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Cop Warns of Jail Time for Online Nudity, Booze Posts During Songkran

Revelers engage in waterfight in Bangkok during 2016 Songkran holidays

BANGKOK — Cyber police on Wednesday warned Thai netizens against posting revealing photos of Songkran revelers and promoting alcoholic drinks.

Col. Siriwat Deepor, deputy chief of the Technology Crime Suppression Division, said that photos posted on social media of individuals wearing “sexually provocative dress” during a water fight may violate the Computer Crimes Act. The law allows a maximum imprisonment term of five years and fines of up to 100,000 baht.

The deputy chief specified that inappropriately dressed people in images or videos may be held liable even if they weren’t the ones who uploaded the content.

Siriwat said promoting the consumption of alcohol on social media during Songkran also risks violating the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act, which carries a maximum prison term of one year and fines up to 500,000 baht.

Siriwat warned that cyber police will be monitoring the web especially closely over Songkran, which officially starts tomorrow until Tuesday.

“Cyber police will definitely be able to find the violators. And you can’t just claim you didn’t know about it or weren’t aware of the law,” said Siriwat.

Siriwat urged youth to continue good Thai traditions instead.

In a related development, parts of Bangkok will be closed to traffic. No vehicles will be allowed noon to midnight from Saturday to Monday in roads including Khaosan, Chakrabongse, Bowonniwet, Sip Sam Hang and Rambutri.

Trucks carrying water for Songkran splashing or loud speakers will be banned in several roads from 10am to midnight including Ratchada Phisaek, Suthisarn and parts of Lat Phrao roads. It’s common for pickup trucks to roam around the city with large plastic water tanks, playing loud music while standing passengers splash water.

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Diplomats Deny Accusation of Protocol Breach in Thanathorn’s Case

Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks to representatives from foreign diplomatic missions Saturday at a police station in Bangkok.
Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaks to representatives from foreign diplomatic missions Saturday at a police station in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Western diplomatic missions responded Wednesday to charges from Thailand’s foreign ministry that they violated protocol by observing a politician being charged by police with sedition, calling their action standard diplomatic practice.

They were responding to Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai, who said Tuesday that foreign countries are barred from closely observing such internal procedures “not only by etiquette, but also by rules and regulations that the whole world abides by.” His ministry on Wednesday accused the diplomats of intervening in Thai politics.

Thirteen foreign diplomats were present Saturday at a Bangkok police station where Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, leader of a popular new political party, acknowledged charges of sedition and other crimes. Thanathorn says the charges are politically motivated.

Thanathorn’s Future Forward Party ran a strong third in last month’s general election and positions itself as being opposed to political interference by Thailand’s powerful military. Several criminal complaints and protests to election authorities have already been lodged against Thanathorn and his party.

The election results are to be certified by May 9, and the contending parties are maneuvering to establishing alliances or have opponents disqualified.

The foreign minister on Tuesday had complained informally, but his ministry on Wednesday issued a diplomatic note “to register our displeasure and concern.”

It charged that the diplomats’ action violated an article in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations that says diplomats “have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs” of the nation in which they are stationed.

It said their presence at the police station “with such a visibility and the publicity it generated were clearly an act of political significance, seen by the Thai public largely as a show of moral support to Mr. Thanathorn.”

“In other words, it was a political act or a political statement on the part of the Embassies,” it said. “It clearly amounted to the Embassies choosing to be a player in Thai domestic politics, at least by having taken side in the country’s political landscape.”

U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Jillian Bonnardeaux said U.S. Charge d’Affaires Peter Haymond met Wednesday with a senior foreign ministry official at the ministry’s request.

“The U.S. Embassy regularly attends court proceedings in high profile cases around the world in order to observe fair trial guarantees and respect for rule of law,” she said in an emailed statement. “This is a standard diplomatic practice. The U.S. interest in this case, as in many other cases, is to observe the judicial process and obtain first-hand information about the handling of the case.”

A statement from the European Union delegation to Thailand made a similar point, saying, “Observation of hearings and trials is standard diplomatic practice worldwide. Its purpose is to enhance understanding of adherence to international standards such as human rights and due process.”

“Such observations are in no way indications of political preference or support for specific actors,” it said.

The EU statement thanked the Thai police for their cooperation “in facilitating the observation and for offering to brief the diplomats present.”

An ambassador from a western embassy told Khaosod English on a condition of anonymity that the embassy would like to keep the details of the meeting at the Foreign Affairs Ministry private.

Another source from the UN’s human rights agency, which also sent representatives to observe Thanathorn when he went to hear the charges, said it hadn’t been summoned by Thai authorities, adding that it had informed the ministry in advance about their intention to monitor the event.

Additional reporting Pravit Rojanaphruk for Khaosod English

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Craving Durian Pad Thai? Baiyoke Has You Covered

Durian pad thai. Photo: Baiyoke Sky Hotel
Durian pad thai. Photo: Baiyoke Sky Hotel

BANGKOK — Baiyoke Sky Hotel’s annual durian buffet is back to satisfy cravings for the iconic, smelly fruit.

Available daily from April 16 through 30, the epic menu includes the usual suspects such as grilled durian, durian with sticky rice, durian jelly, durian crepe and, of course, durian bingsu.

More fascinating/alarming dishes including everyday Thai dishes made with durian, such as durian pad thai, tom yum durian and durian noodles. Other Thai fruit favorites like mango and rambutan will also be featured.

“Durian Fever Buffet” costs 490 baht per person. The price includes access to the hotel’s observation deck. The buffet is open 10.30am to 9pm everyday.

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Coronation-Themed Songkran Shirts at the Ready

Customers try on yellow Hawaiian shirts at Supak Sawasdee’s shop in Korat.
Customers try on yellow Hawaiian shirts at Supak Sawasdee’s shop in Korat.

NAKHON RATCHASIMA — Yellow floral shirts are flying off of the racks in many provinces.

Supposedly apt for both Songkran this weekend and the coronation in May, yellow Hawaiian shirts with yellow star flower patterns are this year’s most popular trend. In Korat city in Nakhon Ratchasima, Supak Sawasdee’s shop on Soi Trok Jan is almost entirely selling yellow shirts.

“This year’s Songkran is near coronation time. That’s why my coworkers and I need to find yellow floral shirts for Songkran, to demonstrate our loyalty to the monarchy,” said Dumri Chalee, 61, who was buying multiple yellow shirts at Supak’s shop.

Thais Gear Up With Yellow Hawaiian Shirts for Both Songkran and the Coronation

These yellow Hawaiian shirts are apt for both Songkran this weekend and the coronation in May. Yellow is King Rama X’s color, while many shirt patterns are of the yellow star tree (ton ruang pheung), which is both his official tree and part of his emblem.Story: https://www.khaosodenglish.com/videos/2019/04/11/coronation-themed-songkran-shirts-at-the-ready/

โพสต์โดย Khaosod English เมื่อ วันพุธที่ 10 เมษายน 2019

Yellow is King Rama X’s color, while the yellow star tree (ton ruang pheung) is both his official tree and part of his emblem.

“Usually we order a lot of colors, but people want yellow because of the coronation. So we had to decrease the stock of the other colors to 15 to 20 percent and make about 80 percent of our stock yellow,” Supak said.

Jintana Ngoksri, 27, a vendor in Surin, said she was having trouble selling her non-yellow shirts.

The Yellow Star tree. Photo: Crown Property Bureau
The Yellow Star tree. Photo: Crown Property Bureau

“They all just want yellow, yellow, yellow,” Jintana said. “People are hesitating more than last year, even with 100 baht shirts. The economy is so bad.”

Shirts cost between 59 baht and 350 baht apiece. Shirts with pineapple patterns and casual versions of traditional Thai costumes – which were an intense fad last year due to a historical rom-com – were selling well this year too, according to vendors.

“Pineapples and Thai patterns are really popular right now,” said Sawaeng Suwadit, president of the Talad Chalong community’s housewife craft group.

Shirts with Yellow Star flower patterns in Surin.
Shirts with Yellow Star flower patterns in Surin.

Since the beginning of April, the ladies of the Talad Chalong community in Sriracha district, Chonburi have been glued to their sewing machines, churning out sunny lemon shirts for their OTOP brand, OTOP Chalong Niyom.

Although colorful shirts aren’t the most fashionable OTOP, a large percentage of customers are from organizations, such as government sectors, that buy them in bulk for employees.

Sawaeng Suwadit, of the Talad Chalong community in Sriracha district holds up a yellow shirt her craft group made for Songkran sales.
Sawaeng Suwadit, of the Talad Chalong community in Sriracha district holds up a yellow shirt her craft group made for Songkran sales.

Sawaeng says pineapple shirts are popular since they are in grown Sriracha district – although they’ve been a ubiquitous fad with a winding origin story since last Songkran.

In Roi Et, husband and wife Songpong Hoinoansoong, 46, and Patcharee Hoinoansoong, 51, say their sales for traditional costumes are on the uptick this year. They have been Songkrang apparel distributors in Isaan for over a decade,

“In Roi Et, people splash water all day and all night. That’s why the adult sizes are all selling out. People like to buy them as souvenirs for their friends and elders at home as well,” Patcharee said.

Customers at Supak Sawasdee's Korat shop.
Customers at Supak Sawasdee’s Korat shop.
A man examines a Hawaiian shirt with sunflowers in Korat.
A man examines a Hawaiian shirt with sunflowers in Korat.

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Surin 2
A vendor with Yellow Star flower patterned shirts in Surin.
Customers at the Hoinoansoong family’s shop in Roi Et.
Customers at the Hoinoansoong family’s shop in Roi Et.
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Songkran shirts on sale in Surin.
A seamstress in the Talad Chalong community in Chonburi makes a shirt.
A seamstress in the Talad Chalong community in Chonburi makes a shirt.

Related stories:

Peak Pineapple: Fruity Hawaiian Shirts Conquer Thailand

Vendors Cash In Before Traditional Garb Fad Fades

Designers Take OTOP Products From Nope to Dope

Thai Folk Arts Get 21st Century Makeover

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Scientists Reveal First Image Ever Made of Black Hole

This image released Wednesday, April 10, 2019, by Event Horizon Telescope shows a black hole. Scientists revealed the first image ever made of a black hole after assembling data gathered by a network of radio telescopes around the world. Image: Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration / Maunakea Observatories via AP
This image released Wednesday, April 10, 2019, by Event Horizon Telescope shows a black hole. Scientists revealed the first image ever made of a black hole after assembling data gathered by a network of radio telescopes around the world. Image: Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration / Maunakea Observatories via AP

WASHINGTON — Scientists on Wednesday revealed the first image ever made of a black hole, depicting a fiery orange and black ring of gravity-twisted light swirling around the edges of the abyss.

Assembling data gathered by eight radio telescopes around the world, astronomers captured a picture of the hot, shadowy edges of a supermassive black hole, the light-sucking monsters of the universe theorized by Einstein more than a century ago and confirmed by observations for decades. It is along those edges that light bends around itself in a cosmic funhouse effect.

“We have seen what we thought was unseeable. We have seen and taken a picture of a black hole. Here it is,” said Sheperd Doeleman of Harvard.

Jessica Dempsey, a co-discoverer and deputy director of the East Asian Observatory in Hawaii, said it reminded her of the powerful flaming Eye of Sauron from the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.

Unlike smaller black holes that come from collapsed stars, supermassive black holes are mysterious in origin. Situated at the center of most galaxies, including ours, they are so dense that nothing, not even light, can escape their gravitational pull. This one’s “event horizon” — the point of no return around it, where light and matter begin to fall inexorably into the hole — is as big as our entire solar system.

Three years ago, scientists using an extraordinarily sensitive observing system heard the sound of two much smaller black holes merging to create a gravitational wave, as Albert Einstein predicted. The new image, published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters and announced around the world in several news conferences, adds light to that sound.

Outside scientists suggested the achievement could be worthy of a Nobel Prize, just like the gravitational wave discovery.

While much around a black hole falls into a death spiral and is never to be seen again, the new image captures “lucky gas and dust” circling at just far enough to be safe and seen millions of years later on Earth, Dempsey said.

Taken over four days when astronomers had “to have the perfect weather all across the world and literally all the stars had to align,” the image helps confirm Einstein’s general relativity theory, Dempsey said. Einstein a century ago even predicted the symmetrical shape that scientists just found, she said.

“It’s circular, but on one side the light is brighter,” Dempsey said. That’s because that light is approaching Earth.

The measurements are taken at a wavelength the human eye cannot see, so the astronomers added color to the image. They chose “exquisite gold because this light is so hot,” Dempsey said. “Making it these warm gold and oranges makes sense.”

What the image shows is gas heated to millions of degrees by the friction of ever-stronger gravity, scientists said. And that gravity creates a funhouse effect where you see light from both behind the black hole and behind you as the light curves and circles around the black hole itself, said astronomer Avi Loeb, director of the Black Hole Initiative at Harvard. (The lead scientists in the discovery are from Harvard, but Loeb was not involved.)

The project cost $50 million to $60 million, with $26 million of that coming from the National Science Foundation.

Johns Hopkins astrophysicist Ethan Vishniac, who was not part of the discovery team but edits the journal where the research was published, pronounced the image “an amazing technical achievement” that “gives us a glimpse of gravity in its most extreme manifestation.”

He added: “Pictures from computer simulations can be very pretty, but there’s literally nothing like a picture of the real universe, however fuzzy and monochromatic.”

“It’s just seriously cool,” said John Kormendy, a University of Texas astronomer who wasn’t part of the discovery team. “To see the stuff going down the tubes, so to speak, to see it firsthand. The mystique of black holes in the community is very substantial. That mystique is going to be made more real.”

There is a myth that says a black hole would rip you apart, but Loeb and Kormendy said the one pictured is so big, someone could fall into it and not be torn to pieces. But the person would never be seen from again.

Black holes are “like the walls of a prison. Once you cross it, you will never be able to get out and you will never be able to communicate,” Loeb said.

The first image is of a black hole in a galaxy called M87 that is about 53 million light years from Earth. One light year is 5.9 trillion miles, or 9.5 trillion kilometers. This black hole is about 6 billion times the mass of our sun.

The telescope data was gathered by the Event Horizon Telescope two years ago, but it took so long to complete the image because it was a massive undertaking, involving about 200 scientists, supercomputers and hundreds of terabytes of data delivered worldwide by plane.

The team looked at two supermassive black holes, the M87 and the one at the center of our own Milky Way galaxy. The one in our galaxy is closer but much smaller, so they both look the same size in the sky. But the more distant one was easier to take pictures of because it rotates more slowly.

“We’ve been hunting this for a long time,” Dempsey said. “We’ve been getting closer and closer with better technology.”

Story: Seth Borenstein

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At Least 2 Dead by Fire Near Bangkok’s Mall

Image: @Orchidmo / Twitter

BANGKOK — A fire ravaged a popular shopping complex Wednesday evening in downtown Bangkok, killing at least two people.

At least 16 people were injured by the fire which broke out at the Centara Grand Hotel just before 6pm. Videos and photos posted online show the blaze and thick smoke spreading out from the hotel, which is located next to the CentralWorld shopping mall. The flame was brought under control about half an hour later.

2 Mall Staff Likely Jumped to Death While Aiding Fire Rescue: Official

Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang said two people died – one at the scene and the other later at a hospital – after jumping from the hotel to escape the fire. Sixteen other people have been hospitalized for smoke inhalation.

A local police chief said the fire broke out from a document storage room on the 8th floor of the hotel. The cause of the fire is still being investigated. CentralWorld announced a temporary shutdown after hundreds of shoppers were evacuated.

Police also said the fire has caused massive traffic congestion on Rama I Road.

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Huge Blaze Ravages Bangkok Broom Factory

Firefighters at a factory in Bangkok Wednesday where a huge fire broke out.
Firefighters at a factory in Bangkok Wednesday where a huge fire broke out.

BANGKOK — Firefighters spent hours battling a huge fire that tore through a large factory Wednesday afternoon in the capital’s northeast.

Police said the blaze broke out just past noon at a broom factory in Chok Chai 4 Road in Lat Phrao district. More than 10 fire trucks responded to the call but were only able to control the fast-moving fire more than 3 hours later, when it had already damaged 6 other nearby buildings.

There’s no confirmed report of casualties. Some volunteer firefighters however reportedly passed out from inhaling smoke while combating the fire.

Witnesses told investigators renovation work was underway at the 60-year-old factory when sparks from a welding torch fell onto a pile of flammable trash and wooden chips. From there, the fire quickly spread.

The cost of damages has yet to be estimated. The Lat Phrao district chief said the administration will investigate whether the factory has been operating legally, and promised to compensate affected residents.

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Enjoy sensational “ABar Saturday Social” Party at ABar, Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park

The 37th floor, ABar at the Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park brings the stylish fun; Saturday Social Party that offers gourmet food, drinks,  music and DJ on every last Saturday of the month, starting from May 2019 onwards.

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A cocktail bar with Victorian London vintage flair and a touch of 1930 America, ABar on 37th level of Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park often makes great impression with its stylish vibes and flavorful drinks. Saturday afternoon will be even more exciting and fun, with a vintage party that reminisces the Prohibition Era during 1920-1930 in America, where alcoholic beverages were banned from producing, selling and importing nationwide. The ban was lifted on the Saturday of December 5, 1933, making Saturday a day of celebration for Americans during that period. To revisit the boisterous fun, ABar is offering a party to entice every last Saturday of the month, starting from Saturday 25 May, 2019, onwards.

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ABar Saturday Social Party offers a sensational and unique dine and drink experiences, starting from an array of gourmet food by Akira Back, the world-renowned fine dining outlet that creates unique dish with East-meets-West elements. The a la menu, created exclusively for this party, includes dishes of premium meat and seafood such as Truffle Bomb, Soul Mate Amaebi and Sea Urchin served on Brioche Toast, Soft Shell Crab Avocado Roll served with Unamite Sauce.

We bring our massive grill dish to share where the meat and seafood items can be enjoyed with various styles of sauce and dipping. Cap off the meal with finely selected cheeses and sorbet made especially for the party.

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Drink wise, ABar offers 4 different free flow beverage packages, including;

  • Soft drink, mineral water, coffee and tea plus Chocolate Valrhona Martini made at the tableside with topping of your choice for THB 260++
  • Additional non-alcoholic beer and sparkling wine for THB 460++
  • Finely selected red and white wine, premium craft beer, Chocolate Martini and ABar Spritz for THB 1,400++
  • All the aforementioned beverage choices plus 3.30-hour free flow French champagne (by 17:00 hrs.) for THB 2,600++

Live band with 1920-1940 music repertoire start performing from 12:00 hrs. till 15:00 hrs., followed by swing set by a live DJ until 15:00 hrs.

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Savor delicious bites and premium drinks and enjoy entertainment with 1930 flair at ABar Saturday Social Party, 37th level of Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park, every last Saturday of the month, starting from Saturday 25 May 2019 between noon till 5pm. For information and reservations, please call +66 (0) 2 059 5999 or email [email protected]

Or connect with us via these channels:

Website:   www.bangkokmarriottmarquisqueenspark.com

Facebook:   www.facebook.com/abarandabarrooftop/

Instagram:   www.instagram.com/abar_abarrooftop/

Line official account:  @akirabackandabar

 

About Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park

The largest hotel in Bangkok and the first Marriott Marquis hotel in Asia Pacific, Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park is a new landmark in heart of the Thai capital. The hotel offers extensive facilities, including 1,388 rooms and suites, over 5,000m² of function space across 37 venues, two swimming pools, 24-hour fitness center, the Quan Spa and a collection of restaurants and bars. Centrally located on Sukhumvit Road, in Bangkok’s vibrant business and entertainment district, the hotel is the perfect choice for all travelers to this pulsating city.

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Redshirts Mark April Crackdown, Pledge Fight for Justice

Redshirt protesters on April 12, 2010, parade portraits of those killed in the military crackdown two days earlier on the streets of Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Redshirt leaders on Wednesday held a religious ceremony to mark the 9th anniversary of a crackdown that killed scores of their supporters.

Weng Tojirakarn, Jatuporn Prompan, Nattawut Saikua and other prominent Redshirts prayed for the dead at a temple in northern Bangkok under the close watch of police officers. It appeared to be the only public event commemorating the fatal clashes that left about 90 killed, mostly civilians.

Speaking to reporters, Weng said his organization will continue to pursue justice on behalf of those who lost their lives.

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“No power can make truth fade away,” said Weng, who was among the leaders of the Redshirt protests in 2010. “I believe one day justice will come. One day, whoever committed wrongdoings in that incident will be held responsible under the law.”

The ceremony was held at Wat Phra Sri Mahathat in Bang Khen district. Police officers were present, but did not interfere with the rituals.

This year’s remembrance of the crackdown was somewhat muted compared to previous years. In 2018, activists and the families of some victims staged a rally in their memory.

The clashes on April 10, 2010, broke out after the military attempted to disperse Redshirt protesters who were camping on Ratchadamnoen Avenue to call for a snap election. The crackdown turned deadly by nightfall when unidentified gunmen skirmished with advancing soldiers.

By the following morning, 27 people were dead, including civilians and soldiers. A colonel in charge of the operation was also killed.

The April crackdown was followed by a larger military operation a month later to disperse another Redshirt encampment downtown. Nearly 90 people died in the two months of unrest, including demonstrators, soldiers, rescue workers and two foreign journalists.

Legal cases against military personnel and government officials alleged responsible for the fatalities have gone nowhere. In 2013, the Redshirt-backed government also tried to pass a blanket amnesty bill that would have expunged political charges involving all factions, including both former MP Thaksin Shinawatra’s corruption conviction and investigations into the 2010 crackdown.

The bill was dropped after widespread opposition.

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Japan’s Emperor and Empress Celebrate 60 Years of Marriage

A file photo of Japanese Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, kneeling down and smiling at people at an earthquake evacuation shelter in Chiba Prefecture. Image: Associated Press

TOKYO — Japan’s Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary Wednesday just three weeks before he abdicates his throne.

The couple met at a 1957 tennis tournament remembered as a “love match.” Akihito and Michiko Shoda married on April 10, 1959, making him Japan’s first future emperor to wed a commoner and someone who was Catholic-educated. Both are among many changes he brought to Japan’s 1,500-year-old monarchy.

Akihito and Michiko broke with tradition, especially in choosing to raise their three children, in speaking far more often to the public, and making amends for the war victims in and outside the country as he kept searching for what his constitutional role of “a symbol” should be.

Unlike their predecessors, Akihito and Michiko are almost always together — Akihito kneeling beside Michiko speaking intimately with disaster victims at evacuation centers, or to residents at nursing homes or a handicapped people’s workshop. Their friendly interactions have won deep affection among the Japanese.

That is now known as the “Heisei” style, after the name of Akihito’s era — the opposite of a more charismatic, invisible and deified emperor that conservatives want to restore from Japan’s militaristic past, experts say. Akihito succeeded the throne in 1989 after the death of his father, Hirohito, the longest serving emperor whose 64-year reign spanned World War II and Japan’s postwar economic recovery.

In his birthday remark in December, Akihito thanked the people for accepting and supporting him, especially Michiko for her yearslong dedication and understanding for his role.

“Looking back, it was soon after I embarked on my life’s journey as an adult member of the Imperial Family that I met the Empress. Feeling a bond of deep trust, I asked her to be my fellow traveler and have journeyed with her as my partner to this day,” Akihito said.

“I am also truly grateful to the Empress, who herself was once one of the people, but who chose to walk this path with me, and over 60 long years continued to serve with great devotion both the Imperial Family and the people of Japan,” Akihito said, with his voice trembling with emotion.

As emperor, Akihito has also made unprecedented visits to the Philippines and other Pacific islands conquered by Japan that were devastated in fierce fighting as the U.S.-led allies took them back. Though the emperor has avoided outright apologies, he has subtly stepped up his expressions of regret in carefully scripted statements on the war.

Akihito and Michiko visited all of Japan’s 47 prefectures at least twice and traveled to 36 countries.

Wednesday’s celebration is their last in Akihito’s 30-year reign. The 85-year-old emperor is abdicating on April 30 and handing the Chrysanthemum throne to his elder son, Crown Prince Naruhito, 59, the next day.

During the ceremony at the palace, Naruhito and his wife, Crown Princess Masako, and other royal family members congratulated Akihito. He wore a tuxedo and Michiko a light-purple long dress. The couple will have an anniversary dinner with their three children and their spouses at the palace later Wednesday.

Story by Mari Yamaguchi

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