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Bangkok Biker Bowls Over Pedestrian With Temerity to Warn Him

Image: Prasert Sae-ung / Facebook
Image: Prasert Sae-ung / Facebook

BANGKOK — A man waits for a bus. Seeing a motorcycle trespass on the sidewalk, he warns the rider. Moments later, the bike returns and plows into his body, knocking him to the ground before speeding off.

That was the incident described online by someone whose security footage of the assault baffled netizens and quickly spread through the Thai net on Thursday. It was revealed later that it happened Feb. 1 in the old royal quarter on Lan Luang Road.

“They just turned around to hit him. It’s my friend’s brother. I don’t have more details,” user Prasert Sae-ung wrote in the video’s caption.

The man who was hit said today that he had warned the rider not to ride on the sidewalk before he was hit, which injured his hip. He added that police contacted him yesterday to say his attacker offered 5,000 baht to withdraw the charges, which he refused.

The video had been shared more than 16,000 times and watched over 1.2 million times as of Thursday afternoon. Most comments condemned the rider.

City Hall in October announced it was doubling fines for sidewalk riders as hundreds of checkpoints set up across Bangkok haven’t discouraged them.

ขี่บนทางเท้า บอกว่าบีบแตรทำไม ขี่ย้อนกลับมาชนเลย ครับ น้องชายเพื่อนครับ ไม่มีรายละเอียดครับ

โพสต์โดย ประเสริฐ แซ่อึ๊ง เมื่อ วันพุธที่ 13 กุมภาพันธ์ 2019

 

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Court Accepts Request to Disband Pro-Thaksin Party

Reporters take photos of a statement by the Constitutional Court declaring that it has accepted a request to disband Thai Raksa Chart Party.

Update: The Constitutional Court postponed the next hearing for the Thai Raksa Chart Party to 3pm on March 7.

BANGKOK — The Thai Raksa Chart Party appeared headed toward oblivion Thursday after a court with the power to disband political parties agreed to take up the case against it.

The Constitutional Court said representatives of the accused party must report to the tribunal within seven days and state their wish to fight the case. Failure to appear will be considered the same as declaring no contest to the charge, the court said in a statement released Thursday.

Read: Facing its Demise, Thai Raksa Chart Demands Fair Trial

Thai Raksa Chart, part of a faction loyal to former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, said it’s confident of proving its innocence in court.

“I cannot see any allegation that we cannot explain,” Surachai Chinchai, the party’s head attorney, told reporters moments after the news broke.

If found guilty, the party will be disbanded and its executives banned from politics for up to 10 years. More than 200 candidates fielded by the party for the March 24 election would also be removed from the race.

Other pro-Thaksin parties have been dissolved by the same court in the past decade, including the governing People’s Power Party on alleged counts of vote buying in 2008. Two parties in the Thaksin-led coalition were also disbanded in the same year.

The complaint was filed to the court Wednesday by the Election Commission, which argued that Thai Raksa Chart broke election law by nominating princess Ubolratana Mahidol as its prime minister candidate last week.

Hours after the nomination became public, His Majesty the King decreed Ubolratana cannot run for office because she’s part of the royal family despite resigning from the nobility in 1972. Ubolratana herself has disputed the king’s interpretation in an Instagram post.

The commission accused the party of drawing the monarchy into politics, which election regulations prohibit.

The first hearing against Thai Raksa Chart is set for Feb. 27 March 7.

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Candidates Say ‘Be Mine’ as Valentine’s Day Sweeps Kingdom (Photos)

Sealed with a kiss: Alan Smith and Nareerat Saenrum hold their marriage certificates on Feb. 14, 2019, at the Bang Rak district office in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Love is in the air as Valentine’s Day is celebrated across Thailand by state and private organizations.

The usual stunts are back – mass marriage registrations in unusual places and police handing out roses instead of fines – but the candidates standing in next month’s election are also jumping on the romance bandwagon to win a little ballot box love.

Leading the charge is Democrat Party chairman Abhisit “Mark” Vejjajiva who posted on his Facebook with a multilanguage pun, “If you still have no one for this year’s Valentine, can you please ‘mark’ me in your heart?”

Not to be outdone, 25-year-old Democrat MP contender Parit “Itim” Wacharasindhu offered free hugs to passers-by as he campaigned at a park in eastern Bangkok this morning. Parit is one of the party’s newgen hopefuls.

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Candidates for the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat and Action Coalition for Thailand parties also dropped their usual belligerent tone and donned pink on the campaign trail today.

But not everyone was feeling the love, such as Thai Raksa Chart Party official Chayika Wongnapachant.

“This is the saddest Day of Love in my life,” tweeted Chayika, a niece of former leader Yingluck Shinawatra. Her party may be disbanded for alleged election law violations.

Provinces throughout Thailand also hold activities to observe the international day of love and promote their local identities at the same time:

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In Bangkok, hundreds of couples, Thai and foreign, flocked to the Bang Rak district office to register their marriages. The venue is considered auspicious because Bang Rak sounds similar to “Place of Love” in Thai.

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In Korat, Highway Police offered a “grace period” for motorists who broke the law today. Instead of fines, officers were handing out warnings and red roses for those caught with minor traffic violations. Over 150 motorists were caught today.

“We want to show that we warned them out of love,” Maj. Wissanu Kamnonmuang told reporters.

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In Suphanburi, worshipers at Wat Then Plai gave pink religious offerings to celebrate Valentine’s Day. The tradition matches a Buddha statue there which was sculpted in hot pink.

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In Trang, 10 scuba-loving couples showed each other how deep their love is by registering their marriages under the sea – strapped to pink oxygen tanks.

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In Krabi, eight Thai and four foreigner couples-turned-daredevils registered their marriage certificates on the side of a cliff.

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In Phayao, 35 couples were rowed onto the vast Phayao Lake to seal the deal. They also swore oaths of faithful love in front of a 500-year-old Buddha figure built in the middle of the lake.

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In Chiang Rai, sky is the limit of couples who sign their marriage certificates on hot air balloons.

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In Surin, aka the home of Thai elephants, wedding certificates were handed out on the back of the big beasts. It’s a tribute to the wedding traditions of a local mahout tribe called Kui that dates back centuries ago.

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In Chonburi, a “giraffe couple” called Tawan and Bin Laden (yes) were the romantic stars at a zoo there.

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And in Pattani, the region torn by sectarian violence found peace today as hundreds of Buddhists and Muslims registered their marriages side-by-side in a state ceremony.

Related stories: 

Love in a Time of Political Hate. Still Possible?

Cheatin’ Hearts: When Infidelity Strikes, ‘Club Friday’ Answers the Call

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Bangkok Gets an Outdoor Rock Fest This May

Photo: Dune Rats / Facebook

PATHUM THANI — Feeling a little left out of the festival scene since you’re not into electronic music or hip-hop? Head north to a lakeside venue in northern metro Bangkok this May to rock it under the sun with a number of local and foreign acts.

Local indie gig promoter Wildest Youth is rolling out its first festival to celebrate music, art and subculture. It’s called the Pink Cloud Music and Art Festival.

Calling itself a “utopia for outcasts, underdogs and alt-rock lovers,” the one-day festival’s highlights are Brisbane’s “hyperactive stone cunts” the Dune Rats, Aussie surf rock duo Hockey Dad and American indie rockers Turnover.

Also joining the stage are Hong Kong shoegaze group Thud, Reggae and dub collective Srirajah Rockers, and Death of Heather, an up-and-coming shoegaze and dream pop group.

The organizer will announce more acts on a later date.

Pink Cloud Music and Art Festival will take place May 25 at Thai Wake Park in Pathum Thani province, a 45-minute drive from downtown Bangkok. Tickets are available online now for 2,300 baht. They go up to 2,900 baht after April 5.

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Journalist and Duterte Critic Posts Bail After Libel Arrest

Maria Ressa listens to a reporter's question after posting bail at a Regional Trial Court following an overnight arrest by National Bureau of Investigation agents on a libel case Thursday in Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

MANILA — The award-winning head of a Philippine online news site that has aggressively covered President Rodrigo Duterte’s administration was freed on bail Thursday after her arrest in a libel case.

National Bureau of Investigation agents served the warrant against Maria Ressa late Wednesday afternoon and escorted her from the Rappler Inc. office to NBI headquarters, where she stayed overnight in an office. The move against Ressa, who was one of Time magazine’s Persons of the Year last year, was denounced by her outfit, Rappler Inc., and media watchdogs as a threat to press freedom. Duterte’s government said the arrest was a normal step in response to a criminal complaint.

“What we’re seeing is death by a thousand cuts of our democracy,” Ressa told reporters after posting bail in the Manila regional trial court that issued a warrant for her arrest.

She accused the government of abusing its power and of using the law as a weapon to muzzle dissent. “I’m appealing to you not to be silent … you have to express outrage.”

Duterte has openly lambasted journalists who write unfavorable stories about him, including about his anti-drug campaign that has left thousands of mostly poor suspects dead.

Rappler’s 2012 article included allegations that a businessman was linked to illegal drugs, human trafficking and a murder case, citing an unspecified intelligence report. The story also said a car registered in his name had been used by the country’s chief justice, who was later ousted in an impeachment trial.

Wilfredo Keng denied the allegations in a statement and welcomed the justice department’s indictment of Ressa and a former Rappler researcher, Reynaldo Santos Jr., adding he was determined to see the legal battle through. He said he has no criminal record.

“Rappler, Ressa and Santos continue to hold themselves high above any accountability to provide credible and justifiable reason for why they continue to harass an ordinary private citizen and businessman despite having absolutely no basis for their claims,” Keng said in a statement.

“With one click of a button, they destroyed my reputation and endangered my life,” Keng said.

Amnesty International Philippines said Ressa’s arrest was based on a “trumped up libel charge.”

“This is brazenly politically motivated, and consistent with the authorities’ threats and repeated targeting of Ressa and her team,” it said.

Justice Secretary Menardo Guevarra said the arrest was “merely part of any criminal procedure.” Duterte’s spokesman said the charge against Ressa was based on facts which she should simply answer and had “nothing to do” with press freedom.

Rappler is one of several local and international news agencies deemed critical of Duterte’s policies.

Duterte had already banned a Rappler reporter from his news briefings after the government’s corporate watchdog found that the news site violated a constitutional prohibition on foreign ownership of media when it received money from an international investment firm. Rappler, founded in 2012, rejected the ruling.

In its selection of Ressa as a Person of the Year, Time magazine cited her and several other journalists as “guardians” in what it said was an effort to emphasize the importance of reporters’ work in an increasingly hostile world.

Ressa, who has worked with CNN, also last year received a Press Freedom award from the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, and the International Center for Journalists’ Knight International Journalism Award.

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Israel Refuses to Let UN Council Visit Palestinian Areas

In this Thursday Jan. 11, 2018 photo, Palestinian children play in an alley at the Shati refugee camp in Gaza City. Photo: Khalil Hamra / Associated Press
In this Thursday Jan. 11, 2018 photo, Palestinian children play in an alley at the Shati refugee camp in Gaza City. Photo: Khalil Hamra / Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — Israel has refused to allow the U.N. Security Council to visit the territory that the Palestinians claim for a future independent state, U.N. diplomats said Wednesday.

Last week, the council authorized Its current president, Equitorial Guinea’s U.N. Ambassador Anatolio Ndong Mba, to consult the Israel and Palestinian ambassadors about a trip.

Palestinian Ambassador Riyad Mansour immediately responded, saying a council visit would be viewed “in the most positive way.”

But Kuwaiti Ambassador Mansour Al-Otaibi said Ndong Mba reported to a closed council meeting Wednesday that “Israel categorically refused the council visit,” though Israeli Ambassador Danny Danon said the government would welcome visits to Israel by individual ambassadors.

A council visit requires support from all 15 council members and approval by the countries concerned. Several other members confirmed Danon’s rejection.

Al-Otaibi, the Arab representative on the council, said he expressed regret that the visit won’t take place, noting there have been many requests for the U.N.’s most powerful body to visit the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, which the Palestinians want as their capital – all unsuccessful.

U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said there is no record of the Security Council ever visiting Palestinian areas.

“We want to continue our consultation,” Al-Otaibi said. “Hopefully we reach a consensus, because we said this issue has been on the council agenda for decades.”

“We want an official trip – this is what we asked for, not to go illegally or not to be invited as tourists,” Al-Otaibi said.

Equatorial Guinea’s deputy ambassador, Job Obiang Esono Mbengono, told reporters: “We’re still working on it.”

The Security Council asked the council president to meet the Israeli and Palestinian ambassadors to discuss a visit after the United States blocked an Arab-backed Security Council statement put forward by Indonesia and Kuwait expressing regret at Israel’s suspension of an international observer mission in the West Bank city of Hebron.

The Temporary International Presence in Hebron was established in 1994 following Israeli settler Baruch Goldstein’s massacre of 29 worshippers at the Ibrahimi Mosque in the West Bank city, which triggered riots across Palestinian areas. The mosque is located at the site that is also revered by Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs.

Israel’s Danon accused the Hebron mission of acting as “a violent, biased” force, which its members strongly denied.

Story: Edith M. Lederer

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Love in a Time of Political Hate. Still Possible?

At left, Watanya Wongopasi of the pro-junta Palang Pracharat party. At right, arch junta critic Thanathorn Juangroonruangkit of the Future Forward Party.

It’s been said that politics can make for strange bedfellows. In today’s hyper-divided climate, it can lead to empty ones as well. So is there any hope for love in a time of open tribal warfare?

With elections just over the horizon, the hosts of the longest-running radio talk show’s best advice boils down to: put up or break up. Relationships are difficult enough without conflict over whether one is pro- or anti-anything, so Napaporn “P’Aoy” Triwitwareegune and Saithip “P’Chod” Montrikul Na Ayudhaya of Club Friday say the only chance couples have to to respect their differences – or call it quits.

“Many can’t make it,” Aoy said.

Read: Cheatin’ Hearts: When Infidelity Strikes, ‘Club Friday’ Answers the Call

She said it’s important for couples to accept each other’s differences as just that – differences, not morally reprehensible defects. Try applying the same thinking of your other, less-combustible differences: one likes blockbuster movies, the other prefers French arthouse flicks.

“When you go vote, you don’t need to be holding each other’s hands into the booth,” Aoy said.

When discussing current events, try sticking to the facts instead of spouting provocations. And remember that discussions aren’t debates where someone has to be steamrolled
over.

“You don’t need to win over other people in the same house as you,” Aoy said.

Allowing each other space to vent politically with their tribe is important as well, the hosts said. One person can’t provide every type of fulfillment, and that includes political validation. A lot of couples simply leave their stripes at the door.

“It’s the same with friendships. You might have this really funny friend, but you don’t go talk to them when you need serious advice,” Aoy said.

Napaporn “Aoy” Triwitwareegune and Saithip “Chod” Montrikul Na Ayudhaya, the radio hosts of Club Friday.
Napaporn “Aoy” Triwitwareegune and Saithip “Chod” Montrikul Na Ayudhaya, the radio hosts of Club Friday.

Related stories:

Cheatin’ Hearts: When Infidelity Strikes, ‘Club Friday’ Answers the Call

Thai Men and the White Women Who Love Them

Isaan Love Triangle: Thai Men Found Lacking by Farang-Loving Women

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Thailand Free No Thanks to Democracy: Junta

A collage of famous Thai kings and historical warriors with a message posted online Wednesday by the junta. Image: NCPO / Facebook
A collage of famous Thai kings and historical warriors with a message posted online Wednesday by the junta. Image: NCPO / Facebook

BANGKOK — Weeks away from Election Day, the ruling junta wants people to know that democracy can take no credit for Thailand’s freedom and independence.

Netizens expressed befuddlement by a social media post showing famous kings and historical warriors which seemed to come out of nowhere last night from the National Council for Peace and Order, as the junta calls itself.

“Thailand has been able to maintain its independence and sovereignty to this day not because of democracy, but because of its former kings, Thai ancestors, and all Thais who love our nation and our land,” the post read.

After it met a major backlash online, it was deleted late Thursday morning, but not before it had been shared nearly 1,200 times.

Most comments were critical at what many perceived as a cheap shot against democratic principles as the nation prepares to vote.

“Thailand has been able to maintain its independence and sovereignty to this day not because of the NCPO,” commented Yingcheep Atchanont, director of iLaw, a group monitoring junta legal abuses.

“In a society where traditionalists don’t have any honor, nor any accomplishments in the present or future, they’ll always cling onto honor done in the past that they have zero share in, to demand people’s gratitude,” user Namfon Parnmongkon wrote. “The lives and spirits of those who bled for the land were all peasants, subordinate soldiers and children of ordinary folks who died for the glory of people on the back of elephant and horses.”

Similar affront was taken on Twitter, where images of the post were widely shared.

“This is the most disgusting thing I’ve seen [from them] so far,” @Bankbn11 wrote. “Support absolute monarchy, support military dictatorship and outrageously dismiss the people.”

“How could you write to imply that if we love democracy it means that we don’t love the nation and the monarchy?” another user, @Zearr_, wrote.

The post came just five weeks before polls open in the first general election after five years of military rule. Recent maneuvers such as moving to disband certain parties and shutter critical broadcasters have contributed to skepticism it will be a fair and free vote.

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Airbus to Stop Making Struggling A380 Superjumbo in 2021

A Thai Airways Airbus 380 takes off in 2015. Photo: Masakatsu Ukon / Flickr
A Thai Airways Airbus 380 takes off in 2015. Photo: Masakatsu Ukon / Flickr

TOULOUSE, France — European aviation giant Airbus said Thursday it will stop making its superjumbo A380 in 2021 for lack of customers, abandoning the world’s biggest passenger jet and one of the aviation industry’s most ambitious and most troubled endeavors.

Barely a decade after the 500-plus-seat plane started carrying passengers, Airbus said in a statement that key client Emirates is cutting back its orders for the plane, and as a result, “we have no substantial A380 backlog and hence no basis to sustain production.”

The decision could hurt up to 3,500 jobs, Airbus said. The company is releasing its 2018 annual earnings later Thursday and said the decision is expected to impact the results.

The decision is a boon for rival Boeing and a crushing blow for Airbus. The European plane maker had hoped the A380 would squeeze out Boeing’s 747 and revolutionize air travel as more people take to the skies.

Instead, airlines have been cautious about committing to the costly plane, so huge that airports had to build new runways and modify terminals to accommodate it. The double-decker planes started flying in 2008 and seated more than 500 passengers.

The A380 had troubles from the start, including tensions between Airbus’ French and German management and protracted production delays and cost overruns. Those prompted a company restructuring that cost thousands of jobs.

Industry experts initially expected A380s to long outlast the 747, which is celebrating its 50th birthday this year.

When it started taking on passengers in 2008, the A380 was hailed for its roominess, large windows, high ceilings and quieter engines. Some carriers put in showers, lounges, duty free shops, bars on both decks.

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Mukdahan Police Hunt for Escaped Uighur Refugees

An ethnic Uighur detainee who fled nearly three years of detention in Mukdahan province is taken back into custody Wednesday night.

MUKDAHAN — Police on Thursday were looking for four Uighurs refugees who escaped nearly three years of detention in Thailand’s northeast.

The four refugees, all men, escaped the immigration detention center in Mukdahan province Tuesday night. Police believe they’re still in the province, likely begging for food, according to Col. Komen Suphap, provincial immigration chief.

The three other male Uighurs, all held there since June 2016, escaped with them but have since been re-arrested.

Uighurs fleeing their homes in western China often pass through Thailand, where they are regarded as illegal immigrants and subject to detention. China has engaged in widespread persecution of the Muslim-majority ethnic group in Xinjiang province, placing an estimated one million Uighurs in political labor camps.

In July 2015, Thailand deported more than 100 Uighurs against their will back to China under pressure from Beijing.

Related stories:

20 Uighurs Escape Songkhla Detention Center

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