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Indie LGBT Film Cleans House at Suphannahong Awards

Image: Malila Movie / Facebook
Image: Malila Movie / Facebook

BANGKOK — An independent drama exploring a tragic love story of two men through the lens of Buddhism brought the most awards home from the biggest annual film awards ceremony.

“Malila: The Farewell Flower,” which came into the night with a dozen nominations, took away seven Golden Swans including Best Picture, Best Director on Saturday night at the 28th Thailand National Film Association Awards Ceremony.

The film was directed by rising transgender director Anucha Boonyawatana. She was also named best director for the film at the Singapore International Film Festival and India’s International Film Festival Kerala in 2017.

ตัวอย่างหนัง "มะลิลา" (Malila The Farewell Flower : Official Trailer)

"มะลิลา" ฉายแล้ววันนี้ในโรงภาพยนตร์ "ไปพิสูจน์การแสดงที่ดีที่สุดของ เวียร์ ศุกลวัฒน์"กดจองตั๋วภาพยนตร์ด้านล่าง!ตัวอย่างหนัง "มะลิลา" (Official Trailer) #หนังโรแมนติกดราม่า นำแสดงโดย #เวียร์ ศุกลวัฒน์ และ #โอ อนุชิต ……………………………………………มะลิลา (MALILA The Farewell Flower)จากผู้กำกับ นุชี่ อนุชา บุญยวรรธนะ แห่ง "ตามสายน้ำ" และ "อนธการ"ร่วมดื่มด่ำกับความรักและความงามของชายสองคนไปพร้อมกัน หลังวันวาเลนไทน์ 15 กุมภาพันธ์ ในโรงภาพยนตร์ #มะลิลา #Malila"มะลิลา" บอกเล่าถึงความรักความอาลัยของผู้ที่จากไป เรื่องราวของ "เชน" (เวียร์ ศุกลวัฒน์) เจ้าของสวนมะลิผู้มีอดีตอันเจ็บปวด และ "พิช" (โอ อนุชิต) ศิลปินนักทำบายศรีอดีตคนรักของเชนในวัยเด็กที่กลับมาพบกันอีกครั้ง ทั้งคู่พยายามเยียวยาบาดแผลในอดีตและรื้อฟื้นความสัมพันธ์ผ่านการทำบายศรีอันงดงาม"มะลิลา" ได้รับเลือกให้ฉายที่เทศกาลภาพยนตร์ระดับนานาชาติทั่วเอเชีย และคว้ารางวัลมาครองได้มากมายเป็นการการันตีคุณภาพอันยอดเยี่ยมรางวัล #ภาพยนตร์ยอดเยี่ยม คิม จีซก อวอร์ด (Kim Jiseok Award) จากเทศกาลภาพยนตร์นานาชาติปูซาน (Busan International Film Festival) ประเทศเกาหลีใต้รางวัลภาพยนตร์ยอดเยี่ยม NETPAC Award จากเทศกาลภาพยนตร์ม้าทองคำ (Taipei Golden Horse Film Festival) ประเทศไต้หวันรางวัล #ผู้กำกับยอดเยี่ยม จากเทศกาลภาพยนตร์นานาชาติสิงคโปร์ (Singapore International Film Festiva) ประเทศสิงคโปร์รางวัลผู้กำกับยอดเยี่ยม จากเทศกาลภาพยนตร์นานาชาติแห่งเกรละ (International Film Festival of Kerala) ประเทศอินเดียและได้รับการเสนอชื่อเข้าชิง Asian Film Awards ซึ่งเทียบได้กับออสการ์แห่งวงการภาพยนตร์เอเชีย ถึง 2 สาขา คือ#นักแสดงนำชายยอดเยี่ยม เวียร์ ศุกลวัฒน์#ผู้กำกับหน้าใหม่ยอดเยี่ยม นุชี่ อนุชา ติดตามข้อมูลข่าวสารก่อนใครได้ทางแฟนเพจมะลิลาค่ะ

โพสต์โดย มะลิลา Malila The Farewell Flower เมื่อ วันพุธที่ 17 มกราคม 2018

Anucha, whose 2015 film “The Blue Hour” got 11 nominations but came up empty in 2016, gave an emotional speech on the stage calling for more state support for the Thai film industry.

“I can’t see a very bright future ahead,” she said. “I can’t be fully happy at the moment, because Thai films haven’t been receiving much protection and support from the government as they should have.”

“I want to commend all filmmakers, directors, for keeping up the spirit. Even though no one is taking an interest in us, all of us still try to fight for what we believe in and keep producing our work,” she continued. “I hope that, when we have a new government in the future, they will take better care of the Thai film industry.”

Sukollawat “Weir” Kanarot, a famous television performer, won Best Lead Actor for his first leading role in the film as a jasmine farm owner trying to cope with his troubled past as he returns to his rural home and reunites with an old flame diagnosed with cancer. Anuchit “O” Sapanpong, who plays his ailing love interest, won Best Supporting Actor.

“Malila” was well received internationally and won awards at several film festivals. It was also Thailand’s official submission for foreign language film at the 2019 Academy Awards.

GDH 559’s “Homestay,” another major contender that walked in with nominations for 13 awards, only bagged three, including Best Supporting Actress (Suquan Bulakul).

The film, based on Japanese novel “Colorful,” was the fourth highest-grossing Thai film last year with estimated revenues of over 120 million baht. It tells the coming-of-age story of a spirit resurrected in the body of a depressed teenage boy who’s committed suicide.

Urassaya “Yaya” Sperbund won Best Lead Actress for her role in the romantic comedy “Brother of the Year” as a modern, independent woman living with a loser sibling who tries to sabotage her relationship after she decides to get married and move out. The film was the second highest-grossing Thai movie of 2018 with over 240 million baht in business at the box office.

Best Documentary Feature went to “2,215,” the epic journey of rock star Artiwara “Toon” Kongmalai, who ran that many kilometers in 2017 between the southernmost and northernmost tips of Thailand to raise 1.4 billion baht for cash-starved state hospitals. His band Bodyslam also won Best Original Song for the film.

Here are the full list of winners at the show held in Bangkok at the Thailand Cultural Centre:

Best Picture: “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Best Director: Anucha Boonyawatana, “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Best Lead Actor: Sukollawat “Weir” Kanarot, “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Best Lead Actress: Urassaya “Yaya” Sperbund, “Brother of the Year”
Best Supporting Actor: Anuchit “O” Sapanpong, “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Best Supporting Actress: Suquan Bulakul, “Homestay”
Best Documentary Feature: “2,215”
Best Screenplay: “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Best Original Song: “Saeng Sawan” by Bodyslam, “2,215”
Best Original Score: “The Legend of Muay Thai: 9 Satra”
Best Cinematography: “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Best Film Editing: “Homestay”
Best Recording and Sound Mixing: “The Legend of Muay Thai: 9 Satra”
Best Visual Effects: “Homestay”
Best Makeup Effects: “Khun Pan 2”
Best Costume Design: “Khun Pan 2”
Best Art Direction: “Malila: The Farewell Flower”
Lifetime Achievement: Rong Kaomulkadee, actor

Related stories:

‘Bad Genius’ Sweeps Suphannahong Awards

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North Korea’s Kim Leaves Vietnam After Summit Breakdown

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves at the Dong Dang railway station Saturday in Dong Dang, Vietnam. Photo: Minh Hoang / Associated Press
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves at the Dong Dang railway station Saturday in Dong Dang, Vietnam. Photo: Minh Hoang / Associated Press

DONG DANG, Vietnam — Smiling and holding up his clasped hands in a victorious pose, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Saturday boarded his private train at the Vietnam-China border for a 60-plus-hour ride home, ending a trip to Vietnam that saw a summit breakdown with President Donald Trump.

He spent his last day in Hanoi laying large red-and-yellow wreaths at a war memorial and at the mausoleum of national hero Ho Chi Minh, surrounded by Vietnamese soldiers in crisp white uniforms and his own entourage of top North Korean officials. At the border, he got out of his armored limousine and clasped his hands, waving to a crowd of people cheering his departure.

Since Trump flew home to Washington, Kim has stepped assuredly into the spotlight, keen to show himself as a poised leader taking his rightful place on the international stage. He met Friday with President Nguyen Phu Trong, the country’s top leader and Communist Party chief, grinning broadly as he was feted by top officials and escorted down a red carpet.

As Kim met with officials in Hanoi, the United States and North Korea have both been spinning their versions of what happened during one of the most high-profile diplomatic collapses in recent years.

But some experts believe that Kim, by standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Trump at a summit that captivated many around the world, will have one sure win: He’ll be able to portray himself to his people and supporters as the charismatic head of a nuclear-armed power, not an international pariah that starves its citizens so it can build nukes and missiles.

On Saturday, Kim, his trademark high-and-tight pompadour a bit disheveled, walked slowly behind a wreath with his name on it and a message that said, “I mourn the heroes and patriotic martyrs,” as it was taken to the Monument to War Heroes and Martyrs. He also oversaw the presentation of a large wreath at the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, where he bowed and walked inside.

Talks between Kim and Trump broke down on Thursday, the second day of their two-day summit, in a dispute over how much sanctions relief Washington should provide Pyongyang in return for nuclear disarmament steps. Despite a senior North Korean official’s suggestion — in a rushed, middle-of-the-night news conference called to dispute Trump’s version of the summit’s end — that Kim may have “lost the will” for diplomacy, the North Korean leader seems to have emerged from the diplomatic wreckage as a winner.

Kim answered questions with humor and ease when confronted by an aggressive international media contingent here. And, crucially for his image at home, he stood firm on his demands for the relief of sanctions imposed over a nuclear program North Korea says it built in the face of unrelenting U.S. hostility meant to end its leadership.

Kim, as he considers his next move after Hanoi, will be backed by state-controlled media that were already busy portraying the summit as a victory for their leader, saying Kim and Trump “appreciated that the second meeting in Hanoi offered an important occasion for deepening mutual respect and trust and putting the relations between the two countries on a new stage.”

North Korea said it had asked for partial sanctions relief in return for closing its main nuclear site at Yongbyon, an important nuclear-fuel production facility but not the only place the North is believed to make bomb fuel.

The United States also has been spinning the summit breakdown, with senior officials saying that North Korea wanted billions of dollars in sanctions relief in return for only partial dismantlement of Yongbyon, and demanded the North scrap more of its nuclear program for such a high level of concessions.

It’s unclear what will come next: Working-level meetings among experts to close the negotiating gap? Another summit? Or will Trump, consumed with controversy in Washington and burned by the failure in Hanoi, lose interest?

The worst-case scenario would be a return to the personal insults and threats of war between Trump and Kim in 2017 as the North staged a series of increasingly powerful weapons tests, including a nuclear detonation and displays of long-range missiles that can target the U.S. mainland, though experts believe those ICBMs are not yet complete.

Trump maintained ahead of the Hanoi summit that the economic benefits of a deal could push Kim to give up his nuclear ambitions.

Kim came into the summit feeling confident that he could settle something that would end painful economic sanctions while letting him keep much of his nuclear program and only making a “a variety of gestures that mimic disarmament,” Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear expert at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, wrote after the summit collapse. This outcome would be a signal that “the world must live with North Korea’s bomb, but Kim won’t rub it in anyone’s face.”

“Since it would be utter madness to try to topple a nuclear-armed dictator, it seems obvious which side should yield,” Lewis said. If Trump “does not accept the reality that we now live with a nuclear-armed North Korea, then we are doomed to the collapse of negotiations, and perhaps even a return to the terror of 2017.”

Story: Foster Klug and Emily Wang

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Opinion: Fun With Stereotypes, Thai Election Edition

Re•tention: Pravit RojanaphrukWhat kind of people vote for which parties, and why? These are important questions that conventional wisdom may fail to fully answer, but still offers a rough take on our political situation.

Phalang Pracharat Party

Big fans of junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha will almost automatically vote for the party which nominated him as its prime ministerial candidate.

They love “peace and order” no matter the cost or means of obtaining it.

Many soldiers will likely vote for the party as well. What’s more, anyone who hates and fears the return through proxies of ousted and fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra will most likely see Phalang Pracharat Party as the most feasible party to prevent pro-Thaksin camps from making a comeback March 24.

People who prefer to be on the likely winning side will likely vote for the party – so will the 250 senate members, mostly selected the junta, help return Prayuth to Government House.

In the end, Prayuth is a known quantity though he will have much less power as he won’t be a junta leader after the election.

Action Coalition for Thailand Party (ACT)

If you love Suthep Thaugsuban, then this is the party for you.

If you see red when you hear the word Shinawatra, then you can’t go wrong with the party, except that Phalang Pracharat Party will likely be a more sensible bet.

If you are a die-hard ultra-royalist and want to sacrifice yourself in defense of the monarchy, then ACT is for you, as no other party can rival Action Coalition for Thailand’s extreme pro-monarchy rhetoric.

Pheu Thai Party

Die-hard fans of Thaksin will most likely continue to vote for the party, no matter what others say about him. The party is also most likely to win more seats than any other anti-junta party.

Rural poor who swear by the benefits of Thaksinomics will likely continue to bet on the party which reliable when it comes to economic policies, minus its mismanagement of the rice-pledging program of Yingluck Shinawatra’s government.

Future Forward Party

If you are against the junta but is disillusioned with Thaksinism, then this new party is likely for you.

If you are hip and young, or think you are hip and young, then Future Forward is likely for you.

Artsy people and those who pretend to be artsy will like its indie vibe, although being a successful political party requires it reach mass appeal, which then could hardly remain indie.

Commoner Party

This is the true indie and progressive party. Voters may know they are throwing away their vote for a party that may not even manage to win a single MP seat. But they may believe the party leaders who say voting for the party is a long-term political investment.

The Commoner Party is for idealists and NGO workers who won’t settle for less even if it means having no MP representing them.

Democrat Party

The kingdom’s political party has a strong political machinery and dominates Bangkok for years also caught between pro-versus-anti-junta political forces, it has somewhat lost its traction.

Big fans of leaders Abhisit Vejjajiva will sure to continue for vote for him although the party seems lost amidst much more extreme political polarization.

Bhumjaithai Party

A typical old-style, medium-size party where patron-and-client politics rule supreme – but with a twist. If you love your MPs to never fail to attend your wedding or funeral, Bhumjaithai is for you. In a bid to upgrade the party for a new generation, it’s gone all in on policy platforms such as legalizing recreational use of marijuana, ride-share service Grab and hosting platform Airbnb.

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Host Pulled From MCOT Show After Televised Debate

A panel of politicians and first-time voters express their positions on an issue Thursday at a debate hosted by Orawan Krimwiratkul of MCOT television. Image: MCOT
A panel of politicians and first-time voters express their positions on an issue Thursday at a debate hosted by Orawan Krimwiratkul of MCOT television. Image: MCOT

BANGKOK — A veteran reporter at a state media outlet said Friday she was abruptly fired after hosting a debate in which young voters voiced broad opposition to the military government.

Political reporter Orawan Krimwiratkul wrote online last night that she was dismissed from MCOT’s “Election War ‘62” show because her employer said she was biased. Although she said she would respect the decision, she went on to defend the format of a debate held Thursday that featured young politicians and young voters as fair and transparent.

“As one of the hosts, and a person who designed the format of the two debates on MCOT, I respect the decision of the board,” she wrote. “But as a journalist who’ve been actively working for almost 30 years, I won’t accept being branded that I was being biased in my duty.”

Update: MCOT Blames ‘Miscommunication’ For Debate Host Drama

The episode called “New People, New Politics” assembled first-time politicians from 10 parties and invited 100 first-time voters from 16 universities across the country. The young voters were asked to vote on whether they agreed or disagreed with four statements about the current Thai political situation.

The questions were: Do you agree with Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha’s decision not to debate his opponents? Do you agree with the 2017 Constitution allowing 250 senators to elect the prime minister? Do you agree that a 20-year national strategic plan is necessary for Thailand? Do you agree that Thailand can either be fully or half democratic so long as it improves the livelihood of the people?

The overwhelming majority of students disagreed with all four statements.

Orawan said the students were not given the questions beforehand, and by giving their honest opinions managed to “frighten the powerful people and make them see these as leading questions to attack the government, when they are actually issues that all Thai people have the right to express opinions about for our future.”

The Thai Broadcast Journalists Association released a statement Saturday criticizing the decision and calling upon the broadcaster to reconsider.

“The order pulling Orawan from the show without any explicit proof that she was ‘leading the show into attacking the government,’ suggests that it was just an excuse to obstruct the press freedom. It is inappropriate … and is a direct threat to the media, including a violation of the people’s right to receive information,” the statement read.

Suwit Mingmol, president of the broadcaster’s union, said it is looking into the exact reasons that led to the MCOT board decision.

“We will see if the order is real or not. If real but not justified, or if the board refuses to reconsider its decision, we will issue a statement calling for [justice],” he said. “The program was praised by the majority of the public, as it was professionally ethical. If there’s no explanation, we can assume that there was intervention into the media’s work, which will affect the people’s decision-making this election.”

MCOT is a state-owned public broadcaster that operates a number of radio and television stations. Most content consists of news and entertainment programs with a pro-establishment slant.

The broadcaster has issued no statement of Orawan being pulled from the program.

The channel has aired two political debates. The first one, also co-hosted by Orawan, featured the top four faces from major parties and aired Feb. 21.

MCOT host Orawan Krimwiratkul, at right, hosts the ‘Election War ‘62’ program on Thursday. Image: MCOT
MCOT host Orawan Krimwiratkul, at right, hosts the ‘Election War ‘62’ program on Thursday. Image: MCOT
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US Nazi Group Has New Leader: A Black Man Vowing to Dissolve It

James Stern of Jackson, Mississippi in a 2012 file photo. Photo: Rogelio V. Solis / Associated Press
James Stern of Jackson, Mississippi in a 2012 file photo. Photo: Rogelio V. Solis / Associated Press

MICHIGAN — One of the United States’ largest neo-Nazi groups appears to have an unlikely new leader: a black activist who has vowed to dismantle it.

Court documents filed Thursday suggest James Hart Stern wants to use his new position as director and president of the National Socialist Movement to undermine the Detroit-based group’s defense against a lawsuit.

The NSM is one of several extremist groups sued over bloodshed at a 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Stern’s filing asks a federal court in Virginia to issue a judgment against the group before one of the lawsuits goes to trial.

Stern replaced Jeff Schoep as the group’s leader in January, according to Michigan corporate records. But those records and court documents say nothing about how or why Stern got the position. His feat invited comparisons to the recent Spike Lee movie “BlacKkKlansman” in which a black police officer infiltrates a branch of the Ku Klux Klan.

Neither Stern, who lives in Moreno Valley, California, nor Schoep responded Thursday to emails and calls seeking comment.

Matthew Heimbach, a leading white nationalist figure who briefly served as the NSM’s community outreach director last year, said Schoep and other group leaders have been at odds with rank-and-file members over its direction. Heimbach said some members “essentially want it to remain a politically impotent white supremacist gang” and resisted ideological changes advocated by Schoep.

Heimbach said Schoep’s apparent departure and Stern’s installation as its leader probably spell the end of the group in its current form. Schoep was 21 when he took control of the group in 1994 and renamed it the National Socialist Movement, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

“I think it’s kind of a sad obit for one of the longest-running white nationalist organizations,” said Heimbach, who estimates it had about 40 active, dues-paying members last year.

The group has drawn much larger crowds at rallies.

NSM members used to attend rallies and protests in full Nazi uniforms, including at a march in Toledo, Ohio, that sparked a riot in 2005. More recently, Schoep tried to rebrand the group and appeal to a new generation of racists and anti-Semites by getting rid of such overt displays of Nazi symbols.

It appeared that Stern had been trying for at least two years to disrupt the group. A message posted on his website said he would be meeting with Schoep in February 2017 “to sign a proclamation acknowledging the NSM denouncing being a white supremacist group.”

“I have personally targeted eradicating the (Ku Klux Klan) and the National Socialist Movement, which are two organizations here in this country which have all too long been given privileges they don’t deserve,” Stern said in a video posted on his site.

On Wednesday, lawyers for the plaintiffs suing white supremacist groups and movement leaders over the Charlottesville violence asked the court to sanction Schoep. They say he has ignored his obligations to turn over documents and give them access to his electronic devices and social media accounts. They also claim Schoep recently fired his attorney as a stalling tactic.

A federal magistrate judge in Charlottesville ruled last Friday that Stern cannot represent the NSM in the case because he does not appear to be a licensed attorney. That did not deter Stern from filing Thursday’s request for summary judgment against his own group.

“It is the decision of the National Socialist Movement to plead liable to all causes of actions listed in the complaint against it,” he wrote.

Stern served a prison sentence for mail fraud at the same facility as onetime Ku Klux Klan leader Edgar Ray Killen, who was convicted in the “Mississippi Burning” killings of three civil rights workers. Killen died in January 2018.

In 2012, Stern claimed Killen signed over to him power of attorney and ownership of 40 acres of land while they were serving prison terms together. A lawyer for Killen asked a judge to throw out the land transfer and certify that Killen and his family owned the property.

Story: Michael Kunzelman

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Many Thai Voters Still Undecided: Polls

Pheu Thai PM candidate Sudarat Keyuraphan is greeted by supporters at a Feb. 15 rally at Bangkok's City Hall.
Pheu Thai PM candidate Sudarat Keyuraphan is greeted by supporters at a Feb. 15 rally at Bangkok's City Hall.

BANGKOK — Many Thais remain unsure of who they’ll vote for come March 24, while most of those who’ve made up their minds favor Pheu Thai, according to polling agencies.

The most recent batch of polls found about half of all voters remained “uncertain” about which party they would vote for. Of those who’ve made up their minds, longtime electoral powerhouse Pheu Thai Party enjoyed the most support, while that enjoyed by the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party was uneven.

Thai polling organizations fall short of the profession’s rigorous transparency standards and do not adequately disclose their methods. Some have been accused of political manipulation in the past. Still, they provide a snapshot of public sentiment.

Bangkok University’s most recent Bangkok Poll found 51.7 percent of surveyed voters were “undecided,” with 11.7 percent saying they would vote for the Pheu Thai Party. The Democrat Party was close behind at 10.6 percent while the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party was favored by 10.2 percent. The Future Forward Party came in fourth with the support of 9.8 percent of those surveyed. The poll was conducted over three days late last month and surveyed 1,506 voters by telephone. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percent.

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The National Institute of Development Administration, or NIDA, conducted a poll of 1,254 first-time voters last month. It found 44.6 percent “uncertain” about which party to vote for. Pheu Thai was favored by 18.74 percent of respondents, followed by Future Forward and Democrat with 13.86 and 10.73 percent respectively. The same poll found low support for Phalang Pracharat among young voters: 2.70 percent. NIDA does not disclose its margin of error.

Read: Thai Election for Dummies: Guide to the Parties

Far fewer voters have yet to make their minds up in Thailand’s northeast, according to a Khon Kaen University E-Saan Poll conducted Feb. 9-10 in 20 northeastern provinces. It found only 9.1 percent of of its 1,108 respondents still undecided or unable to name who they would vote for. Pheu Thai was the choice for 44.8 percent of those surveyed, followed by Future Forward (21.2 percent) and Thai Raksa Chart (7.5 percent). Phalang Pracharat had the support of 7.4 percent of survey respondents; Bhumjaithai Party had 6.1 percent. The poll doesn’t identify a margin of error but says it is “99 percent reliable.”

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Chiang Mai Masseuse Charged Over Miscarriage

A screenshot of security footage released by police shows the pregnant woman entering the massage parlor on Jan. 11 in Chiang Mai province.

CHIANG MAI — Police on Friday charged a traditional Thai masseuse with grievous bodily injury for allegedly causing a client to have a miscarriage.

The pregnant 26-year-old went into shock after receiving a massage at a shopping mall in January in Chiang Mai province. She’s remained hospitalized in a coma ever since, but police said a medical examination concluded that her condition resulted from abnormal blood flow related to the massage. Officers did not identify the suspect.

The incident took place Jan. 11 at a massage parlor run by a senior’s group in the Kad Suan Kaew shopping mall. The woman, who was six months pregnant, was admitted to a hospital where she went into a coma and miscarried.

Parlor owner Uenkaew Chaisri, 81, told the media that her staff initially declined to massage the client, but she insisted on being served.

But Col. Piyapan Pattanapongsin, deputy commander of Chiang Mai police, said the masseuse would still be held responsible for consenting to break the rules.

“The signs clearly say ‘No massage for pregnant women,’ yet the masseuse still gave the service,” Col. Piyapan said. “It’s like there’s a traffic sign saying not to enter, yet you still disobey it.”

While not a law, it’s a universal rule in Thai massage parlors that pregnant women or people with blood conditions should not be massaged. Injuries – and occasional fatalities – have taken place in the past.

In November, a man died of heart failure at a massage parlor in Pattaya.

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Hakuna Matata: ‘Lion King’ Musical to Roar Its Way to Bangkok in September

BANGKOK — World-famous broadway musical “The Lion King” will finally premiere in Bangkok later this year.

Multi award-winning “The Lion King” will show in Bangkok for the first time starting Sept. 14, organizer Bec-Tero Entertainment announced Friday afternoon.

The musical will take place at Muangthai Rachadalai Theatre. The first Broadway-standard theatre in Thailand can be reached by MRT Thailand Cultural Centre.

Tickets will go on sale March 30 via ThaiTicketMajor. Tickets on weekdays range from 1,500 baht to 5,500 baht. Tickets on weekends range from 1,700 baht to 5,700 baht.

“The Lion King,” adapted from the 1994 Walt Disney animation of the same name, features actors in animal costumes as well as giant hollow puppets. It debuted in 1997 in the United States with instant success, before traveling to several cities worldwide including New York, London, Johannesburg and Tokyo.

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34 Rohingya Women, Children Found Stranded on Malaysia Beach

Rohingya Muslims stand in a queue to receive food being distributed near Balukhali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017. Photo: Bernat Armangue / AP
Rohingya Muslims stand in a queue to receive food being distributed near Balukhali refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017. Photo: Bernat Armangue / AP

KUALA LUMPUR — More than 30 Muslim Rohingya women and children were found stranded along a beach in Malaysia’s northernmost state early Friday, and are believed to have been dropped off by human traffickers, authorities said.

A police official in Kangar, the capital of northern Perlis state, said villagers found the 34 people, including nine children, weak, hungry and covered in mud as they made their way through the muddy coast.

The official, who declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue, said the group was believed to have come from Thailand. He said they have been fed and handed over to immigration officials.

Nur Aziah Mohamad Shariff, an official with the National Security Council, said it is aware of the illegal entry and is investigating.

A Myanmar welfare group said the group is believed to have been trafficked into Thailand from Bangladesh, before heading to Malaysia, whose dominant Malay Muslim population makes it a sympathetic destination.

Zafar Ahmad Ghani, who heads the Myanmar Ethnic Rohingya Human Rights Organization of Malaysia, said he obtained information that many more Rohingya are being tricked by traffickers into leaving Bangladesh after being warned they may face death if repatriated to Myanmar.

Pictures and videos obtained by members of the group showed a long rope placed across the muddy shore at low tide to help the Rohingya walk through the mud.

More than 700,000 Rohingya have fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh since August 2017, when a group of militants attacked security forces, triggering a massive retaliation by Myanmar’s army. The exodus came after hundreds of thousands of other Rohingya escaped previous bouts of violence and persecution.

Most people in Buddhist-majority Myanmar don’t accept Rohingya Muslims as a native ethnic group. They are, instead, viewed as having migrated illegally from Bangladesh, though generations of Rohingya have lived in Myanmar.

Nearly all have been denied citizenship since 1982 and lack access to education and hospitals.

The U.N. General Assembly approved a resolution in December condemning “gross human rights violations and abuses” against Myanmar’s Rohingya.

Myanmar’s government denies claims of genocide and ethnic cleansing. The country rejects the U.N. investigators’ work and the General Assembly resolution as biased.

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Meet P’To & P’Shark, the NSFW Memes Infuriating the Thai Net

P’Shark, left, and P’To, right, are pleased to see you here.

BANGKOK — Gay dance videos on the internet are nothing strange, but people have started ask questions after seeing the same two muscled men cropping up online over and over.

The two men – whom Thais have dubbed P’To and P’Lam (lam is shark) – have been dominating the Thai meme factory in recent days. They have appeared in many variations, often in unexpected places. A talk show dedicated to the politics of the day opens with P’To dancing. A theater chain asks netizens which is scarier: the meme or a ghost film.

The growing bewilderment also prompted some news sites to explain – at least partly – who these two well-built men are.

#พี่โตถูกใจสิ่งนี้ คืออะไร ไปไขคำตอบใน #BRIEF Video

โพสต์โดย Charcoal เมื่อ วันพุธที่ 27 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

The memes may vary, but there are some common elements. First, there is P’Shark, who earned the nickname for his smile. He smiles at viewers while the obscure 2007 song “Jai Gay Ray” (“Stubborn Heart”) is usually heard in the background.

Much more popular is P’To, a tanned man with a red bandana dancing in a microscopic thong and showing off his muscular build.

Similar to Rick Rolling from Western internet history, entertaining videos are abruptly cutting to show either the half-naked P’Shark or P’To dancing. Another common use is posting images of P’To in response to other threads, like “P’To Likes This.”

Adding to the confusion is the resemblance between P’To and former rock singer Wirachon “To” Satthaying, who was a member of Silly Fools, an alternative rock band from the early 2000s. Naturally, some have seized on this to try and convince the internet the two are the same.

Both memes most likely washed up on the dank shores of the Thai internet some years ago, as references exist from five years ago. Quick research at Google University finds the man Thais call P’Shark is American adult film actor Daniel Freeman, while P’To is Brazilian erotic model Richardo Milos. They first became internet sensations in Japan (where else?) back in 2011.

But their digital fame appears to have been reignited thanks to Chinese chat app TikTok. It also resurfaced in Thai usage last year with trolls pranking fans of girl group BNK48 with videos purporting to show their dance moves interrupted by the pair.

ใจเกเร

โอชิน้องหลามครับ

โพสต์โดย คุณภาพ เมื่อ วันศุกร์ที่ 31 สิงหาคม 2018

ยึกยักยึกยัก

โพสต์โดย IdolpostingTH เมื่อ วันเสาร์ที่ 1 ธันวาคม 2018

 

The memes seemed to take off, or “go mass,” in recent weeks. Here are some variations.

โพสต์โดย Teeradet Yuvanavanid เมื่อ วันอาทิตย์ที่ 24 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

A helpful collection of P’To “reactions” from “Liking this” to “interested in this product.”

พี่โต กับ พี่หลาม แฟนอาร์ทให้เพจ คุณภาพ…

โพสต์โดย เปลี่ยนทุกอย่างให้"โมเอะ" เมื่อ วันอังคารที่ 26 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

A fan art of P’To and P’Shark

บางครั้งก็รู้สึกกลัวคนมากกว่าผี “พี่โต ถูกใจสิ่งนี้” มีมที่กำลังดัง กับ #พี่นาค หลอนอะไรมากกว่ากัน?

โพสต์โดย Major Group เมื่อ วันอังคารที่ 26 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

A marketing campaign by Major Cineplex

P’To dancing to a K-Pop hit.

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A Safe-For-Work version

แผ่นดินหนักเพราะรักลุงตู่ #แดงรักพ่อ : เจาะข่าวตื้น 213

แผ่นดินหนักเพราะรักลุงตู่ #แดงรักพ่อ : เจาะข่าวตื้น 213

โพสต์โดย เจาะข่าวตื้น เมื่อ วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 21 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

The opening of John Winyu’s talk show

คุณภาพ#ADBENZ

โพสต์โดย ขอบสหนัง เมื่อ วันพุธที่ 27 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

Who’s better: P’To or P’Shark?

53032390 2394652410559486 7235465673944596480 n

There’s even a P’Tuu version, so there’s that.

Explore other Thai memes:

Thais Turn 2013 Romanian Pop Song ‘Panama’ Into Dance Meme

Speechless Netizens Parse Trump Win With Memes

Netizens Put Their Hand Up for the ‘Dele Alli’ Challenge

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