30 C
Bangkok
Friday, July 3, 2026
Home Blog Page 1660

Rangers Rescue Baby Elephants From Muddy Pond (Video)

NAKHON RATCHASIMA — Six baby elephants stuck in a muddy pond were successfully rescued Thursday.

Thap Lan National Park rangers took five hours to dig out a path to save six elephant calves after they were found trapped in a pond.

The elephants were first found Wednesday afternoon, according to Prawatsart Jantep, chief of Thap Lan National Park in Nakhon Ratchasima province. Officers had to travel by foot to dig out a path for the elephants to walk out.

At about noon on Thursday, all the calves were able to leave the pond before heading toward the forest.

The animals were believed to have wandered into the pond with other elephants, but six couldn’t leave and were left behind.

Advertisement

CP Foods Gives Recognition to Responsible Suppliers

Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL (CP Foods) held the first-ever “Supplier Sustainability Award” ceremony, praising the suppliers for their responsible operations that help both parties to achieve sustainable growth together.

The award ceremony was held as a part of “CPF Capacity Building for Partnership Conference 2019”. It was participated by over 200 suppliers and honorable guests from the Department of Labour Protection and Welfare. The company gave the awards to suppliers that make outstanding contributions to the company’s responsible value chain, reinforcing its commitment to social and environmental sustainability.

Mr. Pisit Ohmpornnuwat, Chairman of Sustainable Supply Chain Committee of CP Foods, said the company has been working with partners to develop its value chain in line with CP Foods’ the Sustainable Sourcing Policy and Supplier Guiding Principle as well as the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

The scope of cooperation covers 4 main areas, including product and services’ traceability, fair treatment of employees and human rights, environmental-friendly process, and verifiability performance and risk management.

Last year, CP Foods encourage its suppliers to apply the company’s Online Supplier Sustainability Self-Assessment to ensure that they are stringently comply with law and international trade regulations. The company also provides training programmes for business partners to help develop their practices.

“Supplier Sustainability Awards were given as a recognition to our partners with strict responsible sourcing compliance as well as sharing their expertise with other partners.” Mr. Pisit said. “The partnership will drive the company, our suppliers and the whole food industry toward sustainable level.”

These winning suppliers have delivered key raw materials from responsible sources to CP Foods, such as legal and traceable corns, and IFFO RS certified fishmeal. They also adopt high labor practices in accordance to international human rights and labour standard. It will ensure both suppliers and CP Foods achieve traceability throughout supply chains.

Mr. Manoch Seangkaew, Inspector-General for the Department of Labour Protection and Welfare, who was an honorable guest and keynote speaker on “Labour force and sustainable supply chain” at the event, commented that food producers must places significant emphasis on transparency and sustainability of supply chain, especially on human rights and fair labour practices, to meet international trade regulations.

To boost global competitiveness, the ministry also has policy to work together with private sector to upgrade the standard of their value chain through supplier development.

“The public-private cooperation will benefit everyone in the supply chain as well as our society. Moreover, this sustainable value chain can enhance Thai food industry’s competitiveness at world stage as well.” He said

Advertisement

Pork Bingsu: This Shop Only Serves Crispy Pork Dishes

KHON KAEN — Queues of hungry students and locals were lining up at a shop that sells everything “moo krob” in the northeast of Thailand.

At Ajo Took Yaang Moo Krob or Ajo Everything Moo Krob, every dish features moo krob, or crispy pork at affordable prices, including Moo Krob Bingsu – a mountain of rice, pork, and sauce popular among hungry students.

“I love to eat moo krob myself, but as a Khon Kaen U student, there was no shop that I really liked that I could find,” fresh grad entrepreneur Jakkradoon Semornboon, 23, said.

Open just shy of three months, the shop has gained word-of-mouth popularity, to Jakkradoon’s surprise. Online reviews praise Ajo for its generous servings. The Moo Krob Bingsu (169 baht for a 1 kilogram, 309 baht for 2 kilograms), similar to the popular 2016 Korean dessert fad, is shaped in a cone but made of rice and pork instead.

“I think it’s a dish that creates closeness and intimacy, whether it’s between lovers, family or colleagues, because you have to share it with two to three people to be just the right amount of full,” Jakkradoon said.

Jakkradoon Semornboon.
Jakkradoon Semornboon.

Unlike other moo krob restaurants, Jakkradoon says he dries his pork in the sun before baking it and frying it.

“Other places just fry it without baking. My process makes the pork crunchy and fluffy on the outside, and soft on the inside,” he said.

The shop serves more than 30 dishes, all of which include moo krob – from the simple moo krob over rice for 45 baht to the Moo Krob Bingsu. The krapao or basil stir-fry moo krob is only 50 baht, the larb moo krob is 55 baht.

Various other dishes you can see Khon Kaen University students gobbling up – some of them farang exchange students, Jakkradoon says – are moo krob stir-fried with black pepper (55 baht), moo krob fried with Mala sauce (65 baht), tom yum moo krob (79 baht) and moo krob curry (75 baht).

Ajo Everything Moo Krob is located on U Plaza canteen next to Khon Kaen University. It opens from 10am to 9pm every day. It can be reached on song taew bus number 8.

This review is unsponsored and was based on a Khaosod reporter’s announced visit.

Krapao moo krob (55 baht).
Krapao moo krob (55 baht).
Moo Krob Bingsu (169 baht).
Moo Krob Bingsu (169 baht).
Tom yum moo krob (79 baht).
Tom yum moo krob (79 baht).

55914127 381072285957350 1438798049701789696 n copy 55661592 2320671148176925 4085106745716768768 n copy 55540632 417331865681995 3508743497760899072 n copy 55516206 2308480716037899 7420211742266884096 n copy54800258 300260697323992 447983170785116160 n copy 54728062 840888922918370 2160279794388828160 n copy 54521077 281899959378258 4309651535781953536 n copy 54436722 770202556694844 3627145223441743872 n copy 54279420 423680828387507 3725959969812512768 n copy53668492 405104336704825 8218752110846541824 n copy54518909 652798468467894 1252680821660188672 n copy

Related stories:

Escaping Bangkok: One Dam Day in Nakhon Nayok

Thai Desserts Modern But Unpretentious at Ayutthaya Cafe

Advertisement

Count Voided NZ Votes, Election Observation Group Says

A woman votes in Bangkok on March 24, 2019.

BANGKOK — The Election Commission should count the 1,542 votes which arrived late from New Zealand, an election observation group said Wednesday.

In a statement signed by its Vice President Laddawan Tantivitayapitak, P-NET said there’s no indication of irregularities in the 1,542 ballot papers from Thai overseas voters in New Zealand and asked the Election Commission to count them, as official results have yet to be revealed.

The Election Commission voided the ballots Tuesday afternoon after an alleged logistical problem prevented the votes from arriving to their respective booths on time for last weekend’s poll.

Public outcry followed the incident, with many accusing the Foreign Ministry of failing to retrieve the ballots when they arrived Saturday night, a day before the election.

Advertisement

No Politics in Stripping Thaksin’s Award, Armed Forces Say

Former leader Thaksin Shinawatra at his daugther's wedding in Hong Kong on March 22, 2019.

BANGKOK — A top military figure said Thursday politics wasn’t behind the army’s decision to strip former leader Thaksin Shinawatra of an award.

Gen. Pornpipat Benyasri, Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, told reporters the ex-premier lost his Chakdao medal in accordance with the military’s regulations, which call for awards to be rescinded if recipients “fail to deserve the honor.”

“The media and Thai people may already know that answer from many websites and social media,” Pornpipat said when asked why Thaksin lost the award. “But it disturbs the ethics and values of the armed forces is any action that amounts to insulting and disrespecting higher entities.”

Gen. Pornpipat did not elaborate, though the term “disrespecting higher entities” is sometimes used as a euphemism to describe hostility toward the monarchy.

Chakdao medals are given yearly to prominent alumni of the Armed Forces Preparation Academy. Thaksin, enrolled at the academy before his stint as a police officer, won the award in 1991.

The former leader retains immense popularity among supporters in Thailand despite being ousted in a 2006 coup. He was later found guilty of corruption in 2008, but fled the country shortly before the verdict was handed out, citing the ruling was politically motivated.

Thaksin lashed out at Sunday’s election by calling it “rigged” in favor of the junta. Writing in an op-ed to the New York Times from Hong Kong, the ex-premier said there were numerous allegations of fraud during the votes.

Gen. Pornpipat said Thaksin was not stripped of the medal because of his criticism. He also said the timing has nothing to do with the current political situation.

“Things can be fast and slow. It’s normal,” the general said.

Advertisement

FAA Defends Reliance on Aircraft Makers to Certify Jets

An Ethiopian Boeing 737 Max 8 takes off in February from Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel. Photo: LLBG Spotter / Wikimedia Commons
An Ethiopian Boeing 737 Max 8 takes off in February from Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel. Photo: LLBG Spotter / Wikimedia Commons

WASHINGTON — Under fire from lawmakers on Capitol Hill over the two deadly Boeing crashes, the head of the Federal Aviation Administration on Wednesday defended the agency’s practice of relying on aircraft makers to help certify their own planes for flight.

Acting FAA Administrator Daniel Elwell said the strategy has “consistently produced safe aircraft designs for decades.” And he said the agency would need 10,000 more employees and an additional USD$1.8 billion a year to do all the work now done by designated employees of the companies it regulates.

Under the self-certifying program, these employees perform tests and inspections needed to win safety approvals, with the FAA overseeing their work. The approach is credited with holding down government costs and speeding the rollout of new models.

But in the wake of disasters involving Boeing’s new 737 Max jetliner in Indonesia and Ethiopia, that practice has been seized on as evidence of an overly cozy relationship between the FAA and the industry.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said at a Senate subcommittee hearing that delegating safety work to the companies puts “the fox in charge of the henhouse.”

“The fact is that the FAA decided to do safety on the cheap, which is neither safe nor cheap,” Blumenthal said. He vowed to introduce legislation to change the system.

At the same hearing, the Transportation Department’s inspector general, Calvin Scovel III, said the FAA plans to significantly revamp its oversight of aircraft development by July. But the department gave no indication it intends to abandon the collaborative approach.

Scovel said the changes would include new ways to evaluate training and self-audits by aerospace companies but offered little other detail.

Boeing said the process by which it designs, develops and tests planes has led to safer and safer air travel, and it sees no need for an overhaul.

The FAA and the industry say that deputizing private employees to do safety-related tasks is vindicated by the nation’s safety record — one passenger accident death in the U.S. in the last 10 years and millions of flights. Elwell said the approach is “part of the fabric of what we have used to become as safe as we are today.”

The Max, featuring bigger, more efficient engines, went into service in 2017. The software in a new automated system that can push the plane’s nose down to prevent an aerodynamic stall is suspected of playing a role in the Oct. 29 crash of a Lion Air jet in Indonesia and has also come scrutiny in the March 10 plunge of an Ethiopian Airlines Max. In all, 346 people died.

The plane was grounded around the world this month.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, who chaired the hearing, said the “close relationship between industry and regulators” threatens to erode the confidence of the flying public.

Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, who oversees the FAA, has asked Scovel to look into the way the agency certified the Max as airworthy. Also, the Justice Department is investigating possible criminal violations involving the airliner’s certification.

In addition, the Transportation Department watchdog plans to examine the widespread use of automated systems to fly airplanes and whether pilots are being adequately trained for when such features fail.

Meanwhile, Boeing invited about 200 pilots from several airlines to its Seattle-area facility to explain to them upcoming changes to the Max’s flight-control system.

The company said pilots will be required to take a computer-based training course with about 30 minutes on the flight-control software before they can fly the Max. It includes a knowledge test at the end. Boeing will also put information about the software in flight-crew manuals.

Boeing’s vice president of airplane development, Mike Sinnett, repeated Boeing’s confidence in the safety of the plane.

“We are working with customers and regulators around the world to restore faith in our industry and also to reaffirm our commitment to safety and to earning the trust of the flying public,” Sinnett said.

Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., questioned whether the FAA is too chummy with airlines and Boeing, a major defense contractor with political power in Washington.

“Changes need to be made in the relationship between this company and its regulator to ensure that the safely of the flying public remains the paramount interest, not the quarterly profits of this company,” Udall said.

Scovel, the inspector general, also said he will examine why the FAA was the last safety regulator in the world to ground the Boeing Max after the second crash. He said other countries decided that “they needed to drive risk to zero, and they did that by grounding the aircraft.”

Elwell defended the FAA’s decision, as he has before, saying that FAA acted as soon as “refined” tracking data indicated that the flight path of the Ethiopian plane was similar to Lion Air’s.

The FAA chief said he spoke to Chao, the transportation secretary, and President Donald Trump leading up to the grounding decision on March 13. Despite being pressed, he declined to describe any conversations with Trump, calling silence about such talks a longstanding executive branch policy.

Elwell added that he didn’t ground the plane sooner in part because pilots at American Airlines, Southwest Airlines and United Airlines assured him in strong terms that they were confident in the plane’s safety.

The crashes have raised questions about pilot training in other countries. Ethiopian Airlines CEO Tewolde Gebremariam rejected that assertion, saying this week that the pilots who flew the plane that crashed this month outside the capital of Addis Ababa had trained on “all appropriate simulators” and were adequately prepared to fly the new aircraft.

Story: Tom Krisher, David Koenig, Marcy Gordon

Advertisement

A Look at Alleged Raiders of North Korean Embassy in Madrid

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un receives a military briefing Aug. 14 in Pyongyang, North Korea. Image: Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — The 10 people who allegedly raided the North Korean Embassy in Madrid last month belong to a mysterious dissident organization that styles itself as a government-in-exile dedicated to toppling the ruling Kim family dynasty in North Korea.

The leader of the alleged intruders appears to be a Yale-educated human rights activist who was once jailed in China while trying to rescue North Korean defectors living in hiding, according to activists and defectors.

Details have begun trickling out about the raid after a Spanish judge lifted a secrecy order Tuesday and said an investigation of what happened on Feb. 22 uncovered evidence that “a criminal organization” shackled and gagged embassy staff before escaping with computers, hard drives and documents. A U.S. official said the group is named Cheollima Civil Defense, a little-known organization that recently called for international solidarity in the fight against dictatorship in North Korea.

Here’s a look at the intruders and the Cheollima group.

 

The Group

Details about the creation of the Cheollima Civil Defense group are hazy. The word “Cheollima” – spelled “Chollima” in the North – refers to a mythical winged horse that the government often uses in its propaganda.

In a statement posted on its website on Thursday, the group said it has “temporarily suspended” its activities because of what it described as an “attack of various speculative articles by the media.” The group said it consists of North Korean defectors living in countries around the world, but that it has not worked with or contacted defectors “living under tight security” in South Korea.

“We ask the media to restrain their interest about the truth of our organization or its members. There are bigger things ahead of us,” Cheollima said in a statement written in Korean. “We are an international organization unified by determination to cut off the dynastic power of the Kim family.”

In March 2017, the group said it had arranged the escape of Kim Han Sol, the son of Kim Jong Nam, the half brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un who was assassinated at a Malaysian airport earlier that year.

A man claiming to be Kim Han Sol appeared in a YouTube video at the time and said he was safely with his mother and sister.

“My name is Kim Han Sol from North Korea, part of the Kim family,” the man said in English in the 40-second video clip. “My father has been killed a few days ago.”

Recently the group declared on what appears to be its website the establishment of “Free Joseon,” which it described as “a provisional government” that would fight against “the criminal incumbents of the north.” North Korea still calls itself “Joson,” its spelling of “Joseon,” the name of the dynasty that ruled the Korean Peninsula for more than 500 years.

The group also recently posted a video showing an unidentified man destroying glass-encased portraits of North Korea’s two late leaders. South Korean media reported that the group was behind the writing of “Let’s topple Kim Jong Un,” the current North Korean leader, on the wall of the North Korean Embassy in Malaysia.

After the Spanish judge released documents about the Feb. 22 incident, the Cheollima website said it had been responding to an urgent situation at the embassy and was invited onto the property, and that “no one was gagged or beaten.” The group said there were “no other governments involved with or aware of our activity until after the event.”

The Spanish court report said the intruders urged North Korea’s only accredited diplomat in Spain, So Yun Sok, to defect.

The Cheollima website said the group shared “certain information of enormous potential value” with the FBI, under mutually agreed terms of confidentiality.

The FBI said its standard practice is to neither confirm nor deny the existence of investigations.

If Cheollima was behind the embassy break-in, it indicates the involvement of North Korean defectors who have experience working for North Korea’s military or security authorities, said Nam Sung Wook, a former president of the Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank affiliated with South Korea’s main spy agency.

“There are many young North Korean men who come to the South with more than 10 years of military experience,” said Nam, who now teaches at Korea University in South Korea. “People would be surprised at what they are capable of doing, and they aren’t always being closely watched by the South Korean government.”

 

The Alleged Leader

A Spanish court document identified the leader of the group that entered the embassy as Adrian Hong Chang.

This is likely to be Adrian Hong, who in 2005 co-founded Liberty in North Korea (LiNK), an activist group devoted to rescuing North Korean refugees, according to North Korean defectors and activists who spoke with The Associated Press.

Hannah Song, CEO of LiNK, said Hong has had no involvement with the organization for more than 10 years. “We have no knowledge of his recent activities,” Song said.

The Spanish judge, Jose de la Mata, described Adrian Hong Chang as a Mexican national and resident of the United States. According to the Spanish court report, the man flew to the United States on Feb. 23, got in touch with the FBI and offered to share material and videos. The report didn’t say what type of information the items contained or whether the FBI accepted the offer.

An online message by AP to a verified Twitter account linked to activist Adrian Hong wasn’t immediately answered.

Hong is known for his work helping North Koreans flee their homeland and resettle in South Korea and elsewhere. LiNK said it has helped more than 1,000 North Koreans reach safety. Fellow activists and North Korean defectors said Hong was detained in China briefly in the 2000s because of his work.

Kang Chol-hwan, a prominent North Korean defector-turned-activist, said he was close to Hong and helped him with LiNK.

Kang, an ex-inmate of North Korea’s notorious Yodok prison camp, said Hong became passionate about North Korean human rights after reading his detention memoir. He said Hong visited Seoul and rallied against what he believed were pro-North Korea sympathizers and those silent on North Korean human rights issues.

Kang, who said he last saw Hong about five years ago, said Hong wanted to “muster anti-government forces (in North Korea) and bring down North Korea from the inside.” Kang said Hong even went to Libya to study the fall of dictator Moammar Gadhafi so he could explore ways to topple the Kim government.

Kang believes Hong heads the whole Cheollima group.

“He has great capacity for organization because of his experience establishing LiNK,” Kang said. “He’s a very smart guy.”

Fellow defector-turned-activist Heu Kang Il, who met Hong around 2005, recalled him as a “passionate young man.”

Testifying before the Canadian Senate in 2016, Hong said: “North Korea is not a normal nation with the government seeking to serve and protect its citizens. It is a brutal totalitarian regime, ruled by a royal family and a class of vassals, both in tenuous concert with one another. It does not care for the welfare of its people.”

In an op-ed for The Christian Science Monitor in 2014, Hong said the international community must support “efforts to strengthen meaningful opposition and civil society in the country, training exiles to one day assume leadership positions, educating younger refugees, and creating more robust programs to help defectors adjust to life on the outside.”

“A class of Korean technocrats must be capable of stabilizing and rebuilding on a national scale,” Hong wrote.

Story: Kim Tong-Hyung, Hyung-jin Kim

Advertisement

Prayuth, Pheu Thai Should Step Back, Avoid Bloodshed: Activists

Authorities beat a protester in May 1992 in Bangkok. Photo: The Nation
Authorities beat a protester in May 1992 in Bangkok. Photo: The Nation

BANGKOK — Thailand could witness further deadly clashes if politicians do not step back from the deadlock, a committee chair for relatives of those killed in the May 1992 political confrontations said Thursday.

Adul Kheawbariboon, chairman of the May 1992 Victims’ Relatives Committee, held a press conference warning that signs that suggest possible deadly political clashes are ominous.

“I am concerned and know well what will happen in such conditions,” said Adul, who lost his 20-year-old son nearly three decades ago during the crackdown on anti-junta protests in May 1992. “This kind of situation will surely lead to the second May Massacre… There will surely be loss of lives and to the economy.”

Speaking with four others who lost their loved ones when the military junta mowed down protesters in 1992 – leading to 44 deaths and more than 50 people missing – Adul said it’s not too late to prevent a similar repetition.

Adul urged junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha and candidates of leading anti-junta parties, including Pheu Thai’s Sudarat Keyuraphan of Future Forward’s Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, to withdraw and allow smaller party candidates with less direct political conflict to become prime minister.

He named Bhumjaithai and the Democrat Party as such smaller parties.

Adul said there is a real risk of political violence if Prayuth insists on having his 250 appointed senators vote him prime minister, despite commanding a minority in the lower house.

He also warned that a Pheu Thai-led coalition could not be formed if they don’t have the support of the senate to select the prime minister – a requirement before a coalition can be formed.

Adul added that politics has become even more divisive after elections.

“We think both sides are caught in a deadlock,” said Adul, who said he would submit a letter to push for their proposals to major political parties next week.

He said it’s still not too late for Prayuth to diffuse the situation.

“It’s time for you to leave and act as a mentor. You still have a chance to be a statesman,” Adul said.

Advertisement

Govt Moves to Protect Bangkok’s Famed ‘Green Lung’

A file photo of a canalside path in Bang Kachao, Samut Prakan.
A file photo of a canalside path in Bang Kachao, Samut Prakan.

BANGKOK — The government on Thursday banned large-scale constructions or waste disposal in a river island south of the capital renowned for its lush nature.

An order issued by the natural resources ministry said Bang Kachao area in Samut Prakan province is to be preserved as an environment landmark. It cited the presence of unique and rich biodiversity needed protection from increasing human activity.

The protected area includes six sub-districts – Bang Namphueng, Bang Kachao, Bang Yo, Bang Krasop, Bang Ko Bua, and Song Khanong –  lying on the island formed by a river bend and a canal that covers about 1,900 hectares. The order seeks to encourage more green spaces and environmental conservation measures.

The new rules ban the construction of new commercial properties such as factories, hotels, condominiums, cruise ports and golf courses. They also bar more buildings from being constructed on state-owned land. Any buildings built must not be taller than 9 meters. “Thai-style” buildings can be as tall as 12 meters.

Activities that would damage natural water resources such as waste disposal and waterside construction are also prohibited.

There have been increasing reports regarding threats to the environment of the popular attraction dubbed “Bangkok’s green lung,” and its nearby areas – especially waste problems. In February, local officials on the island’s southern tip filed criminal complaints against an illegal, foreign-owned plastic processing plant for odor pollution and illegal structures encroaching on public water.

Advertisement

Election Results Removed After Media Spot Discrepancies

Redshirt activists protest against alleged voting frauds at the Election Commission on March 27, 2019.

BANGKOK — The Election Commission on Thursday took down its full voting report hours after releasing it to the media, amid growing questions of the results’ numerous discrepancies.

The commission posted the report to the media chat group minutes after an abrupt news conference, in which officials declared the pro-junta party as the most-voted party. However, the report was deleted hours later when reporters discover numerous inconsistent numbers.

Another report was accessible on the commission’s official website Thursday evening but it is unclear whether it is the final, accurate version.

Discrepancies include a difference in raw votes announced by the commission and its official document released later; numbers of voters not matching numbers of ballots used; and total votes awarded to political parties not matching number of ballots declared valid.

Voter turnout was 74.69 percent, higher than the initial report of 65 percent, the commission said, without explaining the hike. Leaders of Pheu Thai and Future Forward parties on Thursday afternoon called upon the Election Commission to clarify that increase.

One reporter asked in the commission’s media chat group why numbers of eligible voters announced by officials before and after the election were not the same.

Official in charge of the chat group did not provide any immediate explanation about the inconsistency nor say if it had replaced the report with a corrected version. But commissioner Krit Urwongse said the discrepancy of voter turnout and ballots used could be due to some voters who registered to vote at polling stations leaving without casting ballots.

Voters typically received ballots and marked them almost immediately after registration.

According to the report available online, the five most-voted parties are Phalang Pracharath (8.4 million votes), Pheu Thai (7.9 million votes), Future Forward (6.2 million votes), Democrats (3.9 million votes) and Bhumjaithai (3.7 million votes).

The document released to the media also left out a party name, later identified as Prachathai Party.

 

There were 2.1 million spoiled ballots in the election, or about 5 percent of the total ballots. About 1.5 percent of voters marked “None of the Above” in their ballots.

The agency said it received about 186 complaints related to voting procedures.

This is the first complete returns of Sunday’s votes. An earlier result released by the Election Commission was based on 95 percent of votes counted.

However, the results will not be endorsed until May 9, the commission said, citing the need to verify the numbers and settle all complaints filed.

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
30 ° C
30 °
26.6 °
79 %
4.9kmh
100 %
Fri
30 °
Sat
30 °
Sun
31 °
Mon
30 °
Tue
31 °