Steps up in ‘Frozen 2’

This image released by Disney shows Elsa, voiced by Idina Menzel, from left, Anna, voiced by Kristen Bell, Kristoff, voiced by Jonathan Groff and Sven in a scene from
This image released by Disney shows Elsa, voiced by Idina Menzel, from left, Anna, voiced by Kristen Bell, Kristoff, voiced by Jonathan Groff and Sven in a scene from "Frozen 2." Image: Disney via AP

Picture this: A princess is in distress. It looks bad. Her dashing young man rides up in the nick of time and says, “Here I am to save you, my dear!” Actually, he doesn’t. He just says, “I’m here. Whaddya need?” She has a plan, and off they go.

This little exchange between Kristoff and Anna may not be the showiest in “Frozen 2,” the long-awaited sequel to that little 2013 Disney movie that won two Oscars, broke box office records and caused countless young girls (and boys) to find their inner belting voice.

But if you’re a parent looking for your young girl or boy to learn good relationship behavior, they could do well to watch Kristoff, who has now become probably the most evolved iceman this side of Arendelle or all of Scandinavia or maybe the entire European Union, pre- or post-Brexit.

Not that a man is the answer to Elsa and Anna’s problems. As in the first movie, the sisters are still doing it for themselves. And they’re wearing the pants — literally. Gowns give way to more practical attire, even a royal wetsuit.

But, folks: Kristoff has the best song, too. Sorry, Elsa! You sound great — because you’re Idina Menzel, duh. But “Lost in the Woods,” sung by the effortlessly lovable Jonathan Groff, might just be the true heir to “Let it Go,” at least in terms of its addictiveness. An angsty love ballad, performed in retro glam rock style with intentionally cheesy music video moves, a reindeer chorus and Kristoff’s blond mane blowing in the wind … what’s not to love? “You’re my only landmark, so I’m lost in the woods,” he sings. Sigh.

It’s a highlight of the film. The rest, you ask? Well, it’s got quality, and it’s got quantity (HOW many animators are listed in those closing credits?) It just doesn’t have the exciting, lightning-in-a-bottle feel that the wonderful original had. Perhaps that was too much to ask.

Certainly, the main characters, who have aged three years (though we humans have aged twice that — drat!) are in good voice, led by Menzel’s majestic Elsa and Kristen Bell’s spunky Anna. Olaf the snowman (Josh Gad) is back, too, and he’s learned how to read, and he has questions. (And nerve! At one point he channels an “American Idol” judge and pronounces Elsa’s singing “a little pitchy.”)

And if it all seems less effortless, more workmanlike than the first film, with a very complex storyline that will definitely be harder to follow for younger fans, there’s plenty to like, especially the lush visuals. Directors Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck give us an animated ocean that looks incredibly real, a more mature, autumn-hued color palette, and a magical forest surrounded by a wall of mist. There are new creatures, from imposing “earth giants” to a sweet little salamander.

There’s an interesting new character played by Sterling K. Brown, a man from Elsa and Anna’s past. And there are seven new original songs by the estimable songwriting team of Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Bobby Lopez, including a fitting anthem for each main character.

We begin, of course, in Arendelle. In flashback, we see Elsa and Anna as young girls, being put to bed by their mother, Queen Iduna (Evan Rachel Wood). In her soothing lullaby, “All is Found,” there’s a message that will shape the story.

Back to present time: It’s autumn, a season we haven’t seen yet in the kingdom. Elsa has gained some control over her magic. All seems well. “Some Things Never Change,” the four main characters sing, in what amounts to a Broadway-style opening number.

Except it’s wishful thinking. Elsa suddenly hears a voice calling from afar — a voice only she can hear, making her feel deeply unsettled. She decides she needs to voyage far “Into the Unknown” — that’s the new anthem she belts out — to see who’s calling her, and why.

Anna insists on going along — they’re in all this together, she reminds Elsa (she has to do this a number of times — it’s the only conflict they still have). And so, accompanied by Kristoff, his reindeer buddy Sven, and Olaf, they head off toward the enchanted forests, unsure of what they’ll find. Meanwhile, Arendelle is in great danger; Elsa has awoken some powerful spirits.

It’s best not to give too much detail about what the band of voyagers will find in that mist-surrounded forest. Suffice it to say that they encounter clues from the past, about wrongs that must be righted if they, and Arendelle, are to have a future.

The voyage has its lighter moments. Olaf gets into his usual jams, and sings about getting older (the song is not, sadly, a substitute for the wonderful “In Summer” of the last film). Kristoff keeps trying to propose to Anna, but saying the wrong thing, and she keeps slipping from his grip. At one point she apologizes, and he replies: “That’s OK. My love is not fragile.”

Keep on modeling that enlightened boyfriend stuff, Kristoff. Our love for you is not fragile, either.

“Frozen 2,” a Walt Disney Studios release, has been rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America “for action/peril and some thematic elements.” Running time: 103 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.

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MPPA definition of PG: Parental guidance suggested.

Story: Jocelyn Noveck

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Pope’s Asian Agenda: Disarmament, Martyrs, Family Reunion

Pope Francis arrives to celebrate a Mass in St. Peter Basilica at the Vatican, Sunday, Nov. 17, 2019. Photo: Alessandra Tarantino / AP
Pope Francis arrives to celebrate a Mass in St. Peter Basilica at the Vatican, Sunday, Nov. 17, 2019. Photo: Alessandra Tarantino / AP

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis has agendas both pastoral and personal for his trip to Asia, where he’ll appeal for global nuclear disarmament at the sites of the atomic bomb and minister to two tiny Catholic communities that have suffered gruesome periods of persecution.

Emphasizing the dignity of life is also on Francis’ to-do list for his trip to Thailand and Japan that begins Wednesday, given the scourge of human trafficking in Thailand and Japan’s use of capital punishment and high suicide rate.

As a young Jesuit, Francis dreamed of being a missionary in Japan, inspired by the courage of Japan’s Hidden Christians, who braved two centuries of persecution to keep their faith alive.

“In some way, this is the fulfilment of his dream,” said the Rev. Bernardo Cervellera, editor of AsiaNews, a Vatican-affiliated news service.

In Thailand, Francis will also be reunited with his second cousin, Sister Ana Rose Sivori, an Argentine nun who has lived in Thailand since 1966 and will serve as Francis’ official translator there.

Here are some highlights of Francis’ pilgrimage, his fourth to Asia and one that could also touch on the Vatican’s delicate relations with China:

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ASIAN MARTYRS AND MISSIONARIES

One of the highlights of the trip will be Francis’ prayer at the memorial of the 26 Nagasaki Martyrs, who were crucified in 1597 at the start of a two-century wave of anti-Christian persecution by Japanese rulers.

Francis’ own Jesuit order had introduced Christianity to Japan with the arrival of St. Francis Xavier on the archipelago in 1549. After converting more than a quarter-million Japanese, missionaries were banned at the start of the 17th century. Japanese Christians were forced to renounce their faith, suffer tortuous deaths or go underground.

Francis will greet some descendants of these Hidden Christians, whose story was recounted in the 2016 Martin Scorsese film “Silence.”

Francis will also honor Thailand’s World War II-era martyrs, who were victims of anti-Christian persecution by Thais who viewed Christianity as foreign and associated with French colonial powers. Francis will pray at the sanctuary for Thailand’s first martyred priest, Nicolas Bunkerd Kitbamrung, who was beatified in 2000.

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THE POPE SAYS NO NUKES

Francis has gone further than any other pope by saying that not only the use, but the mere possession of nuclear weapons is “to be firmly condemned.” Japanese bishops are hoping he goes even further and calls for a ban on nuclear power.

Francis will likely repeat his appeal for a total ban on the bomb when he visits Nagasaki and Hiroshima, meets with survivors of the 1945 bombings there as well as victims of the March 11, 2011 Fukushima nuclear plant disaster in northern Japan.

An offshore magnitude-9 earthquake triggered a tsunami that knocked out power for the cooling systems at the Fukushima nuclear plant, displacing more than 100,000 people and coating the area with radioactive waste. In response, Japanese bishops in 2016 called for the abolition of nuclear power to protect “our common home.”

“We can only hope” Francis will speak about nuclear power, given his frequent exhortation to care for the environment, said Nagoya Bishop Michael Goro Matsuura.

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MINORITY CATHOLICS AND INTERFAITH DIALOGUE

Catholics make up just .59 percent of Thailand’s population of 65 million, most of whom are Buddhist. The percentage is even lower in Japan — estimated at .42 percent of the mostly Shinto and Buddhist population of 126 million.

As a result, Francis will be stressing interfaith ties and the positive role Catholics can play in mostly Buddhist societies, “especially in the service of the poor, the needy and for peace,” he said in a video message to Thais.

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THE POPE ON LIFE AND DEATH

Francis has made the fight against human trafficking a cornerstone of his papacy, a message that is likely to resonate in Thailand, which the U.N. considers a key trafficking destination as well as a source of forced labor and sex slaves.

In Japan, hopes are high among Catholics that Francis will send a message opposing the death penalty, and perhaps meet with a former boxer and human rights activist held for nearly five decades on death row.

The Vatican confirmed that Iwao Hakamada, who converted to Catholicism while in prison, has been invited to the pope’s Mass in Tokyo, but it’s not clear if he will make it. Hakamada is awaiting a Supreme Court decision after being freed when his verdict was overturned in a lower court.

Tomoki Yanagawa, who works at the Jesuit Social Center in Tokyo, said a papal statement about the death penalty would help raise awareness in Japan.

“I hope he will speak about the preciousness of life and clearly denounce what trivializes life,” said Yanagawa.

Francis changed Catholic teaching last year by declaring the death penalty “inadmissible” in all cases. He has also denounced today’s “throwaway culture” where euthanasia, abortion and suicide are often considered acceptable — a message that could resonate in Japan, which has one of the highest suicide rates in the developed world.

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VATICAN-CHINA RELATIONS

When Francis travels from Bangkok to Tokyo next Saturday, he’ll fly through Chinese, Taiwanese and Hong Kong airspace — and will send telegrams to their leaders as part of typical papal protocol.

That could offer Francis a rare opportunity to address not only the current democracy protests in Hong Kong, but the Vatican’s delicate relations with Beijing. It would be the first such opportunity following last year’s agreement with China over Catholic bishop nominations. The pact aimed to unite China’s Catholics, who are divided between an underground church and an official one.

The agreement has been hailed as a milestone by the Vatican, but critics point to continued persecution of underground prelates, including a report last week by AsiaNews that the underground bishop of Mindong was being hounded by Chinese security agents. Monsignor Vincenzo Guo Xijn had stepped aside to allow an official bishop be named as part of the 2018 Vatican deal with China.

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Story: Nicole Winfield and Yuri Kageyama. Kageyama reported from Tokyo.

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