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Venezuela’s Crisis Hits Stand-Still Over Emergency Aid

Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro gives a news conference in 2017 in Caracas, Venezuela. Photo: Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press
Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro gives a news conference in 2017 in Caracas, Venezuela. Photo: Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press

CUCUTA, Colombia — Nearly three weeks after the Trump administration backed an all-out effort to force out President Nicolas Maduro, the embattled socialist leader is holding strong and defying predictions of an imminent demise.

Dozens of nations have recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido’s claim to the presidency and the U.S. has tightened sanctions aimed at cutting off billions of dollars in oil revenue. But anti-Maduro street protests have come and gone, and large-scale military defections have failed to materialize.

With the U.S. seen as considering military action only as a last resort, Guaido is trying to regain momentum with an effort this week to move U.S. emergency food and medicine into Venezuela despite Maduro’s pledge to block it.

Such an operation could provoke a dangerous confrontation at the border – or fizzle out and leave Maduro even stronger.

With so much at stake, Guaido is under increasing pressure to soon unseat Maduro, analysts say.

“He is running against the clock,” said Daniel Lansberg-Rodriguez, a Venezuela expert at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. “Expectations are running very high – not just among Venezuelans but international allies – that this is a crisis that can be resolved quickly.”

Despite having the world’s largest oil reserves, Venezuela is suffering soaring levels of malnutrition, disease and violence after 20 years of socialist rule launched by the late President Hugo Chavez. Critics accuse Maduro, a former bus driver and Chavez’s hand-picked successor, of unfairly winning an election last year for a second six-year term by banning his popular rivals from running and jailing others.

The 35-year-old Guaido was a virtually unknown lawmaker until last month, when he took the helm of the opposition-controlled National Assembly. He has rallied masses of Venezuelans into street demonstrations that have left at least 40 dead since he declared himself interim president on Jan. 23.

Guaido has so far avoided arrest, but the general comptroller announced Monday it was opening an investigation into Guaido’s assets in a new escalation of the confrontation between the government and the National Assembly.

Guaido has won backing from nearly 50 countries worldwide, including the United States, which has pledged an initial USD$20 million in support and has already shipped emergency food and medicine to the Colombian border city of Cucuta, where it sits in a warehouse.

Maduro has refused all economic assistance, denying there is an economic crisis in Venezuela – and contending the aid is part of a coup being orchestrated by the White House to topple him.

Maduro has made a show of overseeing military operations played on state TV almost daily. He’s jogged with troops in formation, mounted an amphibious tank and railed against what he says is an impending U.S. invasion that he has likened to a Latin American Vietnam.

On Monday, Venezuela socialist party chief, Diosdado Cabello, spoke at a rally in Venezuela’s border city of Urena, across from Cucuta, crowding the streets with Maduro loyalists wearing the red shirts of the socialist party and waving flags.

Addressing the crowd, Cabello asserted Venezuelans tell him not to give in to pressure from the United States, saying they are willing to endure whatever they must to maintain freedom from imperialist rule. He said the U.S. supplies were sent in a showy display aimed at justifying a coup.

“It’s not help and it’s not humanitarian,” he said to cheers from roughly 1,000 Maduro supporters, including civilians and soldiers.

Romulo Jaimes, a 62-year-old resident of Urena, said the socialist gathering wasn’t what it appeared to be. He said more than 30 buses were parked outside the event, used to haul in Cabello’s cheering crowd.

“In reality it was a flop,” he said. “Most of the people from this city didn’t attend the rally.”

The U.S. humanitarian aid is being stored in a warehouse across a river from the socialist rally, a situation that also puts Maduro in a tight situation, said Eric Farnsworth of the Council of the Americas and Americas Society, a Washington-based think tank.

“If you let it in, you’re bowing to Guaido and the international community,” he said. “If you don’t you’re seen as a tyrant.”

President Donald Trump has said all options are on the table regarding Maduro’s ouster, but Farnsworth called any U.S. military deployment highly unlikely as such a move would make the U.S. responsible for supplying food long term and rebuilding the gutted country.

U.S. sanctions imposed on the state oil company PDVSA in late January and meant to pressure Maduro from office have yet to bite. In the capital, Caracas, residents pulling up to gas stations can still fill up their cars, despite fears that sanctions would create shortages.

Opposition leaders have been vague about how they plan to get the aid in.

Last week, Lester Toledo, Guaido’s representative in the aid mission, suggested it could be moved by masses of people converging on the border to carry the food and medical supplies across.

On Monday, Guaido posted a video on Twitter showing himself and his wife making phone calls urging people to join a volunteer force by registering on a website and calling on them to return to the streets in protest Tuesday.

“We’re working hard,” he said in one call. “Not only to bring in the aid, but also to end the tyranny” of Maduro.

Gaby Arellano, an opposition leader who is among those leading the aid mission, said the strategy was to conduct “defiance” politics, which she said consists of setting an agenda that forces Maduro’s hand, though she provided no details.

“We are politically defining the steps and they are responding to what we put forth,” Arellano said. “We want and are working for this to be as peaceful, least traumatizing and as quick as possible.”

Amaliexiz Mendoza, who lives in Cucuta with her 3-year-old daughter among the city’s large Venezuelan exile community, said she would walk a thousand times to carry humanitarian aid to her countrymen. Her grandmother, an aunt and young cousins still live in Venezuela and often go hungry, and her grandmother can’t get the blood pressure medication she needs.

“It’s not right for a child to go to bed hungry,” Mendoza said, tearing up as she spoke of Maduro’s denial that a crisis exists. “He doesn’t lack anything but our families do.”

Story: Christine Armario, Scott Smith

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Troopers: Teen Arrested for Taking Control of Alaska Flight

A Piper PA-32-300 Cherokee Six at Kemble Airfield, Gloucestershire, England. Photo: Adrian Pingstone / Wikimedia Commons
A Piper PA-32-300 Cherokee Six at Kemble Airfield, Gloucestershire, England. Photo: Adrian Pingstone / Wikimedia Commons

BETHEL, Alaska — A 16-year-old boy was arrested after he briefly took control of a small plane during a short commercial flight over western Alaska, authorities said.

The teen was in the front passenger seat of the Piper Cherokee Six on a recent Yute Commuter Service flight from Napakiak to Bethel, KYUK-AM reported last week.

The flight between the two remote communities usually takes about four minutes.

The teen grabbed the aircraft controls shortly after takeoff, causing the “plane to enter a steep climb and then a dive toward the ground,” Alaska State Troopers said.

A woman sitting behind the teen grabbed him around the neck, pulling him away from the controls, authorities said. The pilot stabilized the aircraft and returned to Napakiak.

An agent for the regional airline contacted the village public safety officer to detain the teen. He slipped away before the officer could take him into custody, but was arrested the next day in Bethel.

Authorities have not released the teen’s name because he is a minor. Interfering with the duties of a flight crew is a federal offence.

The aircraft model used in this flight does not have a mechanism to lock out passenger flight controls, said Keith Henthorn, the airline’s business manager.

The airline will continue to allow passengers to sit in the front seat, he said.

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As Bangkok Clears, Provinces Choke on Seasonal Smoke

A worker tries to put out forest fire in Phrae province in this undated photo.
A worker tries to put out forest fire in Phrae province in this undated photo.

PHRAE — Air pollution has surged in several northern and northeastern provinces Tuesday due to intense, open-air burning, with Phrae hit the worst.

Officials in the northern province of Phrae said a ban on open burning set to take place Friday has driven people to put fields and forest to the torch before it comes into effect, sending levels of the ultrafine particles over the city as high as 143 micrograms per cubic meter. Seven more northern provinces also saw pollution exceeding acceptable standards this morning.

Since last week, many provinces including Lampang, Khon Kaen and Nakhon Ratchasima have experienced heavy smog with forest fires cited as the main source.

Bangkok suffered unhealthy pollution for most of last month before it eased off recently. Public and media scrutiny sent officials scrambling to take action, though most measures such as spraying water and rinsing streets were criticized as ineffective. Schools were ordered closed three days and police were encouraged to fine drivers of vehicles with emissions over the legal limit. Though the air is clearer, levels were still at the low end of “unhealthy” on Tuesday.

Administrations in provinces with high levels of PM2.5, the smallest and most harmful type of particles, also opted to sprinkle water in public places. Many have also requested clouds be seeded to trigger rainfall.

This morning saw several areas in Phrae and Lampang with PM2.5 densities over 100 micrograms per cubic meter.

A level of 50 is considered acceptable; over 100 is considered unhealthy.

Levels of pollution also exceeded standards in Chiang Mai, Lamphun, Mae Hong Son, Nan, Phayao, Tak, Khon Kaen and Sara Buri provinces.

Phrae Gov. Pongrat Phiromrat said he ordered some forests off limits to the public to prevent more open burning.

While smog has been shaping up as a December-January problem in the capital, slash-and-burn agriculture has darkened skies in the north from February to March for years.

Lampang has also banned burning since this past Sunday through April 11, but administrators say several fires have been reported regardless.

Related stories:

Bangkok Schools Ordered Closed Due to Smog

Rail Construction Halted, Drivers Fined as Smog Persists

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Wildlife Group: Malaysia Seizes Record 30-Ton Pangolin Haul

A Ground Pangolin in 2012 at the Madikwe Game Reserve in South Africa. Photo: David Brossard / Flickr
A Ground Pangolin in 2012 at the Madikwe Game Reserve in South Africa. Photo: David Brossard / Flickr

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian authorities have seized a record 30 tons of pangolin and pangolin products in eastern Sabah state on Borneo, the biggest such bust in the country, a wildlife monitoring group said Tuesday.

The monitoring network Traffic said in a statement that Sabah police this month uncovered two major pangolin processing facilities, throwing a spotlight on Sabah’s role in the sourcing and trafficking of the endangered scaly mammal.

Sabah police said over the weekend they had seized three refrigerated containers containing 1,800 boxes filled with frozen pangolins, another 572 frozen pangolins in separate freezers, 61 live pangolins and 361 kilograms of pangolin scales. Two bear paws and carcasses of four flying fox were also recovered. A 35-year-old Malaysian man, believed to be a factory manager, has been detained.

The pangolin is said to be the most widely trafficked mammal in the world, and its scales are in high demand in Asia for use in traditional Chinese medicine. The scales are made of keratin, the same material in human fingernails. Their meat is also considered a delicacy in China and other Asian countries.

Sabah police chief Omar Mammah said in the statement that initial investigations showed the facility has operated for seven years and that the suspect had bought the pangolins from local illegal hunters for distribution locally and to the neighboring state of Sarawak. He estimated the haul to be worth at least 8.4 million ringgit (USD$2 million).

Traffic said the whole pangolin bodies found frozen and boxed were likely to have been sold for meat consumption.

“Including this bust, Sabah has been implicated in over 40 tons of pangolin smuggling since August 2017, including 13 tons of African pangolin scales,” it said.

It said the seizures came a decade after Sabah authorities discovered logbooks in 2009 kept by another pangolin trafficking ring. It said the logbooks revealed that about 22,200 pangolins were killed and 834.4 kilograms of pangolin scales sourced throughout the state and supplied to the syndicate over 13 months.

There were occasional seizures of live and processed pangolins since then. But a massive seizure of African pangolin scale shipments in 2017 at a Sabah port and at the Kuala Lumpur International airport originating from Sabah has since highlighted Sabah’s emerging role as a transit point in the global trafficking of pangolin scales from Africa to Asia, TRAFFIC said.

The latest “seizure and the 2009 discovery confirm that Borneo is still an important source of pangolins for the illegal trade,” Traffic communications officer Elizabeth John told the Associated Press.

Story:

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American Priest in East Timor Embroiled in Abuse Scandal

A church in 2011 in Dili, East Timor. Photo: tonyforster2 / Flickr
A church in 2011 in Dili, East Timor. Photo: tonyforster2 / Flickr

DILI, East Timor — An American missionary who was a hero in East Timor for founding children’s shelters that have operated for more than two decades has been expelled from his Catholic congregation after admitting to sexual abuse of minors, a church official and a family member said.

Media reports about the allegations have stunned East Timor, one of two predominantly Catholic countries in Asia along with the Philippines. The bishop of Dili, Virgílio do Carmo da Silva, told reporters on Sunday that Richard Daschbach was expelled from the church last year and was no longer a priest.

Daschbach was born in Pennsylvania and first came to East Timor in 1966 when it was a Portuguese colony. He founded the Topu Honis or “Guide To Life” children’s homes in Oe-Kusi Ambeno, an East Timorese enclave in the Indonesian-controlled western half of Timor, in 1992, and was also feted for saving children during East Timor’s war for independence from Indonesia.

A family member in the U.S. who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue said Daschbach left Oe-Kusi Ambeno but later returned. East Timorese media reported he has been performing Masses in the area.

“He admitted that the allegations against him are true,” the family member told The Associated Press. “The priests took him away because of allegations of child abuse. He admitted that it was true. He has returned against their will.”

The public defenders’ office in Oe-Kusi Ambeno said it was aware of the scandal but there was no criminal case registered against him.

Daschbach has not responded to requests for comment.

The two shelters cared for orphans and children and youth aged 3 to 18 from impoverished families, disabled people and women who have fled domestic violence. Some of the hundreds of children who lived in the shelters went on to study at universities in Australia, the U.S. and Indonesia.

Catholic News Service, citing Jovito Rego de Jesus Araujo, episcopal vicar for pastoral care in Dili, said it was the first time sexual abuse of minors by a Catholic priest in East Timor had come to light.

Story: Oki Raimundos

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Japanese Swimming Star Rikako Ikee Diagnosed With Leukemia

Japan's Rikako Ikee poses on the podium after winning the women's 100m freestyle final during the swimming competition at the 18th Asian Games in 2018 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Bernat Armangue / Associated Press
Japan's Rikako Ikee poses on the podium after winning the women's 100m freestyle final during the swimming competition at the 18th Asian Games in 2018 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Bernat Armangue / Associated Press

TOKYO — Japanese swimming star Rikako Ikee has been diagnosed with leukemia less than 18 months before the Olympics in Tokyo.

The 18-year-old Ikee won six gold medals at the Asian Games in Jakarta last year and was tipped to be one of the faces of the 2020 Olympics in her home country.

She posted on her verified Twitter account Tuesday that her illness surfaced when she got tests after returning from a training trip to Australia.

She says, “I still can’t believe it, and I am in a state of confusion.”

Ikee expressed hopes for recovery but acknowledged she could not compete for a while.

“I will take some days off for now and focus on my treatment to do my utmost so that I can show you as soon as possible an even more powerful Rikako Ikee,” she said.

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Voice TV Ordered Off the Air 15 Days

Voice TV logo. Image: Voice TV / Wikimedia Commons

BANGKOK — A television channel previously sanctioned by authorities for its content has again been ordered off the air.

Voice TV will be taken entirely off the air Tuesday for 15 days by order of broadcasting regulators on the basis of rules put in place by the ruling junta several years ago.

“Several news items from the station run the risk of causing confusion and inciting conflict or divisions in the kingdom. The regulator is using its power as stated by [military junta] order No. 97/2014,” The National Broadcasting and Communication Commission said Monday.

Voice TV was founded by Panthongthae Shinawatra, the son of ousted, fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra. He is also a member of the Pheu Thai Party which led the military-ousted government of Thaksin’s sister, Yingluck Shinawatra.

Since the May 2014 coup, the station has now been warned and punished by full or partial shutdown or suspension of specific programs 18 times, according to Pinpaka Ngamsom, Voice’s online editor. The longest period Voice TV went dark previously was at the time of the coup, from May 20 to June 14.

Voice TV CEO Mekin Petplai said the company would petition the Administrative Court to be compensated for damages worth 100 million baht for the times it has been shut down since the junta took power.

He added that the station has been selectively punished and that the media needs freedom prior to elections.

A source from the channel said the suspension would begin at 3pm. The source later said the channel would go off air at midnight.

The order comes less than a month and a half before promised general elections.

Voice TV news host Sirote Klampaiboon said by phone Tuesday that the order was inappropriate and unfair given that junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha uses free airtime to promote his views in a nationally televised program every Friday evening.

Asked if the action was taken due to the station’s affiliation with Panthongthae or perception it is pro-Thaksin, Sirote said Voice TV is not the only party with owners affiliated with politics. He said it endeavors to be fair and has invited leaders from pro-junta parties onto its programs in the past.

Going off the air places further financial strain on the station, which has struggled with losses and layoffs.

“Fifteen days is a lot,” Sirote said.

Related stories:

Voice TV Suspends 2 Commentators, Says NBTC Forced It

Voice TV Program Suspended Over Junta Criticism

Embattled Voice TV to Announce Major Layoffs: Sources

Govt Orders Voice TV Off Air Starting Midnight

Voice TV’s ‘Daily Dose’ Ordered Off Air for Discussion of Courts & Military

Voice TV Pressured to Pull Pundits For Rattling Junta

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GSSI welcomes CP Foods as new global partnership

BANGKOK — The Global Sustainable Seafood Initiative (GSSI) announced Charoen Pokphand Foods (CP Foods) has joined its global partnership with strong intention in working towards sustainable seafood.

Dr. Sujint Thammasart, DVM, Chief Operating Officer – Aquaculture Business of CP Foods, pointed that as a member of GSSI will convince both consumer and stakeholders on the company’s products have come under international standards as well as traceability practices throughout the supply chain.

“CP Foods is delighted to join GSSI. We also look forward to collaborating with stakeholders in the seafood supply chain from across the globe to achieve more sustainable seafood for everyone,” said Dr. Sujint.

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GSSI is the global Public-Private Partnership between leading companies (representing the entire seafood value chain) NGOs, and governmental and inter-governmental organizations including the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). It aims to build confidence and promote improvement in certified seafood by operating a global benchmark tool with transparency aligns with FAO guidelines.  It also provides an international knowledge exchange working towards sustainable seafood.

Dr. Sujint added that the GSSI certification will reduce costs by eliminating redundancy and duplication of certification processes require by consumers and buyers. This will improve operational efficiency and export competitiveness to focus on key standards that already have been benchmarked by GSSI.

CP Foods is an agro-industrial and food conglomerate to operate integrated business in 17 countries including Thailand and exports to over 30 countries worldwide./

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Bangkok ‘Fem Film Fest’ to Celebrate Power of Women

A scene from ‘Amdaeng Muen and Nai Rid.’

BANGKOK — Before 1865, Thai parents got to decide who their daughters married. But one woman stepped up and fought for her love.

To celebrate women’s achievements and promote their works on International Women’s Day next month, the Bangkok Screening Room – the capital’s alternative cinema – will host the Fem Film Festival.

The six-day festival will screen 10 films exploring the struggles and accomplishments of women in their professions, politics and life.

The highlights include 1991 road movie “Thelma & Louise,” which later became a feminist film icon. The film follows two best friends who plan a weekend getaway from their boyfriend and husband.

It’s rare to see a Thai film where a woman steps up for herself. Based on a true story that took place under the reign of King Rama IV, 1994’s “Amdaeng Muen and Nai Rid” tells the story of Amdaeng Muen, who sued for the right to marry Rid, a man of her own choosing.

A “witch camp” in Zambia is portrayed through grim, picturesque yet provocative satire in “I Am Not a Witch.” It tells the story of an 8-year-old girl accused of witchcraft.

For documentaries, “Half the Picture” investigates discrimination against talented female filmmakers in Hollywood, while “Soufra” follows Mariam Shaar who – having lived in a Lebanese refugee camp all her life – causes societal change through the launch of a food truck business.

Outspoken writer and social critic Lakkana Panvichai, or Kam Paka, and Wipaphan Wongsawang of Thai Consent will join a talk panel March 9.

International Women’s Day is March 8. The Fem Film Festival runs March 5 through March 10 at Bangkok Screening Room. Details on the schedule and tickets will be announced at a later date. The cinema is located on the second floor of the Woof Pack Building on Soi Sala Daeng 1.

Get there by foot or a short ride from BTS Sala Daeng or MRT Lumphini.

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Improper Display of King Portrait Brings Police to Thai Raksa Chart

A portrait of His Majesty the King seen with the three-domed funerary flower on Monday.

BANGKOK — Word that a party allied with former leader Thaksin Shinawatra was inappropriately displaying His Majesty the King’s portrait prompted a police visit Tuesday morning.

A senior officer at Bangkok’s Thung Song Hong Police Station said he led several policemen to Thai Raksa Chart headquarters to make sure the portrait was being displayed correctly. The party spokesman wrote online they had no intention to insult the king.

After an inspection was conducted, Maj. Mongkol Thongnueaha said everything was put in order.

On the same day that saw its royal nomination for high office rejected by the Election Commission, Thai Raksa Chart landed in yet more hot water when reporters invited to a news conference saw a portrait of King Vajiralongkorn displayed with krueang thong noi, a flower arrangement only used to memorialize Thai royals.

Read: Election Commission Meets to Discuss Disbanding Pro-Thaksin Party

Photos of the display went viral on social media and outraged supporters of the junta, who have long suspected that Thaksin and his faction holds the monarchy in ill regard.

“They were afraid they didn’t know what to do to look like they are loyal [to the king],” one user wrote in a news thread. “But they were never loyal, that’s why there was an error.”

Some also took offense at the portrait’s presence in news conference room; election regulations ban any mention or use of the monarchy in political campaigns.

Party spokesman Pongkasem Satayaprasert said it was a misunderstanding. Writing online, Pongkasem said the portrait was placed in the media room while party staff were buying the proper altar and other flowers for display at another room. The funerary decoration was purely accidental, he said.

“The arrangement was made due to a misunderstanding of party officials,” Pongkasem said. “When the party heard the news, we immediately ordered the mistake fixed.”

Thai Raksa Chart is already suffering a backlash from royalist circles after His Majesty the King blocked their bid to run a former princess in the upcoming election on the party ticket.

Describing the nomination as “extremely inappropriate,” King Vajiralongkorn ruled that Ubolratana Mahidol is part of the nobility and cannot enter politics or run as prime minister.

In further possible legal repercussions, the Election Commission is said to be deliberating on disbanding Thai Raksa Chart Party for violating election law, which forbids using the monarchy for an advantage.

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