27.2 C
Bangkok
Monday, June 29, 2026
Home Blog Page 1686

TV Footage Shows Kim Jong Un Taking Smoke Break

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, a habitual smoker, takes a pre-dawn smoke break Tuesday at the train station in Nanning, China, hours before his arrival in Vietnam for his high-stakes summit with President Donald Trump over resolving the international standoff over the North’s nuclear weapons and missiles. Image: Associated Press
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, a habitual smoker, takes a pre-dawn smoke break Tuesday at the train station in Nanning, China, hours before his arrival in Vietnam for his high-stakes summit with President Donald Trump over resolving the international standoff over the North’s nuclear weapons and missiles. Image: Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — It’s unclear whether North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is going to give up his nukes anytime soon, and the same could probably be said for his cigarettes.

Footage by Japan’s TBS TV showed Kim, a habitual smoker, taking a pre-dawn smoke break Tuesday at a train station in China hours before his arrival in Vietnam for his high-stakes summit with President Donald Trump over resolving the international standoff over the North’s nuclear weapons and missiles.

The video showed Kim puffing a cigarette and talking with North Korean officials at China’s Nanning rail station. A woman who appeared to be his sister Kim Yo Jong, also a powerful individual in North Korea, is seen holding a crystal ashtray.

Kim arrived in Vietnam on Tuesday after an almost 70-hour train ride that cut through southern China.

Despite pushing a nationwide anti-smoking campaign in North Korea, Kim is frequently seen with a cigarette in his hands. In 2017, North Korea’s state broadcaster showed him casually smoking in front of one of his liquid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missiles as it underwent preparations for a test launch.

Advertisement

‘Buddha’s Teaching’ Party Cleared of Exploiting Religion

Image: People’s Reform Party / Facebook

BANGKOK — A party under fire from Buddhist groups for citing Buddha’s teachings as the basis for its policies has been cleared of malfeasance by the Election Commission.

In a brief statement, the commission said Tuesday it deliberated on the complaint filed against the People’s Reform Party and ruled it did not violate any election regulations.

Filed earlier this month by a group calling itself the Center for Coordination of Buddhists, the complaint urged officials to disband the party for making improper use of religion in its marquee campaign declaration.

“We humbly receive Lord Buddha’s teachings and apply them to finding solutions for the people’s grievances,” reads the party’s many campaign posters.

Speaking to reporters earlier this month, party leader Paiboon Nititawan said his faction sees Buddha as a role model for its moral crusade against corruption and abuse of power.

Filing complaints to disqualify rival parties has become the new normal since the election date was announced in January. A spokesman for the court said it has received over 100 requests to invalidate contenders for alleged legal violations. The Election Commission expects the number will only rise in the weeks remaining before the March 24 poll.

Advertisement

19th Century ‘Palace’ Reborn as Bangkok Arts Hub

Photo: Krirakrit Worawetkulsage via Creative Migration / Courtesy

Top: Krirakrit Worawetkulsage via Creative Migration / Courtesy

BANGKOK — A 120-year-old home that once belonged to a noted Siamese reformer is opening its doors to the public as a nexus for art, culture, social innovation and more.

Since last week, anyone is welcome to walk into Bangkok 1899, an architecturally rich residence where they can sip drinks concocted from edible plants picked from the garden on their way to educational workshops, music performances and art installations.

The two-story mansion is a local adaptation of the European Renaissance Revival built in 1899. It was designed by Mario Tamagno, the Italian architect also behind the beauty of the the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall, Hua Lamphong Railway Station and Neilson Hays Library.

Its original owner was Sanan Devahastin na Ayudhya, who’s known by his noble title Chao Phraya Thammasakmontri. He is well-known as the former Education Minister who proposed the idea of establishing Chulalongkorn University – Thailand’s first. In terms of recreation, the man brought football to Thailand and was also an author who composed the iconic cheerleading song “Grao Gila” that proclaims “sports, sports are magic medicine.”

E1wp8WQ1rtzxjlMEcfAGAC8qpVvSV5XsNuHdwawFQsXFg1yjjdj9Qnu8iYgHjZZYMsF5LM ReyLw 5ECDhgE29LKeH RJNvv2R3 VEv6kgHteokf2yFKnfkWF7JN aYTgpHfvNI

Since then, it passed on to new generations. After being left unoccupied over a decade, it has found new life as Bangkok 1899, a “cultural and civic hub” established by Creative Migration, an international arts organization based in Los Angeles and Bangkok. It has received major support by The Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Motor Co. Fund.

Inspired by creative spaces and arts hubs around the world such as The Swedish Institute in Paris, Islington Mill in Manchester and The Land Foundation in Chiang Mai – Creative Migration founder Susannah Tantemsapya said she wants Bangkok 1899 to be a “light-hearted atmosphere where everyone feels welcome.”

“Our open space encourages individuals to pursue the lost art of leisure, unburdened by consumerism. Our hope is that the public can come together, experience art, have discussions and discover new avenues of creativity,” Tantemsapya said.

But a challenge remains to reaching that public. Since this is the first time in over a century it has opened to the public, many neighbors still cannot believe they’re allowed to walk through the gates.

A neighbor across the street calls the house a “palace,” Tantemsapya told Khaosod English.

“How do we get people to feel that this place is theirs too?” said Tantemsapya. “How do we make our mission and programming accessible when it can easily be viewed as high culture, more of an upper-class pursuit? This process will unfold over time, and I’m certain that we will learn valuable lessons on how to engage with the public-at-large.”

2019 FEB 16 BANGKOK1899 Soft Opening 33
Photo: Krirakrit Worawetkulsage via Creative Migration / Courtesy

Artist Residency

On Feb. 16, which marked the soft opening of Bangkok 1899, New Zealand’s Shayne P. Carter played pinch harmonics on his electric guitar alongside Thai musicians – Piyanart “Pump” Jotikasthira of Paradise Bangkok Molam International Band, ToomTurn Molam Group and transmedia artist Arnont Nongyao.

Carter was Bangkok 1899’s first artist-in-residence.

The goal is, in exchange, that Arnont will travel to Carter’s hometown in Dunedin, New Zealand.

“There is an amazing experimental music scene down there and it’s a perfect fit for Arnont. Also, Shayne is already planning to return this winter to continue working with all his collaborators. I would say that the first residency was a big success,” said Tantemsapya.

XwB
Shayne P. Carter, fourth from left, performed with Thai musicians Feb. 16  at Bangkok 1899. Photo: Krirakrit Worawetkulsage via Creative Migration / Courtesy

“Over the past several years, I have witnessed the burgeoning landscape for arts and culture, especially in the contemporary scene. There is more international recognition, and I would like for our artist residency to contribute to the global conversation,” Tantemsapya said.

The building’s attic, which is now empty, will be turned into a space for a unique light installation by London-based contemporary Thai artist Tuck Muntarbhorn, according to Tantemsapya.

‘Social Impact Cafe’

Nestled in the back of the building is a “social impact cafe” where zero waste and sustainability are valued.

Run by Sakson “Saks” Rouypirom and Diloklarp “Him” Janthachotbutr, Na Cafe serves locally sourced beverages. Its coffee drinks are made of beans in Nan and Chiang Rai provinces. The cold-pressed juice are made mostly from fruits and vegetables planted in the garden.

In a lawn next to the cafe is a mango and papaya trees, and a small urban farm of spinach, chili, coriander, basil and many more.

“We use all parts of the fruits and vegetables to juice, cook, ferment, and make cordials,” said Saks, who is also founder of Sati (“mindfulness” in Thai), non-profit platform focused on healthcare and education for children.

QHab rSpjCa h57 zuPjOS5pS5gojF8tsiKtKOFGXxaPoijl5 O8v0zbkMn MjU0Rcmi1HLxtlxXuHoNnl1Q9vIaD1mJy64phBf vx uCscr3101dr6XShJRtMQt6eW2UaXm74ho

Apart from serving drinks, Na Cafe will also engage refugees and street children by training them in culinary skills, “Everything from barista training to cooking classes,” Saks said. “Giving them jobs is better than giving them money.”

“Our goal is to make [Na Cafe] a space for people from all communities and walks of life to come and meet and interact and enjoy.”

Na Cafe opens 10am to 7pm, Tuesday through Sunday.

QyJD7Q2JjKIU W EDOozvrDrGMMsAmc lRlgOeArX87 sw0XOK6uWHYMt5g42cwTw8cqa9K0Ae7ZHcymgbT6kAJCjtoMrLMqeRx2BQcTE3mEXXHcBVnLJ3A XVNSYsY wTiHihE7

‘Home of NGOs’

Behind Bangkok 1899 is the former Satri Chulanag School, which belongs to foundation named for the home’s original owner. Abandoned nearly 20 years, the three-story schoolhouse will soon become a multi-purpose space for several non-profit organizations.

Referred to as a “home for many NGOs,” the Ford Resource and Engagement Center will be used to headquarter food security organization Scholars of Sustenance. The space provides a much-larger kitchen and washing facilities so the food waste crusaders can collect and process excess food more efficiently before it is donated to communities in need.

On a recent visit, Head of Partnerships for the center and Scholars of Sustenance, Abigail Smith, showed a terraced, vertical farm where edible plants will grow.

Using the shared facilities, the SOS will host workshops and public events. Smith said her organization expects to bring “worthwhile” educational workshops such as those on nutrition, food awareness and even home composting.

The center is funded by Ford Fund, a philanthropic project of the Ford Motor Co.

to6H Yh VIvnWlUGwiRoePnZZEVe4Ke5Bjseon2uBNTRpRkX37uMdSeOV2VtangXSr9qD458C251VYfw9WZc5AFdeyJQz8dyHF 4DT7YDxtj5rmhJgm5bN
Photo: Abigail Smith / Courtesy

The center will also house what’s billed as Bangkok’s first green NGO co-working space. Nature Inc. will offer office and meeting space for three environmental organizations: the Bird Conservation Society of Thailand, Love Wildlife Foundation and Big Trees.

“Nature Inc. does not only give us all a professional office space, it brings us together to address challenges, share advice, and brainstorm new ideas,” said Nancy Gibson, executive director of BCST and founder of Love Wildlife Foundation.

FREC is being under construction. It’s expected to open in April.

Bangkok 1899 is located on Nakhon Sawan Road in old town’s Nang Loeng neighborhood.

lwVhzKc15f 4ES9ZJQA2YH1b x3w2ibnIRO2S srCDA UhfJk7fmPgYmSKO2DTxlNtpl2EGxzzNSrdh AuyWixrleec9ekCH1EJlDJD4yM6kiSYMxCkLrnptltSITU6SoE ncAe

3k0q6bbxVM3V0Hza vEALjLRi4aX3wpXrpnJM3Zy0glvtN6fu6uJjIy6F GVKtz17XYDRHSdpmobyvBrC7cjj6QVcKGqkk6v5OyorSGtgemhrf74tLmf45Z7eYdqNM8bfSoqa6gXCWvz9JctOs1uLIwkvuWmaflCUxaMkQPEMgIY25Jupe6WNNJNnDR9LomZz8sxKSLvURhQsIjXtxeuYOl5LoOb5AvVzrPbWnJ57Mst4UFvoyB2YYNz BYIc52q6HOXu R5aasNtk21

52877915 412094902887360 530522340451155968 n
Photo: Krirakrit Worawetkulsage via Creative Migration / Courtesy

Advertisement

Hanoi Postcard: Kim-Trump Summit Inspires Entrepreneurs

Bartender Ngo Dinh Tien presents
Bartender Ngo Dinh Tien presents "Rock It, Man" cocktail, inspired from Trump-Kim Hanoi summit at a bar Friday in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press

HANOI — For North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump, this week’s summit in Hanoi is a chance to advance the cause of world peace. For canny entrepreneurs, it’s an opportunity to make a buck, or a dong, in Vietnamese currency.

A U.S presidential visit is a big deal anywhere, and when it’s significant enough to draw wall to wall media coverage – as last year’s first summit in Singapore did – an enterprising businessman or businesswoman takes note. Drinks will be poured, burgers will be broiled and T-shirts will be silkscreened.

When Robert Gibb, an American who has been living in Hanoi for 10 years and is co-owner of a bar near Hanoi’s old quarter, heard the summit would take place in Hanoi, he sprang into action.

Of course he was keen to mark a historic occasion, but beyond that, his Unicorn Pub is noted for the elaborate libations it concocts, such as its ‘Pho’ cocktail, mimicking the taste of the famous Vietnamese noodle soup.

The summit celebratory drink, boasts the pub’s website, “is a diplomatic blend of So Ju (Korean) and Bourbon (USA) with a flare of Fireball whiskey to match the personalities of Kim & Trump. Orange in color, it is a bit sharp & bitter, but finishes sweet, peaceful and gives you the desire to continue in a positive direction.”

The drink was dubbed the ‘Rock It, Man,’ after Trump’s less-than-complimentary “Little Rocket Man” nickname for Kim when tensions were still high over Pyongyang’s long-range missile tests.

Gibb, whose two partners in the bar include his wife Trinh Xuan Dieu, said the new cocktail’s name sounded fun and celebrates “maybe for the first time in generations, opening up a country, opening the whole part of the world that was so tense for so long.”

A "Durty Donald" and a "Kim Jong Yum" - Trump and Kim inspired burgers are freshly made Sunday in a restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press
A “Durty Donald” and a “Kim Jong Yum” – Trump and Kim inspired burgers are freshly made Sunday in a restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press

Teetotalers need not despair they will be left out. A restaurant also in the city’s old quarter has added to its summit menu burgers called the ‘Durty Donald’ and the ‘Kim Jong Yum.’

Irishman Colin Kelly acknowledged the summit is an unusual opportunity to drum up publicity for his Durty Bird fried chicken and burger restaurant.

Conceiving the special dishes was something of a must-do because his establishment already has a lot of dishes with funny names and puns, said Kelly, who founded the place with two old friends.

“For the Trump it was quite easy, because American burgers are an American staple and Mr. Trump himself is very extravagant, so that’s why we went with double beef, double bacon, double cheese, fried pickles, and then we added the chicken floss, which represents his hair, which is one of Mr. Trump’s most noticeable features,” he said.

The sauce on it is Russian dressing, Kelly added mischievously.

“And then for the Kim burger, rather than using beef, we decided to go down the pork road, so we use smoked pork belly, smoked, pulled and barbecued wild boar – which is a wild Vietnamese mountain pig – and for the Korean element, we added kimchi mayonnaise and some crispy fried kimchi as well.”

“Both burgers are topped with flags.”

“Obviously, we’d like to make a little profit, but the first idea was just to get involved to what’s happening here in Hanoi … and to create a bit of fun for ourselves and for our customers.”

Durty Bird restaurant owner Colin Kelly stands Sunday next to a menu offering Trump-Kim summit special burgers in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press
Durty Bird restaurant owner Colin Kelly stands Sunday next to a menu offering Trump-Kim summit special burgers in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press

Those who have drunk and eaten their fill of Trump and Kim also have the opportunity to wear the two statesmen.

T-shirt designer Truong Thanh Duc’s creation features a portrait of a smiling Trump along with Kim, over the words “Peace Hanoi, Vietnam 2019.”

“This is the best-selling item I have ever had,” said Duc, wearing a T-shirt with Kim’s likeness at his shop in the old quarter. “We have been running full capacity, but could not meet the demand,” which he expects to increase even more with the media frenzy of the summit.

The 57-year-old Duc, who inherited the shop from his father, also produces and sells T-shirts with images of Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Barack Obama, and made an earlier Trump model after his 2016 election.

He said last week he had sold some 500 summit T-shirts, with half being bought by foreigners and the other by Vietnamese, mostly young people. The price is 100,000 dong (USD$4.20), and Duc said part of his profit would go to buy bread for poor people.

The summit is important, he suggested, because dialogue is better than confrontation and could bring “peace, food, clothing and other good things to the Korean Peninsula.”

Vietnam would also benefit from the event, Duc said.

His viewpoint was shared by a customer.

“This is a huge political event, attracting much attention from the whole world,” said 42-year-old Hanoi resident Nguyen Thuy Hang. “We do not want to be left out of such a big event taking place in our city.”

“Apart from the political factor, this T-shirt is very fashionable, so why not?” said Hang, who bought one for herself and another for her brother who lives in Canada.

Advertisement

24 Men Charged Over Assault on Bangkok Temple School

Wallop Nutfaeng, the lead suspect in the attack on a Bangkok temple school, cries Tuesday as police raid his home.
Wallop Nutfaeng, the lead suspect in the attack on a Bangkok temple school, cries Tuesday as police raid his home.

BANGKOK — Multiple charges have now been brought against two dozen men accused of raiding a Bangkok school during university admission tests, police said Tuesday.

A total of 24 suspects, all male, have now been charged with six counts including trespassing, vandalism, assault, intimidation and consuming alcohol on temple grounds following Sunday’s attack on the Matthayom Wat Sing School, according to the Bang Khun Thian district police chief.

One suspect was charged with sexually harassing a minor, Col. Luesak Damnoensawas said. It followed complaints from a student who said one of the men kissed her cheek and verbally harassed her while she tried to break up a fight between them and her friend.

Investigators today raided the homes of 16 suspects for drugs and weapons but said they came up empty-handed.

Dozens of men stormed the campus Sunday afternoon and assaulted guards, students and teachers in classrooms after the school asked that an ordination ceremony at the temple be quiet as university admission tests were being administered to more than 300 students.

A teacher said he was assaulted by multiple men and sustained serious injuries to his arm after being hit by a chair and table. A student said he was struck in the head. The school’s director said some men charged into his office and punched him.

The ringleader was identified by police as Wallop Nutfaeng, 32, who apologized in tears to students, teachers and school security guards during a police raid on his house.

He said he wanted to talk to the school’s director and got angry when he couldn’t find him. He also admitted to being drunk.

Security footage shows the men walk through the school’s front gate, some holding liquor bottles, and start attacking the school guards attempting to stop them almost immediately. Wallop was seen leading the group.

Police said 20 men will be held at the Thon Buri Criminal Court, while the four minors would be sent to a local juvenile detention center. They said three more suspects would be called in for questioning.

The court on Tuesday afternoon denied bail for all suspects, saying they pose a threat to witnesses and could disrupt the investigation.

The attack drew outrage from the public. The police commissioner has promised swift prosecution of the assailants, while junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha joined the public to condemn the incident online and command that all perpetrators be “dealt with seriously and urgently.”

Education officials said affected students can retake the tests next week. The Education Minister said Monday that they were looking into whether they would sue the attackers for the cost of rescheduling the tests.

Related stories:

Students Affected by School Raid to Retake Test Next Week

Temple Goers Asked to Lower Noise Level Vandalize School

Advertisement

Oil Spills Ravage Southern Beaches – Cause ‘Unknown’

Na Saton Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat as of Tuesday.
Na Saton Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat as of Tuesday.

NAKHON SI THAMMARAT — The oil-slick waves lapping the gulf shores deposit dead fish, jellyfish and octopuses mixed with trash on the beach.

Hua Sai district residents around Na Saton Beach are pleading with local authorities to investigate the source of oil slicks ravaging theirs and other beaches across Surat Thani, Songkhla and Nakhon Si Thammarat provinces.

“The authorities came, but they just took photos and went back,” said Phitanee Yodsurang, the beach resident who first raised the alarm Wednesday. Phitanee had been exercising on the beach when he noticed oil patches being examined by concerned fishermen.

The oil at Na Saton Beach stretches at least two kilometers, with the beach covered in debris and trash deposited there since a powerful tropical storm struck in January.

“Dead fish, octopus and jellyfish keep washing up on the shore in waves. No one knows the source yet; it might be due to the oil. Then, when the sun hits the oil washed up on shore, it melts into the sand. No one knows how toxic that is,” Phitanee said.

Na Saton Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat as of Tuesday.
Na Saton Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat as of Tuesday.

A Khaosod reporter based in Nakhon Si Thammarat interviewed a petroleum engineer working at a nearby rig who said it was unreasonable to suggest an ocean liner or rig caused the spill, since they did not contain enough oil to affect several provinces.

The engineer said authorities should check the oil for its chemical fingerprint to identify the source.

On Monday, at the popular tourist destination of Samila Beach in Songkhla, local authorities brought in trucks to dump sand atop oil deposits there. Energy official Sutthichai Suksisen collected oil samples there and said they would be sent for testing, which would take about a month.

Sutthichai said oil slicks have appeared annually on southern beaches for decades. In 2016, tests found it did not seem to come from oil platforms in the Gulf of Thailand.

คราบ5 copy คราบ9 copy คราบ4 copy คราบ1 copy

Hua Sai Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat on Thursday.
Hua Sai Beach in Nakhon Si Thammarat on Thursday.

มน4 copy มน5 copy มน6 copy

An official collects oil samples Monday at Samila Beach in Songkhla province.
An official collects oil samples Monday at Samila Beach in Songkhla province.
Advertisement

Kim Jong Un Arrives in Vietnam for Summit With Trump

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves Tuesday upon arrival by train in Dong Dang in Vietnamese border town. Photo: Minh Hoang / Associated Press
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves Tuesday upon arrival by train in Dong Dang in Vietnamese border town. Photo: Minh Hoang / Associated Press

DONG DANG, Vietnam — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, grinning broadly and waving at a crowd gathered on a cold, rainy morning, stepped off his armored train Tuesday after a long ride that started in Pyongyang and wound through China to this Vietnamese border town ahead of his second nuclear summit with President Donald Trump.

Kim, dressed in his trademark dark Mao suit, shook hands with officials as Vietnamese troops in crisp, white uniforms and black boots stood at attention on a red carpet beneath large North Korean and Vietnamese flags at the Dong Dang railway station on the China-Vietnam border.

A crowd gathered along the road near the station to wave North Korean flags and bouquets of flowers as the North Korean leader stepped into a black limousine that was then surrounded by burly, crewcut bodyguards who ran alongside their leader as he left the station. Press reports speculate that Kim will be driven to Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital, ahead of his Wednesday meeting with Trump, but officials shared no details about the specifics of a summit that the world will be watching closely.

Trump was flying to Hanoi from Washington. Kim’s arrival comes as Vietnamese officials scramble to finish preparations for a rushed summit that’s meant to deal with one of Asia’s biggest security challenges: North Korea’s pursuit of a nuclear program that stands on the verge of viably threatening any target on the planet.

Although many experts are skeptical Kim will give up the nukes he likely sees as his best guarantee of continued rule, there was a palpable, carnival-like excitement among many in Hanoi as the final preparations were made for the meeting.

Officials in Hanoi said they only had about 10 days to prepare for the summit — much less than the nearly two months Singapore had before the first Trump-Kim meeting last year— but still vowed to provide airtight security for the two leaders.

“Security will be at the maximum level,” Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Le Hoai Trung told reporters.

The ultra-tight security will be appreciated by North Korean authorities, who are extremely vigilant about the safety of Kim, the third member of his family to rule the North with absolute power. Kim’s decision to take a train, not a plane, may have been influenced by the better ability to control security.

Vietnam is eager to show off its huge economic and development improvements since the destruction of the Vietnam War, but the country also tolerates no dissent and is able to provide the kind of firm hand not allowed by more democratic potential hosts.

Vietnam has announced an unprecedented traffic ban along a possible arrival route for Kim. The Communist Party’s Nhan Dan newspaper quoted the Roads Department as saying the ban will affect the 169-kilometer (105-mile) stretch of Highway One from Dong Dang, on the border with China, to Hanoi.

There are high expectations for the Hanoi summit after a vague declaration at the first meeting in June in Singapore that disappointed many.

In a meeting with senior aides in Seoul, South Korean President Moon Jae-in said that the Trump-Kim talks would be a critical opportunity to achieve peace on the Korean Peninsula.

Moon, who met Kim three times last year and has lobbied hard to revive nuclear diplomacy between the U.S. and North Korea, is eager for a breakthrough that would allow him to push ambitious plans for inter-Korean engagement, including lucrative joint economic projects that are held back by U.S.-led sanctions against the North.

“If President Trump succeeds in dissolving the world’s last remaining Cold War rivalry, it will become yet another great feat that will be indelibly recorded in world history,” Moon said.

Trump, via Twitter, has worked to temper those expectations, predicting before leaving for Hanoi a “continuation of the progress” made in Singapore but adding a tantalizing nod to “Denuclearization?” He also said that Kim knows that “without nuclear weapons, his country could fast become one of the great economic powers anywhere in the World.”

North Korea has spent decades, at great political and economic sacrifice, building its nuclear program, and there is widespread skepticism among experts that it will give away that program cheaply.

Story: Yves Dam Van, Foster Klug

Advertisement

Free Test Rides on MRT Blue Line Through Chinatown Start April

The interior of MRT Sanam Chai.

BANGKOK — The long-awaited rail extension west through Chinatown and across the river will open to the public for a test run beginning in April, the transport minister announced Tuesday.

The new line, which runs both above and underground, will run from MRT Hua Lamphong to Bang Khae district in the western suburbs. Minister Pailin Chuchottaworn told reporters riding trains during the testing phase will be free, while full operation will start in September.

“Installation of the train system is now 71 percent completed,” Pailin said, adding that three trains will arrive to service the line in March. The number of trains will reach 35 by next year, the minister said.

Fourteen stations will serve the extension of the 15-year-old Blue Line. Unlike the cold, modern design of its existing stations, some of the new stops were designed by architects and artists to reflect traditional Thai architecture.

The line will stop at Wat Mangkon, Sam Yot, Sanam Chai, Itsaraphap, Tha Phra, Bang Phai, Bang Wa, Phet Kasem 48, Phasi Charoen and Bang Khae before terminating at Lak Song.

Commuters can change to the Tao Poon-bound elevated train line at MRT Tha Phra, though that route will not open till March 2020. MRT Bang Wa is also an interchange to the BTS skytrain system.

An even longer extension will link MRT Lak Song to the Thawi Wattana district, though construction won’t be finished until March 2020, at the most optimistic. The full Blue Line extension project will cost an estimated 80 billion baht.

Advertisement

Australian Cardinal Pell Convicted of Molesting 2 Choirboys

Cardinal George Pell walks onto the stage for the opening mass for World Youth Day in 2008 in Sydney, Australia. Photo: Rick Rycroft / Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia — The most senior Catholic cleric ever charged with child sex abuse has been convicted of molesting two choirboys moments after celebrating Mass, dealing a new blow to the Catholic hierarchy’s credibility after a year of global revelations of abuse and cover-up.

Cardinal George Pell, Pope Francis’ top financial adviser and the Vatican’s economy minister, bowed his head but then regained his composure as the 12-member jury delivered unanimous verdicts in the Victoria state County Court on Dec. 11 after more than two days of deliberation.

The court had until Tuesday forbidden publication of any details about the trial.

Pell faces a potential maximum 50-year prison term after a sentencing hearing that begins on Wednesday. He lodged an appeal last week against the convictions.

Details of the trial had been suppressed because until Tuesday, Pell had faced a second trial in April on charges that he indecently assaulted two boys aged 9 or 10 and 11 or 12 as a young priest in the late 1970s in a public pool in his hometown of Ballarat.

Prosecutor Fran Dalziel told the court on Tuesday that the Ballarat charges had been dropped and asked for the suppression order to be lifted.

“This is not a special case,” Dalziel said.

The victim who testified at Pell’s trial said after the conviction was revealed that he has experienced “shame, loneliness, depression and struggle.” In his statement, the man said it had taken him years to understand the impact the assault had on his life.

Lawyer Lisa Flynn said the father of the second victim, who died of a heroin overdose in 2014 at the age of 31, is planning to sue the church or Pell individually once the appeal is resolved.

Pell’s lawyer Robert Richter initially wanted details of the trial suppressed until his appeal was heard, but later withdraw the application.

Pell was surrounded by a crush of cameras and members of the public as he was ushered from the courthouse to a waiting car. “You’re a monster!” one man shouted. “You’re going to burn in hell, you freak!”

“Are you sorry?” one woman shouted. Pell did not respond.

Another of Pell’s lawyers, Paul Galbally, said Pell continued to maintain his innocence.

“Although the cardinal originally faced allegations from a number of complainants, all of those complaints and allegations save for the matters that are subject to the appeal have all been either withdrawn or discontinued,” Galbally told reporters outside.

Pell has initially been charged with more than 20 charges of sexual abuse against various complainants.

The revelations came in the same month that the Vatican announced Francis approved the expulsion from the priesthood for a former high-ranking American cardinal, Theodore McCarrick, for sexual abuse of minors and adults.

The convictions were also confirmed days after Francis concluded his extraordinary summit of Catholic leaders summoned to Rome for a tutorial on preventing clergy sexual abuse and protecting children from predator priests.

The lifting of the suppression order was welcomed by SNAP, a U.S. support group for victim of clergy abuse.

“We hope that his conviction will not only bring healing to his victims in Australia but hope to survivors across the world who are yearning for accountability at the top levels of the church,” SNAP said in a statement. “We believe (the) conviction will make Australian children safer and parents and parishioners better informed about how to prevent sexual abuse.”

The jury convicted Pell of abusing two boys whom he had caught swigging sacramental wine in a rear room of Melbourne’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral in late 1996, as hundreds of worshippers were streaming out of Sunday services.

Pell, now 77 but 55 at the time, had just been named the most senior Catholic in Australia’s second-largest city, Melbourne.

The boys were both 13 years old. The jury also found Pell guilty of indecently assaulting one of the boys in a corridor more than a month later.

Pell had maintained his innocence throughout, describing the accusations as “vile and disgusting conduct” that went against everything he believed in.

Richter, his lawyer, had told the jury that only a “mad man” would take the risk of abusing boys in such a public place. He said it was “laughable” that Pell would have been able to expose his penis and force the victim to take it in his mouth, given the cumbersome robes he was wearing.

Both he and Chief Judge Peter Kidd urged the jury of eight men and four women not to punish Pell for all the failings of the Catholic Church, which in Australia have been staggering.

“You must not scapegoat Cardinal Pell,” Kidd told the jury.

Along with Ireland and the U.S., Australia has been devastated by the impact of the clerical abuse scandal, with a Royal Commission inquiry finding that 4,444 people reported they had been abused at more than 1,000 Catholic institutions across Australia between 1980 and 2015.

Pell’s own hometown of Ballarat had such a high incidence of abuse – and, survivors say, a correlated higher-than-average incidence of suicide – that the city warranted its own case study in the Royal Commission report.

As a result, Pell’s trial amounted to something of a reckoning for survivors, with the brash and towering cardinal becoming the poster child for all that went wrong with the way the Catholic Church handled the scandal.

The conviction capped a year that had been so dominated by revelations of high-ranking sex abuse and cover-up that analysts openly speak of a crisis unparalleled since the Reformation. In addition to Pell, the allegations against McCarrick of groping a minor in the 1970s and of sleeping with adult seminarians became public.

As a result of the scandal, Francis’ approval ratings have tanked in the United States, and his standing with conservative Catholics around the world – already on shaky ground over his outreach to divorcees – has plunged.

Up until the verdict, Pell’s lawyers had appeared confident that they had established a reasonable doubt and had expected quick verdicts of not guilty.

When the jury chairman delivered the first guilty verdict, Pell’s hands slipped from the arm rests of the chair where he sat in the dock at the back of the courtroom. His head bowed after the second verdict, but he restored his composure for the final verdicts.

Pell, who walked to and from court throughout his monthlong trial with a crutch under his right arm, was released on bail to undergo surgical knee replacements in Sydney on Dec. 14. Prosecutor Mark Gibson did not oppose bail, saying the surgery would be more easily managed outside the prison system.

The first four offenses occurred at the first or second Solemn Mass that Archbishop Pell celebrated as leader of the magnificent blue-stone century-old cathedral in the center of Melbourne. Pell was wearing his full robes – though not his staff or pointed bishops’ hat – at the time.

The now 34-year-old survivor told the court that Pell orally raped him, then crouched and fondled the complainant’s genitals while masturbating.

“I was young and I didn’t really know what had happened to me. I didn’t really know what it was, if it was normal,” the complainant told the court.

The other victim died of a heroin overdose in 2014 without ever complaining of the abuse, and even denying to his suspicious mother that he had been molested while he was part of the choir.

Neither boy can now be identified, because it is illegal to name victims of sexual assault in Victoria state.

Pell was initially charged with orally raping the second boy. But that charge was downgraded to indecent assault when the victim who testified said that he couldn’t see the other’s boy mouth at that moment from his vantage point.

More than a month later, the complainant testified that Pell pushed him against a cathedral corridor wall after a Mass and squeezed the boy’s genitals painfully before walking away in silence.

“Pell was in robes and I was in robes. He squeezed and kept walking,” the complainant told the jurors. “I didn’t tell anyone at the time because I didn’t want to jeopardize anything. I didn’t want to rock the boat with my family, my schooling, my life.”

The complainant testified that he feared that making such accusations against a powerful church man would cost him his place in the choir and with it his scholarship to prestigious St. Kevin’s College.

Pell pleaded not guilty to one count of sexual penetration of a child under 16 and four counts of willfully committing an indecent act with or in the presence of a child under 16 in late 1996 and early 1997.

He did not testify at his trial. But the jury saw a video recording of an interview he gave Australian detectives in Rome in 2016 in which he stridently denied the allegations.

Pell grimaced, appearing incredulous and distressed, waved his arms over his head and muttered to himself as the detectives detailed the accusations that his victim had leveled against him a year earlier.

“The allegations involve vile and disgusting conduct contrary to everything I hold dear and contrary to the explicit teachings of the church which I have spent my life representing,” Pell told police.

Richter told the jury that the prosecution case compounded a series of improbabilities and impossibilities.

He told the jury that Pell could not have “parted” his robes as the complainant had described.

The jury was handed the actual cumbersome robes Pell wore as archbishop. Over his regular clothes, Pell would wear a full-length white robe called an alb that was tied around his waist with a rope-like cincture. Over that, he would drape a 3-meter (10-foot) band of cloth called a stole around his neck. The outermost garment was the long poncho-like chasuble.

More than 20 witnesses, including clerics, choristers and altar servers, testified during the trial. None recalled ever seeing the complainant and the other victim break from a procession of choristers, altar servers and clerics to go to the back room.

The complainant testified that he and his friend had run from the procession and back into the cathedral through a side door to, as Gibson, the prosecutor, said, “have some fun.”

Monsignor Charles Portelli, who was the cathedral’s master of ceremonies in the 1990s, testified that he was always with Pell after Mass to help him disrobe in the sacristy.

The defense argued that Pell’s usual practice was to linger at the cathedral front steps talking to members of the congregation after Mass. But Gibson said there was evidence that Pell didn’t always chat outside and had the opportunity to commit the crimes.

The lifting of the gag order comes after Francis charted a new course for the Catholic Church to confront clergy sexual abuse and cover-up, a scandal that has consumed his papacy and threatens the credibility of the Catholic hierarchy at large.

Opening a first-ever Vatican summit on preventing abuse, Francis warned 190 bishops and religious superiors last week that their flocks were demanding concrete action, not just words, to punish predator priests and keep children safe. He offered them 21 proposals to consider going forward, some of them obvious and easy to adopt, others requiring new laws.

But Francis went into the meeting even more weakened and discredited after one of his top advisers was convicted of the very crime he has now decided is worth fighting on a universal scale.

Pell’s downfall will invariably tarnish the pope, since Francis appointed Pell economy minister in 2014 even though some of the allegations against him were known at the time.

In October, Francis finally cut Pell loose, removing him as a member of his informal cabinet. Pell technically remains prefect of the Vatican’s economy ministry, but his five-year term expires this year and is not expected to be renewed.

Story: Rod McGuirk

Advertisement

Officials Still Don’t Know Who Built Koh Samui Tunnel

KOH SAMUI — Officials on Monday still hadn’t found the origin of a 100-meter tunnel they discovered last week on a southern island.

For days, authorities have been investigating the origin of a mountain tunnel they discovered Friday popular among tourists, but found no evidence of a construction warrant or ownership proof.

Pallop Meepian, a legalization official on Koh Samui, said on Monday that he estimated the tunnel was built from 2002 to 2004 and completed in 2005.

Illegal constructions are punishable by up to three months in prison and a 60,000 baht fine.


q1 ssv8r7Y 1 copy q2 1 copy q4 copy q7 copy q8 copy w8 1 copy

Related stories:

Tourists Drawn to Light at End of Samui Tunnel (Video)

 

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
27.2 ° C
27.2 °
27.2 °
82 %
3.9kmh
100 %
Mon
34 °
Tue
34 °
Wed
33 °
Thu
35 °
Fri
27 °