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US Treasury Lifts Sanctions Against 3 Russian Companies

A photo of Oleg Deripaska.
A photo of Oleg Deripaska.

WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department on Sunday announced it was lifting sanctions on three companies connected to Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska. The move comes despite an effort in Congress to block the action with many lawmakers concerned that the Trump administration is not being tough enough on Russian President Vladimir Putin and his allies.

Treasury said it was removing Russian aluminum giant Rusal and two other companies from its sanctions list on the grounds that the companies have reduced Derapaska’s direct and indirect shareholding stake in the three companies.

Congress voted earlier this month to try to block the administration’s efforts to remove the sanctions. In the House, 136 Republicans joined Democrats to disapprove the deal while in the Senate 11 Republicans supported the move but fell short of the 60 votes needed.

The two votes represented a major break in the solid GOP backing Trump has enjoyed in his first two years as president and sent a strong signal that congressional Republicans are willing to split with the White House on national security matters.

In its brief statement, Treasury said that Rusal and the other two companies, En+ Group and EuroSiobEnergo had severed Derapaska’s control.

“This action ensures that the majority of directors on the En+ and Rusal boards will be independent directors … who have no business, professional or family ties to Deripaska,” Treasury said.

The statement also said that the companies had agreed to “unprecedented transparency for Treasury into their operations by undertaking extensive, ongoing auditing, certification and reporting requirements.”

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin had made similar arguments during two appearances before lawmakers urging them not to vote for legislation blocking the removal of the sanctions.

Treasury noted while the sanctions are being lifted on the three companies, Deripaska will remain blacklisted as part of a number of sanctions announced last April that targeted tycoons with close ties to the Kremlin.

Mnuchin’s appearance before House and Senate lawmakers failed to convince critics of the move. House Financial Services Chairman Maxine Waters, D-Calif., said that the United States needed to make sure “we don’t align ourselves with the people who are undermining this democracy.”

The sanctions against Rusal had raised worries in global markets about the loss of aluminum production from the company, the world’s second largest producer of aluminum.

Story: Martin Crutsinger

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BNK48 to Campaign for Holocaust Awareness

Pichayapa Natha of BNK48 and band manager Nattapol Bawornwatana, at left, meet Sunday with Israeli Ambassador Meir Shlomo and his wife Bracha Shlomo at the ambassador’s residence in Bangkok. Photo: Israel in Thailand / Facebook
Pichayapa Natha of BNK48 and band manager Nattapol Bawornwatana, at left, meet Sunday with Israeli Ambassador Meir Shlomo and his wife Bracha Shlomo at the ambassador’s residence in Bangkok. Photo: Israel in Thailand / Facebook

BANGKOK — Thai idol group BNK48 will participate in educational campaigns promoting awareness of the holocaust and anti-semitism, Israel’s embassy announced Sunday.

The agreement came a day after Pichayapa “Namsai” Natha, 19, gave a tearful apology on stage for wearing a Nazi-themed jersey at a recent concert rehearsal, prompting criticism.

Pichayapa and a band representative met today with Israeli Ambassador Meir Shlomo to apologize in person, according to the embassy’s deputy chief of mission.

Read: Thai Idol Group BNK48 Member Wears Nazi Flag on Stage

“The meeting was held today in the Ambassador’s residence, during which they discussed the importance of history in general, and the awareness to the Holocaust and Antisemitism in particular,” Smadar Shapira said in a series of tweets announcing the development. She posted photos of Pichayapa and band manager Nattapol Bawornwatana meeting with the ambassador.

“At the request of the Ambassador, the band members have agreed to hold in the future an educational activity, together with the Embassy of Israel in Thailand,” she wrote in another tweet, adding that the band’s CEO “proposed that the Band members themselves will participate in an Educational workshop on the Holocaust in order to emphasize their commitment to this important subject.”

On Saturday, the embassy joined public outrage to express “shock and dismay” at the photos of Pichayapa performing on stage wearing the Nazi flag two days before an international day recognizing the millions killed by the Third Reich. German Ambassador Georg Schmidt also joined Israel in condemning the costume.

Later that night, Pichayapa asked for forgiveness on stage before an audience of thousands at a concert held at Impact Muang Thong Thani. She said she would “not let it happen again.”

Shapira said Shlomo was pleased with the result of the meeting.

“I understand that it was an act arising from lack of knowledge and lack of awareness, and I’m pleased that they have [apologized] and agreed to hold together an educational activity in the future,” she quoted him in a tweet.

Thai youth are often criticized for appropriating Nazi imagery. Most, including Pichayapa, have said afterward they were unaware of what it meant.

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Auschwitz Survivors Pay Homage as World Remembers Holocaust

An actor of the Romania's Jewish State Theatre rehearse the musical drama
An actor of the Romania's Jewish State Theatre rehearse the musical drama "The Lights of the Ghetto" a mix of music and stories by Holocaust survivors in Bucharest, Romania, Saturday, Jan. 26, 2019, a day before the premiere on International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Photo: Vadim Ghirda / Associated Press

WARSAW, Poland — Former prisoners of Auschwitz have placed flowers at an execution wall at the former Nazi German death camp on the 74th anniversary of the camp’s liberation and what is now International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

The survivors wore striped scarves that recalled their uniforms, some with the red letter “P,” the symbol the Germans used to mark them as Poles.

Early in World War II, most prisoners were Poles, rounded up by the occupying German forces. Later, Auschwitz was transformed into a mass killing site for Jews, Roma and others.

A ceremony is planned later Sunday near the ruins of the gas chambers to honor the 1.1 million people killed there and all Holocaust victims, one of several worldwide observances.

The camp was liberated by Soviet forces on Jan. 27, 1945.

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20 Dead as Bombs Target Sunday Mass in Philippine Cathedral

A soldier views the site inside a Roman Catholic cathedral Sunday in Jolo, the capital of Sulu province in the southern Philippines after two bombs exploded. Photo: WESMINCOM Armed Forces of the Philippines Via AP
A soldier views the site inside a Roman Catholic cathedral Sunday in Jolo, the capital of Sulu province in the southern Philippines after two bombs exploded. Photo: WESMINCOM Armed Forces of the Philippines Via AP

JOLO, Philippines — Two bombs minutes apart tore through a Roman Catholic cathedral on a southern Philippine island where Muslim militants are active, killing at least 20 people and wounding 81 others during a Sunday Mass, officials said.

Witnesses said the first blast inside the Jolo cathedral in the provincial capital sent churchgoers, some of them wounded, to stampede out of the main door. Army troops and police posted outside were rushing in when the second bomb went off about one minute later near the main entrance, causing more deaths and injuries. The military was checking a report that the second explosive device may have been attached to a parked motorcycle.

The initial explosion scattered the wooden pews inside the main hall and blasted window glass panels, and the second bomb hurled human remains and debris across a town square fronting the Cathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, witnesses said. Cellphone signal was cut off in the first hours after the attack. The witnesses who spoke to The Associated Press refused to give their names or were busy at the scene of the blasts.

Police said at least 20 people died and 81 were wounded, correcting an earlier toll due to double counting. The fatalities included 15 civilians and five troops. Among the wounded were 14 troops, two police and 65 civilians.

Troops in armored carriers sealed off the main road leading to the church while vehicles transported the dead and wounded to the town hospital. Some casualties were evacuated by air to nearby Zamboanga city.

“I have directed our troops to heighten their alert level, secure all places of worships and public places at once, and initiate pro-active security measures to thwart hostile plans,” said Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana in a statement.

“We will pursue to the ends of the earth the ruthless perpetrators behind this dastardly crime until every killer is brought to justice and put behind bars. The law will give them no mercy,” the office of President Rodrigo Duterte said in Manila.

It said that “the enemies of the state boldly challenged the government’s capability to secure the safety of citizens in that region. The (Armed Forces of the Philippines) will rise to the challenge and crush these godless criminals.”

Jolo island has long been troubled by the presence of Abu Sayyaf militants, who are blacklisted by the United States and the Philippines as a terrorist organization because of years of bombings, kidnappings and beheadings. A Catholic bishop, Benjamin de Jesus, was gunned down by suspected militants outside the cathedral in 1997.

No one has immediately claimed responsibility for the latest attack.

It came nearly a week after minority Muslims in the predominantly Roman Catholic nation endorsed a new autonomous region in the southern Philippines in hopes of ending nearly five decades of a separatist rebellion that has left 150,000 people dead. Although most of the Muslim areas approved the autonomy deal, voters in Sulu province, where Jolo is located, rejected it. The province is home to a rival rebel faction that’s opposed to the deal as well as smaller militant cells that not part of any peace process.

Western governments have welcomed the autonomy pact. They worry that small numbers of Islamic State-linked militants from the Middle East and Southeast Asia could forge an alliance with Filipino insurgents and turn the south into a breeding ground for extremists.

“This bomb attack was done in a place of peace and worship, and it comes at a time when we are preparing for another stage of the peace process in Mindanao,” said Gov. Mujiv Hataman of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. “Human lives are irreplaceable,” he added, calling on Jolo residents to cooperate with authorities to find the perpetrators of this “atrocity.”

Security officials were looking “at different threat groups and they still can’t say if this has something to do with the just concluded plebiscite,” Oscar Albayalde, the national police chief, told ABS-CBN TV network. Hermogenes Esperon, the national security adviser, said that the new autonomous region, called Bangsamoro, “signifies the end of war for secession. It stands for peace in Mindanao.”

Aside from the small but brutal Abu Sayyaf group, other militant groups in Sulu include a small band of young jihadis aligned with the Islamic State group, which has also carried out assaults, including ransom kidnappings and beheadings.

Abu Sayyaf militants are still holding at least five hostages — a Dutch national, two Malaysians, an Indonesian and a Filipino — in their jungle bases mostly near Sulu’s Patikul town, not far from Jolo.

Government forces have pressed on sporadic offensives to crush the militants, including those in Jolo, a poverty-wracked island of more than 700,000 people. A few thousand Catholics live mostly in the capital of Jolo.

There have been speculations that the bombings may be a diversionary move by Muslim militants after troops recently carried out an offensive that killed a number of IS-linked extremists in an encampment in the hinterlands of Lanao del Sur province, also in the south. The area is near Marawi, a Muslim city that was besieged for five months by hundreds of IS-aligned militants, including foreign fighters, in 2017. Troops quelled the insurrection, which left more 1,100 mostly militants dead and the heartland of the mosque-studded city in ruins.

Duterte declared martial law in the entire southern third of the country to deal with the Marawi siege, his worst security crisis. His martial law declaration has been extended to allow troops to finish off radical Muslim groups and other insurgents but bombings and other attacks have continued.

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Stumble Into Surprises Touring Old Bangkok for ‘Design Week’ (Photos)

Visitors check out displays on the opening day of Bangkok Design Week Saturday in Talad Noi area.
Visitors check out displays on the opening day of Bangkok Design Week Saturday in Talad Noi area.

BANGKOK — If you want an excuse to discover an old Bangkok neighborhood, a design showcase open through next weekend is a great one to have.

Discover picturesque, hidden communities by the river during Bangkok Design Week while checking out clever solutions by creative minds to make life better.

While there’s a lot to see at the organizer’s headquarters, the best discoveries might lie further away hidden in the capital’s old Chinese quarter across the Charoen Krung area.

Read: Check Out Erudite Furniture and More at Bangkok Design Week

At the Thailand Creative and Design Center, one can check out displays of furniture and everyday products both amatuer and professional. There are also film screenings, talks and workshops. Filling part of the front plaza is an imaginary factory promoting ways to reduce plastic waste, including an interactive exhibition of how to recycle waste and several initiatives for reusing it.

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Bowls and drink coasters made of melted plastic bottle caps.

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Design week gets more interesting the further north one walks. From the front of the Grand Postal Building, follow signs to along the event route and look for attempts by urban designers to make the area more publicly accessible and walkable with new navigation map displays, crosswalks, smart camera guides, resting benches and a disability-friendly bus shelter.

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Pass through Warehouse 30’s offerings and go past the Portuguese Embassy and Sheraton toward Talad Noi. Along the way check out galleries and conceptual exhibitions aiming to boost local businesses and nurture the neighborhood’s unique character at the same time.

Once in Talad Noi, visit a mini museum in a dilapidated Chinese home displaying actual makeshift chairs of all shapes and sizes used by factory workers around the country. They were brought by a design firm to reflect the hard work behind all the elegant furniture from “designers who never define themselves as designers.”

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Enjoy the sunset view and hear people have fun at Chinese shrine San Chao Rong Keauk where a colorful karaoke machine made of simple household appliances has been built. Then continue along creatively lit paths once it gets dark.

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Conclude the evening with a drink with beautiful river views at Baan Rim Naam, an old riverside wooden home turned a lounge and exhibition space showing old school furniture with a touch of modern arrangement that can almost make one forget about the chaotic city life lies just a few hundred meters away.

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Bangkok Design Week 2019 runs now until Feb. 3 at several venues across the Charoen Krung area. All events are free and reachable by express boats or free shuttle services. Not all venues are accessible to visitors with disabilities or impaired mobility. Find more information at the official website.

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Bangkok Man Holds Banquet After Reunited With Lost Dog (Photos)

Boonsong Meethao and Lukmoo at the Saturday feast in Bangkok.
Boonsong Meethao and Lukmoo at the Saturday feast in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — When his beloved dog ran away from home, Boonsong Meethao rushed to pray to the spirit he worships, promising to hold a grand banquet if his best friend were safely returned.

Four days later the dog came home, and now the man is holding up his end of the bargain.

Boonsong, 60, organized a feast Saturday evening at his neighborhood in Bangkok’s Bang Kapi district to celebrate the return of Lukmoo, who he said got scared by fireworks and ran off on New Year’s Eve.

He said he wanted the dog, which has lived with him since a puppy, to come home within five days.

“I rode a motorbike to look for it everywhere and couldn’t find it, so I went to pray with [the spirit] because I was scared it might starve to death. … It might be able to last for just about five days,” he told Khaosod.

Boonsong said Lukmoo likes to eat grilled pork and is loved by everyone in the neighborhood because he’s a very gentle dog.

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IOC Backs FIFA’s Calls for Thailand to Release Bahraini Player

Former Australian soccer national team member Craig Foster talks to journalists at The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand after meeting detained refugee Hakeem al-Araibi on Friday in Bangkok. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press
Former Australian soccer national team member Craig Foster talks to journalists at The Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand after meeting detained refugee Hakeem al-Araibi on Friday in Bangkok. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

The International Olympic Committee has backed FIFA’s calls for a Bahraini soccer player to be allowed to return to Australia from Thailand where he is detention while being pursued for extradition by Bahrain.

But Asian soccer’s leadership is declining to publicly back the campaign to secure the release of Hakeem al-Araibi, who has refugee status in Australia.

The IOC said its president, Thomas Bach, “has personally discussed this worrying situation with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.”

FIFA asked the Thai government earlier this week to ensure al-Araibi was released at the “earliest possible moment.”

The IOC said its “full support for the FIFA actions in order to find a solution based on ‘basic human and humanitarian values'” has been conveyed to the Thai government by IOC member Khunying Patama Leeswadtraku.

By contrast, the Asian Football Confederation only says it “continues to work with FIFA … to find a solution.” In emails, AFC spokesman Colin Gibson would not say what the governing body believes the solution should be, specifically declining to back calls for al-Araibi’s return to Australia.

An AFC statement said Senior Vice President Praful Patel is handling the matter and not President Sheikh Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa, a member of Bahrain’s royal family, to prevent any “conflict of interest.”

Al-Araibi has said he was tortured in Bahrain after his 2012 arrest and fled in 2014 to Australia, which granted him political asylum in 2017 and where he now plays for Melbourne’s Pascoe Vale Football Club.

Bahrain wants its former national team player returned to serve a 10-year prison sentence that was handed down in absentia after he was accused of vandalizing a police station — a charge he denies.

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Check Out Erudite Furniture and More at Bangkok Design Week

Visitors check out displays on the opening day of Bangkok Design Week Saturday at TCDC.
Visitors check out displays on the opening day of Bangkok Design Week Saturday at TCDC.

BANGKOK — Champions of better living through cool design are showing their creations at a grand showcase of Bangkok’s creative thinkers.

Bangkok Design Week is back for a second year to showcase urban design meant to benefit human quality of life as much as the city’s economy.

Read: Stumble Into Surprises Touring Old Bangkok for ‘Design Week’ (Photos)

Highlights of the nine-day festival include design projects aiming to improve public space and walkability, plastic waste reduction and street furniture made of local waste or commodities reflecting the neighborhood’s unique identity.

The event is hosted by the Thailand Creative and Design Center, or TCDC, in the historic Grand Postal Building along Charoen Krung Road near the river. It runs today through Feb. 3.

Visitors can reach the events by Chao Phraya express boats or free shuttle service from BTS Saphan Taksin exit 1 to TCDC from 11am to 10pm, and from MRT Hua Lamphong exit 1 to Talad Noi from 11am to 9pm.

All events are free and take place at venues throughout the Charoen Krung area. Not all are accessible to the mobility-impaired or people with disabilities. Find more information at the official website.

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Thai Idol Group BNK48 Member Wears Nazi Flag on Stage

An image posted by True ID from a televised BNK48 rehearsal on Friday.
An image posted by True ID from a televised BNK48 rehearsal on Friday.

Update 7:40pm: The Embassy of Israel’s deputy chief of mission expressed “shock and dismay” over the outfit in a tweet at 5:30 pm. It noted that Sunday is the international day of remembrance of the victims of the Holocaust. Speaking on stage at Impact Muang Thong Thani, the performer who wore the Nazi shirt asked for people to forgive her and said she would “not let it happen again.”

BANGKOK — A member of one of Thailand’s biggest pop sensations wore a Nazi German war flag replete with swastikas at a Friday performance, according to images of the event.

BNK48 has yet to respond and their publicist could not immediately be reached for comment on images showing Pichayapa “Namsai” Natha, 19, of the so-called girl idol group wearing the Nazi-themed jersey in images posted Friday from a concert rehearsal.

Update: BNK48 to Campaign for Holocaust Awareness

Images showing Pichayapa 'Namsai' Natha of Thai pop group BNK48 wearing a Nazi-themed jersey on Friday at what was described as a “televised rehearsal.” Image: Sexy BNK / Facebook
Images show Pichayapa ‘Namsai’ Natha of Thai pop group BNK48 wearing a Nazi-themed jersey on Friday at what was described as a “televised rehearsal.” Image: Sexy BNK / Facebook

“At Sexy BNK48 fanpage, we are all speechless. Japan’s doubtable ‘idol’ subculture, Nazi Germany’s outfits and Siamese girls, is this an Axis Power revived?” Facebook user Jedmangda Aochermathamphan wrote on Sexy BNK48 page, which called attention to the images after they appeared online without comment.

The Sexy BNK48 page posts critically about the band, usually about racism among its fans.

Jedmangda was referring to recurring incidents in which Thai youth embrace imagery or fashion borrowed from Germany’s Third Reich. In most cases, they have said afterward that they were unaware of the history.
The rehearsal at Impact Muang Thong Thai was for a Saturday concert.

The band’s image took a hit with some of its fans last year when its frontwoman, Cherprang Areekul, agreed to promote the ruling junta’s policies in a government television program.

https://twitter.com/ShapiraSmadar/status/1089108086856404994

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A Silpakorn University student in Bangkok dressed as Adolf Hitler in 2016. Photo: Washirawit Santipiboon / Facebook

In 2016, students at Silpakorn University cosplayed as Nazi Party leader and German Fuhrer Adolf Hitler while other students wore the uniforms of fanatical students who led Chinese campaigns of torture and murder in the 1960s.

Chulalongkorn University apologized in 2013 after its graduating seniors posed for photos doing the Nazi salute in front of a mural of “superheroes” which included Hitler. Some parents were aghast in Chiang Mai in 2011 when students at a school there dressed in elaborate SS costumes for an entire Nazi-themed school parade.

BNK48 is a domestic franchise of a Japanese group called AKB48. Japan has had its share of “Nazi chic” scandals as well.

In late 2016, Sony Music was forced to apologize after a popular act signed to the label called Keyakizaka46 performed in outfits resembling Nazi-era German military uniforms.

Additional reporting Jintamas Saksornchai

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Related stories:

Contrition for Silpakorn’s Nazi Chic Stink Falls Short on Holocaust Memorial Day

Thai University Students Cosplay as Red Guards and Nazis, Again (Photos)

Japanese Girl Band Under Fire For Nazi Chic

Israel Embassy Condemns Thai Aristocrat’s Praise of Hitler

Director Defends ‘Hitler Scene’ in Thai Junta Film

University ‘Hitler Mural’ Leads To Flurry Of Apologies – And Gag Order

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Opinion: Unmistakable Message to Thailand Surfaces in Mekong

From left, Surachai Danwattananusorn, Chatchan Boonphawal, and Kraidet Luelert, in undated photos provided by Pranee Danwattananusorn. All three went missing in December from Laos, with all but Surachai now identified as corpses which washed up in the Mekong River days before the New Year began.

Re•tention: Pravit RojanaphrukNow that police have confirmed through DNA the identities of at least two Thais murdered and mutilated horrendously, I wonder what kind of hatred, cruelty or inhumanity could be responsible.

The two, who fled to Laos after the 2014 coup, were bound, disemboweled and stuffed with concrete. Their bodies were wrapped in rice sacks, another layer of green fishnet and thrown into the Mekong River.

At least two surfaced and have been identified as the anti-monarchist pair Chatchan “Phoo Chana” Boonphawal, 56, and Kraidet “Kasalong” Luelert, 47.

Read: Police Deny 3rd Corpse Was Found in Mekong

The two disappeared from Laos in early December along with a well-known republican Surachai Danwattananusorn, a 76-year-old, colorful former communist rebel turned Redshirt opposed to rule by the military and monarchy.

Was it just sheer hatred and vengeance? Or were their executioners merely “professionals” carrying out an operation?

Was the fact that at least two if not three bodies floated to the Thai side of the river in Nakhon Phanom province an unintended coincidence? Or was it a warning to the rest of the anti-monarchists who dare speak out?

A body is retrieved from the Mekong River on the border of Nakhon Phanom province in an undated photo.
A body is retrieved from the Mekong River on the border of Nakhon Phanom province in an undated photo.

I’m not alone in holding that the killings, which brought to five the number of identical disappearances since the coup, was about “making an example.”

The military government insisted Wednesday after the two DNA results came out, that they had nothing to do with it.

Whoever ordered the killings, when I spoke to the son of Phoo Chana on Monday, he dared not reveal his or his father’s real names. It wasn’t until Thursday that the police made their identities public.

The climate of fear is real.

The remaining fugitive anti-monarchists in Laos, believed to number about a dozen, are now not only in fear but mortal danger.

For four years, many of these people tried to obtain asylum in the West but failed. Now they know they are sitting ducks and at the mercy of the Lao security officers who keep an eye on them.

One of them, 20-something Nithiwat Wannasuri, is one of those who’s tried and failed to win asylum. A member of an act that penned anti-monarchy and anti-junta music, Nithiwat, who believes he could be next, is very bitter about what’s happening but refuses to be quiet. He said he’s moving every four days and posts angry updates on social about their plight and the situation in Thailand.

On Facebook, those supporting their cause have posted tributes praising as martyrs the two men as well as Surachai, whose wife Pranee Danwattanusorn, now says that he must be dead.

“The world have spoken your name: #Surachai …” wrote one Facebook user noting that 13 international news agencies have reported about the three.

To some ultra-royalists, it was time to celebrate and express schadenfreude.

Posting on Tuesday after the DNA tests were revealed, Facebook user Sarawut Niamloi instructed those “next in the queue to be ready for your turn.”

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