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“Ajinomoto” Sponsors the 30th Sea Games to Be Held in the Philippines (Sponsored)

Recently, Mr. Kaoru Kurashima (2nd from right), President of Ajinomoto Co., (Thailand) Ltd. as the representative of Ajinomoto Co., Inc., Japan (AJICO), signed an official sponsorship agreement with Mr. Allan Peter Cayetano (2nd from left), chairperson of the Philippine Southeast Asian Games Organising Committee (PHISGOC) as the first Japanese company entering the highest rank sponsor of the 30th SEA Games to be held in the Philippines from November 30 to December 11, 2019.

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“Ajinomoto” is a global manufacturer of high-quality food and amino acid based products which has been contributing to food, health and nutrition through wide-ranging application of amino acid technologies. Started in 2003, AJICO has been entering in the sport area by promoting amino acids benefits and well-balance diets to top-level Japanese athletes under the “Victory Project®”.

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With its tremendous outcomes, the Ajinomoto Group has initiated ASEAN Victory Project® to introduce Amino acid based products to athletes & sportsmen in the countries of ASEAN region through Ajinomoto’s affiliates. The project was initiated since 2018 and has been running sport support activities via 3 affiliates i.e. the Singapore Swimming Association by Ajinomoto Singapore in March 2018, individual Indonesian swimmer by Ajinomoto Indonesian in April 2018, and the Thailand Volleyball Association by Ajinomoto Thailand in December 2018.

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As a main sponsor of this 30th SEA Games, the Ajinomoto Group will provide various supports including amino acid based products to athletes throughout the event while further pursuing ASEAN Victory Project® to cover six Ajinomoto’s affiliates in the ASEAN region.

The Ajinomoto Group aims to be the Genuine Global Specialty Company by adhering “The Ajinomoto Group Creating Shared Value” policy since establishment focusing on the social value creation in 3 aspects i.e. 1) create healthy living society 2) maximize food resource usage 3) create global sustainability. And the supports of this sport event is one of our shared values in creating “healthy living society” through eating good food balanced nutrition for good health.

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Royal Defamation Reform Remains Untouchable Topic, Survey Finds

Suwat Liptapanlop of Chart Pattana Party rallies today in Sakon Nakhon province.
Suwat Liptapanlop of Chart Pattana Party rallies today in Sakon Nakhon province.

BANGKOK — No major political party has a policy to amend the controversial lese majeste law, an international human rights organization revealed Thursday.

None of 32 political parties who responded to 15 multiple-choice questions from the International Federation for Human Rights said they would try to amend the law, according to the survey’s findings.

Although many significant and new influential parties participated, the Paris-based federation got no response from three of the largest – the pro-junta Palang Pracharat Party, pro-Thaksin Pheu Thai and pragmatic Bhumjathai.

“Bhumjaithai and Phalang Pracharat made clear that they did not want to participate from the outright,” the federation’s regional director, Andrea Giorgetta, said Thursday at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand. “As for Pheu Thai, we waited until the last minute but it never came.”.

The Democrat, Action Coalition for Thailand, Chart Thai Pattana and Future Forward parties took no stance when asked what measures would it take on Article 112 of the Criminal Code, aka the lese majeste law, which effectively makes any action deemed a slight against the monarchy a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

Speaking at a panel discussion of the findings, Yingcheep Atchanont of legal reform group iLaw said even self-styled progressives such as Future Forward won’t touch the law because they are avoiding potential distractions to their more immediate goal of denying another term in office to junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha.

“I will leave some space for them to change their mind,” he said.

Of the 32 political parties surveyed, only four on the margins said they would support removing jail time as punishment for the crime: the Commoner, Mahachon, Green and Thai Power Labor.

As for capital punishment, Future Forward supports abolishing the death penalty for all crimes. The Democrat and Action Coalition for Thailand parties responded that it should remain in place for all current capital crimes, while Chart Thai Pattana said it should not be used for drug-related offenses.

Overall, a majority of the parties supported the capital punishment in some cases while only nine opposed it.

On the question of what could be done about the military’s outsized role in the nation’s affairs and allegations of abuse among its ranks, the Democrat Party said it would abolish the draft. Only five other parties supported that position.

Future Forward was one of just under half of the parties to say it would slash its budget. Both Chart Thai Pattana and Action Coalition for Thailand said they would establish an independent commission to investigate cadet deaths and hold the responsible parties accountable.

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Away From Dull Rallies, Thai Election Sizzles Online

Image: Huaitoon / Facebook
Image: Huaitoon / Facebook

From parodies of Thai Line spam to pairing political parties with Westerosi factions from “Game of Thrones,” the digital seas are churning with snark and parody days before a much-anticipated election.

Here are a few of the hot political memes that have circulated through the digital bloodstream in recent days.

In this graphic posted Friday, someone matched the major political parties to characters from HBO’s “Game of Thrones”

In it, pro-junta party Phalang Pracharat is power-addicted queen Cersei Lannister, while its archrival Pheu Thai Party is sulky protagonist Jon Snow “demanding justice.” Progressive newcomer Future Forward is young dragon queen Danaerys Targaryen, who is described as “the fiery newcomer.” Chaos-striver and expert fence-sitter Littlefinger stands in for the Democrat Party and a Westerosi religious zealot is the Buddhist virtue-signaling People’s Reform Party.

A comic imagines a rupture between anti-junta confederates. It in, a deputy Future Forward leader and former military man charged with cybercrimes this week vows to get the police out of politics, much to the chagrin of three allies and former policemen: Gen. Sereepisut Temeeyavets of the Thai Liberal Party, Pheu Thai’s Capt. Chalerm Yubamrung of and former police Lt. Col. Thaksin Shinawatra.

Although Future Forward has its own billionaire leader, the pro-establishment wing has worked overtime to associate it with Thaksin, the ousted premiere it most reviles.

“Cults of personality,” reads a caption to a side-by-side comparison of party members and Thaksin’s Redshirt supporters. In one comment, a user posted an image morphing Thaksin and Thanathorn into “Thaknathorn Shinroongruangwatra.” “Assemble! I’m rich, and I’m not corrupt!” he wrote.

When Prayuth recently mugged for a camera like Burt Reynolds was still the ideal of masculinity, it was like a challenge to the internet. And people couldn’t keep their Photoshoppin’ fingers off them after his party used one for a completely irony-free “Happy Tuesday” spam post usually found in Line groups comprised of baby boomers. It spawned a slew of copycats and started drawing in other pols.

Several memes addressed how the 250 junta-appointed senators are allowed a say in who is the next premier – and edge they’re expected to give to Prayuth. This video inserts Prayuth into 2012’s “The Dictator” as Sasha Baren Cohen in a slightly unfair race.

‘How many people do you need to conquer 70 million?’ ‘I need just 125,’ resurrects perennial favorite “300” to highlight Phalang Pracharat’s need for only 125 votes in the lower house if the full senate goes for Prayuth.

And of course there’s one of the most popular political webcomics, which has been pumping out election related frames daily, such as Drakeposting Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva’s position on Prayuth’s candidacy.

Ditch the lulz for cold hard facts on the election with our guide on how to vote, a brief explainer on the major parties and more of our election coverage.

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Prime Minister Not a Gov’t Official, State Agency Rules

Photo: Uncle Tu Fighting / Facebook

BANGKOK — Pre-election legal skirmishing continued Thursday with new developments and threats in the home stretch leading to Election Day.

Junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha escaped potential prosecution with the release of one legal opinion as his party was hit with a fresh challenge alleging abuse of state power to buy votes.

Though Prayuth travels the world representing Thailand and meeting heads of state, the state ombudsman today ruled that the prime minister is, in fact, not a government official. The Ombudsman Office’s unanimous ruling therefore meant the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party did not violate regulations by nominating Prayuth to be its candidate.

Read: EC Threatens to Disband Future Forward for ‘Outsider Influence’

Secretary-General Raksagecha Chaechai said being a government official requires four characteristics: being legally elected, possessing active law enforcement authority, being under the state, and receiving regular payment.

The office determined Prayuth didn’t meet two of the criteria as he wasn’t elected, and his junta operates outside of state authority.

The ruling came in response to a complaint filed last week by transparency gadfly Srisuwan Janya.

In another case, a Pheu Thai MP candidate in Lopburi filed complaints today alleging Prayuth and his party violated election law by campaigning there in a way that amounted to vote buying.

Party secretary Sonthirat Sonthijirawong was caught on video promising at a February rally there that Phalang Pracharat would increase credits on public welfare cards if it wins.

Sonthirat has said making such promises are routine on the campaign trail.

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In Success of ‘Captain Marvel,’ a Defeat For Trolls

This image released by Disney-Marvel Studios shows Brie Larson in a scene from
This image released by Disney-Marvel Studios shows Brie Larson in a scene from "Captain Marvel." Image: Disney-Marvel Studios

NEW YORK — Capt. Marvel possesses superhuman strength, cosmic awareness and, it turns out, the ability to vanquish trolls.

Marvel’s “Captain Marvel,” the superhero factory’s first movie fronted solely by a female hero, last weekend notched the sixth largest global opening ever and in five days of release has already sold USD$524.1 million tickets worldwide, Disney said Wednesday. That was despite the efforts of a vocal minority to sabotage the movie’s release in a campaign to lower audience scores and disseminate false information about the film’s star, Brie Larson.

It’s a playbook borrowed from the political realm and brought into the movie theater. And the movies that have drawn such attention have, more times than not, starred women in franchises previously dominated by males. But after similar campaigns against “Ghostbusters” and “The Last Jedi,” Hollywood studios are fighting back, as are sites like Rotten Tomatoes and YouTube.

Paul Feig’s 2016 female-led “Ghostbusters” remake, which Donald Trump himself spoke out against, was among the first films to be targeted by users rating it lowly on sites like the Internet Movie Database, orIMDb, before the film was even released. On YouTube, it was the most disliked trailer ever.

A similar strategy was employed on Rian Johnson’s “Star Wars Episode VII: The Last Jedi,” which — like “Ghostbusters” — had, and continues to have, genuine detractors who simply didn’t like the movie. But there were concerted efforts to amplify criticism of “The Last Jedi,” which notably expanded the “Star Wars” universe with new heroes like Laura Dern’s resistance leader and Kelly Marie Tran’s maintenance worker. Tran eventually deleted her Instagram account after months of harassment.

So when Johnson and Feig saw similar attempts being made ahead of the release of “Captain Marvel,” they recognized the handiwork.

“Pretty much the new ‘Certified Fresh’ badge,” said Johnson, linking to an article about review bombing on “Captain Marvel.” ”What a sad, sad pathetic group of people are who organize to do things like this,” Feig said.

The amplified backlashes to both “The Last Jedi” (which opened strong but faded) and “Ghostbusters” (which disappointed altogether) appeared to hurt the films’ bottom lines.

But the tide may be turning. The same Facebook group that organized to vote down “The Last Jedi” also went after Ryan Coogler’s “Black Panther.” That time, though, both Facebook and Rotten Tomatoes moved to counter the group, which was removed from Facebook. “Black Panther” became the third highest grossing film of all time domestically, not accounting for inflation.

And “Captain Marvel,” which drew a majority male audience (55 percent), similarly showed no signs of any ill effect.

“If those trolls had any negative impact on the box office, somebody point it out to me because I just don’t see it,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for Comscore. “The trolls, they’re not going derail a movie like this. For the fans, they love Marvel, they love the brand. Other than a terrible movie, nothing would dissuade the Marvel fans and the movie fans from coming out and seeing a film.”

Marvel, whose 21 films have earned a combined USD$18 billion in global box office, is indeed about as unassailable as any studio ever has been. “Captain Marvel” was also cunningly positioned as a need-to-see appetizer to “Avengers: Endgame,” due out April 26.

But “Captain Marvel” found itself in the crosshairs with some largely in response to Larson’s advocacy for diversity in film and in those who write about it. A USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative study last year found that, for the 100 top grossing films in 2017, 77.8 percent of the critics counted on Rotten Tomatoes were male and 86 percent were white.

At the time of the study’s release, Larson said: “I do not need a 40-year-old white dude to tell me what didn’t work for him about ‘A Wrinkle in Time.'” Larson later said she, after noticing that critics reviewing movies “appeared to be overwhelmingly white male” decided to make her press interviews “more inclusive.”

“This film is about trying to put in as many little revolutions as possible,” she told AV Club. “And as many little nods to what that experience is like, being a woman, so that other people could feel less alone.”

Online critics exaggerated her words in videos like one titled “Brie Larson hates white men.” Others said her character didn’t smile enough in promotional materials. Larson responded with a photo of giant grins superimposed on previous male Marvel heroes.

But perhaps more importantly, steps were taken to mitigate any troll effect on “Captain Marvel.” Two studio executives who spoke anonymously because they weren’t authorized to speak about their about their anti-troll efforts, said they’ve become more adept and prepared for combating organized negativity around a release. There are no more sneak attacks.

And the avenues for manipulating audience perception are dwindling.

YouTube, where anti-Larson videos proliferated ahead of the film’s opening, chose to categorize “Brie Larson” as a news search, not a general one. The algorithm tweak, first initiated to combat conspiracy videos after the 2017 Las Vegas music festival shooting, pushed videos from news and entertainment outlets up, and rants like “Brie Larson is Ruining Marvel!” down.

Rotten Tomatoes, which ranks both critic and audience scores, removed the potential for audience scoring before a movie is released. Though an initial wave of negative audience ratings had pushed the score for “Captain Marvel” down, by Wednesday it was at 63 percent — almost exactly the film’s average on Metacritic.

Dana Benson, a representative for the Fandango-owned Rotten Tomatoes, said the site is exploring more adjustments to prevent the gaming of its audience scores including a “verified purchase” component to reviews, similar to Amazon’s system, so to audience reviews come from those who have seen the movie.

“We’ve seen it with enough movies that we know we have to evolve our system,” said Benson of the trolling. “Anyone that has an open system like we do has received this type of attention. Moving forward, we want to make sure our users can trust our audience score and that we find different ways to verify the reviews.”

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Boeing’s Newest Plane Becomes its Biggest Headache

A Lion Air Boeing 737 Max 8 lands in January in Papua province, Indonesia. Image: Raja Video Id / YouTube
A Lion Air Boeing 737 Max 8 lands in January in Papua province, Indonesia. Image: Raja Video Id / YouTube

WASHINGTON — Boeing’s newest version of its best-selling airliner ever was supposed to boost its fortunes for years to come.

Instead it has turned into the company’s biggest headache, with more than 40 countries – including the U.S., which had been one of the last holdouts – grounding the 737 Max 8 after a second fatal crash proved one too many.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration issued an emergency order keeping the planes on the tarmac after refusing to do so in the days immediately following the crash of a Max 8 operated by Ethiopian Airlines that left 157 people dead.

The agency said what made the difference was new, enhanced satellite tracking data and physical evidence on the ground that linked the Ethiopian jet’s movements to those of an Indonesian Lion Air flight that plunged into the Java Sea in October and killed 189 people.

“That evidence aligns the Ethiopian flight closer to Lion Air, what we know happened to Lion Air,” said Daniel Elwell, acting FAA administrator.

Officials at Lion Air have said sensors on their plane produced erroneous information on its last four flights, triggering an automatic nose-down command that the pilots were unable to overcome on its final voyage.

Since debuting in 2017, Boeing has delivered more than 350 of the Max in several versions that vary by size. Dozens of airlines around the world have embraced the plane for its fuel efficiency and utility for short and medium-haul flights.

The groundings will have a far-reaching financial impact on Boeing, at least in the short term, said John Cox, a veteran pilot and CEO of Safety Operating Systems.

In addition to the planes that have been grounded, there are more than 4,600 Boeing 737 Max 8 planes on backlog that are not yet delivered to airlines.

“There are delivery dates that aren’t being met, there’s usage of the aircraft that’s not being met, and all the supply chain things that Boeing so carefully crafted,” Cox said. “If they can’t deliver the airplanes, where do they put the extra engines and the extra fuselage and the extra electrical components?”

Impacted airlines also may come knocking on Boeing’s door claiming damages. Norwegian Airlines said it would pursue reimbursement from Boeing for lost business and if other carriers follow suit, that could be costly. Whether airlines would be successful with such claims depends on the details of the contracts those carriers have with Boeing, said Dan Rose, partner at Kreindler & Kreindler, an aviation law firm. .

“One way or another, whether there’s a contractual provision that covers it or not, there are almost certainly going to be claims made against them,” Rose said.

In a research note earlier this week, Morgan Stanley called the grounding of the fleet a “worst-case scenario” that would disrupt near-term profitability because the 737 covers 70 percent of Boeing’s commercial production. The Max fleet was expected to make up most of the 737 deliveries this year and all deliveries over the next three years, according to data compiled by Morgan Stanley.

Shares in Chicago-based Boeing ended up $1.73 or about 0.5 percent, at $377.14 Wednesday after they lost more than 11 percent in the first two days this week. The stock is still up 17 percent for the year.

Boeing issued a statement saying it supported the FAA’s decision even though it “continues to have full confidence” in the planes’ safety.

The company also said it had recommended the suspension of the Max fleet after consultations with the government.

The FAA was under intense pressure to ground the planes and resisted even after Canada relented on Wednesday and agreed to bar the Max from the air, leaving the U.S. almost alone.

The agency, which prides itself on making data-driven decisions, had maintained there was nothing to show the Boeing jets were unsafe, and flights continued.

But President Donald Trump, who announced the grounding, was briefed that same day on new developments by Elwell and Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, and they determined the planes should be grounded, the White House said. Trump spoke afterward with Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenberg and Boeing signed on.

“At the end of the day, it is a decision that has the full support of the secretary, the president and the FAA as an agency,” Elwell said.

While early satellite tracking data showed similarities between the Ethiopian jet’s flight path and Lion Air, Elwell said the FAA was skeptical of the low-resolution images. The data showed movements that weren’t consistent with how airplanes fly, Elwell said.

On Wednesday, global air traffic surveillance company Aireon, Boeing and the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board were able to enhance the initial data and make it more precise “to create a description of the flight that made it similar enough to Lion Air,” Elwell said.

He wouldn’t detail the evidence found on the ground, saying the FAA is a party to the ongoing investigation.

The U.S. also grounded a larger version of the plane, the Max 9.

The Ethiopian plane’s flight data and voice recorders were to be sent to France Wednesday night for analysis, Elwell said. Some aviation experts have warned that finding answers in that crash could take months.

Airlines, mainly Southwest, American and United, should be able to swap out planes pretty quickly, and passengers shouldn’t be terribly inconvenienced, said Paul Hudson, president of flyersrights.org, which represents passengers. The Max, he said, makes up only a small percentage of the U.S. passenger jet fleet, he said.

“I think any disruptions will be very minor,” he said.

Sharon Barnes, a passenger at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, said she agreed with grounding the planes.

“I think it was the right decision given that the rest of the world is doing the same thing, and it’s a prudent thing to be doing until we know more about what’s going on,” she said.

In making the decision to ground the Max 8s in Canada, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said a comparison of vertical fluctuations found a “similar profile” between the Ethiopian Airlines crash and the Lion Air crash. Garneau, a former astronaut who flew in the space shuttle, emphasized that the data is not conclusive but crossed a threshold that prompted Canada to bar the Max 8.

The growing number of countries joining the ban put the FAA in a difficult position, said Peter Goelz, a former managing director of the NTSB who is now an aviation consultant. He said the FAA, which certified the 737 Max as airworthy and has been the lead regulatory body for the airplane.

Goelz said Trump likely was feeling pressure from Congress and the public to step in. “There’s probably nobody in the administration who’s got more of a sensitive ear to cable television,” he said.

After Trump’s announcement, American Airlines said its “teams will make every effort to rebook customers as quickly as possible.”

United Airlines, which grounded its 14 Max planes, said the aircraft account for roughly 40 flights per day. Through a combination of spare aircraft and rebooking customers, the airline did not anticipate a significant operational impact.

Southwest Airlines said it immediately complied with the order and removed its 34 Max 8 from scheduled service. The airline said the Max 8 planes account for less than 5 percent of the airline’s daily flights, adding that it remains confident in the airliner after completing more than 88,000 flight hours over 41,000 flights, but that it supports the FAA’s decision.

Ethiopian Airlines CEO Tewolde Gebremariam said its pilots had received special training on how to deal with the Max’s anti-stall software that could point the nose down.

“In addition to the basic trainings given for 737 aircraft types, an additional training was given for the Max version,” Tewolde told state news reporters. “After the Lion Air crash, questions were raised, so Boeing sent further instructions that it said pilots should know.”

Tewolde said he is confident the “investigation will reveal that the crash is not related to Ethiopian Airlines’ safety record.”

Story: Tom Krischer, Zeke Miller, Rob Gillies

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Korat to Host 2nd Thailand Biennale in 2020

A file photo of Prasat Hin Phimai at Phimai historical park in Nakhon Ratchasima. Photo: Net ohhayo / Wikimedia Commons

NAKHON RATCHASIMA — After the success of its first outing in the southern province of Krabi, a contemporary art biennale has chosen Isaan’s biggest province to host its return next year.

Nakhon Ratchasima will host the next Thailand Biennale in 2020, promising art installations by local and international artists in the city, as well as natural and historical sites.

The festival aims to run for four months beginning in May 2020 in three areas – Korat, the district of Phimai and Khao Yai National Park.

Khao Yai National Park is the third largest national park in Thailand. Phimai formerly belonged to the Khmer empire and is famous for the Prasat Hin Phimai, Khmer temple ruins with impressive architecture at a grand scale.

The Thailand Biennale Korat 2020 will be organized by the Culture Ministry’s Contemporary Art and Culture Office with a budget of over 100 million baht.

Thailand Biennale launched late last year in Krabi under the theme “Edge of the Wonderland.” The recently concluded festival featured nearly 60 artists from around the world showing art at venues including beaches, mountains and islands.

It was one of three “first” biennales to hit the kingdom last year. The more mainstream Bangkok Art Biennale is also tipped to return in 2020, as is the proudly noncommercial Bangkok Biennial.

Related stories:

Krabi to Host 1st Thailand Biennale in November

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#FacebookDown? #IGDown? Thai Net Loses Will to Live.

Image: @lhRD6PMWP0uop76 / Twitter
Image: @lhRD6PMWP0uop76 / Twitter

BANGKOK — Oh, TFW every itching millisecond wait to share a great picture with the world is replaced with a horrifying realization – the world has ceased to exist.

No posts, no likes, no shares – that was the case for roughly 12 hours overnight on Thailand’s favorite social media platforms. Twitter use exploded with complaints and laments as Thais coped with the painful loss caused by the severe global outage to hit the two services, which was the subject of all top five trending Thai hashtags this morning.

“Woke up in the morning hoping I would now be able to access IG and Facebook because they wouldn’t go down that long, right? But damn it it’s already 7:30am and I still can’t get into them. So bad I’m speechless,” @Hcokarokw tweeted with photos of a despondent child and crying cat.

“Okay, I can wait. I’m not going through withdrawal, okay?” @5mEaq wrote with an image of a sad Mario Maurer in a current soap opera being comforted by a friend.

While Thailand has some of Facebook’s most active users in the world, it felt the sting of losing Instagram more as #IGDown topped #FacebookDown to become the No.1 hashtag last night. They remained at No. 1 and 3 respectively as of Thursday morning.

“I’m alright with Facebook going down because I barely use it. When IG is down, I’m like, if you’re gone, my heart is also gone. How can I breathe if my life is without you? … I’m gonna cry,” @NapaschanokU wrote, quoting a song from the famous Thai drama “Nakee.” The tweet was accompanied by a collage of male characters from several Korean dramas crying.

“My life suddenly blank out,” @CalvinBayard tweeted with images of a cartoon bear in from “We Bare Bears” staring blankly.

Some hailed Twitter for being the last platform standing they could turn to.

“Stand alone!” @Btstaetae_s tweeted with that stand-in for all things enduring, the indestructible balloon.

“The survivors are Line and Twitter. I’m still okay,” @lhRD6PMWP0uop76 tweeted.

Facebook has yet to identify the cause of the service disruption but has denied it was the work of hackers.

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No Body Double: Trump Blasts #FakeMelania Theories

US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump walk from Marine One to board Air Force One on March 8 at Lawson Army Airfield, Fort Benning, Georgia. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press
US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump walk from Marine One to board Air Force One on March 8 at Lawson Army Airfield, Fort Benning, Georgia. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is not amused by the #FakeMelania conspiracy theories circulating on social media.

He spun off a new theory on Wednesday to debunk the idea that there’s a body double of his wife who steps in for her at times. The “fake news” did it, he claimed without evidence.

Trump alleged on Wednesday in a tweet that photos of his wife had been altered to make them appear as though a look-alike accompanied him to Alabama last week to survey tornado damage.

His favorite morning TV program, “Fox & Friends,” reported on the body-double theory Wednesday as the show’s hosts weighed in on a discussion that aired Monday on ABC’s “The View.” Hosts of the ABC program debated whether an impostor had traveled with Trump.

“The Fake News photoshopped pictures of Melania, then propelled conspiracy theories that it’s actually not her by my side in Alabama and other places,” the president tweeted. “They are only getting more deranged with time!”

Hosts of “The View” had commented on how the woman at Trump’s side in photos of the trip appeared shorter than usual and had a different facial structure than the first lady’s. One host allowed that the first lady might have been wearing flat shoes.

https://twitter.com/OGBotterz/status/1104145885880041474

In fact, the 5-foot-11 first lady had ditched her customary stilettos for sneakers to walk around the rough terrain with the 6-foot-3 Trump.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment on who specifically Trump thought had doctored the photos. The president showed his frustration with press coverage of his wife during an interview this week with a conservative online news organization.

“If our first lady, if I were a Democrat instead of a Republican, she’d be Jackie O times twenty. Instead, they go after her,” Trump told Breitbart News in Monday’s interview. Trump was referring to President John F. Kennedy’s wife, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, who often was referred to as “Jackie O” after she remarried following Kennedy’s assassination.

Several factors can influence the way people appear in photos, including the angle at which the photos are taken, the type of camera lens that is used and the positioning of the photographer, said Akili Ramsess, executive director of the National Press Photographers Association.

News images are not to be altered beyond basic toning and cropping, she said.

“Manipulation is against photojournalism ethics,” Ramsess said, adding that most newsrooms follow the ethics guidelines on the association’s website. “Photographers or editors can be fired over such manipulation.”

The “FakeMelania” hashtag has been around since at least 2017, Trump’s first year in office, with Twitter searches producing numerous photos of the first lady and unfounded commentary that the woman in the images is not Melania Trump.

Toward the end of the debate on “The View,” contributor Ana Navarro-Cardenas, who opposes Trump, said: “Let’s have fun with Melania. She’s beautiful, and we’re doing this in jest.” Abby Huntsman, a Republican on the panel, followed up by asking, “Does that make it better?” That prompted co-host Joy Behar, who also disapproves of Trump, to say: “We’re not here to be better people. We’re here to have a good laugh.”

Stephanie Grisham, the first lady’s spokeswoman, said the episode “went beyond the petty mean-girl spirit that we’ve grown accustomed to.”

“People died, people lost family, people are hurting in Alabama,” Grisham said Wednesday in an email. “I personally watched the president and first lady hug, listen to and comfort people who had lost everything – and the ‘ladies’ of The View instead chose to laugh and joke about a body-double conspiracy.”

An ABC spokesman declined to comment.

Story: Darlene Superville

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Malaysia Won’t Drop Case Against Vietnamese in Kim Killing

Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, at center, is escorted by police into the Shah Alam High Court on Thursday in Shah Alam, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, at center, is escorted by police into the Shah Alam High Court on Thursday in Shah Alam, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

SHAH ALAM, Malaysia — Malaysia’s attorney general ordered the murder case to proceed against a Vietnamese woman accused in the killing of the North Korean leader’s estranged half brother, prosecutors said in court Thursday.

Prosecutor Iskandar Ahmad gave no explanation for the refusal to drop the murder charge against Doan Thi Huong, who is the only suspect in custody after the stunning decision to drop the case Monday against Indonesian Siti Aisyah.

Huong’s lawyer Hisyam Teh Poh Teik told the court they were disappointed with the attorney general’s decision and said prosecutors were being unfair to Huong.

“It does not bring confidence to our criminal justice system. Very obviously, there is discrimination. The AG favored one party to the other,” Teh said.

He also sought a deferment of the trial, saying Huong has been unwell since Aisyah’s release and is not in a position to testify.

Huong stood in the dock and responded to the judge’s questions on the deferment request, saying she suffered from tension and stress. “I have no idea what is going on,” she said.

The judge agreed to postpone the trial until April 1 but warned there should be no more delay. The defense phase of the trial was to have begun Monday.

Huong looked tired and was sobbing as she spoke to Vietnamese Embassy officials after the court hearing ended.

Vietnamese Ambassaador Le Quy Quynh said he was “very disappointed” with the attorney general’s decision. He said Vietnam’s justice minister had written to the Malaysian attorney general seeking Huong’s release and that Vietnam will keep lobbying Malaysia to free her.

“We will request Malaysia to have fair judgment and release her as soon as possible,” he said.

A Vietnamese delegation said Huong told them she was happy for Aisyah but that she was also innocent.

The two women were the only people in custody after four North Korean suspects fled the country the morning of Feb. 13, 2017, when Kim Jong Nam was poisoned with VX nerve agent.

Aisyah and Huong have said they thought they were taking part in a prank for a TV show.

A High Court judge last August had found there was enough evidence to infer that Aisyah, Huong and the four missing North Koreans engaged in a “well-planned conspiracy” to kill Kim Jong Nam.

Lawyers for the women have previously said that they were pawns in a political assassination with clear links to the North Korean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, and that the prosecution failed to show the women had any intention to kill. Intent to kill is crucial to a murder charge under Malaysian law.

Malaysian officials have never officially accused North Korea and have made it clear they don’t want the trial politicized.

Kim Jong Nam was the eldest son in the current generation of North Korea’s ruling family. He had been living abroad for years but could have been seen as a threat to Kim Jong Un’s rule.

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