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Thailand to Seek Talks With US on Trade Privileges Loss

Senior Thai Commerce Ministry Keerati Rushchano talks to the media after a press conference at the Department of Foreign Trade, Ministry of Commerce, in Nonthaburi province. Monday, Oct. 28, 2019. Thai officials have said that plans by the United States to end preferential trade privileges on a range of imports from Thailand were not unexpected, and would seek talks with Washington on the matter. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP
Senior Thai Commerce Ministry Keerati Rushchano talks to the media after a press conference at the Department of Foreign Trade, Ministry of Commerce, in Nonthaburi province. Monday, Oct. 28, 2019. Thai officials have said that plans by the United States to end preferential trade privileges on a range of imports from Thailand were not unexpected, and would seek talks with Washington on the matter. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP

NONTHABURI, Thailand (AP) — Thailand plans to seek talks with the United States on a decision to end preferential trade privileges on a range of Thai exports including seafood, officials said Monday.

Keerati Rushchano, acting director-general of the Commerce Ministry’s Foreign Trade Department, said his office has been warning exporters that the U.S. might withdraw the duty-free status for some products and had been advised by the U.S. to expect it.

The Office of the United States Trade Representative announced Friday it was suspending $1.3 billion in trade preferences for Thailand under the Generalized System of Preferences, or GSP, because of its failure to adequately protect worker rights.

Keerati said Thailand will try to negotiate the issue before it takes effect in April, as did Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in separate remarks Monday. The U.S. Trade Representative’s announcement said the GSP eligibility was open to periodic review.

Thailand has faced complaints for years over labor issues, particularly in its fisheries industry.

“Despite six years of engagement, Thailand has yet to take steps to provide internationally recognized worker rights in a number of important areas identified in a 2015 petition from the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), such as providing protections for freedom of association and collective bargaining,” said the U.S. announcement.

It said the list of products to be excluded from GSP focused on those “for which the United States is a relatively important market for Thailand, but where Thailand accounts for a relatively small share of U.S. imports” and “due to longstanding worker rights issues in the seafood and shipping industries, GSP eligibility will be revoked for all seafood products from Thailand.”

The U.S. move drew special attention because it came shortly after Thailand announced a ban on the herbicide glyphosate, which is sold under the brand name Roundup by Monsanto, a U.S. subsidiary of German pharmaceutical giant Bayer.

Leaked letters to the Thai government from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and its representative at the U.S. Embassy urged a delay on the ban, saying the health hazards of the farming chemical had been exaggerated and the ban could affect the export of certain farm products from the US to Thailand.

The documents, whose provenance was not denied by the U.S. Embassy, were leaked just ahead of the U.S. announcement on GSP, fueling suspicion that the trade representative’s actions was retaliation. The suspicions were highlighted on Thai nationalist accounts on social media.

However, Thai and U.S. officials both denied any connection.

A statement from the U.S. Embassy, addressing concerns that reasons besides labor rights were behind the GSP move, noted that the GSP review of worker rights had been under way for six years.”

“Despite the six years of engagement, Thailand has yet to take steps to afford internationally recognized worker rights in a number of important areas identified in a 2013 petition from the AFL-CIO, such as providing protections for freedom of association and collective bargaining,” it said.

It expressed hope “that in announcing this action, we will incentivize Thailand to move forward with legislation and administrative enforcement actions related to worker rights that could lead to a reversal of the GSP action.”

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Police Arrest Australian Hell’s Angel on Drug Charges

An immigration officer uses a timeline information board describing details of Australian national Luke Anderson during a press conference at the Immigration Bureau in Bangkok, Thailand, Monday, Oct. 28, 2019. Police have arrested suspected Australian Hell's Angels gang member Luke Anderson last Thursday following a meeting with embassy officials over the problem of outlaw motorbike Hell's Angels gang member gangs. They have revoked his visa and say they will deport him, shortly. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP
An immigration officer uses a timeline information board describing details of Australian national Luke Anderson during a press conference at the Immigration Bureau in Bangkok, Thailand, Monday, Oct. 28, 2019. Police have arrested suspected Australian Hell's Angels gang member Luke Anderson last Thursday following a meeting with embassy officials over the problem of outlaw motorbike Hell's Angels gang member gangs. They have revoked his visa and say they will deport him, shortly. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP

BANGKOK (AP) — Thai police said Monday they have arrested an Australian Hell’s Angels gang member who is wanted on drug charges in Western Australia.

Police say they arrested Luke Anderson on Thursday after meeting with Australian Embassy officials on the problem of outlaw motorbike gangs. They say they have revoked his visa and will deport him.

“We have informed the Australians and they have sent officials to escort him from Thailand to face charges in Australia,” said police Maj. Gen. Archayon Kraithong, commander of the Immigration Bureau’s Division 3. “We believe that he probably has more than one outstanding arrest warrant.”

Police told reporters at a news conference in Bangkok that the arrest warrant dated back to 2017, but gave no details. They said he had been living with his Thai girlfriend in Pattaya, a coastal city notorious for crime and corruption.

According to a Thai police press release, Anderson has been arrested more than 20 times in Australia on a number of charges, including possession of illegal weapons and drugs.

An officer also confirmed that Anderson had been involved in a violent assault on two Thai brothers in Pattaya in September 2016, along with two other Australian motorbike gang members.

“Several years ago, he committed a crime by assaulting a Thai national,” said Archayon. He said Anderson is also suspected of “involvement in illegal trafficking of drugs and weapons, using Thailand as a meeting place, as a base to arrange activities in Australia. We consider him a dangerous person.”

The Australian head of the Hell’s Angels in Pattaya, Wayne Schneider, was bludgeoned to death in 2015 and buried in a shallow grave, in what was thought to be a drug-related dispute. Fellow Australian Antonio Bagnato was convicted of his murder and sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted.

Related stories:

Hells Angels Beat Thai Man Senseless in Pattaya Street (VIDEO)

Missing Former Hells Angel Biker Found Buried in Jungle

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1.44 Million Vie for 24,000 Civil Service Vacancies in China

Examinees check exam information before taking the National Civil Servant Exam at Nanjing Forestry University in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province, Dec. 10, 2017. (Xinhua/Sun Can)

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China’s State Administration of Civil Service has confirmed the receipt of nearly 1.44 million qualified applications for a total of around 24,000 civil servant vacancies with central authorities and their branches.

That means one in 60 qualified applicants can become a civil servant, according to the figures unveiled by the administration after all the applicants’ qualifications were reviewed by the organizations that offered the positions.

Qualified applicants are expected to sit a national written exam set for Nov. 24 in major cities across the country.

In 2019, there were a total of nearly 1.38 million qualified applications for around 14,500 civil servant vacancies.

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Automakers Side With Trump in Legal Fight With California

Paul Gipe protests before the first of three public hearings on the Trump administration's proposal to roll back car-mileage standards in a region with some of the nation's worst air pollution Monday, Sept. 24, 2018 in Fresno, Calif. (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)

WASHINGTON (AP) — General Motors, Fiat Chrysler, Toyota and many others in the auto industry are siding with the Trump administration in a lawsuit over whether California has the right to set its own greenhouse gas emissions and fuel economy standards.

The three companies, plus a trade association called the Association of Global Automakers, said Monday they plan to intervene in a lawsuit filed by the Environmental Defense Fund against the administration, which is planning to roll back national pollution and gas mileage standards enacted under the Obama administration.

In the past, most of the industry had taken the stance that it wanted one standard, and it preferred that California and the Trump administration work out differences to develop it. Negotiations haven’t gone anywhere, and in September, President Donald Trump announced his administration would seek to revoke California’s congressionally granted authority to set standards that are stricter than those issued by federal regulators.

The automakers decided to intervene in the lawsuit over the issue of California’s right to set standards. By intervening, the automakers changed their stance to siding with the Trump administration against the state. The automakers’ group, called the “Coalition for Sustainable Automotive Regulation,” also includes Nissan, Hyundai, Kia, Isuzu, Maserati, McLaren, Aston-Martin and Ferrari.

“The certainty of one national program, with reasonable, achievable standards, is the surest way to reduce emissions in the timeliest manner,” said John Bozzella, CEO of Global Automakers and spokesman for the coalition. “With our industry facing the possibility of multiple, overlapping and inconsistent standards that drive up costs and penalize consumers, we had an obligation to intervene.”

Bozzella said that the group made the decision to intervene on how the standards should be applied. That was even though the group wanted more environmentally friendly standards than the only proposal released so far by the Trump administration. “There’s a middle ground that supports year over year increases in fuel economy,” and promotes electric cars and innovation, he said.

The Trump administration has proposed freezing the standards at 2021 levels through 2025. A final proposal is expected by the end of the year. Many automakers have said they support increasing the standards, but not as much as those affirmed in the waning days of the Obama administration in 2016.

Under the Obama administration requirements, the fleet of new vehicles would have to average 30 mpg in real-world driving by 2021, rising to 36 mpg in 2025. Currently the standard is 26 mpg.

The Trump administration contends that freezing the fuel economy standards will reduce the average sticker price of new vehicles by about $2,700 by 2025, though that predicted savings is disputed by environmental groups and is more than double the EPA estimates from the prior administration. The administration says the freeze would make the roads safer by making newer, safer cars more affordable.

Environmental groups say the figures don’t include money consumers would save at the gas pump if cars got better mileage. A study released by Consumer Reports in August found that the owner of a 2026 vehicle will pay over $3,300 more for gasoline during the life of a vehicle if the standards are frozen at 2021 levels.

California’s authority to set its own, tougher emissions standards goes back to a waiver issued by Congress during passage of the Clean Air Act in 1970. In 2007, when Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger was governor, President George W. Bush’s administration denied California’s bid to place first-in-the-nation greenhouse gas limits on cars and trucks. But the state asked the EPA to reconsider its decision, and in 2009 — when Democratic President Barack Obama took office — the feds granted California’s request.

California has 35 million registered vehicles, the most of any state. A dozen other states and the District of Columbia also follow California’s fuel economy standards.

___

Krisher reported from Detroit.

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Over 10% Weddings Postponed in Hong Kong Due to Unrest: Survey

Demonstrators wave British flags during a rally outside of the British Consulate in Hong Kong, Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2019. Some hundreds of Hong Kong pro-democracy demonstrators have formed a human chain at the British consulate to rally support for their cause from the city's former colonial ruler. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

HONG KONG (Xinhua) — A survey done by wedding media ESDlife was made public on Monday, with the results showing that over 10 percent of interviewees had to postpone their weddings due to the recent social unrest in Hong Kong.

From August to September, ESDlife interviewed 1,297 Hong Kong people who are getting married between 2019 and 2021, with the aim to understand the average expenditures on wedding and spending behavior of wedding couples in Hong Kong.

The results showed that the average wedding expenses of each couple in 2019 was 369,166 HK dollars (47,091 U.S. dollars), 2 percent slightly up from 2018. Wedding banquet ranked top among all wedding expenditures, with an average expense of 185,389 HK dollars per couple, up 4 percent from 2018. It was followed by rings and jewelry, averagely costed 72,328 HK dollars per couple; honeymoon trip, 38,680 HK dollars; and pre-wedding photography, 24,147 HK dollars.

In view of the recent social unrest, ESDlife conducted a follow-up interview in early October with 729 individuals who are getting married between September 2019 and the end of 2021. It revealed that 52 percent of interviewees were affected by the social atmosphere in various degrees, including postponement or cancellation of weddings in over one out of ten couples.

Other impacts include late deposit payment to wedding service provider and additional wedding expenses, as some interviewees expressed their concerns over transportation and safety of guests on their wedding day.

Casey Chow, marketing manager of ESDlife, said that some couples had to re-print all invitation cards due to postponement of wedding day, while some had to arrange shuttle vehicles for guests as the metro may end service earlier than usual.

“These are all the main reasons that caused the wedding expenditure to rise,” said Chow.

According to statistics of China’s Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government, the total number of marriage in Hong Kong in 2018 was about 49,300, down 5 percent from 2017. (1 U.S. dollar = 7.84 HK dollars)

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Bronx Steps in ‘Joker’ Movie Become a Tourist Attraction

People pose on the steps between two apartment buildings, Monday Oct. 28, 2019, in the Bronx borough of New York. The stairs have become a tourist attraction in recent weeks since the release of the movie “Joker.” In the movie, lead actor Joaquin Phoenix dances as he goes down the steps, wearing a bright red suit and clown makeup. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

NEW YORK (AP) — Move over, Rocky, there’s a new stairway to climb.

A set of outdoor steps in the Bronx has become a tourist attraction in recent weeks since the release of the movie “Joker.”

The stairs are between two buildings on Shakespeare Avenue, about a half-mile from Yankee Stadium.

In the movie, lead actor Joaquin Phoenix dances as he goes down the steps, wearing a bright red suit and clown makeup.

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This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Joaquin Phoenix in a scene from “Joker.” (Niko Tavernise/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP)

These days, neighborhood residents using the steps are being joined by tourists trying to recreate the scene.

The visitors have been taking selfies, and some have even shown up in costume.

Coming to the stairs is “really immersive,” said Oliver Bonallack, visiting from Brighton, England.

“You never really get to experience a film first-hand,” he said. “I feel like it is so iconic.”

Not everyone is thrilled with the upsurge in popularity.

“We live in the neighborhood, it’s taking up all of our time, we’re all being inconvenienced,” said Bronx resident Cathyrine Spencer. “Every day when I come down the stairs, I have to go through a barrage of people.”

The stairway joins the ranks of well-known movie settings, like that of the steps at the Philadelphia Museum of Art seen in “Rocky.”

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Thanathorn Welcomes China’s Bigger Role, Denies Supporting HK Protests

A file photo of Future Forward leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit

BANGKOK — Opposition co-leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit on Monday said he has never lent his support to the ongoing protests in Hong Kong, contrary to a claim made by the army chief earlier this month.

The Future Forward Party chairman said the issue was blown out of proportion by those who sought to link him with the protests in Hong Kong based on a single photo of him and activist Joshua Wong. Thanathorn, who reportedly had an investment of 4 billion baht in China, also urged fellow Thais to embrace China’s larger role in the world.

“Some media in Thailand used the photo to report that I supported Hong Kong protests,” the billionaire-turned-politician said at a panel discussion on Thai-Chinese relations. “I have never supported the protests in Hong Kong in any way, whether directly or indirectly.”

It was the first time he spoke publicly about the encounter with Wong, which apparently drew a protest from the Chinese embassy in Bangkok and condemnation from army chief Apirat Kongsompong. The former said Thai politicians should refrain from associating themselves with “separatists” while the latter implied Thanathorn directly had a hand in the protests.

Read: Apirat Meets House Committee Over Anti-Red Speech

“Wong came to Thailand several times,” Gen. Apirat said on Oct. 11. “I don’t know what they were discussing or conspiring about, but they seem to be supporting each other.”

Wong himself recently said he’s been to Thailand only once as a tourist when he was a kid, and his second attempt to visit was thwarted by Thai immigration in 2016.

Speaking at today’s event, which was organized by the Thai-Chinese Media Association,  Thanathorn said he ran into Wong at a forum in Hong Kong, where the two happened to have been invited to speak, albeit on different panels.

Thanathorn said it was the activist who approached him and asked to take a photo with him.

“I have no hidden agenda. I am always willing to clarify the matter,” he said. “No one – not even one person – has ever produced any evidence that I supported the protests in Hong Kong.”

On the contrary, Thanathorn said he has a solid track record of good ties with China, having owned three auto parts factories in the mainland and invested 4 billion baht there since 2009. He praised Chinese production for being “cheap, fast, and good,” and added that in some years his firm spent up to 400 million baht importing materials from China.

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Future Forward leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks at a panel discussion in Bangkok on Oct. 28, 2019.

He also said everyone should embrace China’s rise in the multipolar world.

“China’s bigger role in the world is a welcome thing,” Thanathorn told the audience. “China is the world’s second largest economy. We cannot disregard China. We cannot rely on just one pole … every country should embrace China with open arms. We cannot deny a nation of 1.4 billion people from participating in solving the problems the world is facing.”

Asked whether China’s commitment to an autocratic, one-party rule contradicts his party’s stated aim of promoting democracy in Thailand, Thanathorn said each country should pick whatever model that works best in their context.

“China has its own identity, which they called a Chinese characteristic,” Thanathorn said. “But democracy can also help a country develop. If we revert back to autocracy, it wouldn’t fit Thailand. A majority of Thai people wouldn’t accept it.”

Thanathorn led auto part empire Thai Summit and served as a board member of Matichon Group, which owns Khaosod English, before he resigned from all business positions in 2018.

Related stories:

‘I’m Not Part of the Elite,’ Says Billionaire Leader of Progressive Party

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When and Where to Catch Pope Francis in Bangkok

BANGKOK — Pope Francis will roll down the streets of the Thai capital in a locally-made Popemobile during his apolistic visit this November.

Pope Francis’ Thailand visit will include an audience with the King, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, the Buddhist Patriarch, and two (fully-booked) Holy Masses, according to detailed itinerary released by Thai Catholic officials at a press conference Monday afternoon. 

“The point is to be able to get everyone close to him as possible,” Monsignor ViThanya-anan, deputy secretary-general of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Thailand said. “Even if its full, we will do whatever we can. Even people who can’t get in but are outside will be able to see it live.” 

According to today’s announcement, the Pope will depart Rome Fiumicino Airport on Tuesday Nov. 19, and arrive Nov. 20 at 12:30pm at the Military Air Terminal 2. It would be his 32nd trip out of Italy and fourth visit to Asia. 

At 9am on Nov. 21 he will arrive at the Government House and meet Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha at 9:15. Fifteen minutes later he will meet with government authorities, diplomats, and other bureaucrats, then give a speech.

His Holiness is scheduled to visit the Supreme Buddhist Patriarch at Wat Ratchabophit at 10am.

From 11:15am, he will meet with the approximately 1,000-strong medical staff of St. Louis Hospital, and give a greeting, before visiting the infirm at noon. Afterwards, he will lunch at the Apostolic Nunciature. 

At 4:55pm, the Pope will have private audience with King Rama X at Dusit Palace.

His largest Holy Mass at the National Stadium is scheduled to start at 6pm. Due to overwhelming demand where registration for the 35,000 seats quickly filled up, an extra 20,000 seats at the nearby Thephasadin Stadium will also be open for the audience.

Still, Vissanu said he expects around 70,000 people to attend, which includes pilgrims from ASEAN countries and China, especially at least 6,000 Catholics from Vietnam.

“In February when His Holiness visited the United Arab Emirates, which has only 4,000 Christians, the actual people that came were in the hundreds of thousands,” Vissanu said.

Vissanu also said Thai Catholics from out of Bangkok are expected to make their way into the city.

“From Sakhon Nakhon and Ubon they will come. It’s so touching that so many saved up in piggy banks to travel here, that there are not enough buses,” Vissanu said. 

The National Stadium mass will be broadcast live on NBT. A total of 150 foreign press teams and 95 local Thai press will be covering the apostolic visit. 

On Friday Nov. 22, Pope Francis will meet with priests and other Catholic church members at St. Peter’s Parish in Sampran district, Nakhon Pathom at 10am.

At 11am at the nearby Blessed Nicholas Boonkerd Kitbamrung Shrine, he will meet with Thai and Asian bishops and archbishops. At 11:50am, he has a private meeting with the Jesuits (Fun fact: Pope Francis is the first Jesuit Pope, as well as the first Latin American pope). 

After another lunch at the Apostolic Nunciature, at 3:20pm he will meet leaders of other Christian denominations at Chulalongkorn University, a rare meeting of Christian leaders in a country where Christians of all sects made up only 1 percent of the population.

The audience at Chulalongkorn University’s Main Auditorium will fit 1,500 and will be about an hour long. 

Finally, the Pope will hold a Holy Mass for youths at 5pm at Assumption Cathedral, with an estimated crowd of at least 7,000. 

“This is a casual mass. Young people will have freedom to dress how they want, including ethnic clothes,” Vissanu said. “We as Asians we might be stiff when doing official affairs, and youths in Myanmar were also at first stiff around him. But when he welcomed them with open arms, everyone hugged him.” 

“He can use Gen X, Gen Y language very well,” Vissanu added. 

Finally, the Pope will leave for Japan at the same terminal he arrived at 9:30am on a Thai Airways flight on Nov. 23. His airline choice is deliberate. 

“When leaving a country, he flies on the national airline. When leaving Italy, he flew on Alitalia. So leaving Thailand, he will fly on Thai Airways,” Vissanu said. 

The last pontiff visit to Thailand was in 1984 by Pope John Paul II, whose visit was designated as a state visit. Pope Francis’ scheduled audience with King Vajiralongkorn is marked as a “private visit” in the announcement rather than an official one as a state guest to His Majesty. 

The upcoming visit also coincides with the 350th anniversary of the founding of “Mission de Siam,” the assembly that oversees Roman Catholic missions in the Kingdom, which was established during the Ayutthaya period.

Thailand is home to a minority population of Catholics numbering 0.58 percent of the population, or 388,468 people with 524 churches, the Catholic Social Communications of Thailand announced in a video at a press conference on Sept. 13.

News of the official papal visit will be distributed through the official “Pope Visit Thailand” website as well as the official Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, and Line

The church also released an official theme song for the apolistic visit, featuring Thai Catholic artists.

Related stories:

Pope’s Open-Air Mass Fully Booked for Thais, But Foreigners Can Still Apply

Here’s Pope Francis’ Schedule for His Thailand Visit

Pope Francis to Visit Thailand on Nov. 20 to 23

‘Let Love Be the Bridge,’ Pope Francis’ Thailand Visit Gets Official MV

Pope’s Visit to Thailand Will Also Be a Family Reunion

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Shop, Snack on Chicken Rice and Durian Mooncakes at Singaporean Fair

A file photo of durian mooncake.
A file photo of durian mooncake.

BANGKOK — Chicken rice, bak chang rice dumplings, and durian ice cream will make their way into the capital for the first-ever Singaporean government-sponsored festival dedicated to showcase the diversity of our southern neighbor this Thursday.

“Singatrail 2019” will take place in front of EmQuartier Mall with more than a dozen Singaporean vendors offering a deeper glimpse into the country’s cuisine and products, and not just the Merlion keychains and salted egg fish skins.

Munch on some of Singapore’s national dishes such as Hainanese chicken rice from the legendary Boon Tong Kee, durian desserts from Golden Moments, and bubble milk tea made with all-natural ingredients from R&B.

For health-conscious office ladies, there will be options for clean food including meatless Italian dishes from fusion eatery Elemen, salmon nasi lemak with spicy tomato sauce from Grain, and soy milk from The Soy Inc – all making their first Thai debuts.

 

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Once your tummy is filled up, shop a selection of Singapore-made products like fashion and stationery from multi-brand store Naiise.

 

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Visitors will also have a chance to win up to 4,000 baht vouchers to spend in the event or flights to Singapore from lucky draws and games such as bak chang rice dumplings wrapping competition. Cooking sessions and jam sessions of Singapore’s hits from local bands will also take place at the event.

The event is organized by Enterprise Singapore, the enterprise development arm of the Singapore government, and Singapore-based event organizer Invade.

“Singatrail 2019” will be held in front of EmQuartier. The event will run from 12pm to 10pm from Oct. 31 to Nov. 3. The venue is reachable from BTS Phrom Phong.

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Miss Grand Thailand 2019 ‘Coco’ Finishes as 2nd-Runner Up

Arayha “Coco” Suparurk answers a question at the Miss Grand International pageant on Oct. 25, 2019 in Caracas, Venezuela.
Arayha “Coco” Suparurk answers a question at the Miss Grand International pageant on Oct. 25, 2019 in Caracas, Venezuela.

CARACAS, Venezuela — Thailand’s entry to the Miss Grand International pageant landed in the second-runner up, losing to Venezuela.

Miss Grand Thailand 2019 Arayha “Coco” Suparurk just missed out on the Miss Grand crown during the pageant finals Saturday at the Poliedro de Caracas in the Venezuelan capital.

Venezuela’s Valentina Figuera, 19, was crowned the 7th Miss Grand International, beating out 59 other candidates.

In July, Coco sparked an online controversy when she reposted a meme where she called Miss Universe 2018, Catriona Gray of the Philippines “fat.”

Read: Miss Grand Thailand 2019 Ignites Netizen Rage for Calling Catriona Gray ‘Fat’

The resulting unpopularity followed Coco all the way to the finals. Not only did netizens constantly comment about her body shaming Catriona, they also posted memes making fun of her botched English grammar when responding in the Q&A session, which asked contestants to describe what is the best thing about Venezuela that they want to tell the world about. Coco speaks at 1:40:59.

“The best thing for me in Venezuela is all of you. Everyone. If no you here, no Venezuela. Ti amo Venezuela, muchas gracias,” Coco answered in English, Spanish, and what appeared to be accidental Italian.

Coco drew similar ridicule online when she discussed violence in Thailand’s Deep South in a video posted in October.

But it’s not all haters on the horizon. Some Coco fans congratulated her win.

“Third place is already good. No regrets, you already came far. You made me happy all day at work today, thanks and congratulations,” Facebook user Nuttawut Suksathit said.

Last year’s Miss Grand Thailand, Nam-oi “Moss” Chanapan, reached the Top 20 and did not make it to the question-and-answer section.

Photo: Miss Grand International / Facebook
Photo: Miss Grand International / Facebook

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Miss Grand Thailand 2019 Ignites Netizen Rage for Calling Catriona Gray ‘Fat’

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