23.9 C
Bangkok
Monday, July 6, 2026
Home Blog Page 1640

Japan’s New Emperor Naruhito: A Cosmopolitan Team Player

In this April 30, 2013, file photo, Japan's Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako arrive at the Nieuwe Kerk or New Church in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, for the inauguration of King Willem-Alexander. Photo: Dusan Vranic / Associated Press
In this April 30, 2013, file photo, Japan's Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako arrive at the Nieuwe Kerk or New Church in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, for the inauguration of King Willem-Alexander. Photo: Dusan Vranic / Associated Press

TOKYO — Japan’s soon-to-be-anointed new emperor is a musician and historian, both mild-mannered and quietly tenacious, a team player and a loyal husband and friend who will bring an unusually global perspective to an ancient institution when he ascends the Chrysanthemum Throne on May 1.

Because Naruhito, 59, will be more distanced from the World War II shadows that his 85-year-old father, Akihito, labored under, he may also enjoy greater liberty in shaping the contours of his reign.

Japan’s constitution gives the emperor only symbolic status, and Naruhito is likely to emulate his father, who has embraced his role as national symbol. Akihito will end his three-decade reign by abdicating on April 30.

Naruhito, the first Japanese emperor to have studied abroad, is considered a new breed of royal, his outlook forged by the tradition-defying choices of his mother, Empress Michiko, and Akihito, who broke with ancient imperial traditions by opening up the cloistered palace to the people.

Akihito and Michiko, who was born a commoner, chose to largely raise their own children instead of relying on palace staff for parenting.

And they supported Naruhito when he chose to attend Oxford, where he researched the history of the Thames River transportation systems during his time there from 1983 to 1985.

“He will be a fantastic emperor,” said Keith George, 57, a friend of Naruhito’s since their days at Oxford. “He is a caring person. He is a humble person. But he has never forgotten his duties as the crown prince, and he will never forget them as the emperor.”

The two young men hit it off from the start, and George remembers Naruhito both for his sense of humor and their shared love of music: George played bluegrass and country music on the banjo, and Naruhito played the viola.

The crown prince’s attentiveness and ability to play down his royal status made a strong impression. “He doesn’t look at everything in terms of what it means for him. He looks at it in terms of what it means for the people around him,” George, now a lawyer, said in a recent interview with The Associated Press at his office in Charleston, West Virginia.

Naruhito’s memoir about his experience in Britain includes humorous accounts of his life away from home, including a mishap with an overflowing laundry machine.

Naruhito will be the 126th emperor, but his role will be strikingly different from that of his grandfather Hirohito. Only with Japan’s 1945 surrender in World War II did the Showa Emperor, which is what Hirohito is now called, cease being treated as a living god. Under Japan’s U.S.-inspired pacifist constitution, the emperor has no political power.

In an annual news conference marking his Feb. 23 birthday, Naruhito said he was open to taking up a new role that “suits the times.” But he said his father’s work will be his guidepost.

“I hope to see him develop his own way of doing things in coming years,” Toshio Shiraishi, a longtime friend of Naruhito, told the AP. “The crown prince has closely watched the work of the Showa Emperor and the current emperor and learned from them, while trying to figure out what his role could be.”

Shiraishi, a gray-haired banker who plays the cello, says the crown prince’s choice of instrument — viola — shows a lot about the kind of man he is.

In an essay he contributed for a concert brochure, Naruhito once wrote: “I’m starting to understand the role of viola, which doesn’t stand out, but (is needed because the) harmony becomes lonesome without it. … It’s a joy to have chosen the viola as a friend through which I could meet people and play music together.”

Naruhito is likewise both a good listener and conversationalist, Shiraishi said.

“He encourages people to talk and helps enrich a conversation,” he said. “He doesn’t want to be a star; instead he wants to be with people and work together.”

Palace watchers say that as emperor, Naruhito might focus on global issues, including disaster prevention and water conservation. He has researched such topics since his 1987 visit to Nepal, where he saw women and young children traveling long distances to fetch water.

Naruhito’s wife, the future Empress Masako, is a Harvard-educated former diplomat who may prove an adept partner in his overseas travels and activities. But much will depend on her health, since she has been recovering from what the palace describes as stress-induced depression for about 15 years.

Naruhito has shown himself to be determined. It took him eight years and two rejections before he managed to persuade Masako, who he met at a party in 1986, to marry him.

Masako has largely limited her public appearances since late 2003, after giving birth to their only daughter, Princess Aiko, and facing pressure to produce a son. Naruhito has defended her and said he hopes Masako might slowly expand her role.

The imperial household faces other uncertainties. Only Naruhito’s younger brother, Prince Akishino, 53, and Akishino’s 12-year-old son, Prince Hisahito, can currently succeed him as emperor since the Imperial House Law confines that role to male heirs. Naruhito’s daughter, Aiko, now 17, is not in the running.

Whatever happens, Naruhito will need “a strong will” similar to his father’s if he’s to pursue his own path as emperor, said Takeshi Hara, a Meiji Gakuin University professor and expert on Japan’s monarchy.

George, the friend from Oxford, says he is confident Naruhito can handle his future duties. While at Oxford, where they often went out for drinks and dinners, the crown prince admitted how much he enjoyed the freedom of being a student. Still, he never lamented his destiny, George said.

“Never once did I ever see or feel that he had felt that as a burden,” he said.

Story: Mari Yamaguchi and Kaori Hitomi

Advertisement

By-Election Ordered in Chiang Mai as Pheu Thai Winner Disqualified

A woman cast a ballot March 17 at the Lat Phrao District Office in early voting before the March 24 poll.
A woman cast a ballot March 17 at the Lat Phrao District Office in early voting before the March 24 poll.

BANGKOK — A Pheu Thai candidate on Wednesday became the first election winner to be disqualified, after the Election Commission accused him of vote-buying.

Commissioner Sawaeng Boonmee announced a by-election to be held in Chiang Mai’s eighth constituency after nullifying the victory of Surapol Kiatchaiyakorn, who will be banned from running for office for a year. The commission ruled Surapol breached the election law by offering money to “a community” in exchange for votes.

Sawaeng added that the by-election will be held in May with the same set of candidates, bar Surapol, but declined to say whether it will fall before or after May 9 – the deadline for commissioners to certify the results of the March 24 elections.

Surapol said he was accused of vote-buying for hosting a merit-making ceremony at a local temple. He said he wasn’t involved in organizing the event, but that he privately gave 2,000 baht cash to a monk, adding that he had already explained himself to the commissioners and had the monk testify as his witness. Surapol said he was surprised by the news.

“I did not expect such a ruling as I had already explained everything. I also wonder why the commission appears to selectively respond to complaints against certain parties,” he said. “I however accept the decision.”

According to the election law, monks are not eligible voters. Surapol said he did not understand why giving money to a monk is considered vote-buying.

Surapol said he would propose a new candidate to run in his place. Commissioner Sawaeng however clarified later that no new candidates will be accepted in the by-election, meaning Pheu Thai Party will lose all votes from this constituency.

Results from the constituency on Election Day showed that Surapol won with 52,165 votes, followed by a Phalang Pracharath candidate who received 39,221 votes and a Future Forward candidate with 29,556 votes.

Advertisement

Gov’t Delays 1,500 Baht Tourism Subsidy

A file photo of Thi Lo Su waterfall in Tak province.
A file photo of Thi Lo Su waterfall in Tak province.

Update: The Ministry of Finance said on April 26, 2019, that it has withdrawn the idea.

BANGKOK — The Ministry of Tourism clarified Tuesday that a proposal to provide cash handouts to tourists visiting lesser-known provinces has yet to be approved by the cabinet.

The idea, which calls for an award of 1,500 baht to Thais traveling “off the beaten track”, was not among the topics discussed in today’s weekly cabinet meeting, Tourism Minister Weerasak Kowsurat told reporters.

Weerasak said he has not even seen the proposal in person.

“I only saw what the media reported,” the minister said. “I don’t know about the details.”

Nonetheless the minister confirmed his support for the idea, saying any policy which injects revenue into tourist destinations is a sound one.

Quoting sources in the finance ministry, media agencies reported earlier this week that officials were considering the subsidy as a measure to promote traffic to what the authorities call muang rong or “Secondary Cities” – 44 provinces which receive fewer tourists than big names like Bangkok and Chiang Mai.

Under the proposal, up to 10 million Thais would be eligible for the payout, which must be used by June. Cash would be distributed to electronic wallets, and accepted by shops and hotels that join the program.

Cities designated as muang rong include Mae Hong Son, Si Saket and Prachinburi.

Some netizens responded to the idea by suggesting the government save the money for more pressing matters like public healthcare, while a regional tourism guild said the authorities should also engage in more sustainable approaches to promoting sightseeing.

Northern Tourism Federation chairman Kitti Tissakul said he welcomed the idea but urged the government to also invest in infrastructure and encourage more tourists to buy local products.

“Giving people money to travel to secondary cities should not be the only measure,” Kitti said.

Advertisement

Dhanin Resigns as Chairman of CP’s Food Subsidiary

Dhanin Chearavanont
Dhanin Chearavanont

BANGKOK — Thailand’s richest man has stepped down as chairman of Charoen Pokphand Foods, the company announced Wednesday.

In a written statement, the company said Dhanin’s resignation from the board is effective today, citing “increasing responsibilities” that prevented him from being fully committed to the subsidiary. It did not elaborate further.

The statement said it’s in the middle of the selection process for his replacement. Dhanin remains the senior chairman of CP Group, one of the world’s largest agriculture and food conglomerates.

The 80-year-old Dhanin was named by Forbes as the world’s 75th richest man earlier this year, with an estimated wealth of US$15.2 billion or about 480 billion baht. The Chearavanont family was named the richest of Thailand last year with collective assets worth more than 900 billion baht.

In 2017, Dhanin stepped down from both the positions of chairman and CEO of CP Group, replaced by his sons Soopakij Chearavanont and Suphachai Chearavanont, respectively.

Advertisement

Leaders of Hong Kong Pro-Democracy Protests Get Jail Terms

Occupy Central leaders, from left, Chan Kin-man, Benny Tai and Chu Yiu-ming chant slogans before entering a court in Hong Kong, Wednesday, April 24, 2019. Photo: Kin Cheung / Associated Press
Occupy Central leaders, from left, Chan Kin-man, Benny Tai and Chu Yiu-ming chant slogans before entering a court in Hong Kong, Wednesday, April 24, 2019. Photo: Kin Cheung / Associated Press

HONG KONG — A court in Hong Kong handed down prison sentences of up to 16 months Wednesday to eight leaders of massive 2014 pro-democracy protests on charges of public nuisance offenses.

The sentences are seen as an effort by the government of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory to draw a line under the protests amid pressure from Beijing.

Ranging in age from their 30s to 70s, the nine defendants span generations of Hong Kong citizens who have been agitating for full democracy. The defendants had all pleaded not guilty, calling the prosecutions politically motivated.

Three protest leaders were given 16 months, one of them suspended for two years, two received eights months in prison and two were given suspended eight-month sentences. Another was ordered to perform 200 hours of community service. One other defendant, Tanya Chan, had her sentencing postponed because of the need to undergo surgery.

It was not immediately clear if they planned to appeal.

“Thank you for the sentencing,” Raphael Wong, given eight months, told Judge Johnny Chan. “Our determination on fighting for genuine universal suffrage will not change.”

While the charges carried potential sentences of up to seven years, they were still seen as unusually harsh by activists in what they called an attempt to intimidate them into silence.

“The long sentences send a chilling warning to all that there will be serious consequences for advocating for democracy,” said Maya Wang, Hong Kong-based chief researcher for China at Human Rights Watch.

“The Beijing and Hong Kong authorities appear intent on eliminating the only pocket of freedoms on Chinese soil,” Wang said. She cited a law against booing the Chinese national anthem and moves to amend the extradition law that could see suspects sent to China where they’d be unlikely to receive a fair trial.

Supporters and family members applauded the defendants as they entered the courtroom, then stood outside sobbing after the hearing before breaking into chants.

Those convicted included law professor Benny Tai, retired sociology professor Chan Kin-man and pastor Chu Yiu-ming, who all received 16 months though Chu’s was suspended for two years. The others include two current and one former lawmaker, two student leaders and a political activist.

Chan, who will be sentenced June 10, said prior to the hearing that she hadn’t lost faith in what the movement stood for. “Although it’s an uphill battle, it’s not easy, it’s time for us to make sure that we are strong enough to face different kind of challenges,” Chan said.

The nine were leaders of the “Occupy Central” campaign, which was organized as a nonviolent sit-in that became known as the “Umbrella Movement” after a symbol of defiance against police adopted by the street protests.

Protesters demanded the right to freely nominate candidates for Hong Kong’s leader who would then be elected by all of the territory’s roughly 5 million voters. However, they failed to win any concessions from the government, and Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam was chosen in 2017 from among a slate of candidates approved by Beijing and elected by a 1,200- member pro-China electoral body.

Hong Kong, a former British colony, was handed over to Chinese rule in 1997 under an agreement in which China promised the city could retain its own laws, economic system and civil rights for 50 years.

However, Chinese President and Communist Party leader Xi Jinping has been seen as extending his crackdown on civil liberties to Hong Kong, drawing criticism from commercial and legal associations as well as political, human rights and media groups.

“In the verdict, the judge commented we are naive, believing that by having a occupy movement we can attain democracy. But what is more naive than believing in one country two systems?” Chan Kin-man said before the sentences were issued.

In Taiwan’s capital Taipei, youthful supporters rallied to denounce the convictions and growing pressure from Beijing on both their self-ruled island and Hong Kong.

China has demanded Taiwan agree to its claim to the island as Chinese territory, to be annexed by force if necessary, and accept a “one country, two systems,” framework for governing along the lines of that in place in Hong Kong.

“Occupy Central is not a crime,” they chanted, as well as the “The Hong Kong government is unjustified.”

“The fact that you care about Hong Kong means you care about your own fate. I think this is very important,” Tien-chi Martin-Liao, a member of Independent Chinese PEN Center, said in an address following the sentencing hearing.

“Your support will be felt in the hearts of those persecuted in Hong Kong, and those who live there,” he said.

Story: Katie Tam and Veta Chan

Advertisement

Mars Lander Picks up What’s Likely 1st Detected Marsquake

This photo made available by NASA on Tuesday, April 23, 2019 shows the InSight lander's domed wind and thermal shield which covers a seismometer on the 110th Martian day, or sol, of the mission. Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech via AP
This photo made available by NASA on Tuesday, April 23, 2019 shows the InSight lander's domed wind and thermal shield which covers a seismometer on the 110th Martian day, or sol, of the mission. Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech via AP

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA’s InSight lander has picked up a gentle rumble at Mars, believed to be the first marsquake ever detected.

InSight’s quake monitor recorded and measured the faint signal April 6, and scientists announced the finding Tuesday.

While the rumble sounds like soft wind, scientists believe it came from within the red planet. The Paris Institute of Earth Physics’ Philippe Lognonne, who’s in charge of the experiment, said it’s exciting to finally have proof that Mars is still seismically active. Mars is not nearly as geologically active as Earth and, like our moon, lacks tectonic plates.

“We’ve been waiting months for a signal like this,” Lognonne said in a statement.

InSight’s lead scientist, Bruce Banerdt of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said this carries out the scientific work begun by the Apollo moonwalkers nearly a half-century ago. The astronauts left behind seismometers that measured thousands of moonquakes.

As for Mars, “we’ve been collecting background noise up until now, but this first event officially kicks off a new field: Martian seismology!” ”Banerdt said in a statement.

Researchers are still analyzing the data, as well as three other even fainter seismic signals detected since mid-March. By analyzing marsquakes, scientists hope to learn more about how rocky planets formed.

The French seismometer was placed directly on the Martian surface in December, a few weeks after the spacecraft landed.

InSight’s other main experiment isn’t going as well.

The German-built drilling instrument — dubbed the mole — has managed to penetrate only a foot or two (50 centimeters) into Mars, far short of its goal to measure the planet’s internal temperature. Engineers are still trying to figure out why and how the device got stuck.

Story: Marcia Dunn

Advertisement

The Running of the Kwais: Trang’s Annual Buffalo Bacchanal

TRANGNobody ever lives their life all the way up, except kwai-runners.

Farmers have released about 300 buffalos to run freely on the island fields of Koh Sukorn off the coast of Trang – a kwai bacchanal that began April 14 and which will last two months.

“Kwai-running allows them to socialize and copulate without the need to import breeders [from farm to farm]. It also benefits farmers because the kwais eat weeds and naturally fertilize crops with their waste,” explained Ratree Jitlung, the Palian sub-district’s office director.

Unlike the thrashing, people-tossing bulls that run in Pamplona, Spain, their Thai water-buffalo cousins take a different approach to life. The kwais have free reign to munch on crops – especially watermelons, the island’s specialty – before making sweet, sweet love with the kwai of their eye.

Ratree claims that the tradition has been active on the island for around 90 years, though last week was the world’s first “official” kwai-running event.

Given free reign, some kwais decide to use take their time off to splash around in the surf. The Sea Kwais of Koh Sukorn, as locals call them, are a sight to behold for tourists.

The kwaication will last until mid-June, or the planting season, when the kwai owners – from about 100 households – will round the buffalos up to live on farms again.

“It’s kind of strange, but all the owners can remember which kwai is their’s. There’s never any problem figuring out whose kwai is whose during collection time,” Ratree said.

เกาะสกรจดประเพณปลอยควายครงแรกของโลก 5 เกาะสกรจดประเพณปลอยควายครงแรกของโลก 2 เกาะสกรจดประเพณปลอยควายครงแรกของโลก 1

Related stories:

Melons and Mellow Take Root on Thailand’s ‘Watermelon Island’

Advertisement

Shawn Mendes to ‘Treat Bangkok Better’ in October

BANGKOK — Chiseled Canadian pop royalty Shawn Mendes will be returning this October for his second concert in Bangkok.

The first stop in Asia of “Shawn Mendes: The Tour” will be on October 1 at Impact Arena, entertainment company BEC-Tero announced Thursday.


Tickets start at 2,000 baht. Die-hard fans can snag early tickets from 10am Thursday through the singer’s official presale website, while tickets for the general public can be bought starting 10am Saturday on Thai Ticket Major.

Mendes, 20, shot to fame at 14 after posing videos of himself singing on YouTube and Vine. After his studio debut “Handwritten” (2015), he went on to release “Illuminate” (2016) and most recently “Shawn Mendes” in 2018. Mendes is the first artist to have had four Billboard No.1 pop singles before the age of 20, and has been twice nominated for a Grammy award.

Related stories:

Canadian Heartthrob Shawn Mendes to Put Bangkok in ‘Stitches’

Advertisement

Art Meets Life at Bangkok’s Japanese Design Week

Bags made from used newspaper.

BANGKOK — With pots, plates and cups scattered across tables, the room looks more like a yardsale than an exhibition.

But an exhibition it is. “Japanese Design Today 100”, held at the Creative Economy Agency on Charoen Krung Road, showcases the creativity and philosophies behind Japanese designs of everyday objects that have won admiration from the world over.

20190423 144956
Hot, cold indicator cup holder

Design is not for philosophy, Issey Miyaki once said, it’s for life. The exhibit seems to underscore that vision. Here, a blue cup holder that changes to red as a warning when hot. There, a titanium mug that can keeps its contents cold or hot. A sauce bottle designed to avoid residue.

On one level, the exhibit illustrates how ingenious thoughts can produce ordinary items which improve our lives. But according to director Apisit Laistrooglai, the objects on display are also a window into the minds of Japanese people.

“We are not only inviting people to look at the objects. We are inviting them to look at the roots of those objects,” Apisit told Khaosod English. “We can see the psyche of Japanese people.”

“I hope Thais will also come up designs that respond to the needs of Thai cultures and lifestyles,” he added.

The displays are part of a traveling exhibition curated by the Japan Foundation that has been touring the world for a decade. Before coming to Bangkok, the exhibition was showing in Finland. Its next destination is Indonesia.

Some featured objects are Japanese improvements upon pre-existing inventions that went on to revolutionize the world: Nikon cameras, Toshiba rice cookers and Sony Walkmans.

Others offer a Japanese aesthetic: trays for incense carved with intricate detail, bags made from folded newspapers, and delicate wind bells. And then there’s the Kikkoman sauce glass bottle, a crown jewel of packaging design which combines aesthetics with convenience – modeled after sake bottles, Kikkoman sauce can be poured without having to open the cap.

Of course, the exhibit features smart disaster-relief equipment designs – a must for a country prone to natural calamities such as Japan. On display are waterproof megaphones, portable radios that double as power-banks, helmets that can be unfolded into storage boxes and other ingenious inventions.

(Curiously missing from the comprehensive exhibit are the famed Japanese electric toilets, a source of fascination for many Thai tourists.)

Apisit’s personal favorite item is a foldable walking cane that comes with a wheel and a hook to hold grocery bags.

“It’s an answer to challenges in Japan’s aging society,” Apisit said. “We Thais are also moving toward an aging society. I want our people to start thinking about designs which respond to that problem.”

“Starting with our pavements. How do we make them better and smoother?” he pondered aloud.

20190423 144223
Casting vessel for anti-mosquito incense
20190423 144541
Chic altar for Buddha
20190423 150513
Colorful masking tapes
20190423 143742
Kikkoman Soy Sauce dispenser

“Japanese Design Today 100” is held at the TDCD Center, right behind the Grand Postal Building. It’s open from 10.30am to 9pm Tuesday – Sunday from April 24 to May 26 2019. Entry is free. Explanatory texts are in Thai and English.

Advertisement

More Storms to Batter North After 2 Killed in Freak Weather

A house in the northern province of Nan is seen collapsed to the ground on Tuesday following a powerful storm.
A house in the northern province of Nan is seen collapsed to the ground on Tuesday following a powerful storm.

BANGKOK — A new round of summer storms is coming to hit upper Thailand after two people, including a 4-year-old girl, were killed by the severe weather of the past few days.

The state meteorology department said Wednesday that the northeast and east will be the first to see the powerful thunderstorms, torrential rain, gusty winds and hailstorms which are expected Friday through Sunday. Those regions will be followed by north and central Thailand, including parts of metropolitan Bangkok.

Temperatures in most parts of the kingdom will hike to highs of 40C to 42C during the same period. Bangkok’s heat could peak to 38C, with about 30 percent of the capital to see thundershowers and possible hailstorms.

Extreme weather this summer has already brought freak storms to 35 provinces in upper Thailand since April 5, according to disaster officials. As of Tuesday, two people have been left dead and 20 others injured by the powerful storms and winds, with more than 10,000 homes damaged.

On Sunday, a 59-year-old woman died in the northern province of Chiang Mai after a storm caused a large tree to fall onto her family’s car. A 4-year-old girl in northeastern Khon Kaen died the following day after she was hit by concrete debris collapsing from the ceiling of her school, with four others injured.

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
light rain
23.9 ° C
26.6 °
23.9 °
56 %
2.8kmh
100 %
Sun
29 °
Mon
31 °
Tue
36 °
Wed
31 °
Thu
33 °