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Honda to Shut Plant in Britain, Imperiling 3,500 Jobs

A Honda W-RV on display in 2017. Photo: Jengtingchen / Wikimedia Commons
A Honda W-RV on display in 2017. Photo: Jengtingchen / Wikimedia Commons

TOKYO — Honda said Tuesday it plans to close its car factory in western England in 2021, imperiling 3,500 jobs in a fresh blow to the British economy as it faces its March 29 exit from the European Union.

The Japanese automaker announced the decision at a news conference in Tokyo, where Honda’s president and CEO, Takahiro Hachigo, told reporters the decision was based on what made most sense for its global competitiveness in light of the need to accelerate its production of electric vehicles.

Brexit was not the main factor behind the decision, he insisted.

“We still don’t know what sort of changes Brexit will bring at this point,” he said. “We have to wait until we have a better idea about the situation.”

Hachigo said the company immediately would begin discussions with affected workers at the factory in Swindon.

“I very much regret this,” he said, adding that “this was the best choice the circumstances.”

Honda makes its popular Civic model at the factory, 115 kilometers (70 miles) west of London, with an output of 150,000 cars per year. Its restructuring is aimed at adjusting its operations to reflect stronger demand in Asia and North America, Hachigo said.

The next model of Civic to be sold in Britain will be exported from Japan, the company said.

The company said it will also adjust its operations in Turkey, where it makes 38,000 Civic sedans a year. It said it would continue operating there and hold a “constructive dialogue” with local stakeholders.

British businesses are issuing increasingly urgent warnings about the damage being done by the uncertainty around Brexit. The UK has yet to seal a deal laying out the divorce terms and establishing what trade rules will apply after Brexit.

In presenting the restructuring plan, Hachigo stressed that Honda was striving to adjust to a fast changing global industry.

“We have to move more quickly,” he said.

Story: Kaori Hitomi

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Asian Shares Gain on Hopes for Progress on China-US Trade

The American flag flies in 2015 above the Wall Street entrance to the New York Stock Exchange. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Share benchmarks were mostly higher in Asia on Tuesday as Chinese and U.S. negotiators geared up for trade talks in Washington this week.

U.S. markets were closed Monday for President’s Day.

Thailand’s SET dropped just slightly at 1,635.71 on Tuesday afternoon. Shares in Shanghai and Hong Kong fell back after early gains after an industry association reported that auto sales fell nearly 16 percent in China from a year earlier, the eighth straight month of declines.

Analysts said much is riding on the outcome of the trade talks after an inconclusive end to an earlier round in Beijing last week.

“Without sounding like a damp squib, there is now a vast amount of optimism baked into currency, stock and energy market prices globally and precisely zero concrete detail,” Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst for OANDA, said in a commentary.

“The unwind, should no deal be struck, could be very ugly,” he said.

The Shanghai Composite index lost 0.3 percent to 2,747.77 in early trading, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 edged 0.1 percent higher to 21,302.65. Australia’s S&P ASX 200 climbed 0.3 percent to 6,106.90 and the Hang Seng in Hong Kong gave up 0.3 percent to 28,271.56. South Korea’s Kospi lost 0.2 percent to 2,205.63. Shares were mostly higher in Southeast Asia.

A truce between the U.S. and China on increased American tariffs on Chinese good expires March 2, leaving the U.S. free to more than double its import taxes on USD$200 billion in Chinese goods.

Vice Premier Liu He, China’s economy czar, is due to arrive in Washington on Thursday, China’s state media reported, after two days of preliminary talks by lower-level officials.

President Donald Trump has said he may hold off on these if the country was close to a deal with China.

The U.S. is wrangling over trade with many nations. On Monday, the European Union warned that the bloc will hold back on a commitment to buy more American soybeans and liquefied gas if European cars are hit with punitive tariffs.

 

Energy

U.S. crude added 28 cents to $56.26 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It gained $1.19 on Monday. Brent crude, used to price international oils, lost 14 cents to $66.36 per barrel.

 

Currencies

The dollar strengthened to 110.66 yen from 110.60 yen on Monday. The euro slipped to $1.1299 from $1.1309.

Story: Elaine Kurtenbach

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Indonesia Makes 2032 Olympics Bid Official

Pakistan's Muhammad Nooh Butt compete at the men's +105kg weightlifting at the 18th Asian Games in August in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Aaron Favila / Associated Press
Pakistan's Muhammad Nooh Butt compete at the men's +105kg weightlifting at the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta, Indonesia, Monday, Aug. 27, 2018. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

JAKARTA — Indonesia has officially joined bidding to host the 2032 Olympics following its success staging the Asian Games last year, the deputy chairman of its national Olympic committee said Tuesday, highlighting the rising ambitions of the giant but perennially underperforming Southeast Asian nation.

Muddai Madang said letters from President Joko Widodo and the national Olympic committee were delivered to the International Olympic Committee’s president in Lausanne last week by Indonesia’s ambassador to Switzerland.

“Indonesia is ready to host the Olympics,” Madang told The Associated Press. “What we need now is support from all the Indonesian people and the international community.”

Widodo, who is campaigning for re-election, made a surprise announcement of plans to bid for the 2032 games after the Indonesian cities of Jakarta and Palembang co-hosted the 18th Asian Games in August, and the process has gathered momentum. The Olympics have never been held in Southeast Asia.

There were doubts Indonesia could successfully host the Asian Games, an event involving more than 10,000 athletes, but its reasonably smooth execution was praised by the IOC, paving the way for a tilt at even bigger sports events.

India is planning to bid for the 2032 games and North and South Korea have confirmed an intention to launch a joint bid. Australia and Russia have also expressed interest.

Problems with the 2016 Olympics in Brazil, a developing country that like Indonesia suffers endemic corruption, may count against the chances of the Indonesian bid.

By some estimates it cost Brazil about $20 billion to host the Olympics, the kind of bill that is likely to raise objections in Indonesia, despite projections it will be among the world’s 10 biggest economies by 2030 with a population nearing 300 million.

Tokyo is hosting the 2020 Olympics. Paris and Los Angeles have already been selected to host the following two games, in 2024 and 2028, respectively.

Story: Niniek Karmini

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Makha Bucha Day Around Thailand: Campaign Edition

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha plants a sacred bodhi tree in Ayutthaya on Makha Bucha Day.
Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha plants a sacred bodhi tree in Ayutthaya on Makha Bucha Day.

BANGKOK — Politicians aren’t taking Makha Bucha Day off. It’s election season, and that means continued campaigning – but with Buddhist traditions.

Tuesday is Makha Bucha, a national holiday that marks Buddha passing on his teachings to 1,250 of his followers. Here is how some of the parties nationwide are working through the holiday.

Pheu Thai Party

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While campaigning in Ubol Ratchathani on Makha Bucha, Pheu Thai PM candidate Sudarat Keyuraphan said to market vendors that she wished their businesses well.

“Endure a little more with the suffering you experienced the past few years. If Pheu Thai Party gets elected, we can fix these problems,” Sudarat said.

Chadchart Sittipunt, another Pheu Thai prime minister candidate and Panthongtae Shinawatra, former premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s son, were also campaigning in Ubol Ratchathani. Chadchart, Panthongtae and Sudarat made merit to monks in the market to mark the special occasion.

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Democrat Party

“Do good. Avoid evil. Make your heart pure, on this Makha Bucha Day,” Democrat Party candidate Abhisit “Mark” Vejjajiva posted on Facebook, along with a photo of him wai-ing at a monk Tuesday morning.

Photo: Abhisit Vejjajiva / Facebook
Photo: Abhisit Vejjajiva / Facebook

Along with other Democrat Party members Ong-Art Klampaiboon and Jermmas Junglertsiri, Abhisit made merit at about 7am at Wat Benchamabophit, or the Marble Temple, in Bangkok’s Dusit district.

Asked by reporters if he wished for anything, Abhisit said he didn’t “ask for anything in particular” but was just doing his duty as a Buddhist. Abhisit and his party members then went to campaign to early risers exercising in the Suan Romaneenaak park and Talad Trok Moh Market. The prime minister candidate even fried pork at a stall before making another round of merit at Wat Rakang Kositaram across the river in Bangkok Noi area.

Phalang Pracharat Party

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While planting a sacred Bodhi tree Monday that arrived from Sri Lanka at Wat Wachira Thamma Ram in Ayutthaya province, junta leader and premier candidate Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha blessed Buddhist citizens.

“On this Makha Bucha Day, may everyone follow the virtues, mercy and purity of Lord Buddha in living out their lives, being good people in Thai society and the world,” Prayuth said.

He denied he was campaigning during his trip.

After planting the sacred bodhi tree, Gen. Prayuth takes a selfie with a fan.
After planting the sacred bodhi tree, Gen. Prayuth takes a selfie with a fan.

“It’s Makha Bucha Day…I had to do the planting ritual here today, so I took the opportunity for an excursion too. I’m not doing it for anything else, understand? We all know it. We all love each other,” he said. “Since elections are coming, let’s campaign in a good way. Stop attacking each other. It damages the country. No one else does this, so stop pillorying ourselves.”

A sacred Bodhi tree sapling from Sri Lanka arrives Monday in Bangkok for the coronation of King Vajiralongkorn in three months.
A sacred Bodhi tree sapling from Sri Lanka arrives Monday in Bangkok for the coronation of King Vajiralongkorn in three months.
Bangkok Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang makes merit on Makha Bucha Day at City Hall in Bangkok.
Bangkok Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang makes merit on Makha Bucha Day at City Hall in Bangkok.

Future Forward Party

A call to spokeswoman Pannika Wanich revealed that Future Forward party does not have any activities specifically planned marking Makha Bucha Day, as she said party members had existing activities and interviews lined up.

Related stories:

Thailand Celebrates Makha Bucha Day (Photos)

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Army Gets 100M Baht Fund for ‘Border Emergency’

Two wounded soldiers are brought to a medevac Nov. 6, 2016, after a clash with unidentified gunmen along Thai-Myanmar border in Chiang Mai province.

BANGKOK — The government on Monday approved a 100-million baht fund to be used by the army in case of unspecified “emergency” situations at Thailand’s border.

Under the regulations, army chief Apirat Kongsompong will have the sole authority to use the money for military operations if he believes border security is at risk. Government spokesman Atisit Chaiyanuwat said the fund would be necessary should unforeseen external threats arise.

The measure was passed by the cabinet which met on Monday instead of the usual Tuesday session because of a Buddhist holiday.

In the same meeting, the government also granted emergency funds of 10 million to 50 million baht to eight state agencies for expenses during national disasters or other crises. The agencies include the Public Health Ministry and provincial disaster relief commands.

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Medical Weed Law Comes Into Effect

BANGKOK — The use of marijuana for medical purposes became officially legal late Monday through a royal decree.

The law was signed by His Majesty the King two months after it was unanimously approved by the parliament. It legalizes the medical use and research of not only cannabis but also kratom.

Those eligible for marijuana possession or cultivation are patients with prescriptions, drug or health related government agencies, certified medical professionals, educational institutions, agricultural community enterprises registered with the state and international transportation operators.

Cultivation, however, must be approved and operated under the direct supervision of the Narcotics Control Board.

As proposed by the Food and Drug Administration, individuals and organizations that already possess marijuana should notify regulators within 90 days to be legally pardoned.

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Australia Police Say They Didn’t Know Bahraini Was a Refugee

Hakeem Ali Mohamed Ali AlAraibi, shackled at his feet, arrives at a court in Bangkok on Feb. 4, 2018.

CANBERRA, Australia — Australian Federal Police did not know a Bahraini soccer player was a refugee who feared persecution in his homeland when the agency alerted Bahrain and Thailand that he was on a flight bound for Bangkok, Australian officials said Monday.

Australian Border Force Commissioner Michael Outram told a Senate committee he blamed human error within his own agency for a failure to email to police Hakeem al-Araibi’s refugee status in time. But Outram would not concede under questioning by senators that the 25-year-old former Bahrain national soccer team player would not have been arrested in Bangkok on Nov. 27 without the Australian tip-off.

“I apologize for the error that occurred within the ABF, but I can’t say, nor can I accept, that that error necessarily led to his detention in Thailand that would have occurred anyway,” Outram said.

Police Deputy Commissioner Ramzi Jabbour told the committee Bahrain and Thailand were alerted by police almost six hours before al-Araibi landed after a nine-hour flight from Melbourne on his honeymoon.

The bungle drew the Australian government, international soccer bodies and human rights advocates into a top-level dispute with the Thai and Bahrain governments to gain al-Araibi’s freedom. He was detained at the airport and was held 76 days under threat of extradition to Bahrain before he was released last week and returned to Melbourne.

The rules of international policing organization Interpol prevent a Red Notice from being issued for an acknowledged refugee to be sent back to the country from which he or she fled persecution.

Australian officials face days of questioning by a Senate committee this week to determine how the bungle arose.

Australian Federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin told the committee that police did not know that al-Araibi was a refugee and did not have access to his visa status when Bahrain applied for a Red Notice to Australia’s Interpol bureau on Nov. 9.

The Australian Border Force did not advise Australian police that al-Araibi was a refugee until a day after he was detained in Thailand, Colvin said.

Interpol subsequently withdrew the Red Notice, but Bahrain did not drop its bid to extradite al-Araibi until last week.

Jabbour said Bahrain issued the Red Notice on the same day Thailand issued al-Araibi a tourist visa.

“I cannot comment as to what was the trigger” of the Bahrain Red Notice, Jabbour said.

On whether Thailand knew before Australia’s notification that al-Araibi was coming, Jabbour said, “We didn’t get a response either way whether this came as news to them.”

Thailand said in a statement two weeks ago, “We would not have become involved in the issue had we not received the Red Notice alert from the Australian Interpol and the subsequent formal request by Bahrain for his arrest and extradition.”

Australian law does not allow for al-Araibi’s arrest in Australia under a Bahrain Red Notice and warrant.

Bahrain had wanted al-Araibi to serve a 10-year prison sentence for an arson attack that damaged a police station. The former Bahrain national soccer team player has denied those charges, which he was convicted of in absentia, and says the case is politically motivated.

He said he believed he was targeted for arrest because of his Shiite faith and because his brother was politically active in Bahrain. Bahrain has a Shiite majority but is ruled by a Sunni monarchy.

Al-Araibi says he fled Bahrain because of political repression and that he fears torture if he returns.

Story: Rod McGuirk

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Vietnam Memorial to North Korea Pilots Marks Bygone Alliance

War veteran Duong Van Dau walks in between a row of headstones Saturday at a memorial for North Korean fallen pilots in Bac Giang province, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press
War veteran Duong Van Dau walks in between a row of headstones Saturday at a memorial for North Korean fallen pilots in Bac Giang province, Vietnam. Photo: Hau Dinh / Associated Press

BAC GIANG, Vietnam — In a rice field in northern Vietnam, 14 headstones are an enduring symbol of the wartime friendship of Vietnam and North Korea. They mark the original burial ground of North Korean pilots who died while secretly fighting alongside Vietnamese comrades against U.S. Air Force and Navy planes during the Vietnam War.

The role of North Korea is a footnote in the sweeping history of that conflict, one that speaks mostly of the fraternal relations of two nations that separately fought bruising armed conflicts against the United States in the context of the Cold War. Decades later, the communist nations’ friendship is apparent as Vietnam gets ready to host a summit of the North Korean and U.S. leaders later this month.

“When they died, Vietnamese people treated them the same as Vietnamese martyrs who sacrificed for the country,” Duong Van Dau, the caretaker of the memorial said last week. On the high ground where the fallen pilots were interred, their tombs all face northeast, toward their homeland.

South Korea’s role in the war is much better known. From 1964 to 1973, Seoul deployed more than 300,000 military personnel to help the U.S. effort in South Vietnam against the communists.

By contrast, the North Korean air force contingent deployed near Hanoi in what was then called North Vietnam — the communist half of the war-torn Southeast Asian nation — had 200-400 personnel, including about 90 pilots over more than two years, according to postwar Vietnamese accounts.

In September 1966, according to Vietnamese historical documents obtained and translated by CIA analyst-turned-scholar Merle Pribbenow, Hanoi accepted an offer by Pyongyang to send three companies of pilots who would form a regiment equipped with 30 aircraft in total. They were to wear North Vietnamese uniforms and Vietnam would provide the aircraft, facilities and equipment.

It was timely assistance. Vietnam’s fleet of aging Russian-made MiG-17 fighters was taking heavy losses defending against the U.S. bombing campaign against North Vietnam, Operation Rolling Thunder. China and Russia provided material assistance, but the number of trained Vietnamese pilots was shrinking by attrition.

The first North Korean contingent, also destined to fly Mig-17s, were sent before the end of 1966 to Kep air base in Bac Giang province, 70 kilometers (40 miles) northeast of Hanoi, to aid in training and to carry out combat missions.

“The agreement was signed by the two governments, but we didn’t know anything about it. I did know that North Korea wanted to send pilots to Vietnam so that they could practice and gain experience with the aim of building its air force,” Vu Ngoc Dinh, one of the Vietnamese pilots who served alongside the Koreans, recalled in an interview with István Toperczer, a Hungarian air force officer turned historian.

“The pilots were their best ones whose parents or relatives were working for the Politburo of the North Korean Central Party Committee,” Dinh is quoted saying in Toperczer’s book, MiG Aces of the Vietnam War. “They sent their pilots and commanders to Vietnam and we provided the hardware they required during their service.”

“They kept everything secret, so we didn’t know their loss ratio, but the North Korean pilots claimed 26 American aircraft destroyed,” said Dinh. “Although they fought very bravely in the aerial battles, they were generally too slow and too mechanical in their reactions when engaged, which is why so many of them were shot down by the Americans. They never followed flight instructions and regulations either. ”

Dau, the cemetery caretaker, is also a war veteran. He joined the army and marched south in 1966 to fight for the communist side in South Vietnam. He was discharged three years later after getting shot in the knee in fighting just outside of Saigon, now called Ho Chi Minh City.

“For the North Korean pilots who fought to protect our country and died for our country, I salute them. Being a soldier myself, I have great compassion for them. I see them as my comrades, regardless of the nationality,” Dau said.

In 2002, the remains of the pilots were repatriated from Vietnam to North Korea in a ceremony held by the military of both countries. But the headstones remain, lined up in two rows behind a memorial marker with an inscription in Vietnamese: “Here used to lie 14 North Korean comrades.”

Since the repatriation, the number of visitors to the site has declined. But Dau said he would continue to care for the gated memorial to the fallen pilots.

Only in 2000-2001 was the participation of the North Korean pilots officially acknowledged by Hanoi and Pyongyang. Since then, there has been a trickle of additional details about North Korea’s involvement in the Vietnam War, teased out mostly from Vietnamese memoirs and state press accounts and Eastern European diplomatic archives.

What has also emerged is a revisionist view of North Korea’s assistance, which suggests Pyongyang would have been happy to see Hanoi fight to the last Vietnamese.

“Sinking deeper and deeper into the quagmire of the Vietnam War, the U.S. government did not want to open a new front in Korea if it could help it,” wrote Balázs Szalontai, a Hungarian historian of North Korea. He alleges that North Korea’s then-leader, Kim Il Sung, “had much to gain from keeping America bogged down in Vietnam” and for that reason went out of it way to sustain North Vietnam’s struggle.

Conversely, “the very fact that North Korea’s assistance to Hanoi was strongly motivated by self-interest also implied that Pyongyang would not take kindly to any steps that could potentially enable the U.S. to get off the Indochinese hook and refocus its attention on the Korean peninsula,” he noted in an essay in nknews.org, a website with news and analysis about North Korea.

When Washington and Hanoi began peace talks in Paris in 1968, North Korean aid began to tail off sharply, noted Szalontai, Pyongyang greeted the 1973 Paris Peace Accords coldly.

Story: Hau Dinh, Grant Peck

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Prayuth Should Stay On as PM for Coronation: Minister

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha at Government House Monday.

BANGKOK — Interior Minister Gen. Anupong Paochinda defended his boss Monday by insisting that junta leader-cum-Prime Minister Gen Prayuth Chan-ocha should not step down before the royal coronation takes place in two months.

He said Prayuth is not campaigning for the Phalang Pracharat Party, although he is its nominee to serve as prime minister. Prayuth is carrying out his duties as he has for the past four years, the interior minister said.

His comments came after Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva today urged the Election Commission to investigate whether Prayuth has abused his office to canvass for votes following repeated campaign-style appearances.

Earlier, Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit has repeatedly called on Prayuth to resign so there could be a level playing field in the final weeks before the March 24 election..

Anupong said that since the royal coronation ceremony will take place in two months, it is only appropriate for Prayuth to stay on as prime minister and not resign.

 

 

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Lovesick Slovenian Destroys Pro-Junta Posters to Spite Girlfriend

A Slovenian man accused of destroying Phalang Pracharat Party’s campaign posters in Kalasin apologized to candidate Chalong Karalert, at left, in front of the damaged posters Monday at a police press briefing.
A Slovenian man accused of destroying Phalang Pracharat Party’s campaign posters in Kalasin apologized to candidate Chalong Karalert, at left, in front of the damaged posters Monday at a police press briefing.

KALASIN — A Slovenian man destroyed posters of the Phalang Pracharat Party to get back at his girlfriend for standing him up on Valentine’s Day to campaign for the party, police said.

Local police said the 54-year-old man was arrested in Kalasin City following complaints filed by candidate Chalong Karalert yesterday that eight of his posters were destroyed, including ones with images of junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha. The man, identified as Zvonimir Nad, was released with a warning Monday after Chalong declined to press charges.

According to police, the Slovenian national was tracked to his apartment after security footage showed him using a knife to slash some of the posters Saturday night. He later confessed to riding his motorcycle across the city just to destroy the party’s posters.

He told police that he was angry that his girlfriend, who campaigns for Chalong, stood up their Valentine’s dinner date – where he had planned to propose – to join a party rally.

The man said he got wasted and rode out on his political hack job because he couldn’t get in touch with the girlfriend, who was unidentified.

Chalong said he dropped the charges as the vandalism was committed by a foreigner who didn’t appear to be politically motivated, adding that he wants the atmosphere during his campaign to be “positive.”

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