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‘She Accepts Her Punishments,’ Praewa Family Apologizes to Crash Victims

Orachorn “Praewa” Thephasadin Na Ayudhya at the crash site in 2010.

BANGKOK — The extended, illustrious family of a woman convicted of killing nine people in a car crash in 2010 said Thursday they are sorry for what happened and pledged to assist the families of the victims.

In a statement released to the media Thursday afternoon, representatives of the powerful Thephasadin Na Ayudhya clan – which counts army generals and lawmakers among its ranks – said they will set up a fund to pay for the legal fees incurred by victims’ families in their pursuit of compensation. The legal fees have not been paid as mandated by the court in May.

Praewa Thephasadin Na Ayudhya, who is now known as Rawinpirom Arunwong, was 16 when she crashed her car into the back of a university van in Bangkok, killing nine people onboard and wounding several others. She had no driver’s license at the time.

The victims’ families told the media in recent days that they have not received any compensation from Praewa despite a verdict in May that ordered her to pay out a total of 25 million baht to the families.

The news renewed outrage on social media, where many accused the Thephasadin Na Ayudhya clan of using its influence to help one of its scions avoid legal repercussions.

But in a two-page statement handed out to reporters prior to a news conference today, Thephasadin Na Ayudhya representatives asked the public not to conflate Praewa’s actions with the rest of the clan, which numbers 200-plus families.

“Many used aggressive, rude language in talking about our deceased ancestors,” the statement said. “[We] would like to ask them to stop referring to our clan and forefathers, since it is illegal and we do not want to cause divisions in society.”

Apart from setting up a fund to pay the legal fees of the victims’ families, the clan also urged Praewa to respect the court verdict and take responsibility by compensating the victims.

The statement went on to ask the public to have sympathy for Praewa and give her a second chance.

“She was a minor at the time. She did not mean for any accident to happen,” the statement said. “She has also shown responsibility by not making any attempt to flee and accepting all punishments.”

Praewa, now 25, has changed her name twice. In 2014 she married former interim parliament member Sorawee Ratpitakteerada, but her mother Laddawan Thephasadin Na Ayudhya told Channel 3 in a live interview today that they are now divorced.

Although reports on social media said Praewa worked at the Ministry of Defense, army officials said today the rumors are false because she did not pass the examination.

Laddawan also said in the interview her family is currently trying to find buyers for their 105-million baht land plots in order to pay the compensation ordered by the court.

Praewa herself has never spoken publicly about her role in the fatal accident.

Formed by descendants of past monarchs and court noblemen with Chinese backgrounds, the Thephasadin Na Ayudhya clan bears one of the elite rajasakuls – or royally bestowed surnames – whose members include army generals, junta-appointed lawmakers and actors.

Additional reporting Asaree Thaitrakulpanich

Related stories:

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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‘Big Bad Wolf’ Book Sale Back With 3 Million English and Thai Books

Photo: Big Bad Wolf Books / Facebook
Photo: Big Bad Wolf Books / Facebook

BANGKOK — Dust off your bookshelves because massive piles of discounted books are returning to Bangkok this August.

The annual Big Bad Wolf discounted book fair is returning to its lair at Impact Muang Thong Thani convention center this August, with even more books to choose from than previous years.

More than 3 million books ranging from fiction, non-fiction, to children’s books will be marked down 50 to 90 percent. All books are new, but titles may be from years back as books are bargained from the excess stocks of international distributors.

For example, Hillary Clinton’s memoir “Hard Choices” will cost only 180 baht, compared to 1,035 baht at a downtown bookstore.

In addition to the English-language collections offered in previous years, this year’s event will also feature Thai-language books. The organizer claims to also be the sole distributor in Asia for augmented reality (AR) books, which will be on sale for only 180 baht — so there’s even something for tablet-addicted children.

Don’t worry if there is not enough space in your tote for your haul, as the organizer has partnered with Kerry Express courier service to provide nationwide book deliveries that customers can arrange on site.

Surachet Worawongwasu, the director of the organizing company Ready2Read, said during a press conference on Thursday that he aims to make books, especially English-language ones, accessible to everyone — not just the wealthy.

Some of unsold books will be donated to remote schools and libraries across the country. Visitors can also contribute to the “Red Readerhood” scheme by dropping purchased books in collecting boxes.

The Big Bad Wolf Book Sale was founded by a bookworm couple Andrew Yap and Jacqueline Ng. The first event took place in 2009 in Malaysia, before coming to Thailand for the first time in 2016 with two million books. The regional book fair has since expanded to other parts of Asia including Indonesia, Myanmar, and Taiwan.

“Our event is almost the cheapest among Big Bad Wolves in Asia, as Thailand has no VAT or import duties for books,” Surachet said.

Surachet Worawongwasu showing an augmented reality (AR) application from a tablet during the press conference on July 18.
Surachet Worawongwasu showing an augmented reality (AR) application from a tablet during the press conference on July 18.

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The “Big Bad Wolf Book Sale 2019” will run from August 9-19, for 24 hours daily at Impact Forum Hall 4, Impact Muang Thong Thani. The venue is reachable by taxi, or Impact Link shuttle vans from BTS Mo Chit exit No. 4 and MRT Chatuchak Park exit No. 3.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated the nationality of the Big Bad Wolf founders. The error has been corrected.

Related stories:

Passport Bookshop: A Haven for Travel Book Lovers

New Travel Bookshop Brings the World to Bangkok’s Old Town

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Suspect Screaming ‘You Die!’ Kills Up to 23 at Anime Studio

Smoke billows from a three-story building of Kyoto Animation in a fire in Kyoto, western Japan, Thursday, July 18, 2019. Kyoto prefectural police said the fire broke out Thursday morning after a man burst into it and spread unidentified liquid and put fire. Photo:Kyodo News via AP
Smoke billows from a three-story building of Kyoto Animation in a fire in Kyoto, western Japan, Thursday, July 18, 2019. Kyoto prefectural police said the fire broke out Thursday morning after a man burst into it and spread unidentified liquid and put fire. Photo:Kyodo News via AP

TOKYO — A man screaming “You die!” burst into an animation production studio in Kyoto, Japan, and set it on fire early Thursday, authorities said, killing seven people and leaving at least 16 more presumed dead.

The blaze injured another 36 people, some of them critically, Japanese authorities said. Most were workers at Kyoto Animation, known for mega-hit stories featuring high school girls.

The fire started in the three-story building in Japan’s ancient capital after the suspect sprayed an unidentified liquid accelerant, Kyoto prefectural police and fire department officials said.

Seven have been confirmed dead with severe burns, said fire department official Satoshi Fujiwara. Six people also found on the first and second floors were presumed dead, Fujiwara said.

On the third floor, more than 10 people were found unresponsive, he said. Some of them were found on the stairs, where they apparently collapsed while gasping for air and trying to go out to the roof.

The suspect was injured and taken to a hospital, officials said. Police are investigating the man on suspicion of arson.

Survivors who saw the attacker said he was not their colleague and that he was screaming “(You) die!” when he dumped the liquid and started the fire, according to Japanese media reports. They said some of the survivors got splashed with the liquid.

Footage on Japan’s NHK television showed gray smoke billowing from the charred building. Other footage showed windows blown off.

“There was an explosion, then I heard people shouting, some asking for help,” a female witness told TBS TV. “Black smoke was rising from windows on upper floors, then there was a man struggling to crawl out of the window.”

Witnesses in the neighborhood said they heard bangs coming from the building, others said they saw people coming out blackened, bleeding, walking barefoot, Kyodo News reported.

Rescue officials set up an orange tent outside the studio building to provide first aid and sort out the injured.

Fire department officials said more than 70 people were in the building at the time of the fire and many of them ran outside.

Kyoto Animation, better known as KyoAni, was founded in 1981 as an animation and comic book production studio, and its hits include “Lucky Star,” ”K-On!” and “Haruhi Suzumiya.”

With at least 23 killed or presumed dead, the fire was the worst mass killing in Japan since a man stabbed and killed 19 people at an assisted living facility in western Tokyo in 2016.

A fire in 2001 in Tokyo’s congested Kabukicho entertainment district killed 44 people in its worst known case of arson in modern times. Police never announced an arrest for setting the blaze, though five people were convicted of negligence. In 2008, 16 people died in a blaze at a movie theater in Osaka, near Kyoto.

Story: Mari Yamaguchi

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

Thawin Chaotiang makes garlands July 17, 2019 in Ratchaburi.
Thawin Chaotiang makes garlands July 17, 2019 in Ratchaburi.

BANGKOK — Childless after her daughter was killed in a car crash at the hands of a wealthy teen, Suchada Palakul was also soon widowed, with her husband dying from grief.

On Dec. 27, 2010, Suchada’s husband, Nirat Sudthanakit, waited to pick up his daughter Trong Sudthanakit at BTS Mo Chit, but she never arrived. Trong was riding in a Thammasat University van when Orachorn “Praewa” Thephasadin Na Ayudhya — now going by Rawinpirom Arunwong — crashed into it, killing nine including Trong.

“When he knew she died, he lost it. He couldn’t control his mind. He was so sad, always crying, and became depressed. He was still, quiet, and stopped eating,” Suchada said on the Tham Trong Trong show.

Suchada Palakul, left, talks about Trong Sudthanakit and Nirat Sudthanakit. Photo: Thairath / YouTube
Suchada Palakul, left, talks about Trong Sudthanakit and Nirat Sudthanakit. Photo: Thairath / YouTube

Nirat stopped working and only read Buddhist texts, distancing himself from his wife. Then a year and three months after Trong’s death, Suchada found Nirat dead in his sleep.

“He called my name twice, and then died. He had no chronic illnesses. I believe he died from grief. She was our only daughter,” Suchada said.

Suchada says she is still crying over the death of both her daughter and husband.

“I have friends and my daughter’s friends to advise me on what to do. But my life right now has almost nothing left,” Suchada said.

Interviews with the families of Praewa’s crash victims are coming in a wave of renewed media interest in the case, after victims revealed they received absolutely no compensation despite the orders of the civil court when the case against Praewa concluded on May 8. Victims also said they have never received a sincere apology from Praewa.

In April 2017, amid a legal battle that had lasted years, Praewa’s legal representatives managed to cut the total restitution for the nine families from 30 million baht to 19.8 million baht.

Praewa’s family – the Thephasadin Na Ayudhya family – have announced they will give a press conference at 4pm today at Ploen restaurant on Vibhavadi Rangsit Road.

This afternoon, Praewa’s mother, Laddawan Thephasadin Na Ayudhya, gave a live phone interview on Channel 3 apologizing for the fatal accident and saying that the family would repay the victims after they sell land plots worth 105 million baht.

“My daughter is both alive and dead at the same time. We all need medication to sleep, and we’re never happy. We’re always crying and suffering,” Laddawan said. “She may have depression. I’m scared she may kill herself any day.”

Laddawan said that Praewa married former National Legislative Assembly member Sorawee Ratpitakteerada in 2014, but has since divorced. Instead of jail time, Praewa served 138 hours of community service, completed six years after the accident. At the time of the accident, Praewa was 16 and an unlicensed driver.

Laddawan suggested that the Ministry of Justice intervene to pay the families first, and allow the Thephasadin clan to repay the Ministry once it is able to sell their land.

“No matter what your clan representative says today, what I want to hear the most is that you will follow what the court ordered,” Warunyoo Ketchoo, a survivor of the crash and an outspoken Twitter user, wrote Thursday. “We have suffered enough. Over the past nine years, you showed us that you never wanted a solution.”

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

Tomoko Nando speaks about Pinyo Jinantuya. Photo: Thairath / YouTube
Tomoko Nando speaks about Pinyo Jinantuya. Photo: Thairath / YouTube

Japanese widow Tomoko Nando also spoke about the loss of her husband, Pinyo Jinantuya.

“Losing him was like losing a leg. I’m alone. I had him to talk, discuss, and eat with,” Nando said, who speaks fluent Thai. “Nowadays, I’m alone and don’t want to talk to anyone. No one understands me like he did.”

Sitapat Pongratthawon on the Tham Trong Trong show. Photo: Thairath / YouTube
Sitapat Pongratthawon on the Tham Trong Trong show. Photo: Thairath / YouTube

Sitapat Pongratthawon, the widow of Ukkrit Ratanachoamsri who left behind a then-3-year-old boy, said that Praewa’s lawyers spoke callously to her about seeking compensation.

“They said, ‘If you want to settle, contact me. Even if you want to sue us to the fullest extent of the law, I don’t know if you’re going to get anything, or how far the case will go. We don’t have to give you what you want from us,’” Sitapat recalled.

Thawin Chaotiang makes garlands July 17, 2019 in Ratchaburi.
Thawin Chaotiang makes garlands July 17, 2019 in Ratchaburi.

Meanwhile, the mother of one of the nine victims lives in poverty.

Thawin Chaotiang, the adoptive mother of doctor Sastra Chaotiang, said that she has to sell flower garlands at the City Municipality Market in Ratchaburi City to make ends meet now that there’s no hope of getting compensation for her dead son.

She once had high hopes for a more comfortable life after her son Sastra, a scientist at the National Science and Technology Development Agency, came back to Thailand with a doctorate degree from the UK.

“If he was alive, I wouldn’t have to sell garlands. He always told me that he would take care of me,” Thawin, 71, said.

Thawin said the last time she saw Praewa was in 2010 at her son’s funeral.
“It’s been such a long time. That word, sympathy – they probably have none,” Thawin said. “I’m old now. I’m fine with anything, and I’m not even bargaining or asking for much.”

Krid Rodaree, the father of another victim, Kiattimant Rodaree, took to Facebook on Jan. 2, 2011 to post a note titled “From the father of Kiattimant, who died.” Attached are Kiattimant’s Chulalongkorn University engineering graduation photos, childhood photos, and news about the crash that killed him at the age of 23.

Netizens, who have been raking the internet for information on Praewa and the crash, have made Krid’s letter go viral years later.

Kiattimant Rodaree’s funeral photo. Photo: Kiattimant Rodaree / Facebook
Kiattimant Rodaree’s funeral photo. Photo: Kiattimant Rodaree / Facebook

“He was a good son who never made his parents sad, a good older brother to his siblings, and beloved by everyone he knew. It’s difficult to come to terms with this, and to find the words to express what we are feeling,” Krid wrote.

He also condemned Praewa’s lack of apology to the victims’ families.

“The litigant’s reactions and expressions have been inappropriate to the situation. The victims should have received basic healing words such as ‘I’m sorry’ or ‘Sorry for being involved in the situation’ which would have lessened our grief,” Krid wrote.

Prior to his death, Kiattimant had planned to continue his studies in nanoengineering.

 

Related stories:

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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Passport Bookshop: A Haven for Travel Book Lovers

BANGKOK — For almost 15 years, Passport Bookshop has been the hub of Bangkok’s travel book lovers. 

While a small, independent bookshop may not be the most profitable venture in a digital era, the two-storey book shop on Phra Sumen Road in Old Bangkok has been purveying travel books and guidebooks in both English and Thai for more than a decade. 

For shop-owner Amnat Rattanamanee, reading a physical book is a more rewarding experience than online reading, since lengthy research goes into printing a book while any blogger can hammer out a quick article. 

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“Some writers dedicate their whole lives to penning just a single book,” said Amnat.

Moreover, Amnat believes travel is most enriching when tourists take the time to read up beforehand. 

“There are places that are a waste to visit if you have no background knowledge. If you visit Angkor Wat with no [historical and architectural] knowledge, then all you’ll see is stone. You need to have some knowledge in order to appreciate certain places,” insisted the shop owner.

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Amnat Rattanamanee

When asked for a recommendation, the 44-year-old shop owner’s approach to offering tips is thoughtful and personal: “First, you have to ask yourself what stimulates you to travel. Do you prefer books, novels, short stories or poetry?” 

The shop is as eclectic as the owner is eccentric. Besides typical travel-related books about where to visit and what to eat, shelves feature more detailed writings on societies spanning both history and the globe, such as Benedict Rogers’ “Burma: A Nation At The Cross Roads” and Stephen Clarke’s “Paris Revealed: A Secret Life of a City.” 

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Panpit Tor-suwan’s book on Sathorn’s unique “ghost” tower, the infamous unfinished luxury skyscraper famous among voyeur tourists, is available in Thai. English-language books on Thailand include a selection of translated Thai novels and poems

“After you’ve returned [from your trip] and feel curious as to why the place you visited was the way it was, I have books that will delve deeper, be it into philosophy, religion or history,” said Amnat, watching customers trickle in and out of his shop. 

Passport Bookshop is open everyday except Monday from 11am to 7pm. It’s located at 523 Phra Sumen Road. The shop can be reached at 02 629 0694.

This is the last of two stories on travel bookshops in Bangkok. The previous entry is published here: New Travel Bookshop Brings the World to Bangkok’s Old Town

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15-Year-Old Dies After Kicked into a Coma in SOTUS Hazing

Pisit Kumniw's funeral on July 18, 2019 at Wat Samrong in Nakhon Chai Si district in Nakhon Pathom.
Pisit Kumniw's funeral on July 18, 2019 at Wat Samrong in Nakhon Chai Si district in Nakhon Pathom.

NAKHON PATHOM — A high-school student who was kicked into a coma by his upperclassmen during hazing activities died Thursday.

Pisit Kumniw, a Matthayom 3 student at Phra Pahtom Wittayalai School, died Thursday from injuries sustained from hazing by Matthayom 6 students, anti-hazing activist Panuwat Songsawatchai said.

Pisit passed away 4:18am Thursday after going into cardiac arrest at 3:30am. Doctors tried to resuscitate him but were unsuccessful.

On June 28, he was assaulted under the guise of a hazing tradition under the SOTUS creed (Seniority, Order, Tradition, Unity, Spirit), where he was supposed to receive a class bracelet after getting kicked three times.

One of his three assaulters was charged with assault on July 10.

Panuwat suspects the death may be another case of the well-connected getting off the hook – he says two of the alleged assaulters are the sons of policemen and have not been charged at all.

“Police only interviewed around 10 witnesses,” Panuwat said by phone Thursday. “And they still won’t let me see the police report. I fear it might be another one of those cases that just fades away silently.”

Panuwat said he was on the way to Pisit’s funeral at Wat Samrong in Nakhon Chai Si district.

SOTUS hazing, which has spread to high schools, often involves mentally and physically abusive practices that have resulted in fatalities. In July 2018, three upperclassmen were charged with grievous bodily harm for kicking a university freshman until his spleen burst. In 2014, Pokai Saengrojrat, a 16-year-old student, died from hazing activities that involved being kicked at the beach.

In 2008, a student at Uthenthawai University died after being reportedly beaten by a group of senior students during a rub nong ritual.

This is a developing story and may be updated without notice.

Related stories:

Student Charged With Assault For Kicking 15-Year-Old Into Coma

High Schooler Kicked Into Coma During SOTUS Hazing, Family Says

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Memories of Watching Apollo 11: ‘You Could Hear a Pin Drop’

This 1971 photo provided by David Waldrup shows him in the cockpit of a Cessna 172 at White Rock airport in Dallas. The day of the moon landing on July 20, 1969, David was celebrating not only man’s first steps on the moon - he was also celebrating his 15th birthday. Photo: Courtesy David Waldrup via AP
This 1971 photo provided by David Waldrup shows him in the cockpit of a Cessna 172 at White Rock airport in Dallas. The day of the moon landing on July 20, 1969, David was celebrating not only man’s first steps on the moon - he was also celebrating his 15th birthday. Photo: Courtesy David Waldrup via AP

NEW YORK — When Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took their first steps on the moon in 1969, the world was watching.

Live TV coverage made hundreds of millions witnesses to history. They huddled in front of televisions at home and gathered in auditoriums and schoolrooms as the Apollo 11 astronauts ventured onto another world for the first time.

Even now, 50 years later, that day is still deeply etched in memories of many. The Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, NASA and others have gathered their stories for this week’s golden anniversary.

Here are five of the Smithsonian’s submissions. They have been edited for length.

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This June 1969 photo made by Frank Schramm shows his father, Frank, holding a model of a Saturn V rocket. The junior Schramm had an utter fascination with the moon landing ever since the Apollo 11 mission. He and his family even met Buzz Aldrin in 2016 when the former astronaut returned to Montclair to celebrate his old middle school being renamed Buzz Aldrin Middle School. Photo: Frank Schramm via AP
This June 1969 photo made by Frank Schramm shows his father, Frank, holding a model of a Saturn V rocket. Photo: Frank Schramm via AP

Frank Schramm of Montclair, New Jersey, was 12 years old and away at summer camp for four weeks of swimming, hiking and building rockets. The Apollo 11 landing was during his second week at Camp Watonka in Hawley, Pennsylvania. The only problem was that they didn’t have a television there. At his suggestion, the camp rented a small 15-inch (38-centimeter) TV:

“It was set up that Sunday, July 20th, and there were only two chairs in the ping pong room. I staked out my place the whole day. I will never forget that evening of all 175 campers and I sitting in the chair, watching this small black-and-white TV with Neil Armstrong coming out of the lunar module in that very blurry image from the moon. The room was in total awe, you could hear a pin drop. I will never forget this day!”

Schramm has been fascinated with the moon landing ever since. He and his family even met Aldrin in 2016 when the former astronaut returned to Montclair to celebrate his old school being renamed Buzz Aldrin Middle School.

This August 1969 photo provided by Frank Schramm shows him during a family trip to Venice, Italy. Schramm of Montclair, N.J., was 12 at the time of the Apollo 11 moon landing. But rather than being at home, he was out swimming, hiking and building rockets for four weeks at Camp Watonka in Hawley, Pa. "I will never forget that evening of all 175 campers and I, watching this small black-and-white TV with Neil Armstrong coming out of the Lunar Module in that very blurry image from the moon. The room was in total awe, you could hear a pin drop. I will never forget this day!” Photo: Courtesy Frank Schramm via AP
This August 1969 photo provided by Frank Schramm shows him during a family trip to Venice, Italy. Schramm of Montclair, N.J., was 12 at the time of the Apollo 11 moon landing. But rather than being at home, he was out swimming, hiking and building rockets for four weeks at Camp Watonka in Hawley, Pa. Photo: Courtesy Frank Schramm via AP

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This 2019 photo provided by Cathy Goff shows her with newspaper clippings about the Apollo 11 moon landing mission at her home in King, N.C. Photo: Courtesy Cathy Goff via AP
This 2019 photo provided by Cathy Goff shows her with newspaper clippings about the Apollo 11 moon landing mission at her home in King, N.C. Photo: Courtesy Cathy Goff via AP

In King, North Carolina, then 14-year-old Cathy Goff, an avid Star Trek and science fiction fan, followed Apollo 11 closely, cutting newspaper clippings about the mission for a school science project:

“I remember my mother letting my sister and me stay up late to watch the moonwalk. I love anything space related. I had a model of the Apollo 11 rocket, the lunar module, and the Star Trek Enterprise on my desk. I still have my scrapbook of newspaper clippings starting one week before blast off until the day the astronauts came out of quarantine on the Apollo 11 mission. I got to meet Buzz Aldrin at the Star Trek 30th anniversary convention in Huntsville, Alabama. It was one of the greatest thrills of my life!”

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This 1983 photo provided by David Waldrup shows him in his Air Force uniform as a captain. Photo: U.S. Air Force via AP
This 1983 photo provided by David Waldrup shows him in his Air Force uniform as a captain. Photo: U.S. Air Force via AP

On July 20, 1969, David Waldrup of Reston, Virginia, was celebrating not only man’s first steps on the moon, he was also chowing down on chocolate cake for his 15th birthday:

“I was a child of the space race growing up in the 60s and watching everything we did to put men on the moon. I built models of the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo spacecraft and read everything I could find on the vehicles and men flying them. But I was most excited when, on my 15th birthday, my family gathered around our TV to watch the live broadcast in Dallas, Texas, as Neil Armstrong walked on the moon.

What a birthday gift for an excited space nut! And then my next feeling was, wow, what are we going to do next? It’s literally not just the sky, but outer space is the limit. And I can’t wait to be part of it. And I knew at some level, I would be part of it somehow.”

Waldrup started flying planes later that year. He eventually became a pilot in the Air Force and watched two of his buddies go on to become space shuttle astronauts. Waldrup is now a volunteer at the National Air and Space Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia.

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This 2015 photo provided by June Dorricott of Brisbane, Australia, shows her during a visit to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Photo: Courtesy June Dorricott via AP
This 2015 photo provided by June Dorricott of Brisbane, Australia, shows her during a visit to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Photo: Courtesy June Dorricott via AP

While others were watching in the wee hours of the night or morning, June Dorricott of Brisbane, Australia, was spending the afternoon home on an unofficial day off from school:

“I was seven years old and waiting at the bus stop in a little town called Toowoomba, Australia when my mother came up to get me. She told me I didn’t have to go to school because a man was going to walk on the moon. Little Judy Wakefield, who was waiting with me, started to cry, and mum told her she had the day off too, so she could go home. I found out much later in life that we didn’t actually have off school. I really think she thought it was important that we witness a man make history live on TV.

My memories of sitting in the living room in our house in Perth Street with mum, and watching on TV as the first man ever walked on the moon are precious to me in so many ways. My mother passed away a few years ago, and our family home was sold and then demolished. But they are both so vivid in my mind, it’s as if they’re still there.”

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This June 25, 2019 photo provided by Peter Cowin shows him looking over Apollo 11 memorabilia at his home in Cheltenham, England. Photo: Courtesy Peter Cowin via AP
This June 25, 2019 photo provided by Peter Cowin shows him looking over Apollo 11 memorabilia at his home in Cheltenham, England. Photo: Courtesy Peter Cowin via AP

Peter Cowin in Cheltenham, England, stayed up until the middle of the night to watch the moon landing, with his parents’ permission. “I was something of a space junkie at the time,” he said. The 13-year-old was the only one awake; his family was headed on vacation later that day. But for him, it was worth missing sleep:

“At first the picture was upside down and horribly grainy, but it improved as time went on so I could see two ghostly figures — raising the flag, setting up experiments, and taking that ‘giant leap for mankind.’ The day after, it seemed as if the whole world was celebrating and uplifted at the thought of what ‘we’ had achieved. The moon landings showed us that mankind could achieve absolutely anything it set its mind to.

As a man in his early 60s, I have a much better understanding of the politics involved, the price paid — and just how close some of those Apollo missions came to catastrophic failure. But I will always be in awe of the bravery, commitment and determination of the 400,000-odd people who made Apollo such a milestone in the history of mankind — and the insight they gave us into our place in the universe.”

This June 25, 2019 photo provided by Peter Cowin shows a page from his scrapbook of Apollo 11 memorabilia at his home in Cheltenham, England. Photo: Courtesy Peter Cowin via AP
This June 25, 2019 photo provided by Peter Cowin shows a page from his scrapbook of Apollo 11 memorabilia at his home in Cheltenham, England. Photo: Courtesy Peter Cowin via AP

Story: Jeremy Rehm

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With New Cabinet, Thailand Replaces Junta With Army Allies

Thailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha attends a group photo with his cabinet members at the government house in Bangkok Tuesday, July 16, 2019. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP
Thailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha attends a group photo with his cabinet members at the government house in Bangkok Tuesday, July 16, 2019. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP

BANGKOK — Thailand’s new Cabinet was sworn in Tuesday, creating a nominally elected government after five years of military rule but keeping power in the hands of the same allies of the army.

King Maha Vajiralongkorn presided over the swearing-in of the Cabinet, whose 36 members pledged their loyalty to the constitutional monarch. The Cabinet’s inauguration dissolved the junta that had governed while giving itself almost unlimited powers without oversight.

“Every task has obstacles. Every mission faces problems,” the king told the Cabinet members. “It is normal to take on work and solve problems so that the country can be run smoothly according to circumstances.” The Cabinet then held its first meeting at Government House.

Prayuth Chan-ocha, who as army commander seized power in a 2014 coup ousting an elected government, returns as prime minister. This time he was elected by a parliamentary vote after a March general election that was held under a new constitution and laws enacted by Prayuth’s junta aimed at disadvantaging established political parties in favor of the military and its conservative allies.

The measures were seen as being directly particularly at the Pheu Thai party. The party and its predecessors have won every national election for two decades and have been ousted in two military coups. The party founder is telecoms tycoon Thaksin Shinawatra, whose populist policies and enormous political support threatened the influence of Thailand’s traditional power holders, including the military.

After seizing power in 2014, Prayuth declared a war on money politics and so-called “influential persons,” including political power brokers with shady connections.

But in assembling a political machine, the Palang Pracharath Party that made him its candidate for prime minister recruited the same types of wheeler-dealers and made alliances with some to attain a majority.

“This Cabinet either represents old wine in a new bottle,” said Paul Chambers, a political scientist at Naraesuan University in northern Thailand, referring to major posts held by former members of Prayuth’s military government, “or a product of a multiparty and multi-factional balance of power.”

Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a professor of political science at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University, described the Cabinet as “dominated by patronage politics and paybacks,” including at least two members with questionable reputations who were recruited for their abilities to turn out the vote.

“The unsavory few who have had a shady and criminalized past are surprising because they will be a lightning rod on the Prayuth government’s credibility,” he said in an email interview. “It suggests that Prayuth has paid a high price for luring old-style politicians and influential figures into his party and Cabinet.”

Prayuth is both prime minister and defense minister in the new government.

His key partners are Democrat party leader Jurin Laksanawisit, who is deputy prime minister and commerce minister, and Bhumjai Thai Party leader Anutin Charnvirakul, who is deputy prime minister and health minister. Anutin campaigned for legalization of the production of marijuana to aid farmers.

Three other deputy prime ministers held the same jobs in Prayuth’s military government. One, Prawit Wongsuwan, was a senior career military officer like Prayuth. Another former senior officer, Anupong Paojinda, retains the post of interior minister.

Prayuth, in a Monday night speech marking the political transition, said “Thailand is now fully governed as a democratic country with a constitutional monarch, possessing a parliament that is elected and a government endorsed by the parliament. Several rights and liberties are safeguarded by the constitution in line with the highest international norms. Pending problems will be solved through democratic processes without the application of any special powers.”

Prayuth recently revoked 66 of more than 500 special executive orders that he had enacted under the junta. Critics said it was an attempt to make it appear that the military is relinquishing power and transitioning to an elected government. The executive orders he retained enable the military to influence politics, such as one that allows soldiers to search and arrest people they suspect of threatening national security for up to seven days without charges.

Story: Kaweewit Kaewjinda and Grant Peck

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Asian Entertainment Industries Grappling With #MeToo Issues

In this March 16, 2019, photo, Cindy Bishop speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP
In this March 16, 2019, photo, Cindy Bishop speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP

When Wu Ke-xi was looking for a frightening plotline for her latest film, she didn’t need to look further than her own industry.

The Taiwanese actress and screenwriter’s latest movie, “Nina Wu,” is the story of an actress who, in pursuit of a role that will lead to stardom, is abused and psychologically scarred by a man in power.

Wu found herself closely following the #MeToo movement in Hollywood, and decided to write something for women affected by sexual assaults in the entertainment industry. Directed by Midi Z, it was selected to show at the Cannes Film Festival.

“After 2017, after the year the Harvey Weinstein stuff occurred, I read a lot of documents and interviews. I was so purely curious about what happened,” said Wu. She said she has been threatened in her career, but never sexually assaulted. “It’s still a humiliating experience,” she said.

“So I felt really connected to those women.”

Asia is having its own #MeToo moment, with its homegrown entertainment industries grappling with many of the issues that have upended entertainment careers in the United States and elsewhere.

In this May 21, 2019, photo actress Wu Ke-xi poses for portrait photographs at the 72nd international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Photo: Joel C Ryan / Invision / AP
In this May 21, 2019, photo actress Wu Ke-xi poses for portrait photographs at the 72nd international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Photo: Joel C Ryan / Invision / AP

Earlier this year, the K-pop scene was shaken when two male stars were accused of sexual misconduct in South Korea. Solo singer Jung Joon-young faced allegations he secretly filmed himself having sex with women and shared the footage on a mobile messenger app; he apologized to the victims. And Seungri, the youngest member of the quintet Big Bang, was accused of trying to steer sex services to business investors. He denied the charges and retired from the group.

Last year, in India, Bollywood actress Tanushree Dutta came forward with details of a 2008 complaint she filed against actor Nana Parekar for alleged sexual harassment, which he denied. A flood of stories of sexual harassment and assault followed on social media from Indian actresses and writers.

Indian actor, singer and filmmaker Farhan Akhtar, a United Nations “He For She” ambassador with his own “Men Against Rape and Discrimination” initiative, says there is unease in the industry.

In this Feb 7, 2019, photo, actor and U.N. "He for She" Ambassador Farhan Akhtar poses for a portrait photograph in London. Photo: Vianney Le Caer / Invision / AP
In this Feb 7, 2019, photo, actor and U.N. “He for She” Ambassador Farhan Akhtar poses for a portrait photograph in London. Photo: Vianney Le Caer / Invision / AP

“Fear runs down the spine of everyone, thinking that, ‘Oh my God, maybe I’ve done something in the past that might come back to bite me,'” he said.

He encourages other women to come forward and speak out.

“Nobody can do it for her. Nobody can out her story and put her in a position that maybe she doesn’t want to be in,” he said. “But when she does, then it’s important that people rally around her so that she feels she’s done the right thing. And through her, through that conversation, and through her words she will hopefully inspire, motivate many more people to come out. And that’s the way the system will be cleaned.”

Read: #DontTellMeHowtoDress, Thai Women Say

Screenwriter Zhou Xiaoxuan did speak out. She became a central figure in China’s #MeToo movement after an essay she wrote privately, claiming she was sexually assaulted by a TV star, went public on the social media platform Sina Weibo last summer. A prominent television host, Zhu Jun, sued her for defamation and Zhou followed with her own suit, for infringing on her personal rights. Women’s rights advocates in China are following the case.

Zhou says the movement has only reached so far in China, affecting mostly a group of high-profile, well-connected men.

“They were frightened by the #MeToo trend and they stopped. But most people in this society, they’ve never heard of #MeToo,” she said.

In this Jan. 16, 2019, photo, screenwriter Zhou Xiaoxuan speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at her home in Beijing, China, detailing her involvement in China's #MeToo movement. Photo: Ng Han Guan / AP
In this Jan. 16, 2019, photo, screenwriter Zhou Xiaoxuan speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at her home in Beijing, China, detailing her involvement in China’s #MeToo movement. Photo: Ng Han Guan / AP

“I’ve actually been lucky because Zhu Jun is well-known,” Zhou said. “It’s extremely difficult for women who have been assaulted by their friends, colleagues or partners to seek legal recourse.”

Japanese TV journalist Shiori Ito said she experienced months of trolling and shaming after she revealed in May 2017 that she had been raped. That was before the #MeToo movement got under way in the United States.

“I’m very grateful to all the other women that have spoken up because I felt very lonely,” she said. She said she has felt a change in Japan and in her own family “who were really against me speaking up, and then they started saying, ‘You know what, maybe she’s right.'”

An emotional television interview with South Korean prosecutor Seo Ji-hyun in January 2018, in which she said she had been assaulted eight years earlier, is credited with starting the #MeToo movement there. Seo has since won a court case for abuse of power against her alleged assaulter. She said that watching women reveal their stories in Hollywood helped give her the courage to speak publicly. Supporters marched in the streets with candles and #WithYou banners.

In this Feb. 27, 2019, photo, Seo Ji-hyun of South Korea, left, and Shiori Ito from Japan pose for a photo in Camden Town in London. Photo: Tony Hicks / AP
In this Feb. 27, 2019, photo, Seo Ji-hyun of South Korea, left, and Shiori Ito from Japan pose for a photo in Camden Town in London. Photo: Tony Hicks / AP

“I told myself that, ‘Yes, this was not my fault and that I should not be ashamed at all,'” she said.

In Pakistan, dancer, theatre director and activist Sheema Kermani is campaigning against sexual abuse, trying to make the movement there more than a moment.

“When actresses, big actresses, started calling out big names of actors for sexual harassment, I think it gave Pakistani women and women in media the courage to speak out,” she said.

In Thailand, model and TV personality Cindy Sirinya Bishop launched the “Don’t Tell Me How To Dress” campaign after receiving a wave of support for a “social media rant” — her response to an article advising women not to wear sexy clothes for the Thai New Year in order to avoid sexual assault.

“It all started when that clip that I posted went viral overnight with the support of many, many women all over Thailand, chiming in, commenting, sharing and saying ‘Yes, this is exactly what we feel.’ Why are we always the ones that have to cover up, or why, when we are harassed or assaulted, is it somehow our fault?” she said.

Bishop also created an exhibition displaying clothing worn by sexual-assault victims. “We have university student outfits to toddler’s clothing to sweatpants and T-shirts,” she said.

She says her movement would have happened regardless of the stories arriving from America. But she adds: “In some way, the #MeToo movement has collectively empowered women without our knowing it, all over the world.”

___

Story: Hilary Fox. AP journalists Tassanee Vejpongsa in Bangkok, Muhammad Farooq in Islamabad, Pakistan, Yanan Wang in Beijing, and Louise Dixon in London contributed to this report.

Related stories:

#DontTellMeHowtoDress, Thai Women Say

Why Few Thai Women Are Saying #MeToo

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Singer ‘Tom Dundee’ Freed After Serving Five Years for Lese-Majeste

Thanat “Tom Dundee” Thanavacharanon on July 16.
Thanat “Tom Dundee” Thanavacharanon on July 16.

BANGKOK — A singer-turned-activist who spent five years in prison for defaming the monarchy was released Wednesday morning.

Thanat Thanavacharanon, or Tom Dundee, was greeted by supporters as he walked out from Bangkok Remand Prison at 5:30am on Wednesday. He was convicted over speeches found to be insulting to the late King Rama IX and Queen Sirikit delivered on Redshirt protest stages in 2013.

Thanat was released five months earlier than set out in his sentence due to a royal pardon. The 60 year-old activist was originally sentenced to a decade in prison by the military court for two charges of lese-majeste, before the sentence was halved when he pled guilty.

On top of the prison sentence, the Criminal Court instructed him in 2016 to write a song promoting national reconciliation and plant trees to honor His Majesty the King once he completed his jail term. It is unclear whether Thanat remains committed to these promises.

Thanat was thankful to his supporters, who gave him red roses as he walked to freedom. He said he would continue authoring songs and making merit.

“Thank you to the past, to the challenges, and the sorrows. Without them, I would not have been able to find happiness,” Thanat said. “My life in prison was like being in a boarding school, where I learned a lot of things, including the religion which guides me.”

After an interview with reporters, Thanat attempted to sing a song he had written behind bars, but was overwhelmed with tears before completing a verse.

He tried again that afternoon while attending a welcoming party hosted by Redshirt leaders and ex-prison mates including Jatuporn Prompan and Arisman Pongruangrong, but was unable to end the same verse.

“I am just a grain of sand on the beach of democracy,” Thanat said during the party. “I have chosen to do what is right, even if it might bring me harm or even death.”

Thanat was accused of four charges related to lese-majeste, but was acquitted of two in 2018 due to lack of evidence.

Related stories:

Singer ‘Tom Dundee’ Acquitted of Royal Defamation

Singer Will Spend Decade in Prison after Military Adds to Royal Defamation Sentence

Singer Gets 7 Years for Lese Majeste, Must Write ‘Reconciliation Song’

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