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Finally, a Law on Importing and Producing Medical Cannabis is (Almost) Here

A local strain of cannabis is unveiled in Buriram province on April 19, 2019.

A new law on cannabis legalization will address two issues many foreigners want to know: roles of foreigners in production of weed-based medicine, and how international travelers may bring medical cannabis with them into Thailand for personal use.

Firstly, foreigners will be able to own shares in commercial production of cannabis pharmaceuticals under a new regulation, as long as those shares doesn’t exceed 33 percent.

The new rule, drafted by the Ministry of Public Health, will allow production of cannabis-based medicine for local consumption and exports, with prior authorization by the Narcotics Control Board and the health ministry.

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It is currently under review by the Council of State, an agency tasked with ensuring that all legislatures in Thailand comply with other existing laws. If the review is successful, the regulation would likely come effective in the first quarter of 2020.

Industry observers and legalization activists are closely watching the move because no companies have ever been granted a license to produce cannabis in the country so far.

The new parameters, if approved, will open a whole new world of cannabis business and medicinal marijuana for economic benefits of the Thai population for the first time beyond the narrow scope of research and study, while efforts will continue to be made to ensure that the substance will not be abused and siphoned into undesirable recreational use.

Since early this year, distribution of a narcotic cannabis production license has been restricted to government organizations, universities and hospitals, all for the purpose of research and treating patients and none for commercial.

The Narcotics Control Board will be empowered to designate a company as “a health ministry authorized person, eligible to apply for a cannabis production license.

Shortage Addressed

Government hospitals in and outside Bangkok are currently overwhelmed with patients suffering from cancer-related ailments and neurological diseases hoping for cannabis treatment, and there is only one state producer of cannabis oil for research purposes.

Commercial medicinal cannabinoids production has not taken shape. There are simply no local pharma-grade cannabis medicine supply chains available here in Thailand.

Thousands of medical practitioners, pharmacists and dentists specially trained in cannabis are licensed to practice cannabis medicine, but those licenses sit on the shelf as the doctors cannot find cannabis pharmaceuticals to prescribe to their patients.

The launch of cannabis medicine commercial production will help respond to the high demand by the Thai population.

New Export?

Exportation of cannabis medicine to the world market is stated explicitly as a rationale for issuing the regulation, leading one to infer that world-class technology and capital investment will be required to produce premium standards of cannabis pharmaceuticals acceptable in industrialized countries.

Modern pharmaceutical companies, Thai and foreign, are already well versed in know-how and flush with cash. They stand a good chance of being labeled as “health ministry authorized persons” under the new regulation to expand into medical cannabis.

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A hospital in Trat province unveils a medical cannabis service on Oct. 16, 2019.

The release of this regulation will provide enough certainty for large Thai conglomerates to take part in this promising venture, boosted by funds and partnerships from abroad.

To take it further, one can also imagine a state-of-the art pharmaceutical plant by a big name pharma, in a joint ventured by a large Thai corporation, on the Eastern Economic Corridor once the cannabis industry is lit up in full.

Moving Ahead, Cautiously

Just as some officials are touting the economic benefits that cannabis may bring, the authorities have expressed caution in moving the commercialization forward. Their caution translates into measures includes a background check on the applicant.

Among the application procedures spelled out in the draft guidelines, the applicant company will be subject to a background check by the authorities, and a certification of the clean criminal history will be required.

The rule does not say whether the background check will go all the way to cover the shareholders and directors of the company, but one should anticipate the possibility.

Two-Step Authentication

The license itself will come in a two-step process. A routine non-narcotic pharmaceutical production license from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is needed before a company can apply to become a health ministry authorized person.

The FDA drug production license and the company’s status as a health ministry authorized person will then enable the firm to apply for a narcotic cannabis production license, also issued by the FDA.

Existing pharmaceutical companies who already have a normal FDA drug production license on hand will be at an advantage; it will be quicker for them to move straight to the narcotics board and a second FDA production license.

The two FDA licenses will automatically allow you to sell and distribute finished cannabis medicine products in the Thai market—you don’t need additional sales licenses. Normal registration of drug formulas would still be required, though.

Medical Cannabis and Air Travels

Lastly, foreign readers of Khaosod English would be happy to know that the new rule is very tourist-friendly.

After months of ambuigity, it lays down details of how international travelers can get a Thai possession license to carry with them their cannabis medicines to treat their personal illnesses, prescribed by doctors in their own countries.

They will be allowed a supply of 90 days. A copy of the prescription and an original doctor’s certificate outlining necessary details will be required.

The required information includes the name and address of the patient, the illness, the diagnosis and symptoms, the name and characteristics of the medicine, the doses ordered, and the amounts of medicine prescribed, and the name and address and certification number of the doctor.

There is no mention of notarization of the documents, but as with any documents made abroad, notarization by a notary public and legalization and authentication of the documents (not their contents) by the Thai embassy in the applicant’s country should be anticipated.

Licensing for airlines to carry cannabis medicines on the airplane for emergency treatment of passengers is also included in the new rule.

Wirot Poonsuwan is senior counsel and head of special projects at Blumenthal Richter & Sumet in Bangkok and can be reached at [email protected].

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New Species of Carnivorous Dinosaur Identified in Nong Bua Lamphu

A replica of Vayuraptor nongbualamphuensis.
A replica of Vayuraptor nongbualamphuensis.

NONG BUA LAMPHU — Paleontologists announced they identified a new species of carnivorous dinosaurs that once roamed the land that is now Nong Bua Lamphu province.

Mineral Resources deputy director deputy Montri Luengingkasoot said Tuesday that the new species is called Vayuraptor nongbualamphuensis, named after the province where the bone fragments were found and the Sanskrit word for wind deity, reflecting the dinosaur’s perceived speed.

Scientists estimated that the dinosaur was about four to 4.5 meters long and might have been alive roughly 130 million years ago. Thai scientists have been studying the bones since they were first excavated in 1988 at Phu Kao–Phu Phan Kham National Park in Nong Bua Lamphu.

Montri said the bone fragments they found belonged to six parts of the dinosaur’s body, which are enough for scientists to identify a new species due to its unique ankles. He said the dinosaur is more closely related to birds than to carnosaurs, or predatory dinosaurs like the famed Allosaurus.

The site where bone fragments have been unearthed will be developed into a museum, Montri said.

The new species will be the eleventh species of dinosaur discovered in Thailand. The last was Phuwiangvenator yaemniyomi, found July in Khon Kaen.

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‘Kodaline’ to Bring ‘High Hopes’ to Pattaya Music Fest

Photo: Kodaline / Facebook
Photo: Kodaline / Facebook

PATTAYA — Irish alt-rock band Kodaline is coming to lead an outdoor music festival in Pattaya with their beautifully sad songs early next year.

Best known for their heartfelt hit “All I Want,” the quartet will return to the kingdom as one of the main acts at Maya Music Festival, which will be held from Jan. 31 to Feb. 1 at the 300 rai (48 hectares) Maya Space in Pattaya.

Early bird tickets for the two-day event are on sale online from 3,299 baht. Entry is 13 and up.

The quartet – which consists of lead vocalist Steve Garrigan, guitarist Mark Prendergast, drummist Vincent May, and bassist Jason Boland – was founded in 2005 under the name 21 Demands, before changing to Kodaline in 2011.

They debuted their first extended play “The Kodaline EP” in 2012 and then the full album “In a Perfect World” the year after, which includes chart toppers like “High Hopes,” “All I Want,” and “Pray.” Their latest album, “Politics of Living,” was released in 2018.

More lineups of the music festival, which will consist of four stages serving different genres, will be announced soon online.

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Chinese Court Issues Guidelines for ‘Killer Litter’ Cases

A smart system monitors high-rise littering activities in a residential area in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, Oct. 23, 2019. (Xinhua/Huang Zongzhi)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — Acts of deliberately throwing objects from a high altitude will be treated as a crime of endangering public security by dangerous means, intentional injury or intentional homicide depending on specific situations, according to a new guideline issued by the Supreme People’s Court.

Suspects, whose intentional high-rise littering activities have not caused serious consequences but are sufficient to endanger public safety, shall be convicted for endangering public security and sentenced to three to 10 years in jail, the guideline reads.

Those who inflict serious injury or death on people or cause heavy losses of public or private property could face penalties up to life imprisonment or death in accordance with article 115 of China’s Criminal Law.

Anyone who commits the acts with the purpose of injuring or killing a specific person shall be convicted for intentional injury or homicide, the guideline says.

“Criminal activities involving intentionally throwing objects from a high altitude should be severely punished in accordance with the law,” the guideline reads.

The document also lists circumstances that are subject to heavy penalties and are generally not applicable to probation, including committing the acts multiple times, continuing to carry out such acts after being dissuaded from doing so, or conducting the acts in crowded places.

Anyone who causes objects to fall from high altitudes due to negligence, resulting in serious injury or death, shall be convicted for negligently causing severe injury or death according to the Criminal Law, says the guideline.

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Hawaii Man Proposes to Girlfriend While Surfing

In this Sunday, Nov. 10, 2019 photo, instead of just hanging ten when surfing with his girlfriend, Chris Garth drops to one knee and proposes to Lauren Oiye in the surf off Queen's Beach in Waikiki in Honolulu. (Tommy Pierucki via AP)

HONOLULU (AP) — A Hawaii man was surfing with his girlfriend when — instead of hanging 10 — he knelt down on one knee on his board and proposed.

Hawaii News Now reported that Lauren Oiye said yes just before Chris Garth dropped the ring in the ocean.

Multiple photographers nearby captured the Sunday moment.

Luckily, he had a spare.

Garth said he knew it could go wrong, so he used a stand-in while they were out in the water. The real ring was on shore at Queen’s Beach in Waikiki, where the two met years before.

Details about the rings were not released.

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Traversing Sri Lanka’s Mountains Made Smoother by Chinese Trains

People travel by a Chinese-made train in Sri Lanka, Nov. 2, 2019. (Xinhua/Tang Lu)

COLOMBO (Xinhua) — Sri Lanka has always been regarded by travel enthusiasts as “a country with the most beautiful railway network in the world.”

If you are travelling in Sri Lanka and have not taken the “mountain train” that runs through the lush green tea gardens in the Alpine Central Highlands, you have missed something deliriously enchanting.

While the view from the train is breathtakingly beautiful, the ride itself can be quite bumpy and shaky. As the train winds its way round mountains and the turns are often very sharp, the passengers often find it difficult to keep their balance. This is because both the train and the railway tracks are decades old.

Given the difficult terrain in the mountains, high standards are required in the construction of the mountain line, and these standards are now being met fully in the new trains designed and manufactured by China.

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Photo taken on Nov. 1, 2019 shows that on the high quality Chinese-made trains, passengers enjoy a comfortable and smooth ride while enjoying the beauty of the tea gardens and the lush mountains. (Xinhua/Tang Lu)

On Nov. 1, the latest version of the luxury train named Denuwara Menike manufactured by CRRC Qingdao Sifang Co., Ltd. was put into operation for the first time.

On the high quality Chinese trains, passengers can now enjoy a comfortable and smooth ride while enjoying the beauty of the tea gardens and the lush mountains.

The train, an S14 Diesel Multiple Unit, consists of two power locomotives, two air-conditioned cars, two second-class cars, three third-class cars and a car with a canteen.

The Denuwara Menike, which runs between Colombo and Badulla, in the central hills, will complete the journey in 8 hours and 43 minutes.

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People travel by a Chinese-made train in Sri Lanka, Nov. 2, 2019. (Xinhua/Tang Lu)

The train can carry a total of 400 commuters including 88 in AC compartments, 96 in second class compartments and 216 in third class compartments, the Railway Department said.

The first-class is air-conditioned and equipped with TVs. The conditions in the second and third-class cars are also much better than the old trains.

Entering the mountainous area, the train goes past jungle canyons, culverts and tea gardens. Thrilled by the beauty outside, young passengers hang out of the train, clutching door handles and taking selfies and pictures of each other in happy and even daring poses.

Su Xiaofeng, a designer in CRRC Qingdao Sifang Co., Ltd., said that there is a screen in each car showing useful information about the journey and the facilities available.

Sri Lankans are keenly interested in the newly-launched mountain train. Many of the passengers who took the ride put their thumbs up when they saw the Xinhua reporter.

“Thanks to China for making this for Sri Lanka. It is a comfortable train,” they said with a broad smile on their faces.

Hewa, a Sri Lankan business manager, took the train on Nov. 2 that returned to capital Colombo from the central highlands of Kandy. Hewa travels between Badulla in Central Sri Lanka and Colombo on the west coast almost every month to see his mother. He spoke glowingly to Xinhua about the new deluxe train after recalling the hardships he had to face in the past.

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Photo taken on Nov. 2, 2019 shows the first-class car of a Chinese-made train, which is air-conditioned and equipped with TVs, in Sri Lanka. (Xinhua/Tang Lu)

“The mountain line was beautiful, but the bumps used to make me uncomfortable every time I took a ride,” Hewa said. “But this is no longer the case with the introduction of the modern Chinese-made train,” he said.

“I learnt from a friend who works at the railway station that a Chinese-made luxury train is about to be put into use. So I decided to go to Badulla by this train. Luckily, my trip happened to take place on the day the train was inaugurated,” he said.

“My decision was very wise. The newly-launched train is not only comfortable but also very safe. The other aspect that I like is the information put out on the train. This is very educative.”

“I also appreciate the creation of space for dumping garbage in the compartment itself which makes the compartment spick and span. At present, most of the trains in Sri Lanka do not have garbage bins and passengers throw trash out of the train, spoiling the environment,” Hewa said.

The Sri Lankan Railway currently operates about 150 diesel locomotives, many of which are more than 30 years old.

In an effort to modernize the railways and attract more foreign tourists, the Sri Lankan government has purchased nine trains of the same type from China. The first luxury train was officially put into commercial operation on Nov. 1 and the remaining eight will arrive later this year and early next year.

Story by Tang Lu, Jamila Najmuddin

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Diplomats Accuse Trump as Impeachment Hits Americans’ TVs

Top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine William Taylor arrives to testify before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, during the first public impeachment hearing of President Donald Trump's efforts to tie U.S. aid for Ukraine to investigations of his political opponents. (Saul Loeb/Pool Photo via AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) — On Day One of extraordinary public impeachment hearings, the top American diplomat in Ukraine revealed new evidence that President Donald Trump was overheard asking about political “investigations” that he later demanded from Ukraine in exchange for military aid.

The revelation came as House Democrats pressed their case for Trump’s impeachment before the American people after weeks of closed-door interviews.

Wednesday’s account from a pair of career diplomats was a striking though complicated one that Democrats say reveals a president abusing his office, and the power of American foreign policy, for personal political gain.

“The matter is as simple and as terrible as that,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, the Democratic chairman of the Intelligence Committee, as he opened the daylong hearing. “Our answer to these questions will affect not only the future of this presidency but the future of the presidency itself.”

Career diplomat William Taylor, the charge d’affaires in Kyiv, offered new testimony that Trump was overheard asking on the phone about “the investigations” of Democrats that he wanted Ukraine to pursue that are central to the impeachment inquiry.

Trump said he was too busy to watch Wednesday and denied having the phone call. “First I’ve heard of it,” he said when asked.

All day, the diplomats testified about how an ambassador was fired, the new Ukraine government was confused and they discovered an “irregular channel” — a shadow U.S. foreign policy orchestrated by the president’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, that raised alarms in diplomatic and national security circles.

The hearing, playing out on live television and in the partisan silos of social media, provided the nation and the world a close-up look at the investigation.

At its core, the inquiry stems from Trump’s July 25 phone call when he asked Ukraine’s newly elected president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, for “a favor.”

Trump wanted the Ukraine government to investigate Democrats’ activities in the 2016 election and his potential 2020 rival, Joe Biden — all while the administration was withholding military aid for the Eastern European ally that is confronting an aggressive neighbor, Russia.

Both sides tried to distill it into soundbites.

Democrats said Trump was engaged in “bribery” and “extortion.” Republicans said nothing really happened — the military aid was ultimately released after Congress complained.

Trump restated his aggressive defense with rapid-fire tweets, a video from the Rose Garden and a dismissive retort from the Oval Office as he met with another foreign leader.

“It’s a witch hunt. It’s a hoax,” he said as he appeared with visiting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan by his side.

Across the country, millions of Americans were tuning in — or, in some cases, deliberately tuning out.

Viewers on the right and left thought the day underscored their feelings. Anthony Harris, cutting hair in Savannah, Georgia, had the hearing on in his shop, but he said, “It’s gotten to the point now where people are even tired of listening.”

The hours of partisan back-and-forth did not appear to leave a singular moment etched in the public consciousness the way the Watergate proceedings or Bill Clinton’s impeachment did generations ago.

“No real surprises, no bombshells,” said committee member Rep. Chris Stewart, R-Utah.

Still, the session unspooled at least partly the way Democrats wanted with the somber tones of career foreign service officers telling what they knew. They sounded credible.

The witnesses, the graying Taylor and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent in his bow tie, defied White House instructions not to appear. Both received subpoenas.

They are among a dozen current and former officials who already testified behind closed doors. Wednesday was the start of days of public hearings that will stretch into next week.

Taylor, who was asked by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to return to Ukraine as Trump was firing Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, introduced new information Wednesday.

He testified that a staff member recently told him of overhearing Trump when they were meeting with another diplomat, Ambassador Gordon Sondland, at a restaurant the day after Trump’s July 25 phone call to the Ukraine president that sparked the impeachment investigation.

The staff member explained that Sondland had called the president and they could hear Trump on the phone asking about “the investigations.” The ambassador told the president the Ukrainians were ready to move forward, Taylor testified.

In the face of Trump’s denial, Schiff expects the person to appear before investigators for a closed-door deposition. He is David Holmes, the political counselor at the embassy in Kyiv, according to an official unauthorized to discuss the matter and granted anonymity.

Republicans argued that even with the diplomats at the witness table the Democrats have only second- or third-hand knowledge of Trump’s alleged transgressions.

A Trump ally on the panel, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, mockingly called Taylor the Democrats’ “star witness” and said he’d “seen church prayer chains that are easier to understand than this.”

Taylor, a West Point graduate and former Army infantry officer in Vietnam, responded: “I don’t consider myself a star witness for anything.”

The top Republican on the panel, Rep. Devin Nunes of California, said Trump had a “perfectly good reason” for wanting to investigate the role of Democrats in 2016 election interference, giving airtime to a theory that runs counter to mainstream U.S. intelligence which found that Russia intervened and favored Trump.

Nunes accused the Democratic majority of conducting a “scorched earth” effort to take down the president after the special counsel’s Russia investigation into the 2016 election failed to spark impeachment proceedings.

The veteran foreign service officers delivered heartfelt history lessons about Ukraine, a young and hopeful democracy, situated next to Russia but reaching out to the West.

Asked about Trump’s withholding military aid from such an ally, Taylor said, “It was illogical. It could not be explained. It was crazy.”

Both men defended Yovanovitch, a career officer who Kent has said was subject to Giuliani’s “campaign of lies.” She is to testify publicly Friday.

Kent, in his opening remarks, directly contradicted a core complaint against Joe Biden being raised by allies of the White House. While he said he himself raised concerns in 2015 about the vice president’s son, Hunter Biden, being on the board of Burisma, a Ukraine gas company, he “did not witness any efforts by any U.S. official to shield Burisma from scrutiny.”

Republicans sought to hear from the anonymous whistleblower by subpoenaing him for a closed-session. The panel voted down the request and Schiff and repeatedly denied the GOP claim that he knows the person.

“We will do everything necessary to protect the whistleblower’s identity,” Schiff declared.

The Constitution sets a dramatic but vague bar for impeachment, There’s no consensus yet that Trump’s actions at the heart of the inquiry meet the threshold of “high crimes and misdemeanors.”

The anonymous whistleblower first alerted officials to concerns about the Trump phone call with Zelenskiy. The White House released a rough transcript of the telephone conversation, with portions deleted.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was initially reluctant to launch a formal impeachment inquiry. But she pressed ahead after the whistleblower’s complaint. She said Wednesday it was sad that the country has to undergo the inquiry with Trump, but “he will be held accountable.”

___

Associated Press writers Colleen Long, Mike Balsamo, Eric Tucker, Laurie Kellman, Alan Fram, Zeke J. Miller and Matthew Daly in Washington contributed to this report.

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HK Gov’t Condemns Rioters Who Struck Elderly Man With Bricks

Image: Ting-HKP / Weibo

HONG KONG (Xinhua) — A spokesman for the government of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) expressed outrage on Thursday at the violence of rioters that left a senior worker critically injured.

According to a statement from the HKSAR government, “an outsourced worker of the Food and Environment Hygiene Department, who is a senior, was suspected to be hit in his head by hard objects hurled by masked rioters during his lunch break yesterday (Nov. 13).”

The worker was described as suffering “serious injury and is in critical condition.”

A spokesman for the HKSAR government said that he was “saddened by the incident” and said the government “is in contact with family members of the worker through the service contractor and will provide all appropriate assistance to them.”

Meanwhile, he expressed “outrage over the malicious acts of the rioters and emphasises that police will follow up the case thoroughly to bring offenders to justice.”

“Masked rioters conducted extremely dangerous and violent acts in various districts three days in a row, where they wantonly assaulted other members of the public,” he said. “The acts are outrageous. Police will resolutely take law enforcement actions to restore public order. The HKSAR government appeals to members of the public to stay calm and rational as well as to stay away from violence to safeguard personal safety.”

Video footage circulating online showed that the man, in a checked shirt and a dark coat, was standing facing some black-clad rioters who were hurling what seemed to be bricks, before he was hit and fell down.

This is not the first time ordinary residents in Hong Kong being assaulted in the unrest.

On Monday, a 57-year-old man was beaten up by rioters on a footbridge in the Ma On Shan area because of different political view, and he was poured with suspected flammable liquid and set on fire by a rioter.

The man was still in critical condition at hospital with second-degree burns on 40 percent of his body, the Hong Kong police said on Wednesday.

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More Transit Disruptions, More Violence Break Out in Hong Kong

HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong residents endured a fourth day of traffic snarls and mass transit disruptions Thursday as protesters closed some major arteries and rail networks while police skirmished with militant students at major universities.

Life in this city of 7.5 million has been strained as thousands of commuters were unable to make it to work.

The government appealed for employers to show flexibility. “For staff who cannot report for duty on time on account of conditions in road traffic or public transport services, employers should give due consideration to the circumstances,” the statement said.

Riot police fired tear gas during a standoff with students at Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Protesters have hurled gasoline bombs and thrown objects off bridges during clashes at campuses this week. The Chinese University of Hong Kong suspended classes for the rest of the year, and others asked students to switch to online learning.

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A pro-democracy protester makes nail roadblocks inside the campus of the University of Hong Kong, early Thursday, Nov. 14, 2019. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

Students at Chinese University, site of some of the fiercest clashes where students hurled more than 400 Molotov cocktails at police on Tuesday, have barricaded themselves in the suburban campus.

Early Thursday they used chain saws to drop trees onto streets around the campus and prepared for a possible confrontation with police, which were not intervening.

Anti-government protests have riven Hong Kong, and divided its people, for more than five months.

A major rail line connecting Kowloon to mainland China was closed for a second day and five major underground stations were shut along with seven light rail routes, the Transport Department announced.

“Road-based transport services have been seriously affected this morning due to continued road blockages and damage to road facilities. In view of safety concerns and uncertain road conditions, buses can only provide limited services,” the department said.

Traffic was also disrupted because protesters have destroyed at least 240 traffic lights around the city.

The movement began in June over a now-withdrawn extradition bill. Activists saw it as another sign of an erosion in Hong Kong’s autonomy and freedoms, which China promised would be maintained for 50 years under a “one nation, two systems” principle when the former British colony returned to Chinese control in 1997.

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12,000+ Russians Heading Straight to Southern Party Islands

Photo: Extraguide.Ru
Photo: Extraguide.Ru

SURAT THANI — At least 12,000 of our Russian friends will be partying and vacationing on Thailand’s party islands from before the New Year through Songkran.

Russian tourists on 32 direct flights carrying 12, 760 people will head straight to Surat Thani from Dec. 27 until April 22, carrying our comrades from the cold of winter to the tropical parties on Koh Samui, Koh Phang Ngan, and Koh Tao.

Surat Thani governor Witchawut Jinto said Wednesday that these flights, which are on Nordwind Airlines, are fully-booked, and the province will prepare to welcome the influx of Russians.

Surat Thani Tourism Authority of Thailand director Nongyao Jirandon said that the flights will come from Moscow, Novosibirsk, and Krasnoyarnsk, and tourists have an average stay of 11 to 12 days.

Nongyao estimated they would generate 700 million in tourism revenue.

“This group are interested in nature tourism, such as going to Koh Samui’s beaches and diving at Koh Tao, as well as going to the Full Moon Party, shopping, and community tourism,” Nongyao said.

On Tuesday, Nong Nooch Tropical Garden in Pattaya said that as many as 4,000 Russians flew in for Loy Krathong via planes with tour groups, with 1,300 people attending each day from Monday through Wednesday.

In 2018, 1.5 million Russians visited Thailand, a 15 percent jump from the year before, with holidayers ferried in by about a 100 weekly flights between Russian and Thai cities. In contrast, Thai tourism to the Motherland is a trickle – averaging about 20,000 tourists a year, though 2018 saw a sharp uptick to 100,000, possibly due to the World Cup.

Tourists at a Loy Krathong event on Nov. 11, 2019 at Nong Nooch Tropical Garden in Pattaya.
Tourists at a Loy Krathong event on Nov. 11, 2019 at Nong Nooch Tropical Garden in Pattaya.
Tourists at a Loy Krathong event on Nov. 11, 2019 at Nong Nooch Tropical Garden in Pattaya.
Tourists at a Loy Krathong event on Nov. 11, 2019 at Nong Nooch Tropical Garden in Pattaya.

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