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Naresuan Seniors, Alumni Defend Muddy Hazing

Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook

PHITSANULOK — A ceremony, watched over by professors, sanctifies a wooden pole. Freshmen in white carry a heavy wooden pillar around the campus before placing it in front of the Architecture Faculty building, where they dance and sing around it.

Then, the dirty part begins. Using hoses, upperclassmen make everything wet and muddy as the the digging starts to erect the pole while shouting ensues. The whole thing takes hours.

This recent hazing activity, criticized as another example of abusive hazing, is being defended as a valuable tradition by seniors and alumni of Naresuan University’s architecture program.

“We are proud of this pole installation ceremony. It shows the essence of the Faculty of Architecture, because every time we build a house, we have to dig and install a central pole,” third-year student Parima Sooklert said Wednesday.

Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook
Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook

“The students come from different families, but they have to learn to love and cooperate together. This ceremony helps them to learn to help out each other. If the pole is too heavy, someone quickly runs in to help them,” Parima said.

She was one of several to step forward after the practice became criticized by anti-hazing activists looking to limit the practice of SOTUS, as it is known by an acronym for Seniority, Order, Tradition, Unity and Spirit.

“What the heck do they need to do that for?” Panuwat Songsawatchai, a 25-year-old activist said by phone Thursday. “What if the pole falls and whacks someone in the face? It’s a heavy-ass wooden pillar. Don’t architecture students know that people die when that happens?”

Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook
Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook

Panuwat is member of an online group called Anti Sotus, which has strongly condemned the activity.

Panuwat said the activity, whose full name is “Welcoming Freshmen Pillar Installation: Creating Foundations,” is not only dangerous but could be count as sexual harassment since female upperclassmen are forced to wear white while their male peers soak them, leaving their shirts transparent.

“We can’t just wait until someone dies before alerting people,” he said. “SOTUS deaths never get justice. The seniors just cry and apologize.”

But another third-year Naresuan student, Pantawan Konglakorn, told Khaosod on Wednesday that the Anti Sotus page was only presenting the negative aspects of the tradition. After the freshmen are done planting the pole, he said seniors rinse them, wipe their faces and tie bai sri strings tied around their wrists to welcome them. Disadvantaged students are also awarded scholarships during the event.

The upperclassmen said the activity has gone on for almost 20 years, while Anti Sotus said it was a recent invention.

Apinan Lek Buabok, an alumni posted publicly on Facebook that the mud crawling and pole installing was a positive tradition.

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Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook

“Everyone has to help each other, trading off digging and carrying the pole. Of course some of the kids tease each other and some of the roon p tease. But it’s a normal thing to happen because we need the pole to withstand the rain and sun,” he wrote.

He said the activity helps to “melt the attitudes” of the freshmen, instill teamwork and get them to “help each other wake up in time for class.”

“I’m damaged by you posting about this. I graduated in 2010,” Apinan wrote in messages to the Anti Sotus page, which Apinan shared on the page.

One video shows freshmen carrying a large wooden column while a senior screams, “You wanna hold it in your mouth?”

Although it the activities are not academically mandatory, upperclassmen told the freshmen that they needed to collect extracurricular activity hours, saying that they were necessary for graduation, Anti Sotus said.

“We’ve been doing this page for seven years,” an Anti Sotus post wrote, in response to the defenses. “It’s the same old story and excuse. And people who don’t participate will get psychologically bullied later.”

Commentator Klattlsak Prasatthong said that people who do not participate get bullied later. “The seniors said it was okay to not participate, so I didn’t. But during class hours, no one would even talk to me. The seniors told them not to.”

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Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook
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Photo: Anti Sotus / Facebook

Related stories:

Freshmen Stripped to Undies on SOTUS Beach Trip

Worlds Collide When Intl School Students Hazed at Thai Unis

Abusive ‘Buddhist Camp’ One of Top 10 Worst SOTUS Incidents of 2018

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Engine Malfunction Reported on Prayuth’s Plane

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha on Samui island.

BANGKOK — An air force plane carrying junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha was forced to return to Bangkok for an emergency landing Thursday morning due to a reported mechanical problem.

The junta leader, who was scheduled to visit Koh Samui, had to delay his departure by an hour and a half after pilots discovered a malfunction in one of the C-130’s propellers about 45 minutes after takeoff.

Also onboard were tourism minister Weerasak Kowsurat and interior affairs minister Anupong Paochinda.

The delegation changed planes after returning to the airbase in northern Bangkok and departed safely at about 8:30am.

Later in the morning, the government’s official Facebook page broadcast live videos of Gen. Prayuth visiting state agencies and local communities on the island.

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Get Hangry, Go ‘Mad Face’ at Riverside Food & Fun Fare

Photo: Mad Face Food Week

BANGKOK — Consider starving yourself just a little next week to prepare for a festive riverside smorgasbord.

More than 60 selected food stalls will pop up in a riverside warehouse on the Thonburi side for Mad Face Food Week, a joyous, scrumptious celebration of food.

The three-day event is divided into 10 sections including the No Fork Zone’s finger foods, No Spain No Gain’s tapas and Wholesome Fun’s organic fare. Fans of oriental dishes can go to Crazy Rich Asian Food while foodies skilled in the culinary arts will show off their talents in the Non-Chef Kitchen Meltdown competition.

Foreign chefs and restaurateurs will be throwing down together in The Farang Pit.

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Photo: Mad Face Food Week

Those who don’t want to just browse, sip or chomp can go March 2 for a private exclusive dinner of contemporary European dishes cooked with local ingredients by Sorawis “Gunn” Saengvanich of Top Chef Thailand. Andy Ricker, owner of famed Thai restaurant Pok Pok in New York and Portland, will perform his magic under a Vietnamese concept on March 3.

That’s not all. The festival this year adds The Love Boat, a sunset dinner cruise with a full-course dinner and Chao Phraya River view.

Night owls who are down to party can join the What the Boat Party, where art, music, food and drinks will all be paired by rum-heavy cocktail bar Tropic City, Goja Gallery Cafe and Chinese-themed bar Ba Hao.

Admission is 100 baht and includes one drink. Tickets for the private dinner, sunset cruise and boat parties are available online.

Mad Face Food Week runs from 3pm to midnight on March 1-3 at the Sermsuk Warehouse Pepsi Pier. It’s is a five-minute walk or short ride from BTS Krung Thon Buri’s exit No. 3.

Photo: Mad Face Food Week

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Post Today to Cease Printing Next Month

BANGKOK — Thai-language newspaper Post Today will cease offering a print version next month, the publisher said Wednesday.

The daily business paper, which like the Bangkok Post is owned by Post Publishing, will shut down its printing operation after 17 years and go fully online. The parent company said it will also shutter its free daily circular M2F, citing “rapid changes in the mass media business.”

Bangkok Post, the English language newspaper, will continue to be available both online and in print.

Post Today was founded in 2003, while M2F launched in 2011.

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2nd Trump-Kim Summit Crucial Moment for Moon’s Presidency

In this image made from video provided by Korea Broadcasting System (KBS), South Korean President Moon Jae-in, left, poses with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for a photo on the podium upon arrival in September in Pyongyang, North Korea. Image: Associated Press
In this image made from video provided by Korea Broadcasting System (KBS), South Korean President Moon Jae-in, left, poses with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for a photo on the podium upon arrival in September in Pyongyang, North Korea. Image: Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean President Moon Jae-in has staked his legacy on the stunning diplomatic progress he has forged with North Korea, as well as the behind-the-scenes orchestration of the U.S.-North Korean summits.

But following months of stalemate on North Korea nuclear talks, Moon’s presidency faces a crucial moment, with President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un set to meet for the second time next week.

Moon, a liberal who took office in May 2017, is desperate for a breakthrough so he can continue engagement with the North that has driven the three-way diplomacy but is now held back by tough U.S.-led sanctions against Pyongyang. There’s hope among Moon’s supporters that progress by Trump and Kim on the nuclear issue will allow the partial sanctions relief needed for the Koreas to resume joint economic projects that were shelved during previous standoffs.

But Moon may be disappointed in his push for quick sanctions relief.

It remains unclear whether Kim is ready to deal away his nukes, and Washington still sees economic pressure as its best form of leverage over Pyongyang. If the nuclear negotiations break down, Moon could face a serious political dilemma over whether to continue to engage with the North or join another U.S.-led pressure campaign.

A look at the stakes for Moon as Trump and Kim prepare to meet in Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi:

 

Moon’s Shot

Moon, who has preached that Seoul should be in the driver’s seat when dealing with Pyongyang, has prioritized improving bilateral relations with North Korea, which he says would help drive nuclear progress between Washington and Pyongyang.

A son of North Korean war refugees, Moon has vowed to build on the legacies of former Presidents Kim Dae-jung and Roh Moo-hyun. Under their “Sunshine Policy,” which Moon had a hand in building as Roh’s chief of staff, economic inducements from Seoul resulted in temporary rapprochement and summits in 2000 and 2007 with then-North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, Kim Jong Un’s late father. In a phone conversation with Trump on Tuesday, Moon said the South was ready to proceed with inter-Korean economic projects to induce further nuclear disarmament steps from Kim.

But Moon is in a tougher spot than his liberal predecessors, who governed when the North’s nuclear threat was nascent. Kim’s arsenal now includes purported thermonuclear warheads and intercontinental ballistic missiles potentially capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.

The Trump-Kim meeting in Hanoi could be pivotal in determining whether things head toward a stable and nuclear-free Korean Peninsula, or the cementing of the North as a nuclear power. With crucial parliamentary elections coming next year, Moon can’t afford a major setback in inter-Korean relations, his strongest issue.

Moon continues to enjoy a good level of public support for his rapprochement with North Korea. But recent polls show there’s also growing skepticism among South Koreans, especially among older people, over whether Kim will ever give up his nukes.

“As long as the Kim Jong Un regime is there, North Korea will never abandon its nuclear weapons, even if we pay them hundreds of billions of dollars or trillions of dollars,” said Thae Yong Ho, a former North Korean diplomat who defected to the South in 2016.

“The nuclear weapons are gravity that pulls the regime together,” Thae said. “They make up for the North getting behind in the inter-Korean competition and provide an instant solution to the North’s inferiority in conventional military power against the United States and South Korea.”

 

Worries in Seoul

While Moon focuses mainly on North Korea, there’s criticism that huge problems are being mishandled at home.

There’s discontent over a rapidly decaying job market — the 1.22 million South Koreans measured as jobless in January represented the highest number in 19 years. The bad economy has also compromised government efforts toward reforming powerful family-owned conglomerates often accused of monopolistic behavior and corruptive ties with politicians. There’s also worry over the long-term effects of a falling birthrate as many women put off marriage and child birth because of financial instability, grueling working hours and limited daycare services.

Deep gender, age and political divides seem to be coming to the head on the eve of an election year, and the ruling liberals have seen their popularity decline over scandals, including the arrest of a pro-Moon provincial governor for his involvement in manipulating online opinions ahead of the 2017 presidential election.

“Inter-Korean relations have been the only thing going well for the Moon government,” said Yul Shin, a politics professor at Seoul’s Myongji University. “But enthusiasm will quickly wane if we go through event after event without producing real changes on denuclearization.”

 

Hopes of Restarting Joint Project

The Koreas in recent months have taken military measures to reduce conventional threats, opened a liaison office in the North Korean border town of Kaesong and vowed to pursue a bid to co-host the 2032 Summer Olympics.

Now they want sanctions dialed back so they can resurrect two major symbols of rapprochement that provided much-needed hard currency to North Korea: a jointly run factory park in Kaesong and South Korean tours to the North’s scenic Diamond Mountain resort.

At their third summit in Pyongyang in September, Moon and Kim agreed to make progress on both projects. Kim said later during his annual New Year’s speech that the North was ready to restart the projects “without any precondition,” while making a nationalistic call for stronger cooperation between the Koreas.

South Korea suspended tours to Diamond Mountain in 2008 after a North Korean soldier shot a South Korean tourist. Seoul’s previous conservative government closed the Kaesong park in February 2016 following a North Korean nuclear test.

It’s impossible for Seoul to restart the projects under current international sanctions, which have strengthened significantly since 2016 as North Korea sped up its weapons development.

One potential deal could see Pyongyang agree to verifiably dismantle its main nuclear complex at Yongbyon and freeze its nuclear program. Washington, in return, could agree to take steps to free up inter-Korean activities at Kaesong and Diamond Mountain, said Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea expert at Seoul’s Dongguk University and one of Moon’s policy advisers.

The Security Council would probably need to pass an entirely new resolution on the North for inter-Korean economic activities to resume, which is difficult to imagine until Kim takes deeper steps toward verifiably and irreversibly relinquishing his nuclear arsenal, said Lim Soo-ho, an analyst from the Seoul-based Institute for National Security. Even if this happens, it still leaves U.S. unilateral sanctions, which would put South Korean companies doing business in the North under the threat of U.S. boycotts.

Trump would need to go through an exhaustive process to soften U.S. sanctions, Lim said, because of a 2016 law that demands significant progress not only on North Korea’s nuclear disarmament but also on its dismal human rights record for punitive measures to be suspended or removed.

Story: Kim Tong-hyung

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Quake Swarm Damages 14 Homes in Thailand’s North

A house in Lampang province damaged by earthquakes.

LAMPANG — At least 14 residences in the north sustained damage from more than two dozen quakes and tremors that struck between Wednesday and Thursday morning, officials said.

The first earthquake, of 4.3 magnitude, struck Lampang province at about 1pm yesterday, setting off at least 25 other aftershocks and related temblors in the region. No injuries have been reported, and a dam in the nearby Chiang Mai province was reportedly unaffected.

The following quakes registered at magnitudes of 2 and 4.9, officials said.

The largest quake’s was centered 10 kilometers underground at the northern reach of the province, about 100 kilometers northeast of Chiang Mai city, according to the US Geological Service.

Cracks appeared in some houses following the tremors. A temple in Lampang province also reported minor damages.

Five fault lines run below Northern Thailand and cause occasional earthquakes. A magnitude 3.1 quake was reported in Chiang Mai last month.

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Case Over Future Forward’s Junta Criticism Goes Forward

Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, Future Forward Party leader, takes a selfie with supporters at a campaign rally Wednesday in Bangkok’s Siam Square.
Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, Future Forward Party leader, takes a selfie with supporters at a campaign rally Wednesday in Bangkok’s Siam Square.

BANGKOK — A cybercrime case against the leader of the Future Forward Party will be handed over to prosecutors Friday, the party’s spokeswoman said.

Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit and two other senior party members are scheduled to meet with prosecutors Wednesday over their criticism of the ruling junta during a Facebook live video last year, Pannika Wanich said.

The three were charged under the Computer Crime Act for the live video “Return Friday to the People” streamed via the party’s Facebook page as well as Thanathorn’s criticism written on his own Facebook page.

Reports on the latest development prompted a wave of online support for the businessman-turned-politician, who’s progressive policies are popular among young voters.

#Savethanatorn has been trending in Thailand since yesterday and remained No. 1 as of Thursday morning, according to Twitter.

Pannika said the party members aren’t worried about proving their innocence.

“What Thanathorn and two party executives commented on was from media reports that were widely known in public. We can confirm that our criticism wasn’t ‘spreading false information online’ as accused,” she said, referring to the alleged infraction.

She said the party had expected the case to be accelerated in the run-up to Election Day, adding that it will continue to campaign nationwide.

Thanathorn once served on the board of Matichon Group, which owns Khaosod English.

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Fire in Old Part of Bangladesh’s Capital Kills at Least 69

In this Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2019, photo, firefighters try to douse flames in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Photo: Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2019, photo, firefighters try to douse flames in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Photo: Associated Press

DHAKA, Bangladesh — A devastating fire raced through buildings in an old part of Bangladesh’s capital and killed at least 69 people, officials and witnesses said Thursday.

About 50 other people were injured and the fire in Dhaka was mostly under control after more than nine hours of frantic efforts by firefighters.

The Chawkbazar area where the fire was burning is crammed with buildings separated by narrow alleys. The neighborhood is a mix of residential and commercial, with buildings that commonly have shops, restaurants or warehouses on the ground floors.

The blaze started late Wednesday night in one building but quickly spread to others, fire department Director General Brig. Gen. Ali Ahmed said.

The death toll rose to 69, with many of the victims trapped inside the buildings, said Mahfuz Riben, a control room official of the Fire Service and Civil Defense in Dhaka.

“Our teams are working there but many of the recovered bodies are beyond recognition. Our people are using body bags to send them to the hospital morgue, this is a very difficult situation,” he told AP by phone.

Some floors of the destroyed buildings had chemicals and plastic in storage.

Most buildings are used both for residential and commercial purposes despite warnings of the potential for high fatalities from fires after one had killed at least 123 people in 2010. Authorities had promised to bring the buildings under regulations and remove chemical warehouses from the residential buildings.

The death toll could still rise as the condition of some of the injured people was critical, said Samanta Lal Sen, head of a burn unit of the Dhaka Medical College Hospital.

Sen said at least nine of the critically injured people were being treated in his unit.

Witnesses told local TV stations that many gas cylinders stored in the buildings continued to explode one after another. They said the fire also set off explosions in fuel tanks of some of the vehicles that got stuck in traffic in front of the destroyed buildings.

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Thais Give Russia, US Right to Extradite Hacking Suspect

U.S. President Donald Trump, left, listens to Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2018 during a press conference after their meeting at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press
U.S. President Donald Trump, left, listens to Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2018 during a press conference after their meeting at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press

BANGKOK — A court ruled Wednesday that a Russian man who allegedly was part of a gang that stole millions of dollars online from bank accounts can be extradited to the United States to stand trial, but the suspect could end up in Russia anyway.

The court approved a request from U.S. authorities that Dmitry Ukrainsky be extradited to the U.S., where he has been indicted on fraud and money laundering charges. The court said Ukrainsky’s group was charged with stealing more than 1 billion baht (USD$32 million) from victims in the U.S., Australia, Japan, England, Italy and Germany by planting malware on their computers.

However, Ukrainsky’s extradition to Russia was previously approved last year by a court after he agreed to return there after he finishes serving a 10-year, 8-month prison term in Thailand for fraud, money laundering and conducting business illegally as a foreigner. He was arrested in July 2016 in the beach resort town of Pattaya, where he ran a yacht rental business, and sentenced in 2017.

His alleged accomplice, Olga Komova from Uzbekistan, was arrested in the beach resort of Koh Chang where she worked at a hotel as a guest relations officer.

It is unclear to which country Ukrainsky would eventually be extradited. In other cases of alleged Russian hackers arrested abroad, usually at a U.S. request, Moscow has strongly opposed them being sent to the United States.

The court said Wednesday said that although Ukrainsky had denied the charges on which he is sought by U.S. authorities, Komova had already been extradited to the United States and was convicted there on the same charges. The court said in its ruling that it had considered evidence from the arresting officers and the U.S. request for Ukrainsky’s extradition.

U.S. authorities had been pursuing the case since 2014, when they found multiple suspicious money transfers into bank accounts in Thailand, according to a statement from the court.

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UN Gives Green Light for North Koreans to Travel to Vietnam

In this undated image from video distributed on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019, by North Korean broadcaster KRT, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un delivers a speech in North Korea. Photo: KRT via Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — The Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against North Korea has given a green light to Kim Jong Un’s delegation to travel to Vietnam next week for talks with U.S. President Donald Trump on denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula, U.N. diplomats said Wednesday.

The Vietnamese government requested an exemption from sanctions for the entire delegation to travel to Hanoi and there was no objection by any of the 15 council nations, the council diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because consultations were private.

The exemption covers anyone in the delegation who is on the U.N. sanctions blacklist and therefore is banned from traveling and subject to an asset freeze. It will also allow all delegation members to take home luxury goods whose import to North Korea is banned by the council.

The sanctions committee granted the same exemptions for the North Korean leader’s delegation ahead of Kim’s first meeting with Trump in Singapore in June.

The sanctions committee can grant exemptions on a case-by-case basis for any reason consistent with the objectives of relevant Security Council resolutions. One objective is peacefully resolving the North Korea nuclear issue.

At the Singapore summit, Kim pledged to work toward the “complete denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula, without providing a clear timetable or roadmap on abandoning North Korea’s nuclear weapons. U.S.-led diplomacy aimed at making progress on Kim’s pledge, in return for unspecified concessions, has since made little headway.

Trump said Tuesday that he wants to see North Korea eventually give up its nuclear weapons program, but he says he is not in any rush because relations between the two countries are good.

He said the Hanoi summit on Feb. 27-28 will be “very exciting” but gave no details of what he hopes to achieve.

Story: Edith M. Lederer

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