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Royal Fraud Acquitted of Human Trafficking

Monta Yokrattanakan is fingerprinted upon her arrest in July 2016.

BANGKOK — The court acquitted a well-known socialite of human trafficking Monday, though she will continue to serve a sentence for royal defamation.

Monta Yokrattanakan, better known as Ying Kai, was cleared of charges that she enslaved three women and forced them to work as her housekeepers for nearly four years.

Rejecting the prosecution’s argument that she held them captive from 2006 to 2010, the court said the three women testified that they had access to phones and received money from Monta to go on leisure trips.

Socialite Accused of Flaunting Royal Title Goes to Jail

The 62-year-old broke down in tears in the courtroom upon hearing the verdict and thanked the judges for their verdict.

Monta’s high-profile arrest in 2016 came as a shock to many because the socialite was a regular among the upper stratosphere of society. Apart from human trafficking charges, police also accused her of insulting the royal family by claiming false ties to the monarchy for personal gain.

The arrest was part of a purge of those allegedly perpetrating fraud by exploiting ties to the monarchy.

The court found her guilty of two separate counts of royal defamation in 2017 and 2018. She’s serving a prison sentence of 14 years.

Monta is currently jailed in Klong Prem Central Prison.

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Instagram Removes Gay Muslim Comics After Indonesia Warning

A screenshot of the cartoon strip Instagram removed after the Indonesian government said it was pornographic. Image: Alpantuni / Instagram
A screenshot of the cartoon strip Instagram removed after the Indonesian government said it was pornographic. Image: Alpantuni / Instagram

JAKARTA — Instagram has removed an account that published comic strips depicting the struggles of gay Muslims in Indonesia following a frenzy of moral outrage online in the world’s biggest Muslim nation.

The Ministry of Communications said Wednesday that the account under the username Alpatuni was pornographic, which violated the law on information and electronic transactions. It was closed after the communications minister wrote a warning letter to Instagram, the ministry said.

The comics depicted gay characters facing discrimination and abuse, which has become increasingly common in Indonesia since late 2015 when conservative politicians and religious leaders began a campaign of portraying lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people as a threat to the nation.

An account of the same name on Facebook, which owns Instagram, was also no longer accessible.

Facebook’s regional office in Singapore said its Instagram arm was preparing a response to the controversy.

The social media company is regularly in the crosshairs of regulators, rights groups and the public as it unsuccessfully tries to balance what CEO Mark Zuckerberg has called “giving people a voice” and demands for censorship of content posted on the Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp platforms.

The Indonesian ministry said it appreciated that members of the community reported the gay Muslim account, which “accelerated” its removal.

Some Indonesian netizens in turn congratulated the ministry. On Twitter, Fahmi Alfansi Pane, a policy analyst at the Indonesian parliament, thanked officials for “acting decisively” to protect public morality but also told The Associated Press he had never seen the comics.

Local media, quoting the communications minister, reported the ministry would block Instagram in Indonesia if the Alpatuni account wasn’t removed.

The government frequently threatens to block Western social media and internet companies for content deemed illegal but has never taken such measures, possibly fearful of a public backlash due to the huge popularity of the services with Indonesians.

In 2017, it briefly and partially blocked the Telegram messaging app because of its failure to remove groups linked to violent jihad.

Story: Stephen Wright

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Belgian PM Criticizes UN Report on Racism in Belgium

A male missionary from the Congo Balolo Mission holds the arm of a Congolese man in the Congo Free State. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
A male missionary from the Congo Balolo Mission holds the arm of a Congolese man in the Congo Free State. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

BRUSSELS — Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel says he is baffled by a preliminary U.N. report that said racial discrimination against Africans “is endemic” in Belgium’s institutions and that the nation needs to apologize for the crimes committed during its colonization of Congo.

He says Belgium will await the full U.N. expert report in September but says the U.N. Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent has produced “a very strange report.”

Belgium’s actions in Congo have long been criticized as one of the worst examples of colonial abuse. Some experts say King Leopold reigned over the mass deaths of millions of Congolese.

But Michel told the VRT network that the story of colonialism “is not only about Belgium, but also about many other European nations.”

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Ratchaprasong’s Newest Mall ‘The Market’ Opens on V-Day

An April 26 photo file of The Market. Photo: The Market Bangkok / Facebook

BANGKOK — CentralWorld. Central Chidlom. Gaysorn Village. In case it lacked shopping opportunities, Ratchadamri Road is adding another mall tomorrow.

After several months of delay, The Market Bangkok has set its official opening for Thursday, which just happens to be Valentine’s Day.

Owned by The Platinum Group, the six-story, mixed-use project sits on 21 rai and cost  9 billion baht to build. It includes two Marriott-owned hotels – Fairfield and Moxy Hotel Bangkok Ratchaprasong. The Market Bangkok shopping mall features more than 1,200 shops selling food, drinks, clothing and more.

It sells itself as “Bangkok New Dream.”

The Market Bangkok is located on Ratchadamri Road next to Big C Ratchadamri. It can be reached via skywalk from BTS Chit Lom.

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Photo: The Market Bangkok / Facebook

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Smog Surges Over Thailand’s Two Major Cities

Smog over Bangkok Jan. 15.
Smog over Bangkok Jan. 15.

BANGKOK — Thailand featured two of the world’s most-polluted cities Wednesday morning, according to independent – not government – monitoring.

Chiang Mai and Bangkok ranked seventh and ninth respectively in a list of polluted urban centers, according to data from AirVisual. The capital’s air quality was indexed at 166, while Chiang Mai’s was 180, both of which are considered “unhealthy.”

However, the official government source of air quality information still offered a much rosier assessment. According to the Pollution Control Department’s Air4Thai app, most of Bangkok was shown to be only moderately polluted.

“Air4Thai is not real-time. The reported results are four hours behind. The reporting system needs to change,” said Tara Buakamsri, director of Greenpeace Thailand. “We’ve all had to rely on other apps, which are real time.”

Tara said the air in both cities was unhealthy. Exercising outdoors and opening windows is discouraged and the use of masks and air filters is strongly recommended.

Tara said the smog is expected to lay stagnant over the cities for the next couple of days, since there is little wind to flush it out over the Gulf of Thailand.

“Many spots in Bangkok will cage in the smog as well, especially between tall condos as big as malls. Even if the air quality is good in Bangkok on many days, some spots will continue to hold in dust,” he said.

Thai cities have been on alert since January for high levels of PM2.5 particles – the smallest and most harmful type – while the government has continued to field discredited solutions such as spraying water into the air.

Schools were closed for several days at the end of January and the public has scrambled to purchase masks.

Smog in Chiang Mai, known for its unclean air, is caused by both transportation emissions and slash-and-burn farming.

Related stories:

As Bangkok Clears, Provinces Choke on Seasonal Smoke

Bangkok Schools Ordered Closed Due to Smog

‘I Don’t Know What to Do’ About Smog: Bangkok Governor

Bangkok’s Air More Toxic Than You Think: Greenpeace

Worsening Smog Spreads Across Metropolitan Bangkok

Rail Construction Halted, Drivers Fined as Smog Persists

Bangkok Pollution Has Always Been Bad – So Have the Solutions: Experts

Burning Sugarcane Stalks Contributes to Smog: Activists

Chiang Mai Has Worst Small Particle Pollution in Thailand: Greenpeace

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Facing its Demise, Thai Raksa Chart Demands Fair Trial

Thai Raksa Chart Party executives arrive at party headquarters Tuesday.

Update: Members of the Election Commission delivered a formal recommendation Wednesday afternoon to the Constitutional Court that the Thai Raksa Chart Party be disbanded.

BANGKOK — The party under investigation for allegedly exploiting the monarchy by nominating a former princess said Wednesday the case against it must proceed fairly.

In a statement released to the media, Thai Raksa Chart slammed the Election Commission for launching its investigation without hearing from the accused. The party, part of a faction loyal to former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, could be disbanded if found guilty.

“The Election Commission must exercise its power in accordance with the rule of law under Section 3 of the Constitution,” part of the statement read. “Party disbandment would also affect the rights of the party and its members, who are protected by Section 4 of the Constitution.”

Despite widespread reports the commission had ruled to disband Thai Raksa Chart yesterday afternoon, the commission later released a statement saying it had not yet made a decision. Despite that, commissioners showed up early Wednesday afternoon to the Constitutional Court with a recommendation to disband the party based on a decision reached yesterday.

Thai Raksa Chart argued the the party is entitled by election regulations to state its case before the commission and contest any punishment.

The case is part of ongoing political fallout over the party’s Friday nomination of Ubolratana Mahidol to be its candidate for prime minister in the March 24 election. The nomination was blocked by His Majesty the King, who ruled that Ubolratana was still part of the royal family and therefore cannot run for office.

Ubolratana herself has continued to insist, as recently as Tuesday night, that she had “quit a long time ago.”

While King Vajiralongkorn’s decree had no official legal standing, his edict interpreting the law is considered final by many, including the Election Commission.

Current election laws ban any use or mention of the monarchy for one’s political advantage. If found guilty, 14 executives of Thai Raksa Chart would be barred from politics up to 10 years. More than 200 candidates fielded by the party would also be banned from the race.

And the damages may not be contained to Thai Raksa Chart. Law scholar and former constitution drafter Jade Donavanik warned that the commission could take another step and disband all other pro-Thaksin parties on the grounds that they “colluded” in the election campaign.

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Belgium to Shut Airspace for 24 Hours Due to Strike

An Brussels Airlines Airbus 319 taxis in 2013 at Heathrow Airport in London, England. Photo: Mark Harkin / Flickr
An Brussels Airlines Airbus 319 taxis in 2013 at Heathrow Airport in London, England. Photo: Mark Harkin / Flickr

BRUSSELS — Belgium’s air traffic control authority said Tuesday it is shutting down the country’s airspace for 24 hours due to staffing uncertainties caused by a nation-wide strike.

The authority, called skeyes, said it is forced to shut down Belgian airspace from 10:00 pm (2100 GMT) Tuesday until 10:00 pm Wednesday.

It said in a statement that it “does not have sufficient insight into the staffing levels during the industrial action that will start tonight.”

Belgian rail and other public transport systems are due to be hit hard during the 24-hour strike called by unions after the breakdown of wage talks. Police, postal and hospital services will also be affected.

International trains like the Eurostar, Thalys and TGV services are unlikely to be disrupted.

An estimated 650 flights pass through the main Brussels airport each day. Authorities there have warned that no flights will be operating and have asked passengers not to come to the airport.

The airport in the nearby city of Charleroi, which handles about 140 flights daily, had already been ordered closed on Wednesday due to the strike.

European air traffic authority Eurocontrol will manage all flights over Belgian territory above an altitude of 7,500 meters (24,600 feet).

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‘Alita: Battle Angel’ Is Big Eyes and Big Effects

Alita is just like a typical teenage girl. She loves chocolate, breaks curfew and crushes on a bad boy with floppy hair, a leather jacket and a motorcycle. But Alita isn’t typical in other ways. For one, she can slice apart a single falling tear with her ferocious battle sword.

Those are the two sides brought up by ”Alita: Battle Angel ,” our film entry into the thrilling manga world of artist Yukito Kishiro and imagined for the screen by producer James Cameron and director Robert Rodriguez. The film crams in so many plot lines that it risks being overstuffed but somehow stays true to its mesmerizing vision and emerges as a sci-fi success, if not a triumph.

Alita is both machine and human and the big-budget screen adaptation is both live action and computer generated, each element present in Alita herself, played with equal parts tenderness and ferocity by Rosa Salazar. She’s been given huge CG eyes but they’re not as distracting as you may fear. Somehow, Salazar still conveys deep emotion without a crucial acting tool. The film also has appearances by Jennifer Connelly, who is chilly and mysterious, and Mahershala Ali, who is chilly and dangerous.

The film begins with Alita’s torso found in a junk heap by a compassionate cyber-physician played by Christoph Waltz. The year is 2563 and we are in the crowded, chaotic streets of Iron City, a melting pot of survivors from a post-apocalyptic war. Cyborgs are everywhere and getting fresh parts seems to fuel the economy. (Curiously, plastic umbrellas are still in use. Cities can float in the sky here, but the population still relies on cheap plastic umbrellas.)

Alita’s human core is given a body and she awakens but has no memory of what came before. She must find out who she is and what her destiny is. “Whose rules do I live by?” she asks. Meanwhile, she falls for a human cyborg jacker (bland but hunky Keean Johnson) who has some moral issues to work out since he’s romancing a cyborg by day and slicing them apart at night.

There are several subplots involving cyberpunk bounty hunters, a ruling elite that lives in the sky and the town’s favorite sport — Motorball, a combination meth-fueled roller derby and Death Race. The film is rated PG-13 but there’s quite a bit of cyber-gore here, including gouging out eyeballs (more than once) and slicing metal folk in half or amputating them. If these were human, we’d be moving toward an R for sure.

The filmmakers are not afraid of making our heroine absolutely lethal and yet swooningly immature (she actually digs into her chest and offers her own artificial beating heart to her boyfriend, later laughingly admitting that gesture was “intense.”) She can give a beat-down to a roomful of hardened killers but still curl up on the couch and put her head on her adoptive dad’s chest. She can do flips worthy of an Olympic gymnast but her dad still wants her to wear knee pads and a helmet while competing at Motorball — against lasers, huge spinning saws and knives.

Alita has a strong moral compass — “I do not stand by in the presence of evil,” she announces — and, thankfully, triggering her special brand of martial arts mayhem must be earned. When a cute dog is senselessly slaughtered (relax, off camera), she dabs its blood on her face out of respect and revenge, squints really hard and coils up like lethal spring. It’s very clear whoever did that will not survive the next 5 minutes.

“Alita: Battle Angel,” which, in the end, needs more humor and less violence, kind of staggers quietly to its end. A sequel isn’t just hinted at — it’s practically dangled in front of our eyes as Alita looks heavenward to the next battlefield in the sky city. Well, count us in. Like Hailee Steinfeld in “Bumblebee,” Salazar’s Alita is part of a welcome wave of films about complex young women who know how to handle even the worst machines. Girls rule.

“Alita: Battle Angel,” a Twentieth Century Fox release, is rated PG-13 for “sequences of sci-fi violence and action, and for some language.” Running time: 122 minutes. Three stars out of four.

Story: Mark Kennedy

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K-Pop and Fancy Sneakers: Kim Jong Un’s Cultural Revolution

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

PYONGYANG, North Korea — Dancers in hot pants. Factories pumping out Air Jordan lookalikes. TV dramas that are actually fun to watch.

North Korean pop culture, long dismissed by critics as a kitschy throwback to the dark days of Stalinism, is getting a major upgrade under leader Kim Jong Un.

The changes are being seen in everything from television dramas and animation programs to the variety and packaging of consumer goods, which have improved significantly under Kim. Whether it’s a defensive attempt to keep up with South Korea or an indication that Kim is willing to embrace aspects of Western consumer culture that his predecessors might have viewed as suspiciously bourgeois isn’t clear.

“The most important thing for us is to produce a product that suits the people’s tastes,” Kim Kyong Hui of the Ryuwon Shoe Factory told The Associated Press recently in the facility’s showroom, which is filled with dozens of kinds of shoes for running, volleyball, football – even table tennis. “The respected leader Kim Jong Un has instructed us to closely study shoes from all over the world and learn from their example,” she added, pointing to a pair of flame-red high-top basketball shoes.

To be sure, North Korea remains one of the most insular countries in the world. Change comes cautiously and anyone who openly criticizes the government or leadership or is seen as a threat can expect severe repercussions. But there appears to be more of a willingness under Kim to experiment around some of the edges.

The most visible upgrades are on television and its normal menu of propaganda programs and documentaries in praise of the leaders.

Viewers of the main state-run TV network – the only channel that can be seen anywhere in the country – are now stopping their routines to watch the latest episodes of “The Wild Ginseng Gatherers of the Imjin War,” a historical drama set in the late 16th century, when Korea was struggling against a Japanese invasion.

The anti-Japan, nationalistic theme is nothing new. A similar theme was used for Kim Jong Un’s first big contribution to the television lineup, an animated series reviving a popular comic from his father’s era called “The Boy General” that made its debut in 2015. The animation, set in the Koguryo period when Korea was fighting off Chinese incursions, was such a hit that people would stop whatever they were doing to watch it. A Boy General game was created for mobile phones. New episodes are believed to be forthcoming.

What the TV drama, first aired last July, and the Boy General animation share that’s new is their high production values.

The acting in the movie is grittier and more compelling, the plots more engaging and the sets and costumes are decidedly more elaborate than previous projects. Even the dialogue spoken in Japanese by the villains, played of course by North Korean actors, is generally accurate, though delivered with a heavy North Korean accent. The Boy General, meanwhile, makes skillful use of computer effects and is visually on par with some of the best animation in the world.

The improvements reflect an awareness within Kim’s regime that the North Korean public is increasingly familiar with foreign pop culture despite severe restrictions that make it impossible for most to travel abroad or freely experience foreign movies, music or books.

That familiarity is particularly true of the North Korean elite, who are accustomed to seeing brand name products from Dior to Sony on the shelves of upscale stores in Pyongyang, the capital. Cheap knockoffs from China are common in marketplaces around the country.

Watching South Korean movies or listening to South Korean music is illegal. But a lot makes its way over the border and, even for those who would never dream of taking that risk, the officially approved cultural fare isn’t entirely void of foreign treats.

Bollywood films are popular in state-run cinemas – 2009’s “Three Idiots” with Aamir Khan, for example, was recently shown in a cinema just across the street from Kim Il Sung Square. North Korea’s educational channel regularly features long clips from foreign documentaries, and dog-eared Harry Potter books are among the most popular items at the People’s Grand Study House, North Korea’s biggest library.

North Korea’s “approach to the influx of foreign media has been to ‘modernize’ media production to provide an attractive and competitive product that caters to younger generations for whom older productions are no longer attractive,” said Geoffrey See, the founder of the Choson Exchange, a Singapore-based non-profit that supports change in North Korea through exposure to knowledge and information in business, entrepreneurship and law.

“For consumer goods, it also ties into a state policy to encourage more domestic production and import substitution,” he said.

Kim’s first attempt to update the pop culture scene started almost as soon as he assumed power in late 2011 with the creation of the Moranbong Band, an ensemble of female vocalists and musicians who are the “soft face” of his regime.

Although the members all belong to the Korean People’s Army, they are known for performing in miniskirts and wearing their hair fashionably short. They have released dozens of songs, all of which get lots of exposure through concert tours, DVDs and airtime on television.

They are beginning to look a bit passe, however.

In February last year, North Korea sent some of its top musicians, including a female quintet that performed in black shorts and red tops, south of the Demilitarized Zone to perform during South Korea’s Pyeongchang Winter Olympics. Two months later, Kim was in the audience as the South Korean girl group Red Velvet put on what is believed to be the first real K-pop show ever held in Pyongyang. The North Korean act that performed in South Korea was so well received that Kim sent them to Beijing last month for another goodwill tour.

Still, military orchestras and classically trained vocalists who perform in traditional “Choson-ot” gowns remain the mainstay of the Pyongyang musical scene. The girl band’s performance in Beijing was backed up by the state’s military chorus and orchestra, all in full uniform.

More importantly, there has been no effort to delink the arts from politics.

When the musical group returned to Pyongyang, Kim urged them to continue to “conduct original artistic activities pulsating with the party’s ideology” and act “courageously as mouthpieces of the party,” according to state media.

Story: Eric Talmadge

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Ubolratana Says Problems With Candidacy ‘Shouldn’t Have Occurred’

Ubolratana Mahidol receives a gift from a student Feb. 12, 2019 while visiting Nakhon Sawan province to promote her anti-drug abuse foundation. Photo: Nakhon Sawan Public Relations Department
Ubolratana Mahidol receives a gift from a student Feb. 12, 2019 while visiting Nakhon Sawan province to promote her anti-drug abuse foundation. Photo: Nakhon Sawan Public Relations Department

BANGKOK — The former princess whose short-lived candidacy set off political convulsions said Tuesday she was disappointed by the backlash to her bid and said she is done with royal life.

Ubolratana Mahidol said her motivations were sincere and reiterated that she is no longer a royal in a message posted to Instagram last night following news the party which had nominated her to be its candidate for prime minister was likely to be dissolved.

“I’m sorry that my honest intentions to work for the country and the Thai people have caused problems that shouldn’t have occurred in this era,” Ubolratana wrote just before midnight after a day spent in the central province of Nakhon Sawan promoting her drug abuse foundation.

She concluded the message with #howcomeitsthewayitis, in English. That hashtag was trending on Thai Twitter Wednesday morning.

Many commented on the post with messages of support four days after the Thai Raksa Chart Party nominated her to be its candidate, a move later overruled by her brother the king.

“There are many other things that you can work on to help the people as a royal,” one user commented.

Replying, Ubolratana said she was not interested in doing that.

“I don’t want to be in that position, because I quit a long time ago,” she wrote in reply.

She renounced her royal title to marry an American in 1972. Decades later, after divorcing, she returned to Thailand and reentered royal life.

The Election Commission has yet to announce its final decision on disbanding Thai Raksa Chart, although it has disqualified Ubolratana from running as candidate. The party went to the commission Wednesday to file evidence supporting its case.

Friday’s nomination of Ubolratana quaked the political landscape. Later that same day, it was abruptly blocked by King Vajiralongkorn, who said her candidacy was “highly inappropriate” and that a member of royal family “cannot hold any political positions.”

Related stories:

Thai Raksa Chart Set for Disbandment Amid Princess Backlash

Princess Formally Disqualified From PM Nomination

King Says Princess ‘Cannot’ Run for Office

Princess Nominated to Lead Thailand in Election Shocker

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