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Asian Stocks Follow Wall Street Higher Ahead of Brexit Vote

An investor stares at a stock price board at a stock trading hall in 2016 in Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. Photo: Long Wei / Associated Press
An investor stares at a stock price board at a stock trading hall in 2016 in Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. Photo: Long Wei / Associated Press

BEIJING — Asian stocks followed Wall Street higher on Tuesday as investors awaited Britain’s vote on a plan to leave the European Union.

Thailand’s SET gained marginally, trading at 1,627.59 on Tuesday afternoon. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.6 percent to 3,043.53 points and Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 gained 1.1 percent to 21,503.69. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 1.1 percent to 28,821.14 and Seoul’s Kospi surged 1.0 percent higher at 2,158.88.

Sydney’s S&P-ASX 200 slipped 0.1 percent to 6,174.80, while markets in New Zealand, Taiwan and Southeast Asia were higher.

Overnight, gains in tech stocks drove the benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500 index to its biggest daily gain since January, snapping a five-day losing streak for the S&P, which was coming off its worst weekly stumble this year.

The S&P 500 gained 1.5 percent to 2,783.30. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.8 percent to 25,650.88. The Nasdaq composite jumped 2 percent to 7,558.06.

Nvidia rose after agreeing to buy chipmaker Mellanox. Apple benefited from an analyst upgrade.

Boeing Co.’s stock slumped 5.3 percent after the second fatal crash involving the newest version of its popular 737 jetliner. An Ethiopian Airlines jetliner went down Sunday, killing 157 people. That followed the crash of another 737 Max 8 crashed in Indonesia on Oct. 29 that killed 189 people.

Authorities in Ethiopia, China, Singapore and Indonesia have grounded all Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft. At one point Monday, Boeing shares slid more than 13 percent.

British lawmakers were due to vote Tuesday on a plan to leave the European Union following negotiations in Strasbourg over details including Britain’s border with the Irish Republic.

Britain is due to pull out of the EU in less than three weeks, on March 29, but Prime Minister Theresa May’s government has not been able to win parliamentary approval for its agreement. The impasse has raised fears of a chaotic “no-deal” Brexit that could disrupt businesses in Britain and the 27 remaining EU countries. May said the latest changes should overcome lawmakers’ qualms about a mechanism to keep an open border between Britain’s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland.

“Investors will likely favor risk-taking on positive Brexit news and a strong showing on Wall Street overnight,” Nicholas Mapa and Prakash Sakpal of ING said in a report. “Technology and energy shares are seen to drive the rally in Asia but market players remain wary ahead of China retail sales data later in the week.”

 

Energy

Benchmark U.S. crude rose 14 cents to USD$56.93 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract jumped 72 cents on Monday to close at $56.79. Brent crude, used to price international oils, added 7 cents to $66.65 per barrel in London. It gained 84 cents the previous session to $66.58.

 

Currency

The dollar gained to 111.31 yen from Monday’s 111.21 yen. The euro advanced to $1.1254 from $1.1245.

Story: Joe McDonald

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US Withdrawing Last of Its Embassy Personnel From Venezuela

People search for their names on voter lists for mayoral elections by a mural of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez at a school serving as a polling station in 2017 in Caracas, Venezuela. Photo: Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press
People search for their names on voter lists for mayoral elections by a mural of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez at a school serving as a polling station in 2017 in Caracas, Venezuela. Photo: Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press

CARACAS, Venezuela — The United States announced late Monday that it is pulling the remaining staff from its embassy in Venezuela, citing the deteriorating situation in the South American nation.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the decision as Venezuela struggles to restore electricity following four days of blackouts around the country and a deepening political crisis.

The U.S. has led an international effort to oust socialist President Nicolas Maduro and replace him with opposition leader Juan Guaido, who vows to hold a new presidential election. Guaido is backed by some 50 countries, while Maduro maintains support from countries such as China, Russia and Cuba.

Maduro had ordered all U.S. diplomats to leave Venezuela in late January because of its support from Guaido, but he retreated and allowed them to stay. The U.S. still withdrew dependents of embassy personnel as well as some of the staff. Pompeo said the remaining diplomats would be out of Venezuela by the end of the week.

The move came after another day of chaos as power outages that began Thursday evening continued to cause problems for Venezuelans, leaving them with little power, water and communications.

People converged on a polluted river to fill water bottles in Caracas, and scattered protests erupted in several cities

A 3-year-old girl with a brain tumor languished in a Caracas hospital, awaiting treatment after doctors started surgery but then suspended the operation when nationwide power outages first hit on Thursday, said the girl’s fearful mother, who only gave her first name, Yalimar.

“The doctors told me that there are no miracles,” said Yalimar, who hopes her daughter can be transferred Tuesday to one of the few hospitals in Venezuela that would be able to finish the complex procedure.

The girl’s story highlighted an unfolding horror in Venezuela, where years of hardship got abruptly worse after the power grid collapsed. On Monday, schools and businesses were closed, long lines of cars waited at the few gasoline stations with electricity and hospitals cared for many patients without power. Generators have alleviated conditions for some of the critically ill.

President Nicolas Maduro said on national television Monday night that progress had been made in restoring power in Venezuela. He also said two people who were allegedly trying to sabotage power facilities were captured and were providing information to authorities, though he gave no details.

Guaido, who heads the opposition-controlled congress, and the United States say Maduro’s claims that the U.S. sabotaged the power grid with a “cyberattack” are an attempt to divert attention from the government’s own failings.

There have been acts of kindness during Venezuela’s crisis: People whose food would rot in refrigerators without power donated it to a restaurant, which cooked it for distribution to charities and hospitals.

The blackouts also have hit the oil industry. The country hasn’t shipped $358 million in oil since the power failures started, and “the whole system is grinding to a halt,” said Russ Dallen, a Miami-based partner at the brokerage firm Caracas Capital Markets.

Two large tankers are sitting empty at the Jose offshore oil-loading dock, and at least 19 other ships are waiting their turns there, Dallen said.

Engineers have restored power in some parts of Venezuela, but it often goes out again. There have been a few protests in Caracas and reports of similar anti-government anger elsewhere. Guaido tweeted about reports of looting in some cities, but details were difficult to confirm.

Security forces in the city of Maracaibo dispersed “criminals” trying to take advantage of the power cuts, Mayor Willy Casanova told local media. However, numerous videos posted on social media that purported to be from Maracaibo showed crowds roaming the streets and people running from looted, damaged buildings with no police in sight.

In Caracas, some people reported more sightings of “colectivos,” a term for armed groups allegedly operating on behalf of the state to intimidate opponents.

The mood in Caracas was desperate.

Marian Morales, a nurse working for a Catholic youth group, and several colleagues handed out diapers and food from a car parked near a hospital. Police and men in civilian clothing ordered them to leave, saying they didn’t have permission.

Morales said the needy are cautious about approaching to collect the handouts because of the presence of security forces.

Early Monday, an explosion rocked a power station in the Baruta area of Caracas. Residents gathered to look at the charred, smoldering equipment.

Guaido said three of four electricity transformers servicing the area were knocked out. He has blamed the blackouts on government corruption and mismanagement.

Winston Cabas, the head of Venezuela’s electrical engineers union, which opposes the government, disputed government allegations that the country’s main hydroelectric dam was sabotaged last week. He blamed a lack of maintenance as well as the departure of skilled workers from the troubled country over the years.

“The system is vulnerable, fragile and unstable,” he said.

Spain’s airline pilots union asked for Spanish airline Air Europa to stop flying to Venezuela after one of its crews was attacked at gunpoint in Caracas. The Sepla union said two pilots and eight more crew members of a flight from Madrid were assaulted on Saturday while going from the airport to their hotel in the Venezuelan capital. None of the crew members was injured.

Air Europa responded by ordering the crews of flights to Venezuela to not spend the night in the country, according to the union.

The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump imposed sanctions on a Moscow-based bank jointly owned by Russian and Venezuelan state-owned companies, alleging it tried to circumvent U.S. sanctions on the South American country. The U.S. said it is targeting Evrofinance Mosnarbank for supporting Petroleos de Venezuela SA, the state oil company previously targeted by sanctions in January.

Evrofinance said it was carrying out its activities normally despite the announcement and pledged to “meet its obligations to the clients and partners in full.”

The U.S. and the other governments that recognize Guaido as Venezuela’s interim president say Maduro wasn’t legitimately re-elected last year because opposition candidates weren’t permitted to run. Maduro says he is the target of a U.S. coup plot.

Story: Fabiola Sanchez, Scott Smith

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Gov’t Petitioned to Reveal 400 Senate Nominees

Selection of Senate candidates in Korat on Dec. 22, 2018.
Selection of Senate candidates in Korat on Dec. 22, 2018.

BANGKOK — A legal advocacy group wants the junta to reveal the names of the 400 people short-listed to eventually be appointed senators.

Peerapat Meesang of the Internet Law Reform Dialogue, or iLaw, submitted a letter to junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha on Monday at the Government House asking for the disclosure of those candidates, who will be key to selecting the next prime minister.

That happened only after the straightforward request got the runaround for the better part of the day. Peerapat first went to the Election Commission before noon, where he was told the junta was in charge of the matter. Over at army headquarters, he was told to go to the Government House because deputy junta leader Prawit Wongsuwan was in charge of short-listing the candidates.

According to information reportedly leaked last week from an insider, many of the candidates are friends and contacts of Gen. Prawit, who also serves as deputy prime minister and is no stranger to controversy.

The petition cited public information laws to compel the release of “documents related to the selection of members of the senate.”

The junta has insisted it won’t reveal the names for now. iLaw’s Yingcheep Atchanont said transparency is needed as the senators will play an important role after the election by voting to select the next prime minister.

Prior to the 2017 constitution, the senate’s 76 members had no say in selecting the prime minister. Those who say the new charter rewrote the rules to perpetuate military rule cite its expansion of the upper house to 250 junta-appointed members empowered to vote for the next prime minister.

Under the law, all senators must be appointed no later than May 26.

Yingcheep said Tuesday that the Information Act gives the state 15 days to either disclose the information or justify its reason for not doing so.

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Algeria’s President Abandons Bid for 5th Term Amid Protests

Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika prepares to vote in 2017 in Algiers, Algeria. Photo: Sidali Djarboub / Associated Press
Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika prepares to vote in 2017 in Algiers, Algeria. Photo: Sidali Djarboub / Associated Press

ALGIERS, Algeria — Algeria’s president of two decades abandoned his bid for a fifth term Monday following unprecedented protests over his fitness for office, but his simultaneous postponement of an election set for next month had critics worried he intends to hold on to power.

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who has rarely been seen in public since he had a stroke in 2013 and just returned from two weeks in a Geneva hospital, promised to establish a panel to plan a rescheduled vote and to put an interim government in place.

In a letter to the nation released by state news agency APS on Monday, Bouteflika, 82, stressed the importance of including Algeria’s disillusioned youth in the reform process and putting the country “in the hands of new generations.”

But for many of the protesters – students, lawyers and even judges among them – the most important sentence in the president’s letter read, “There will be no fifth term.”

Celebrations popped up instead of protests on the streets of the capital, Algiers, at the news. Car horns rang out while people waved flags, jumped up and down, and sang the national anthem. Several thanked Bouteflika. One described the development as a “real ray of sunshine.

Others were more cautious, calling their longtime leader’s pledge to step aside just a first step. Bouteflika did not give a date or timeline for the delayed election.

He said in his Monday letter that the “national conference” he would task with planning the vote also would be responsible for drafting a new constitution for Algeria.

He said he would name an interim government as well. The changes were put in motion within hours.

Noureddine Bedoui, a Bouteflika loyalist and the current interior minister, was made prime minister and charged with forming the new administration, according to Algerian state news agency APS.

Critics said they fear the moves could pave the way for the president to install a hand-picked successor. Others saw his decision to postpone the election indefinitely as a threat to democracy in Algeria.

A wily political survivor, Bouteflika fought in Algeria’s independence war against French forces and has played a role in Algeria’s major developments for the past half-century.

He became president in 1999 and reconciled a nation riven by a deadly Islamic insurgency, but questions swirl over whether he is really running the country today.

The recent protests surprised Algeria’s opaque leadership and freed the country’s people, long fearful of a watchful security apparatus, to openly criticize the president.

Algerians also expressed anger over corruption that put their country’s oil and gas riches in the hands of a few while millions of young people struggle to find jobs.

The unprecedented citizens’ revolt drew millions into the streets of cities across the country to demand that Bouteflika abandon his candidacy.

On Monday, Algerian state television aired the first images of Bouteflika since the protests started. Bouteflika, who has used a wheelchair since his stroke, appeared weak and moved with slow gestures. No sound accompanied the images.

While the tense nation waited to see if he would make any concessions now that he was back from his hospital stay, teenagers and lawyers held protests, and workers held scattered walkouts,

Security was high in Algiers, where some businesses were shuttered by a second day of strikes. Lawyers in black robes gathered in front of courthouses to join calls for Bouteflika to withdraw from the election.

Some judges joined the lawyers protesting in the city of Bedjaia. Judges normally are prohibited from publicly demonstrating, as are police officers and soldiers.

Story: Aomar Ouali

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US House Speaker: Impeaching Trump ‘Just Not Worth It’

US President Donald Trump listens during a meeting with Hispanic pastors Friday in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. Photo: Susan Walsh / Associated Press
US President Donald Trump listens during a meeting with Hispanic pastors Friday in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. Photo: Susan Walsh / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is setting a high bar for impeachment of President Donald Trump, saying he is “just not worth it” even as some on her left flank clamor to start proceedings.

Pelosi said in an interview with The Washington Post that “I’m not for impeachment” of Trump.

“Unless there’s something so compelling and overwhelming and bipartisan, I don’t think we should go down that path, because it divides the country,” she said.

While she has made similar comments before, Pelosi is making clear to her caucus and to voters that Democrats will not move forward quickly with trying to remove Trump from office. And it’s a departure from her previous comments that Democrats are waiting on special counsel Robert Mueller to lay out findings from his Russia investigation before considering impeachment.

That thinking among Democrats has shifted, slightly, in part because of the possibility that Mueller’s report will not be decisive and because his investigation is more narrowly focused. Instead, House Democrats are pursuing their own broad, high-profile investigations that will keep the focus on Trump’s business dealings and relationship with Russia, exerting congressional oversight without having to broach the I-word.

Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, one of the lawmakers leading those investigations, said he agrees with Pelosi and Congress needs “to do our homework.” He said impeachment “has to be a bipartisan effort, and right now it’s not there.”

“I get the impression this matter will only be resolved at the polls,” Cummings said.

Still, Pelosi’s comments are certain to stoke a stubborn tension with those who believe impeachment proceedings should have begun on day one of the new Congress. Some new freshman Democrats who hail from solidly liberal districts haven’t shied away from the subject – Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib used a vulgarity in calling for Trump’s impeachment the day she was sworn in.

Billionaire activist Tom Steyer, who is bankrolling a campaign pushing for Trump’s impeachment, shot back at Pelosi on Monday: “Speaker Pelosi thinks ‘he’s just not worth it?’ Well, is defending our legal system ‘worth it?’ Is holding the president accountable for his crimes and cover-ups ‘worth it?’ Is doing what’s right ‘worth it?’ Or shall America just stop fighting for our principles and do what’s politically convenient.”

Neil Sroka of the liberal advocacy group Democracy for America said Pelosi’s comments were “a little like an oncologist taking chemotherapy off the table before she’s even got your test results back.”

Other lawmakers who have called for impeachment looked at Pelosi’s comments more practically. Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., who filed articles of impeachment against Trump on the first day of the new Congress in January, acknowledged that there is not yet public support for impeachment, but noted that Pelosi “didn’t say ‘I am against it if the public is clamoring for it.'”

Sherman said that the multiple Democratic investigations of Trump might be a substitute for impeachment, “it’s also possible it will be a prelude.”

Republicans alternately praised Pelosi and were skeptical. White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said “I agree” in response to Pelosi’s words.

Sanders added of impeachment, “I don’t think it should have ever been on the table.”

House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy said it was a “smart thing for her to say,” but Georgia Rep. Doug Collins, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, said he doesn’t think it’s “going to fly” with some of Pelosi’s members.

“I do believe what Speaker Pelosi understands is that what they’re wanting to do is going to require far more than what they have now, so I think they are hedging their bet on it,” Collins said.

Pelosi has long resisted calls to impeach the president, saying it’s a “divisive” issue that should only be broached with “great care.”

She refused calls when she first held the speaker’s gavel, in 2007, to start impeachment proceedings against George W. Bush. Having been a member of Congress during President Bill Clinton’s impeachment, she saw the way the public turned on Republicans and helped Clinton win a second term. Heading into the midterm elections, she discouraged candidates from talking up impeachment, preferring to stick to the kitchen table issues that she believes most resonate with voters.

Pelosi has often said the House should not pursue impeachment for political reasons, but it shouldn’t hold back for political reasons, either. Rather, she says, the investigations need to take their course and impeachment, if warranted, will be clear.

Freshman Democrats who are from more moderate districts and will have to win re-election again in two years have been fully supportive of Pelosi’s caution.

“When we have something that’s very concrete, and we have something that is compelling enough to get a strong majority of Americans, then we’ll do it,” said Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif. “But if it’s going to be a political disaster for us, then we’re not going to do it.”

Story: Mary Clare Jalonick, Lisa Mascaro

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Jordanian Drowns Toddler in Pattaya to Punish Wife: Police

A file photo of Pattaya City. Photo: Stanislav Baranov / Flickr
A file photo of Pattaya City. Photo: Stanislav Baranov / Flickr

PATTAYA — A Jordanian man stands accused of murdering his own toddler by strapping him in a stroller and dumping him into the gulf off Pattaya, police said Tuesday.

Wael Zureikat, 52, was arrested at Suvarnabhumi International Airport while attempting to leave the country hours after his 18-month-old son was found dead Monday evening, according to immigration chief Lt. Gen. Surachate Hakparn.

The boy’s body was found still strapped to the the pram, floating in the water near Bali Hai Pier in Pattaya. Police said he had been dead at least two days.

Col. Apichai Krobphet, Pattaya police chief, said Zureikat confessed to killing his son late Friday night by pushing the pram off the pier.

Surachate said Zureikat wanted to take revenge against his 24-year-old wife after they got into a violent fight over their financial situation while on vacation there, and because he didn’t want to have children in the first place. He has been charged with murder.

Surachate said the wife, who hasn’t been identified, was still in shock after learning about her son’s death and still couldn’t make a statement. She’s currently under medical care at a local hospital, he added.

Clarification: This story has been updated with additional police statements about Zureikat’s motive.

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Most Thais Are Daily Straw Users – Especially Women, Survey Says

Photo: Pimtha / Instagram
Photo: Pimtha / Instagram

BANGKOK — One for the morning bottle of OJ, another for afternoon milk tea and yet one more for the dinner table’s glass of lime-infused ice water.

Over half of Thais who participated in a survey said they use plastic straws daily, with a fourth saying they used several in a day – especially women, online pollster YouGov announced Monday. The survey comes as Thailand faces a growing reckoning over its disposable culture in the form of dying sea life and overflowing landfills.

Asked about the results, a Greenpeace Thailand anti-plastics campaigner said it’s an understandable consequence of habit.

“As a woman, when I go out with my girlfriends, they like to use a straw because it’s convenient, or they didn’t refuse a seller putting one in their drink,” Pichmol Rugrod said.

The YouGov survey found that 24 percent of Thais use plastic straws multiple times a day, with 29 percent using one a day. Of the women surveyed, 59 percent use straws at least once a day, compared to 47 percent of men.

“Some are concerned about whether the cups they’re drinking from at some shops are clean, and some people who wear lipstick don’t want to leave a mark on the glass,” Pichmol said of possible reasons for the gender disparity.

Ultimately, gender was less of a determiner in who uses more plastic than lack of awareness, she added.

“It’s up to the individual,” she said.

The YouGov poll was conducted in February. YouGov selected 1,016 respondents from its pool of 165,000 Thais who have signed up to participate in return for compensation. They were selected by age, gender, income group and education level in order to be representative. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percent.

Graphic: YouGov
Graphic: YouGov

“While most Thais believe that conserving the environment is paramount, this doesn’t appear to have translated into their actions,” head pollster Aisanart Wuthithankul said. “Our data shows significant numbers of Thais are still relying on single-use plastics in their daily lives.”

One-in-five respondents said they use straws many times a week, while about 10 percent said they use only one a week. Few respondents said they use straws less often than that.

Although more women admitted to being culprits, they were also more likely to carry reusable straws. Nearly half of the women (47 percent) said they owned one compared to 36 percent of men polled. It found younger people were more likely to own reusable straws.

Those who didn’t cited inconvenience, lack of need and not knowing where to get one as to why.

The reuse and recycling of plastics has become a growing cottage industry as society confronts the impact of its habits on health and the environment.

Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook

Those looking to relieve their consciences can donate new or cleaned used straws (the latter cut into short lengths 1- to 2-centimeters long) by mail to a Catholic hospice care center operated by the Diocese of Chanthaburi.

New straws will be used to help incontinent patients to drink water and the used pieces as pillow stuffing. Straws should be the standard size – about half a centimeter in diameter, not the larger type commonly used for bubble tea.

Straws can be donated through the end of the year by sending them to:

Diocesan Social Action Center of Chanthaburi (DISACC)
89 Moo 16, Khlong Hin Pun, Wang Nam Yen
Sa Kaeo 27210

The diocese can be reached by telephone at 089-939-8665 or 086-143-4118.

YouGov is a UK-based market research company.

Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook

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UK, EU Announce Change to Brexit Deal Ahead of Key Vote

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, left, greets British Prime Minister Theresa May during a round table meeting in December at an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, left, greets British Prime Minister Theresa May during a round table meeting in December at an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press

STRASBOURG, France — Britain and the European Union emerged from last-minute talks late Monday to announce they had finally removed the biggest roadblock to their Brexit divorce deal, only hours before the U.K. Parliament was due to decide the fate of Prime Minister Theresa May’s hard-won plan to leave the EU.

On the eve of Tuesday’s vote in London, May flew to Strasbourg, France, to seek revisions, guarantees or other changes from European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker that would persuade reluctant British legislators to back her withdrawal agreement with the EU, which they resoundingly rejected in January.

At a joint news conference, May and Juncker claimed to have succeeded.

May said new documents to be added to the deal provided “legally binding changes” to the part relating to the Irish border. The legal 585-page withdrawal agreement itself though was left intact.

“In politics, sometimes you get a second chance. It is what you do with this second chance that counts. Because there will be no third chance,” Juncker warned the legislators who will vote late Tuesday.

“Let’s be crystal clear about the choice: it is this deal or Brexit might not happen at all,” he said.

May said the changes should overcome lawmakers’ qualms about a mechanism in the deal designed to keep an open border between Britain’s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland. The mechanism, known as the backstop, is a safeguard that would keep the U.K. in a customs union with the EU until a permanent new trading relationship is in place.

Brexit-supporters in Britain fear the backstop could be used to bind the country to EU regulations indefinitely.

May said the new wording “will guarantee that the EU cannot act with the intent of applying the backstop indefinitely.”

“Now is the time to come together to back this improved Brexit deal and deliver on the instruction of the British people,” she said.

But the changes appear to fall well short of Brexiteers’ demands for a unilateral British exit mechanism from the backstop.

Pro-Brexit U.K. lawmakers said they would read the fine print and wait for the judgment of Britain’s attorney general before deciding how to vote on Tuesday.

Announcing the breakthrough in Britain’s House of Commons, Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington said lawmakers faced “a fundamental choice … to vote for the improved deal or to plunge this country into a political crisis.”

And Juncker warned Britain “there will be no new negotiations” if lawmakers rejected the deal again.

Britain is due to pull out of the EU in less than three weeks, on March 29, but the government has not been able to win parliamentary approval for its agreement with the bloc on withdrawal terms and future relations. The impasse has raised fears of a chaotic “no-deal” Brexit that could mean major disruption for businesses and people in Britain and the 27 remaining EU countries.

“This is a government in chaos, with a country in chaos because of this mess,” Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said.

May has staked her political reputation on securing an exit deal with the EU and is under mounting pressure to quit if it is defeated again. She survived a bid to oust her through a no-confidence vote in December. As a result, she cannot be forced from office for a year.

The EU is frustrated at what it sees as the inability of Britain’s weak and divided government to lay out a clear vision for Brexit. It is irritated, too, that Britain is seeking changes to an agreement that May herself helped negotiate and approve.

May has been working frantically to save her deal, speaking by phone to eight EU national leaders since Friday, including French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

If Parliament throws out May’s deal again on Tuesday, lawmakers will vote over the following two days on whether to leave the EU without an agreement – an idea likely to be rejected – or to ask the EU to delay Brexit beyond the scheduled March 29 departure date.

Conservative lawmaker Nicky Morgan said May’s position will become “less and less tenable” if she suffers more defeats in Parliament this week.

“It would be very difficult for the prime minister to stay in office for very much longer,” Morgan told the BBC.

Alan Wager, a Brexit expert at the U.K. in a Changing Europe think tank, said Parliament this week could decisively rule out both May’s deal and a no-deal departure.

That, in turn, would make such options as a new Brexit referendum or a “softer” withdrawal from the EU lot more likely, he said.

“Finally, the House of Commons is going to have to make a final judgment on what it wants in terms of Brexit,” he said.

Story: Raf Casert, Jill Lawless

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Fearing More Assaults, Activist Asks For Army Protection

Ekachai Hongkangwan hands a letter to an army representative. Image: Ekachai Hongkangwan / Facebook

BANGKOK — A politician made headlines last week by scolding a soldier shadowing him on the campaign trail, but an activist Tuesday asked the military to do just that – follow him wherever he goes.

Having been assaulted by masked men for the sixth time in a year, pro-democracy campaigner Ekachai Hongkangwan formally requested the army keep him under close watch. The 44-year-old activist said it should have no problem providing him a security escort since it has done so for many politicians uninvited.

“I have been physically assaulted many times, and my belongings have been damaged, including my car,” Ekachai said. “Yet the army didn’t care about me at all, even though I have asked them to send soldiers to protect me in the past.”

Ekachai, well known for his one-man protests against the junta, said he was beaten by unidentified assailants at a government office last week. As with his other attacks in the past, police have yet to capture or identify any suspects.

Army spokesman Winthai Suvaree said the military will have to study procedure before approving or rejecting Ekachai’s request.

“Usually, there has to be a formal request, and those who file the requests are usually people holding important offices that need protection,” Col. Winthai said by phone. “We will look into the details.”

Speaking in front of army headquarters today, Ekachai also urged Army Chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong to stop unwanted surveillance of politicians and stay true to his word to be neutral in the upcoming election.

“Gen. Apirat himself keeps stressing that the army will help the people, keep peace and order, and prevent any unrest during the election season,” the activist said.

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Boeing 737 Max Banned From Singaporean Airspace

SilkAir's new Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft is seen through a viewing gallery window in 2017 parked on the ramp of Singapore's Changi International Airport. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press
SilkAir's new Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft is seen through a viewing gallery window in 2017 parked on the ramp of Singapore's Changi International Airport. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s civil aviation authority says it has temporarily banned all Boeing 737 Max planes from entering and leaving the country.

It noted in a statement on Tuesday that there have been two fatal accidents involving the aircraft in less than five months. Sunday’s deadly crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max 8 killed all 157 people on board.

The authority said the suspension starting later Tuesday will be “reviewed as relevant safety information becomes available.”

The suspension will affect SilkAir, a regional carrier that’s wholly owned by Singapore Airlines. It has six Boeing 737 Max 8 planes.

The authority said that flights to Singapore by China Southern Airlines, Garuda Indonesia, Shandong Airlines and Thai Lion Air will also be affected.

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