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Film Star Dumps Pro-Junta Party, Joins Pheu Thai

Rattaphoom “Film” Toekongsa embraces Pheu Thai chief advisor Sudarat Keyuraphan in Bangkok on Aug. 19, 2019.

BANGKOK — A former celebrity singer and actor who quit a pro-military party in protest last month signed up with the main opposition party today.

Speaking at Pheu Thai Party headquarters after submitting his application, Rattaphoom “Film” Toekongsa said he believes his new political home has the ability to improve the country and the willingness to listen to younger generations.

“I want the new generations to unite for better changes in politics,” Ratthaphoom, 34, told reporters before sharing a hug with Pheu Thai chief advisor Sudarat Keyuraphan.

Ratthaphoom, who was best known as a pop singer and film star prior to his entry into politics earlier this year, made waves after he publicly resigned from the Thai Local Party in July, citing disagreement with the party’s ideology.

Thai Local Party was among a dozen “micro-parties” who voted for then-junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha’s second term in office as prime minister.

But Ratthaphoom said today he maintains a cordial relationship with his former party.

“I have my own stance, and I do not seek personal gain,” the former actor said.

Pheu Thai elder Sudarat said she’s pleased to have Ratthaphoom onboard.

She said she hopes Ratthaphoom – who served as a spokesman for Thai Local Party – will help connect her party with younger audiences through social media campaigns and digital marketing.

Several politicians have switched their allegiance after the March 24 elections. In July, Pheu Thai member and ex-minister Pornsak Charoenprasert moved to Phalang Pracharath, who is leading a coalition government consisting of over 18 parties.

Media reports today also quoted Phalang Pracharath sources as saying that New Economy Party leader Mingkwan Sangsuwan is about to leave the opposition camp.

When questioned by the media today, Sudarat said she has not heard the rumor concerning Mingkwan.

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Shop Taiwanese Green Goods at Indie Craft Market in Bangkok

A reusable bubble tea cup by Milx, one of the vendors. Photo: Pinkoi / Courtesy
A reusable bubble tea cup by Milx, one of the vendors. Photo: Pinkoi / Courtesy

BANGKOK — For 11 days, 11 Taiwanese indie designers will sell sustainable, hand-crafted goods in a pop-up market.

The Pinkoi Eco Pop Up market will feature small-scale crafters from Taiwan hawking eco goods from bubble-tea drink holders to heat-retaining lunch bags.

Event organizer, Chang Chinfang, said that Taiwan’s design community saw an influx of “green” goods after the government set a goal of phasing out single-use plastics by 2030.

Pinkoi, Asia’s answer to Etsy, launched in 2011 and provides online access to small designers across East and Southeast Asia. Pinkoi held their first fair in Bangkok in November at Lhong 1919. The markets aim to spread local culture across borders, as shown by a Malaysian vendor that sold iron-on patches at the Lhong 1919 fair.

The market will run from Aug. 29 to Sept. 8, open from 9:30am to 6:30pm at Phak Cafe & Crafts shop, reachable from BTS Thong Lo.

Reusable bottle holders. Photo: Pinkoi / Courtesy
Reusable bottle holders. Photo: Pinkoi / Courtesy
Reusable lunch bags by Pockeat_agooday. Photo: Pinkoi / Courtesy
Reusable lunch bags by Pockeat_agooday. Photo: Pinkoi / Courtesy

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Craft-Nerd Out With Indie Asian Designers on Bangkok Pier Fair

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11 Killed After Truck Crashes Van Carrying Migrant Workers

Crash scene on Route 317 in Wang Sombun district, Sakaeo on Aug. 18.
Crash scene on Route 317 in Wang Sombun district, Sakaeo on Aug. 18.

SA KAEO — Eleven people died after a van carrying Laotian migrant workers collided with a truck in an eastern province on Sunday morning.

Police Col. Seksan Wattanapong, deputy commander of the Sa Kaeo police, said the van was carrying migrant workers from Bangkok to Chanthaburi when it crashed with an 18-wheel truck on Route 317 in Wang Sombun district at around 4.15am.

Seksan believes that the driver of the van, who died at the scene, fell asleep after hours of driving. Half of the van was crushed, with parts falling off on the street, while the truck sustained minor damage.

Ten Laotian passengers in the van died, according to the police. The driver of the trailer truck and the other three people were injured.

Police are investigating the cause of the accident. Truck driver Subin Pengmoo said the van skid off its lane from the opposing direction and collided into his vehicle at a high speed.  

GPS logs recovered from the van indicated that the vehicle was cruising at 88kph shortly before the crash, but investigators found multiple instances of speeding in the record of its route.

The crash came amid backlashes against transport minister Saksayam Chidchob, who recently dropped a plan to switch from public vans to more durable minibuses. The proposal was floated by the previous government in 2017 as a bid to reduce deaths and injuries related to vans.

Saksayam also extended the services of public vans from 10 to 12 years, raising concerns that outdated vehicles would be used on the roads.

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Here’s Why Fewer Will Die on Thai Roads If Vans Replaced

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Families of ‘Praewa’ Victims Donate 1 Million Baht to Thammasat Legal Aid

Thawin Chaotiang hands a donation to staff Aug. 17., 2019 at the Law Center at Thammasat University.
Thawin Chaotiang hands a donation to staff Aug. 17., 2019 at the Law Center at Thammasat University.

BANGKOK — Families of victims in a car crash that killed 9 in 2010 have donated 1 million baht to a university legal center that offered them legal aid during their almost decade-long battle for compensation.

On Saturday, families of the victims at the hands of Orachorn “Praewa” Thephasadin Na Ayudhya, who killed 9 when her car slammed into a Thammasat University van on Dec. 27, 2010, donated 1 million baht to the legal center that helped them with their case.

Praewa, of the illustrious Thephasadin Na Ayudhya clan, avoided jail time and served 138 hours of community service, completed in 2016. In May, the civil case against Praewa finally ended and she was ordered to pay compensation within a month, which her family only did three months later on Aug. 6 after public outcry.  Her legal representatives paid 41.7 million baht in compensation to the victims, with 800,000 baht still outstanding.

“Getting a lot or a little, it’s not as important now that it’s over,” Thawin Chaotiang said. “We’re lucky…A lot of lawyers would have abandoned a civil case lasting this long.”

Thawin’s adoptive son, Sastra Chaotiang, died in the crash. The 71-year-old, who had hopes of retiring under his son’s care, now has to sell garlands to make ends meet.

Read: Families of 9 Dead Still Reeling from ‘Praewa’ Crash Nine Years Ago

The families say that they hope the donation will help others seeking legal aid from the law center.

Law professors at the event spoke about how there aren’t enough Thai laws to ensure that parties owed compensation actually get paid. In many cases, parties in the case have to go collect the debt themselves.

“Thanks for fighting with us over the past nine years,” tweeted Warunyoo Ketchoo, who was severely injured in the crash.

Mothers, widows, and relatives of the Praewa crash victims on Saturday.

Thawin Chaotiang.
Thawin Chaotiang.

Related stories:

9 Years Later, ‘Praewa’ Delivers Compensation to Car Crash Victims

Families of 9 Dead Still Reeling from ‘Praewa’ Crash Nine Years Ago

9 Years On, Crash Victims Say ‘Praewa’ Gave No Compensation

‘Praewa’ Ordered to Pay 30 Million Baht to Van Crash Victims

Praewa Completes Community Service, 4 Years After Court Orders It

Supreme Court Rejects Appeal from Underage Motorist Who Killed 9

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Airport Worker Fired For Giving Passenger ‘You Ugly!’ Note

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — An airport security worker in New York has been fired for handing a passenger a handwritten note that said “You ugly!!!”

The June incident came to light this week after passenger Neal Strassner obtained security video through a public records request and posted it to YouTube .

The video from Greater Rochester International Airport shows the worker handing Strassner the note after he passes through a metal detector.

Strassner says he didn’t think much of it and continued toward his gate. That’s when he says the woman yelled out: “You gonna open the note?”

Strassner says that when he did, the woman burst out laughing. He later complained to her supervisors.

The Transportation Security Administration says the woman worked for a contractor. The agency says it has “zero tolerance for this type of behavior.”

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Uganda, Zambia Dispute Huawei Spying Claim

Foreigners look at a Huawei computer at a Huawei store in Beijing, China, Thursday, Dec. 6, 2018. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

LUSAKA/KAMPALA — The governments of Zambia and Uganda have respectively dismissed a U.S. Wall Street Journal report alleging that they used Chinese telecommunication giant Huawei Technologies to spy on political opponents.

The WSJ article on Govt spying on political opponents is malicious, we refute it with the contempt it deserves,” Zambian government spokesperson Dora Siliya said on Twitter on Friday.

“Zambia is a country of laws with Constitution guarantees citizens right to privacy,” She said.

Siliya noted that the country’s telecommunication regulator, the Zambia Information and Communication Technology Authority (ZICTA), was a lawful regulator whose functions do not extend to illegalities as alleged by the report.

“ZICTA operates under authority of the Zambian constitution, which explicitly guarantees our citizens the right to privacy of the personal conservations, data and information,” she said.

The government will continue to safeguard the right to privacy, she said, urging the public to dismiss such reports.

“This WSJ story on Huawei helping govts hack into opposition phones is total hogwash. There’s no evidence,” Ugandan presidential Senior Press Secretary Don Wanyama also said in a tweet.

Wanyama said the move against Huawei is a continuation of the U.S.-initiated trade war and “a new frontier being opened in Africa.”

In a statement issued on Thursday, Huawei also refuted the U.S. news report as unfounded, with inaccurate allegations against its business operations in Africa.

The multinational company said its code of business conduct prohibits any employees from undertaking activities that would compromise its customers or end users’ data or privacy or that would breach any laws.

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Alaskan Discovers Message in Bottle From Russian Navy

This undated photo provided by Tyler Ivanoff shows a bottle with a message that he found on the shores of western Alaska. (Tyler Ivanoff via AP)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A man discovered a 50-year-old letter in a bottle from the Russian Navy on the shores of western Alaska.

Tyler Ivanoff found the handwritten Russian letter early this month while gathering firewood near Shishmaref about 600 miles (966 kilometers) northwest of Anchorage, television station KTUU reported.

“I was just looking for firewood when I found the bottle,” Tyler Ivanoff said. “When I found the bottle, I had to use a screwdriver to get the message out.”

Ivanoff shared his discovery on Facebook where Russian speakers translated the message to be a greeting from a Cold War Russian sailor dated June 20, 1969. The message included an address and a request for a response from the person who finds it.

Reporters from the state-owned Russian media network, Russia-1, tracked down the original writer, Capt. Anatolii Prokofievich Botsanenko, KTUU reported.

He was skeptical he wrote the note until he saw his signature on the bottom.

“There — exactly!” he exclaimed.

The message was sent while the then 36-year-old was aboard the Sulak, Botsanenko said. Botsanenko shed tears when the Russian television reporter told him the Sulak was sold for scrap in the 1990s.

Botsanenko also showed the reporter some souvenirs from his time on the ship, including the autograph of the wife of a famous Russian spy and Japanese liquor bottles, the latter kept over his wife’s protests.

Ivanoff’s discovery of the bottle was first reported by Nome radio station KNOM.

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Police Keep Low Profile at Huge, Peaceful Hong Kong Protest

A protester waves a Hong Kong colonial-era flag as others march along a street in Hong Kong, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2019. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

HONG KONG — Hong Kong streets were turned into rivers of umbrellas on Sunday as hundreds of thousands of people marched through heavy rain down a major road in the Chinese territory, where massive pro-democracy demonstrations have become a regular weekend activity.

Organizers said at least 1.7 million participated, though the police estimate was far lower.

The assembly was peaceful, with no reports of violence, making for a rare calm weekend in a protest movement that has been marked by violent clashes with police. Law enforcement officers kept a low profile, with no riot police seen from the procession’s main routes. When stragglers convened outside a government complex in the late evening, other protesters urged them to go home.

Demonstrators who were shining laser pointers at a government building were convinced to leave, prompting applause from others in the group.

“We hope to see whether the government gives a response to this peaceful protest,” said Michael Leung, a 24-year-old who was ushering his fellow demonstrators away. “If we get a negative response, we cannot control the next (gathering).”

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Organizer Bonnie Leung of the Civil Human Rights Front said earlier in the day that she hoped there would be no “chaotic situations.”

“We hope we can show the world that Hong Kong people can be totally peaceful,” she said.

The Civil Human Rights Front had organized three previous massive marches in Hong Kong since June. The movement, however, has been increasingly marked by clashes with police as demonstrators vent their frustrations over what they perceive to be the government’s blatant refusal to respond to their demands.

“Peace is the No. 1 priority today,” said Kiki Ma, a 28-year-old accountant who participated in the march. “We want to show that we aren’t like the government.”

While police granted approval for the rally, they didn’t approve an accompanying march. Demonstrators nevertheless fanned out and filled the streets, as there was not enough space at the designated assembly area.

Public transit trains did not stop at stations near the assembly because of overcrowding.

Jimmy Shan of the Civil Human Rights Front said the group estimated that at least 1.7 million took part in the rally. He said the figure did not include those who were not able to make it to Victoria Park — where the march began — due to traffic constraints.

Police, whose crowd figures are generally lower than the organizers’ estimates, said the turnout at the assigned location and during the designated time period was 128,000. Many protesters, however, did not follow the pre-approved guidelines laid out by the authorities.

In Beijing, You Wenze, a spokesman for China’s ceremonial legislature, condemned statements from U.S. lawmakers supportive of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement.

You called the lawmakers’ comments “a gross violation of the spirit of the rule of law, a blatant double standard and a gross interference in China’s internal affairs.”

He said that Hong Kong’s 7.5 million people and the Chinese population as a whole rejected the actions of a “very small group of violent protesters” as well as “any interference of foreign forces.”

You did not mention any specific lawmaker, but numerous U.S. senators and Congress members, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have affirmed the U.S. commitment to human rights and urged Hong Kong’s government to end the standoff.

Congress also has the power to pass legislation affecting Hong Kong’s relationship with the U.S. in ways that could further erode the territory’s reputation for stability and rule of law. That includes the recent reintroduction of the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act in Congress, which would among its other provisions require the secretary of state to issue an annual certification of Hong Kong’s autonomy to justify special treatment afforded to the city.

More directly, President Donald Trump could simply issue an executive order suspending Hong Kong’s special trading status with the U.S., a move that could have a devastating effect on the local economy at a time when Beijing and Washington are engaged in a bitter trade war.

A former British colony, Hong Kong was returned to Beijing in 1997 under the framework of “one country, two systems,” which promised residents certain democratic rights not afforded to people in mainland China. But some Hong Kongers have accused the Communist Party-ruled central government of eroding their freedoms in recent years.

The protest movement’s demands include the resignation of Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam, democratic elections and an independent investigation into police use of force.

Harley Ho, a 20-year-old social work student who attended Sunday’s rally, said protesters were undeterred by the rain and would not rest until their demands were met.

“We will stand here, we will take action until they respond to us,” she said. “In the rain, our spirit becomes stronger.”

Members of China’s paramilitary People’s Armed Police force have been training for days across the border in Shenzhen, including on Sunday morning, fueling speculation that they could be sent in to suppress the protests. The Hong Kong police, however, have said they are capable of handling the demonstrations.

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Associated Press journalists Ken Moritsugu, Yves Dam Van and Phoebe Lai in Hong Kong, Dake Kang in Shenzhen, China, and Christopher Bodeen in Beijing contributed to this report.

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‘Save Hong Kong’ Rally Draws 470,000 People: Organizers

People attend a "stop violence" rally at Tamar Park in south China's Hong Kong, Aug. 17, 2019. (Xinhua/Wu Xiaochu)

HONG KONG — “Anti-violence!”, “Save Hong Kong!” Over 470,000 people gathered on Saturday in a rally held at Tamar Park, Admiralty of Hong Kong, to voice out their demand for peace and stability in Hong Kong.

At around 4 p.m. local time, the metro station near Tamar Park was swarming with people. An hour later, the rally started as the Chinese national anthem was ringing out.

Waving the Chinese national flag and the flag of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) and holding signs written with slogans including “Stop Riots”, “Anti-violence” and “Save Hong Kong”, the crowd was enthusiastic and impassioned despite the rain. They chanted the slogans to express their views.

At the beginning of the rally, a video was played, featuring a recording of a policeman’s wife who spoke, choking back sobs, of how violent protesters stormed the police stations and attacked the police. She appealed to the public to support the police and Hong Kong during this difficult time. “Police, keep it up!”, “Save Hong Kong!” the crowd cried out at the end of the video.

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Tam Yiu-chung, a member of the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s Congress, called upon people from all walks of life to firmly oppose violence.

The national flag and emblem represent the dignity of the country, and those who insult the national flag and emblem are turning themselves into enemies of the people in the whole country, Tam added.

Rebuking the recent illegal assemblies and violent acts at Hong Kong International Airport as “the ugliest riot in the world”, Maria Tam Wai-chu deputy director of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee Basic Law Committee from Hong Kong, stressed that everyone should respect the freedoms of others and the exercise of freedom does not include wanton destruction of public properties or obstruction of public transport.

Wong Kam-leung, chairman of Hong Kong Federation of Education Workers, said that the violence in Hong Kong has been escalating over the past two months and he was distressed to see young people using force and violating laws.

He called on the young people to “stop and think twice” before engaging in violent or illegal acts.

A 57-year-old gardener surnamed Chan said sometimes she could not go to work because radical demonstrators disrupted the traffic, “which was very annoying.”

“Hong Kong has always been a peaceful society. I hope the extremist radicals stop violent acts so that people can return to peaceful life,” she said.

A finance professional surnamed Lee said his business has been badly hit by the illegal demonstrations since many of his clients are too concerned to invest in Hong Kong.

“The common aspiration of the overwhelming majority of people in Hong Kong is that the violence and chaos will stop soon. Our community has been torn apart and can not afford any more of it,” he said. “We urge the demonstrators and mobs to stop it immediately; otherwise, the whole community has to pay for the consequences.”

A local resident, Wendy, a mother of a young boy, told the reporter that her life was largely affected by the violent protests going on in the recent two months.

“For the sake of our future generations and Hong Kong getting back on track, we refuse to be in silence, we must let the world hear our voice,” she said firmly.

The assembly ended at around 6 p.m. local time, with the participants singing the chorus Below the Lion Rock, a famous song in Hong Kong that represents the spirit of unity and hard-working.

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Farmers and Agents Visited CP Bangladesh’s Fish Feed Mill

Twenty-two farmers and sales agents from northern part of Bangladesh went to witness the modern technology of Bogura aqua feed mill. Bogura plant is a new-built plant of C.P. Bangladesh providing good quality and safe products, traceable and environmental friendly.

The visitors were welcomed by Mr. Chonlasit Vettayawanic, General Manager of C.P. Bangladesh Co., Ltd. at Bogura Aqua Feed Mill.

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