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Oil tanker explodes near petrol station in Khon Kaen, students evacuated

Black smoke engulfs the area after an oil tanker exploded near a school in Khon Kaen.

KHON KAEN — An oil tanker exploded near a petrol station close to a school in Kranuan district, Khon Kaen, on the morning of 2 February 2026, triggering a large fire and forcing the evacuation of students.

The blast occurred not far from Sri Kranuan School in Nong Ko subdistrict. Thick black smoke rose into the sky, with intermittent explosions reported, prompting authorities to cordon off the area for safety.

Teachers at Sri Kranuan School ordered an immediate evacuation, moving students out of classrooms to a safe area away from the scene and monitoring them closely.

Firefighters from nearby areas deployed multiple fire engines and used water mixed with foam to contain the blaze and prevent it from spreading to surrounding sites.

No injuries or fatalities have been reported so far. The cause of the explosion and the extent of the damage are under investigation by relevant authorities.

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Thai tourists praised for helping push snowbound truck in Japan

Thai tourists step in to help snowbound truck in Japan

Thai tourists have been praised online after a video showed them getting off their tour bus to help push a truck stuck in deep snow in Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan.

The clip, posted on TikTok by user @eggtanya on 31 January 2026, shows an incident on 25 January, when heavy snowfall blanketed Sapporo for around 16 hours, making roads difficult to navigate.

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According to the post, the Thai tour group was travelling to a restaurant when they encountered a truck immobilised in the snow, blocking traffic and trapping vehicles behind it. Several members of the group got off the bus and helped push the truck clear so traffic could resume.

The video drew widespread attention online, with many commenters praising the Thais’ willingness to help. The clip has since gone viral, with viewers describing the moment as a reflection of Thai kindness and a helping spirit often seen as second nature.

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Naked Russian man causes mid-air chaos, denied entry to Thailand

Bangkok — Thai authorities have denied entry to a Russian man after reports of disruptive behaviour aboard a flight from Nha Trang to Bangkok, officials said on 31 January 2026.

Foreign media and passengers reported that the 41-year-old man acted erratically during the flight, allegedly removing his clothes, repeatedly running in and out of the lavatory, arguing with cabin crew and demanding that the aircraft door be opened. He was also heard shouting profanities in Russian and appeared to be intoxicated.

The Airports of Thailand and Don Mueang immigration police confirmed the man arrived on Thai AirAsia flight FD647 from Vietnam on 29 January. During immigration screening, officers found him to be heavily intoxicated, incoherent and unable to explain the purpose of his visit. He was also deemed to lack sufficient means of support as required by law.

Authorities said the man met the criteria of a prohibited person under the Immigration Act 1979 and was refused entry. He was deported back to his country of origin on flight FD646 at 7:55 on 31 January, officials said.

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Two French tourists fined over indecent act on Phuket tuk-tuk

Phuket police detain two French tourists after an indecent act was reported on a tuk-tuk in the resort island.

PHUKET — Police have fined two French tourists after they were caught engaging in an indecent act on a tuk-tuk in Phuket, following the circulation of a video clip on social media.

The clip, shared online on 30 January 2026, showed two foreign tourists allegedly having sex on a tuk-tuk while travelling over Patong Hill, drawing widespread criticism for damaging the image of the resort island.

Kathu police said they received photos and information from a concerned citizen showing the tourists undressing and committing an indecent act on a Phuket-registered tuk-tuk. Officers later questioned the driver, Kittisak Phonbamrung, who said he had taken the tourists to a hotel in Ratsada subdistrict, Mueang district.

On 31 January 2026, police tracked down the two suspects, identified as Valentine Celine Johanne and Crouzier Wesley Franck, both French nationals. They were brought in for questioning and charged with committing an indecent act in public by exposing their bodies or engaging in lewd behaviour.

Both admitted the offence and requested to pay a fine during the investigation to settle the case. Police fined each of them 5,000 baht, officials said.

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Burkina Faso’s junta dissolves all of country’s political parties, saying they cause divisions

FILE - Burkina Faso President Ibrahim Traore speaks at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on May 10, 2025. (Angelos Tzortzinis/Pool Photo via AP, File)

OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) — Burkina Faso’s military junta has dissolved all the political parties in the country and scrapped the laws governing them, according to a decree approved by the government on Thursday.

The dissolution of political parties and similar groups follows similar measures that activists say have targeted civic freedom and the opposition since military authorities took power in a 2022 coup.

Activities by political parties have long been suspended in the country under the junta. The new decree requires the assets of the parties to be transferred to the state, the government-run news agency said.

Minister of Territorial Administration Emile Zerbo said the dissolution comes after authorities found that the parties have deviated from the guidelines establishing them.

“The government believes that the proliferation of political parties has led to excesses, fostering division among citizens and weakening the social fabric,” he said after Thursday’s Council of Ministers meeting where the measure was approved.

Draft laws that will guide the establishment of future political parties and groups will be submitted to the legislature “as soon as possible,” the minister said.

Burkina Faso is among a growing number of countries in West and Central Africa that have been hit by a surge in coups and delays to the return of democratic rule.

Since taking power in a 2022 coup, its military leaders have launched sweeping reforms, including postponing elections that were expected to restore civilian rule and dissolving the country’s independent electoral commission.

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Gunman robs gold shop at Bangkok mall, escapes with 11 million baht in gold

CCTV footage shows a gunman inside a gold shop at a Bangkok mall on Sukhumvit 50 shortly before fleeing with gold worth about 11 million baht late on Friday night.

BANGKOK — A gunman robbed a well-known gold shop at a shopping mall on Sukhumvit 50 late on Friday night, escaping with gold jewellery weighing 149 baht and cash worth about 11 million baht, police said.

The incident was reported at about 11:30 on 30 January 2026 at a gold shop inside Lotus’s Sukhumvit 50 in Phra Khanong subdistrict, Khlong Toei district. Officers from the 191 emergency unit and Phra Khanong police rushed to the scene.

Police said the suspect was a lone man wearing a light-blue long-sleeved shirt, long trousers and a cap. He was armed with a gun and fled with gold worth about 11.17 million baht and around 170,000 baht in cash.

Shop staff told police the suspect entered the store as they were closing, poured fuel and brandished a firearm, threatening employees and demanding gold and valuables. After taking the items, he escaped. Staff then activated the emergency alarm and alerted police.

Investigators are reviewing CCTV footage from the mall and nearby routes and are continuing the manhunt for the suspect.

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Education Ministry allows stateless, migrant children to enrol in Thai schools

Thailand’s Ministry of Education has announced that all schools under its supervision must accept children and students who are foreign nationals, have no household registration, or do not hold Thai nationality, starting from the 2025 academic year.

The announcement, published in the Royal Gazette on 30 January, was signed by Education Minister Narumon Pinyosinwat. It revokes a previous regulation dated 31 October 2019, and updates policy to reflect current conditions and long-standing cabinet resolutions.

The ministry said the change aligns with a 5 July 2005, cabinet resolution requiring the expansion of educational opportunities for people without civil registration or Thai nationality. The new policy removes previous restrictions that limited access to certain groups, education levels, or areas, allowing everyone residing in Thailand to study at any level, in any type of school, nationwide.

The announcement also cites Thailand’s obligations as a party to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, stating that access to education would help students develop understanding and positive attitudes towards Thailand, contributing to long-term national security.

Under the new rules, schools must enrol students regardless of their legal or nationality status. If applicants have valid civil registration documents or a 13-digit national ID number, schools should follow normal admission procedures. If they do not, schools are required to register them under the G Code system, a special 13-digit student identification number beginning with the letter “G” for those without civil registration.

Schools are also instructed to coordinate with parents or guardians to gather relevant documents and work with district or local registration offices to apply for official civil registration and a 13-digit ID number where possible. If a student cannot legally be assigned civil status or an ID number, the school must retain the G Code until the student completes their education.

Once a student receives official civil registration and a national ID number, schools must update their records accordingly.

The regulation applies to all educational institutions under the Ministry of Education and takes effect from the 2025 academic year onward.

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Cambodian genocide survivor detained by ICE after 40 years in the US

Sithy Yi, a survivor of the Cambodian genocide who fled to the United States as a refugee in 1981, is now being held by US immigration authorities following a routine ICE check-in, despite a pending visa application.

A survivor of the Cambodian genocide who fled to the United States more than four decades ago has been detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), despite having a pending visa application, US media reported.

LAist News identified the woman as Sithy Yi, who arrived in the United States as a refugee in 1981 after escaping the Khmer Rouge genocide. She was detained earlier this month during a routine immigration check-in at an ICE office in Santa Ana, California.

Yi’s lawyer, Kim Luu-Ng, said she is being held unlawfully at the Adelanto detention centre. Although an immigration court ordered her removal in 2016, the order was later withheld due to concerns that she could face harm if returned to Cambodia.

Yi’s sister, Sithea San, told LAist that the family arrived in California in 1981, sponsored by their uncle, with just US$10. While Yi’s mother and sisters became US citizens by 1990, Yi’s path to legal residency was complicated by a medical condition that prevented her from attending school.

San said Yi’s detention on 8 January came as a shock, noting that her sister had consistently complied with immigration requirements and attended monthly ICE check-ins.
“She complied with every single thing that the government asked her to do,” San said.

According to Luu-Ng, Yi was fitted with an ankle monitor during a check in November after concerns that ICE might detain her, but officials at the time told her she would not be taken into custody as long as she complied with monitoring conditions.

The American Community Media website reported that Yi held a green card until 2011, when she was arrested on a drug conviction for possession with intent to sell. After completing her sentence and serving additional time for a parole violation, her permanent residency was revoked, leaving her without legal status.

Luu-Ng said Yi has since lived peacefully in her community and has never been considered a threat. She added that Yi did not have a Khmer interpreter during her drug trial, which she said amounted to a denial of due process.

“ICE has had numerous opportunities over the past 20 years to detain or deport my client but chose not to,” Luu-Ng said. “They repeatedly determined that she was not a danger to the community.”

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Thailand Election 2026: Anutin Charnvirakul and the politics of pragmatism

Anutin Charnvirakul, Bhumjaithai Party PM Candidate

This is the third article in Khaosod English’s four-part series examining Thailand’s leading prime ministerial contenders ahead of the 8 February election. In this instalment, we look at incumbent Prime Minister and Bhumjaithai Party leader Anutin Charnvirakul, a candidate defined less by ideology than by pragmatism.

Few Thai politicians embody contradiction as neatly as Anutin Charnvirakul. A conservative royalist who decriminalised marijuana, an anti-gambling crusader who thrives on deal-making, and the sitting prime minister facing re-election, Anutin represents a politics of pragmatism at a moment of deep uncertainty.

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Anutin is a known quantity, both as the incumbent prime minister and as a long-standing political figure.The 58-year-old veteran politician has held multiple Cabinet portfolios before becoming prime minister. These include serving as public health minister during the most critical phase of the COVID-19 pandemic — a period that produced sharply divided assessments of his leadership. One episode that continues to draw criticism was his 2020 remark that Western tourists who refused to wear face masks should be expelled from Thailand for putting others at risk during the coronavirus outbreak.

Some critics question how clean his administration is, pointing to his decision to appoint a former heroin smuggler to his Cabinet. Many nevertheless see Anutin as the only viable prime ministerial choice to represent conservative royalists, largely because Bhumjaithai is viewed as the sole clearly conservative royalist option among the three leading parties. The other two leading parties, Pheu Thai and People’s Party, are notably more progressive.

While Anutin has declared war on casinos and gambling, he is also the architect of Thailand’s progressive decriminalisation of marijuana, initially for medical use and, by default, recreational consumption. His brief stint as prime minister also saw Anutin leaning heavily into nationalist sentiment during the second round of military conflicts between Thailand and Cambodia. While campaigning in Nakhon Sawan province, Anutin told locals that there would be no reopening of Thai-Cambodian border checkpoints as long as he remained in power, describing the idea as a “taboo word”.

Prominent social media influencer Nattaa “Bow” Mahattana told Khaosod English why she believes Anutin is the most suitable candidate for the premiership.

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“Anutin might be the most suitable candidate for the next prime minister. He is very pragmatic in his administration and has demonstrated this over the past few months by recruiting experienced executives to run crucial ministries. They got on the job quickly and achieved a few “quick wins” in a short time, which I think came as a surprise to many.

“This stems from Anutin’s two decades of experience in Thai politics. He knows what can be done and what cannot, so he does not sell dreams but promises what is achievable. His most important asset, however, is his smooth relationship with all sectors and political actors in the country.

“This could help ensure the stability that a Thai government badly needs. Within an undemocratic constitution that grants extensive powers to independent bodies such as the Constitutional Court, a government can easily be tripped up and collapse if it does not know how to operate within such a system.”

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‘Stress at Work Turns People Gay’? Malaysian minister’s claim sparks backlash

Dr. Zulkifli Hasan, minister in the Prime Minister’s Department for Religious Affairs of Malaysia

KUALA LUMPUR — A Malaysian cabinet minister has come under fire after linking work-related stress to involvement in the LGBT community, comments that have drawn mockery and criticism from the public and rights groups.

Dr. Zulkifli Hasan, minister in the Prime Minister’s Department for Religious Affairs, made the remarks in a written reply to parliament, where he cited work stress, social influence and weak religious practice as factors behind what he described as “LGBT-related behaviour”.

“Societal influence, sexual experiences, work stress, and other personal factors come under this category [of possible causes],” Zulkifli said in response to a question from opposition lawmaker Siti Zailah Mohd Yusoff of the Islamist PAS party.

The comments were made as part of a parliamentary inquiry into LGBT trends in Malaysia, including age groups, ethnicity and contributing factors. Zulkifli also said that between 2022 and 2025, authorities recorded 135 cases involving arrests or prosecutions related to LGBT activities.

Same-sex relations remain illegal in Malaysia, and the minister’s remarks have reignited debate over official attitudes towards sexual minorities in the country.

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