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Activists Describe Life Under Lockdown in Kashmir as ‘Grim’

A Kashmiri man walks as Indian paramilitary soldiers stand guard during security lockdown in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2019. Photo: Dar Yasin / AP
A Kashmiri man walks as Indian paramilitary soldiers stand guard during security lockdown in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2019. Photo: Dar Yasin / AP

NEW DELHI — On the eve of India’s Independence Day, a team of activists and scholars released a report that paints a bleak picture of Indian-administered Kashmir, challenging official government accounts that life is returning to normal amid an indefinite curfew and communications blackout imposed just before the restive region’s special status was stripped by Parliament on Aug. 6.

The report, presented Wednesday in New Delhi, found that people living under the security lockdown expressed “enormous anger and anguish” in response to the surprise move by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to revoke a constitutional provision that gave the predominantly Muslim population some degree of autonomy and prevented outsiders from buying land in the pristine Himalayan region.

It said protests have occurred daily, though the constraints on movement and communication mean that the response has been largely subdued.

The report’s authors, including economist Jean Dreze, described the situation in Indian-administered Kashmir as “grim” and said the clampdown had “crippled economic life” there. The team said it traveled to towns and villages the length of the Kashmir Valley between Aug. 9 and Aug. 13, including southern areas that have been recent hotbeds of rebel activity.

Maimoona Mollah, an activist on the fact-finding team, likened the situation in the region to Israel’s security protocol in the Palestinian territories.

“Kashmir is like an open jail,” said Vimal Bhai, another activist on the team.

Although the 4 million residents of the Kashmir Valley, where an insurgency has simmered for decades, are used to blockades, residents have told The Associated Press that what they’re experiencing is unprecedented.

Since independence from British rule and partition in 1947, India and Pakistan have fought two wars over their rival claims to Kashmir, with each left controlling part of the region.

The Indian side has seen several uprisings, including a bloody armed rebellion launched in 1989 to demand independence or a merger with Pakistan. About 70,000 people have been killed in that uprising and a subsequent Indian military crackdown that left Kashmiris exhausted, traumatized and broken.

Even before India’s Parliament voted Aug. 5 to strip Jammu and Kashmir of its statehood and split it into two federal territories, the central government imposed a curfew, suspended telephone and internet services and deployed tens of thousands of additional soldiers to the region — already one of the world’s most militarized zones.

In one of several videos and photos the activists showed reporters, a boy can be heard saying he was released one day before Eid al-Adha, the Muslim holiday that was celebrated on Monday. In the video, which doesn’t show his face, the boy, who says on camera that he is 11 years old, describes being held in police custody and beaten up. He says he encountered younger children in police custody.

Other people in the activists’ videos who were filmed with the camera pointed away from their faces said the region witnessed sporadic protests, some of which were met with force by Indian paramilitary forces.

The Associated Press could not independently verify the claims.

The activists said their report and images cast doubt on government and some Indian media accounts depicting Kashmir as calm.

A spokesman for India’s home ministry tweeted on Wednesday that law enforcement in the portion of Kashmir controlled by India had “showed restraint,” and that no bullets had been fired in the region.

Story: Sheikh Saaliq

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Japan’s New Emperor Remorseful in 1st War Anniversary Speech

Japanese Emperor Naruhito, accompanied by Empress Masako bows after delivering a speech before the main altar decorated with huge bank of chrysanthemums during a memorial ceremony for the war dead at Nippon Budokan Martial Arts Hall in Tokyo Thursday, Aug. 15, 2019. Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / AP
Japanese Emperor Naruhito, accompanied by Empress Masako bows after delivering a speech before the main altar decorated with huge bank of chrysanthemums during a memorial ceremony for the war dead at Nippon Budokan Martial Arts Hall in Tokyo Thursday, Aug. 15, 2019. Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / AP

TOKYO  — Emperor Naruhito has expressed deep remorse over Japan’s role in World War II in his first appearance at the annual ceremony marking the end of the hostilities.

The 59-year-old monarch is Japan’s first emperor born after the war, and his remarks Thursday followed the stance of his father, Akihito, who abdicated in May.

Naruhito, attending an event in Tokyo on the 74th anniversary of the war’s end, expressed “the feelings of deep remorse” over the tragedy. He pledged to reflect on the wartime past and expressed hope that the tragedy should never be repeated.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe stayed away from a Tokyo shrine that honors convicted war criminals among the war dead, but did not apologize or acknowledge Japanese wartime atrocities.

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Satellite Photos: Chinese Armored Vehicles Near Hong Kong

This satellite image captured on Monday, Aug. 12, 2019, provided by Satellite image ©2019 Maxar Technologies appears to show Chinese security force vehicles inside the Shenzen Bay Sports Center in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, bordering Hong Kong. Photo: Satellite image ©2019 Maxar Technologies via AP
This satellite image captured on Monday, Aug. 12, 2019, provided by Satellite image ©2019 Maxar Technologies appears to show Chinese security force vehicles inside the Shenzen Bay Sports Center in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, bordering Hong Kong. Photo: Satellite image ©2019 Maxar Technologies via AP

BEIJING — Satellite photos show what appear to be armored personnel carriers and other vehicles belonging to the China’s paramilitary People’s Armed Police parked in a sports complex in the city of Shenzhen, in what some have interpreted as a threat from Beijing to use increased force against pro-democracy protesters across the border in Hong Kong.

The pictures collected on Monday by Maxar’s WorldView show 500 or more vehicles sitting on and around the soccer stadium at the Shenzhen Bay Sports Center just across the harbor from the Asian financial hub that has been rocked by more than two months of near-daily street demonstrations.

Flights at Hong Kong’s airport, one of the world’s busiest, were disrupted on Monday and Tuesday by a mass demonstration and occasional violence inside its terminal.

Chinese state media have said only that the Shenzhen exercises had been planned before hand and were not directly related to the unrest in Hong Kong, although they came shortly after the central government in Beijing said the protests were beginning to show the “sprouts of terrorism.”

President Donald Trump tweeted that U.S. intelligence believes that the Chinese government is moving troops to its border with Hong Kong and that, “Everyone should be calm and safe!”

Beijing has been apparently reluctant to send in police or army units from the mainland or to mobilize the People’s Liberation Army garrison in Hong Kong to quell the unrest. It’s seen as mindful of the devastating effect that would have both on the territory’s reputation as a safe and stable place to invest in, and as indication of the Communist Party’s failure to win over the hearts and minds of the city’s 7.3 million residents, 22 years after the former British colony was handed over to China.

It would also be a shocking reminder of the PLA’s bloody crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrations centered on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square 30 years ago, which remains a taboo subject in China but is memorialized with a massive rally and march each year in Hong Kong.

Yet, mainland China is believed to have already dispatched officers to fortify the ranks of the Hong Kong police, and may also have planted decoys among the protesters in order to encourage more violent acts that could eventually turn ordinary Hong Kongers against the protest movement.

Such a change in sentiments does not yet appear to have happened despite rising violence surrounding protests and the shutdown of the city’s usually bustling international airport for two days after it was occupied by demonstrators.

Story: Christopher Bodeen

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CP Foods India Enters IFFO RS IP for Fishmeal Sustainable Production

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PF (India) Private Limited, a subsidiary of CP Foods PCL, is ready to enter into IFFO RS Improver Program (IFFO RS IP) by this year making the first company in India to apply fishmeal sourcing and manufacturing in line with international sustainable standard.

Dr. Sujint Thammasart DVM, Chief Operating Officer – Aqua Business of CP Foods, said the plan of CPF India to apply IFFO RS IP this year will encourage the company prepares and improves operation. With the plan, the company will engage on stepping further for IFFO RS Standard certification, the world’s best practices of fishmeal and fish oil and traceability throughout the supply chain.

“CP Foods’ Aqua Business both in Thailand and the overseas investment have single-standard for sustainable procurement of raw materials. Particularly, we encourage fishing industry to work on international standard legally,” stressed Dr. Sujint.

Mr. Pichaiyut Tachapong, Senior Vice President for Quality Control of CPF India, said applying IFFO RS IP is the beginning step to improve and review its fishmeal procurement system to ensure that it is well done under laws and international standards. It is also drawn a strong intention to reduce environmental impacts and preserve balance of nature. The plan will allow the company engages legal fishing with appropriate fishing equipment which will not create any extinction of some fish species.

“Following the IFFO RS IP guideline will kick off CPF India steps further to achieve IFFO RS Standard in the future. It will confirm that the company’s fishmeal come from legal practices and sources without IUU fishing,” pointed Mr. Pichaiyut.

Besides, CPF India also fully supports India Government and Omega fishmeal and Oil Private Limited to draft the country’s sustainable fishing and sourcing action plan (Fishery Improvement Project Action Plan) for IFFO RS approval.

So far, 100% fishmeal in Thailand has been certified by IFFO RS. CP Foods also encourages its subsidiary in Vietnam to apply IFFO RS IP which target to achieve IFFO RS by 2022. In addition, it plans to extend such good practices to the Philippines and Malaysia.

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Witnesses Testify Against Bangkok Bombing Suspect

Wildun Maha and Luai Sae-ngae being escorted by police on Aug. 13.
Wildun Maha and Luai Sae-ngae being escorted by police on Aug. 13.

BANGKOK — Witnesses testified Wednesday against one of the two men accused by authorities of planting explosive devices in front of the Royal Thai Police headquarters on Aug. 1.

Deputy Bangkok police chief Pakapong Phongpetra told reporters Wednesday that three witnesses, one of whom is a taxi driver who drove the suspects to a bus station, have identified Wildun Maha as one of the perpetrators.

Wildun was brought to the capital on Tuesday for further interrogation.

Authorities are pursuing four charges against both men, including cooperating in criminal activity, possessing explosive devices, attempted manslaughter, and handling explosive devices in public spaces. The suspects have reportedly denied all the allegations, but the police say they have gathered enough evidence to press charges.

Both men are now being detained separately across two Bangkok police stations, with armed police on guard inside and outside their cells around the clock. The police said that both men “do not show any signs of stress” and are cooperating with officials.

Another suspect, Luai Sae-ngae, is to be identified before witnesses on Thursday.

A report on Channel 3 on Aug. 3 quoted an unnamed police source as saying that the two men had confessed that their involvement in the bomb attacks was revenge for military operations in the Deep South. However, the Prime Minister himself later disputed this claim.

Arrest warrants were issued for four more men on Wednesday: Hasae Bae-loh, 22; Asmee Abuwa, 22; Usman Poh-loh, 20; and Amri Maming, 23. All men are from the Deep South provinces of either Narathiwat or Pattani.

On Aug. 5, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha confirmed that nine people alleged to be involved in the bomb attacks that rocked Bangkok on Aug. 2 have been arrested.

The first bombs were discovered in front of the Royal Thai Police headquarters on Aug. 1, but the police were able to diffuse them. The next morning, bombs exploded at five areas across Bangkok, injuring four.

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Young First-Time MPs Keen to Be Friends Despite Political Divide

Taopiphob Limjittrakorn, left, Thanikan Pornponhsaroj, center, and Saratsanun Unnopporn, right, during a panel discussion held by the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand on August 13.
Taopiphob Limjittrakorn, left, Thanikan Pornponhsaroj, center, and Saratsanun Unnopporn, right, during a panel discussion held by the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand on August 13.

BANGKOK When Taopiphob Limjittrakorn, a first-time MP from the Future Forward party went out to meet his constituents – who were complaining about dust from nearby condominium construction – one man said Future Forward’s leader is a communist.

Taopiphob, 30, an MP for Khlong San district in Bangkok, reminded the man that the war on communism ended three decades ago. He said that if the citizen was affected by the condominium construction, he was willing to represent him.

Newbie members of Parliament from the Phalang Pracharath, Pheu Thai, and Future Forward parties have told the press they are seeking friends from the opposing political camp and will serve voters regardless of who they voted for.

“As an MP, I represent my district, regardless of whether someone voted for me or not. I represent women as well,” Thanikan Pornponhsaroj, 38 and a Phalang Pracharath Party MP, said during a panel at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand on Wednesday evening.

Although Pheu Thai and Future Forward are aligned, Phalang Pracharath is on the opposite end of the political spectrum in being led by Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, the junta leader-cum-PM.

“I am open to everyone. I gave my mobile [number] to everyone, though nobody calls,” Taopiphob said.

Taopiphob took pundits by surprise by winning in his district in the March election – a man once arrested for brewing beer in his own home is now sitting in the legislative assembly. Taopiphop formerly ran a vaporwave cafe serving craft beer, which was closed last year. Even Taopiphop himself couldn’t believe his electoral victory, tweeting in March that “a political miracle has happened!”

Meanwhile, 30-year-old Saratsanun Unnopporn, a first-time MP from Khon Kaen though also the descendent of a local political dynasty, has found herself the spokesperson of Pheu Thai’s youth wing. Though Pheu Thai is a polarizing party, she says that hasn’t stopped her from connecting with MPs from her generation even across the political divide.

“We speak the same language. And that’s a good thing, right?” Saratsanun said.

The young MP went on to express her disagreement with the junta-appointed Senate, calling it “absurd”.

“There are good and qualified people but I don’t like the process,” she concluded.

None of the MPs said they desire a new round of elections soon, despite the polarizing nature of the Prayuth Chan-ocha administration.

“I hope it’s going to last,” Thanikan said of the new government, adding that it’s best for the Kingdom to progress step by step.

Taopiphob, though agreeing that a return to elections would not be fruitful, predicted that the political situation “will get ugly fast”. Saratsanun meanwhile foresees a fierce struggle over the state budget in Parliament soon, as well as conflict within the governing coalition.

Additional reporting Asaree Thaitrakulpanich

Related stories:

Prayuth Wins Second Term as PM

Surprises, Snubs of Thailand’s 2019 Election

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Court Acquits 24 Redshirt Leaders of Terrorism

Redshirt leaders led by Jatuporn Prompan at Criminal Court Wednesday morning just before the verdict was handed.
Redshirt leaders led by Jatuporn Prompan at Criminal Court Wednesday morning just before the verdict was handed.

BANGKOK — A court on Wednesday acquitted 24 Redshirt leaders of terrorism charges leveled against them in relation to protests in 2010.

In the ruling, the Court of First Instance stated that the Redshirt leaders engaged in “a political struggle and not an act of terrorism”.

State prosecutors had accused the defendants, which included prominent activists Jatuporn Prompan, Nattawut Saikua and Weng Tojirakarn, of sedition and terrorism in relation to a protest to oust the then Abhisit Vejjajiva administration during the period of Feb. 28 to May 20, 2010. Military crackdowns on the protests ended in at least 90 deaths, mostly civilians.

“We fought the case over the past nine years. The Thai legal system is an accusatorial system … Our job was to defend ourselves,” Jatuporn said before the ruling on Wednesday.

However, Weng said after the hearing that the prosecutor will likely appeal the lower court’s decision. Terrorism carries a maximum punishment of death in Thailand.

“I have always respected the court and I was willing to accept the ruling whether positive or negative. The court confirmed that we exercised the right to protest as protected under the constitution, however,” Weng said in an interview over the phone.

In August 2018, Jatuporn was released from a year in prison after he was sentenced for libelous remarks made against former PM Abhisit Vejjajiva of the Democrat Party.

Related stories:

Redshirt Leader Jatuporn Released From Prison

Jailed Redshirt Leader’s Defamation Prison Term Reduced

‪Redshirt Leader Imprisoned After Bail Revoked

Supreme Court Jails RedshirtLeader for Defaming Former PM

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‘Mumford & Sons’ Land November for First Bangkok Concert

Photo: Mumford & Sons / Facebook
Photo: Mumford & Sons / Facebook

BANGKOK — British folk-rock band Mumford & Sons will perform in their first gig in Bangkok this November.

The quartet will perform on November 21 at GMM Muang Thai Live House inside CentralWorld. Tickets will be sold online starting August 31 via Thai TicketMajor, though prices have yet to be revealed.

Concertgoers should expect renditions from their latest album “Delta,” released in 2018, as well as previous hits such as “The Cave” and “Little Lion Man.”

The Grammy award-winning band was founded in 2007, rising to fame in 2009 following the debut of their first album “Sigh No More,” which peaked second in the Billboard 200. Their second album, “Babel,” released in 2013, earned them two Grammy awards for Album of the Year and Best Music Film (for the documentary “Big Easy Express” in which the band featured.)

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Park Rangers Report DJ to Police for Fishing in National Park

Left, Poomjai “DJ Poom” Tangsanga holds a fish captured in Mu Koh Chumphon National Park, in a video he posted in August 2018. Right, a park ranger holds a printed screenshot of the video at the same spot in the park, in a photo posted on Aug. 13, 2019.
Left, Poomjai “DJ Poom” Tangsanga holds a fish captured in Mu Koh Chumphon National Park, in a video he posted in August 2018. Right, a park ranger holds a printed screenshot of the video at the same spot in the park, in a photo posted on Aug. 13, 2019.

CHUMPHON — Police are awaiting additional evidence Wednesday from park officials who reported a DJ for fishing in a national park.

Park rangers on Tuesday filed various police complaints against Poomjai “DJ Poom” Tangsanga, 40, for alleged charges involving unauthorized fishing and boating in Mu Koh Chumphon National Park.

“National park officials will come this afternoon to give us more evidence about the case,” Police Lt. Col. Dejbundit Dunpelee of Pak Nam Chumphon Provincial Police Station said by phone Wednesday. “After that, we will issue summons.”

Last year on Aug. 8, DJ Poom posted a video showing himself and six other people fishing from a speedboat and cooking fish to his YouTube channel, before erasing it in July this year.

The Phaya Suea Ranger Facebook page, which announced that rangers went to the police over the video on Tuesday, shows screenshots of DJ Poom’s erased video next to photos of the rangers in the same spots visited by DJ Poom.

Dejbundit said the summons would be for all seven people featured on the speedboat, not just DJ Poom.

Photo: DJPoom / Instagram
Photo: DJPoom / Instagram

The rangers said they identified the islands DJ Poom was sailing near in the video as Koh Rad, Koh Kaloke, Koh Lakngam, and Koh Lawa, which are all within Mu Koh Chumphon National Park.

The complaints cover unauthorized fishing in a national park (punishable by five years in jail and a 20,000 baht fine) and bringing a vehicle, in this case a boat, into a national park without permission (punishable by a month in jail and a 1,000 baht fine). The rangers also said DJ Poom brought in fishing equipment into the park without permission and broke national park rules, offenses punishable by a 500 baht fine respectively.

DJ Poom has since apologized via an Instagram video and said he will cooperate with the authorities.

“We’re taking action. This is very serious … I feel very bad. Our [Youtube] show is about finding raw materials, fishing, as well as environmentalism,” DJ Poom said. “On the show we’re always complimenting the Department of Fisheries. This is a big mistake … I apologize for disappointing everyone.”

“This is a great lesson for me. In the future I will be very careful and make sure nothing illegal happens on the show again,” he continued

The speedboat, named T.Thanit, is registered under the name of Cholteerapong Anantayothin in Pathum Thani, according to the rangers.

This isn’t DJ Poom’s first fish rodeo. In 2015, he was slammed for posting videos of himself feeding fish at a coral reef at Koh Samui in Surat Thani.

Nature photographer and environmentalist Sirachai “Shin” Arunrugstichai, who got in an online tiff with DJ Poom over the videos, told Khaosod English that DJ Poom “didn’t admit he was wrong and even posted that he was an expert in environmentalism.”

DJ Poom came to fame for his role as a DJ on Virgin Hits radio and as a VJ on MTV Thailand during the noughties.

Related stories:

Thailand ‘Prostituting Its Resources,’ Says Top Nature Photographer

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Thais Divided Over Banning Mother’s Day School Festivities

The now-deleted photo originally posted by Facebook user Nana Copy on Friday showing a boy being consoled by his friend and teacher during Mother’s Day event at an unidentified school. Photo: Nana Copy / Facebook
The now-deleted photo originally posted by Facebook user Nana Copy on Friday showing a boy being consoled by his friend and teacher during Mother’s Day event at an unidentified school. Photo: Nana Copy / Facebook

Some Thai netizens are calling for the abolition of Mother’s Day events in schools, arguing that they can be harmful for students without mothers or whose mothers can’t be present.

The debate over Mother’s Day school events, held nationwide in the lead up to Mother’s Day on August 12, was ignited by photos of crying students waiting for their mothers that went viral on Friday.

Facebook user Artoo Jak posted a tear-jerking video on Facebook of a boy crying and clinging to a school fence while waiting for his mother to show up. The same day, Facebook user Nana Copy posted a now-deleted photo of a boy crying beside a vacant chair, surrounded by other students and their mothers.

“It’s fine that your mother couldn’t be here. I’m sure that she loves you, don’t cry,” the accompanying caption read.

More than 9,655 people have now signed a Change.org petition calling on the Ministry of Education to cancel Mother’s Day events in schools nationwide. The petition suggests instead that schools adopt activities in which everyone can participate regardless of their family situation, such as honoring Queen Mother Sirikit or events that do not rely on parents’ attendance.

When the Facebook page “Sorry For My Friend’s Behavior” reshared Nana Copy’s post, netizens in the thread called for the event to be cancelled.

“[The school] should come up with activities that are joyful and creative. I feel sorry for the kid. Not everyone lives in a full family,” user Nam Thanyaluck commented.

Some celebrities, such as actress Pimpaka “Moo” Siangsomboon, the mother of actor Naphat “Nine” Siangsomboon, echoed the concerns of netizens. Pimpaka took to her Facebook on Friday to share her experience of allowing her fatherless son to skip school on Mother’s Day to prevent further grief.

“If you want your children to show their respect, just do it privately at home,” Pimpaka’s post read. “Those who want to put an end to these events should do it now, otherwise they will continue to provoke trauma for those who have lost their parents.”

But the Ministry of Education has made it clear that Mother’s Day events will continue to be held as part of “good tradition.”

“It is our tradition to honour our parents,” education minister Kalaya Sophonpanich said during a press conference on July 30. “It is a good tradition, but the new generation might not understand the importance. The events should be held as usual, whether parents can attend or not.”

Similarly, not all netizens have called for a complete end to Mother’s Day festivities at school.

“The activities aren’t bad at all, but it depends on how the organizers manage them to protect children’s feelings,” user Bas Sirawit commented.

Mother’s Day events celebrate both the birthday of Queen Mother Sirikit and the role of mothers in society through a wide range of activities, some of which can be controversial such as mass prostration of students at their mother’s feet. Students may be required to sing Royal Anthems, perform shows or compete in poetry contests.

Previously, Mother’s Day was celebrated every April 15. But in 1976, the date of the holiday was changed to Queen Mother Sirikit’s birthday on August 12.

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