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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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Rare Turtles Babies Hatch on Phang Nga Beach

Newly hatched leatherback sea turtles on Monday in Phang Nga province.
Newly hatched leatherback sea turtles on Monday in Phang Nga province.

PHANG NGA — The first clutch of rare turtle eggs laid on a Thai beach last year hatched last night, officials said Tuesday.

Forty-eight of the hatchlings, the first left there by a leatherback sea turtle since 2013, made it to the sea Monday night, with one dying in the nest. They were laid by a turtle that came ashore Dec. 17 on the beach in Phang Nga province, according to marine officials.

The marine department said the turtle laid 118 eggs, 89 of which were fertilized. The first baby turtle emerged from the nest just after 7pm on Monday.

After disappearing from Thai beaches for five years, three leatherback turtles laid eggs on Phang Nga beaches in less than a month. Marine experts said it’s an indication that the environment there is recovering.

Officials set up a livestream feed near the turtles’ nests for public monitoring and to prevent the eggs from being disturbed or stolen.

Leatherback turtles are considered the largest of all living turtles. Their population worldwide is rapidly decreasing, and many have died from eating plastic waste in the sea.

Related stories:

Public Invited to Monitor Latest Rare Turtle Egg Discovery

First Since 2013, Rare Turtle Lays Eggs on Thai Beach: Expert (Video)

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Clooney Returns to High School Read ‘Catch 22’ for Hulu Show

PASADENA, California — George Clooney says he never expected his next project to be a miniseries based on a novel he read in high school.

But against his initial inclination, he’s directing and starring in Hulu’s series “Catch-22,” drawn from Joseph Heller’s classic work about the insanity of war. The streaming service Hulu will release it this spring.

Clooney said Monday that the longer format allowed them to develop the characters beyond what could be done in Mike Nichols’ 1970 classic movie. Adopted at the time by opponents of the Vietnam War, he said the story making fun of the red tape and bureaucracy of war is relevant today and not tied to a particular conflict.

Series makers say the mixture of horror and hilarity becomes more pronounced as the series goes on.

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Gunman in 2017 Dealership Raid Sentenced to Die

Remains of a truck which exploded Aug. 17, 2017 outside the Mayo Police Station in Pattani province.

SONGKHLA — One of several gunmen accused of stealing pickup trucks at gunpoint and killing a hostage was sentenced to death Tuesday by a southern court.

Eighteen months after the brazen attack, Attanan Sa-i was sentenced to die by the Na Tawee Court in Songkhla province after being found guilty of several crimes including violating national security, engaging in extremism, robbery and murder.

Another three – Panumat Lheesen, Maroyee Radaeng and Hariya Garee – were given life sentences for the attack, which authorities at the time blamed on a new faction of insurgents in the violence which has persisted for nearly 15 years.

Abdulmanus Jae-loh, the fifth gunman was convicted of being a criminal conspirator and sentenced to two years and eight months in jail.

All five appealed the verdict Tuesday morning.

The incident occurred on Aug. 16, 2017, when the gunmen raided a car dealership and stole five vehicles. Four people were taken hostage – three employees and the owner – before one of them, Saharat Laeni, was shot dead.

The perpetrators drove over the border from Songkhla into Pattani’s Nong Chik district with police in pursuit. A shootout took place, and a suspect in one of the trucks was shot dead.

He was later identified as Nurhasan Arwear, a 23-year-old student in Pattani province. Police found 80 kilograms of explosives and seven fuel tanks inside the vehicle he was driving.

The next morning, one of the five vehicles stolen from the car dealership exploded at a police station in Pattani province. No one was killed or injured.

Car bombs are a common weapon of separatist militants in the Deep South.

Related stories:

Official Eyes Martial Law as Deep South Attacks Intensify

Truck Bomb Ring is New Generation of Militants: Officials

Hostage Dies, Stolen Truck Explodes at Police Station

Hunt on After Trucks Stolen, Staff Killed at Deep South Dealership

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Indonesian Executioner for IS Killed in Syria

This undated photo shows an individual carrying a flag of the so called Islamic State at an undisclosed location. Photo: VOA / Wikimedia Commons

JAKARTA — An Indonesian militant shown killing a foreigner in a 2016 Islamic State group video was killed last month in a battle with U.S.-backed forces in Syria, Indonesian police and a family member said Monday.

National police spokesman Dedi Prasetyo said Muhammad Saifuddin, who used the aliases Abu Walid and Mohammed Karim Yusop Faiz, was killed on Jan. 29 in eastern Deir Ezzor province where an international coalition is trying to defeat remaining pockets of IS group extremists.

“He was killed by shrapnel from a Syrian forces tank in the battle,” Prasetyo told The Associated Press.

Saifuddin’s older brother, Muinudinillah Basri, said the family learned about the death through an instant messaging app. “There was a photo of his body and I can recognize it,” he said.

Saifuddin was a recruitment tool for IS and appeared in several videos on radical websites. They included a 2016 video that showed him along with two other militants from Malaysia and the Philippines killing three foreigners, including Japanese journalist Kenji Goto, who were dressed in orange jumpsuits and forced to kneel before being slain.

The U.S. in August designated Saifuddin and the two other killers in the IS video, Malaysian Mohammad Rafi Udin and Filipino Mohammed Reza Lahaman Kiram, as global terrorists.

Basri said the family hadn’t heard from Saifuddin since he left Indonesia to join IS in Syria with his wife and children about four years ago.

They believed he was originally radicalized by a Christian-Muslim conflict in Indonesia’s Ambon region from 1999 to 2001 along with his twin brother, who died in the conflict.

One of Saifuddin’s Indonesian friends, convicted militant Sofyan Tsauri, said that in radical circles Saifuddin was perceived as trusted by IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as a leader of Southeast Asian Islamic militants.

Tsauri, a former member of the al-Qaida-affiliated network responsible for the 2002 Bali bombings who now collaborates with Indonesia’s counterterrorism agency, said Saifuddin fled to the southern Philippines shortly after the Bali bombings with two other senior Indonesian militants.

He was arrested in the Philippines while attempting to return to Indonesia with weapons and explosives and sentenced to nine years in prison in 2007.

After marrying the widow of an Indonesian suicide bomber following his early release in 2013, Saifuddin sank below the radar of authorities but reappeared several years later in an IS propaganda video that urged Indonesian Muslims to oppose the government and join violent jihad in Syria or the southern Philippines.

“Since long ago he had aspired to go international,” Tsauri said. “He had a convincing track record that gained trust and an important position in IS.”

In a news conference on Monday, Prasetyo said police early last month arrested an Indonesian militant, Harry Kuncoro, at Jakarta’s international airport, thwarting his plan to travel to Syria via Iran with Saifuddin’s help.

Prasetyo said Kuncoro, who was sentenced to nine years in prison in 2012 for harboring Bali bomber Umar Patek and illegally possessing weapons, used the Telegram instant messaging app to communicate with Saifuddin after being paroled last year.

Saifuddin sent Kuncoro USD$2,100 for traveling to Syria, advised him to travel via Iran’s Khorasan province and gave him contact numbers for Indonesian militants living in Khorasan, Prasetyo said. He had obtained a passport using a fake national identity card.

Story: Niniek Karmini

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Refugee Footballer Freed by Thailand Returns to Australia

Refugee football player Bahraini Hakeem al-Araibi leaves the criminal court Feb. 4 in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press
Refugee football player Bahraini Hakeem al-Araibi leaves the criminal court Feb. 4 in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia — A refugee football player thanked Australians on his return home Tuesday hours after the threat of extradition to Bahrain was lifted and three months after he was detained in Thailand.

Hundreds of supporters carrying welcome signs and singing “You’ll Never Walk Alone” were waiting at Melbourne Airport when Hakeem AlAraibi arrived on a commercial flight direct from Bangkok.

“I would like to say thanks to Australia,” AlAraibi told the cheering crowd. “It’s amazing to see all of the people here and all of the Australian people and all of the media who supported me.”

Thailand had come under great pressure from Australia’s government, sporting bodies and human rights groups to send Hakeem AlAraibi back to Australia, where he has refugee status and plays semi-professional football.

Former Australia national team captain Craig Foster, who has been leading the campaign for AlAraibi’s release, said he could not sleep until he received word from the Australian embassy in Bangkok that the 25-year-old’s flight had left.

Foster was by AlAraibi’s side with an arm around the footballer as they faced the crowd.

“So this is the man, probably the most famous young man in Australia right now,” Foster said. “Something of this magnitude doesn’t happen without an incredible team behind, and there’s been an amazing coalition of people, right from around the world.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who wrote twice to his Thai counterpart Prayuth Chan-ocha in a bid to secure AlAraibi’s freedom, thanked Australians as well as Thai authorities.

“I want to thank all Australians for their support in achieving this outcome,” Morrison tweeted on Tuesday.

“We are grateful to the Thai government and thank them for the way they have engaged with us to enable Hakeem to return to Australia,” he added.

Two Australian expert cave divers who had helped rescue 12 boys and their football coach from a flooded Thai cave in July also wrote to the Thai prime minister last week pleading for AlAraibi’s release.

Anesthetist Richard Harris and his dive buddy Craig Challen, a retired veterinarian, were last month named joint winners of Australian of the Year Award trophies, one of Australia’s most prestigious awards.

“The issue had just gained more and more prominence and Richard and I both realized that we’re in a position to hopefully give the issue a little bit of a nudge and contribute in our own little way,” Challen told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

“We basically appealed to the prime minister to recognize that both the Thai and Australian peoples hold very dear certain principles of justice and that the charges of which Hakeem had been convicted in Bahrain didn’t really appear to adhere to those principles,” Challen added.

Thai prosecutors on Monday submitted a request to a court to withdraw the case to extradite AlAraibi to Bahrain, where he faces a 10-year prison sentence for an arson attack that damaged a police station. He has denied those charges and says the case is politically motivated.

Prosecutors made the decision after Thailand’s foreign ministry sent their department a letter Monday indicating that Bahrain had withdrawn its request for AlAraibi, a Thai official said.

Officials in Bahrain, an island kingdom off the coast of Saudi Arabia that’s home to the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet, said the country “reaffirms its right to pursue all necessary legal actions against” AlAraibi.

AlAraibi, a former Bahraini national team player, says he fled Bahrain due to political repression and that he fears torture if he returns.

He was detained at the request of Bahrain relayed through Interpol upon his arrival in Bangkok in November while on a honeymoon with his wife.

Thailand’s foreign ministry said last week that AlAraibi was detained because Australian authorities had forwarded them an Interpol Red Notice that Bahrain was seeking his arrest. Australian police acknowledged doing so, but there have been questions raised about why the Red Notice appeared to have been issued just before AlAraibi departed on his trip, and whether Bahraini authorities had been tipped off about his travel plans.

With AlAraibi now free, attention has quickly shifted to who is to blame for his predicament in Thailand.

Opposition foreign affairs spokeswoman Penny Wong said senators will quiz Australian bureaucrats at committee hearings next week about why the system had failed AlAraibi.

“I’d encourage the government to be upfront about this,” Wong said. “I think the Australian community does want to know how this occurred and we do need to consider whether the system is fit-for-purpose.”

Story: Rod McGuirk

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Princess Formally Disqualified From PM Nomination

A file photo of Princess Ubolratana Mahidol

BANGKOK — The Election Commission on Monday afternoon declared that the eldest daughter of the late King Bhumibol cannot compete in the upcoming election as a candidate for prime minister.

The commissioners voted to shoot down the nomination just three days after His Majesty the King barred Princess Ubolratana Mahidol, 68, from the race for the top government job on the grounds that royal family members cannot get involved in politics. The commission cited the same rationale for its decision today.

Election Commission Meets to Discuss Disbanding Pro-Thaksin Party

“All members of the royal family must abide by the king’s principle of staying above politics, maintaining political impartiality and they cannot take up political office,” part of the statement released to the media said.

Thai Raksa Chart, the party that nominated the princess on Friday, initially said its executives would speak at a news conference at 5:30pm today but later canceled the event.

Just four days after the stunning announcement that threatened to upend the entire election, Thai Raksa Chart now faces disbandment by the Election Commission for “drawing” the monarchy into political affairs.

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