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Thai police arrest Taiwanese drug kingpin in Bangkok

Thai police arrest Taiwanese drug kingpin in Bangkok

BANGKOK — 16 January 2026, Thai narcotics police have arrested a Taiwanese described as a key mastermind behind a transnational drug trafficking network, uncovering drugs concealed inside carpets and equipment allegedly prepared for export, authorities said.

The suspect, Chiang Ming Feng, 27, was arrested on 15 January 2026 at a condominium in the Asok area of Bangkok during a joint operation by the Narcotics Suppression Bureau, the Immigration Bureau’s investigation division and the Metropolitan Police investigative unit.

Police said Chiang was the principal coordinator of an international drug trafficking ring and had fled foreign arrest warrants before entering Thailand. A search of his room uncovered about 5 grammes of ketamine and numerous suspicious items, including several large carpets, a sewing machine and sewing tools.

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The carpets stitched with multiple hidden compartments containing white powder resembling illicit drugs, for overseas shipment

Investigators said the carpets had been stitched with multiple hidden compartments containing white powder resembling illicit drugs, packed in a manner suggesting preparation for overseas shipment. The substances are undergoing detailed forensic examination.

A deeper investigation found that Chiang allegedly served as the “brain” of the network, planning and directing drug shipments abroad. Authorities said the group converted heroin, a category 1 narcotic, into a white liquid resembling lotion, which was then concealed in fake containers with realistic packaging to evade detection. The parcels were allegedly sent overseas through international postal services.

Police said intelligence indicated that about two crates of liquid heroin, weighing roughly 10 kilogrammes in total, had been smuggled from Laos to Taiwan, leading investigators to identify Chiang as the organiser behind the operation.

Background checks showed that Chiang is wanted by Taiwanese authorities under four serious criminal charges: attempted murder, participation in a criminal organisation, fraud and theft.

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Chiang Ming Feng, 27, was arrested at a condominium in the Asok area of Bangkok.

Thai immigration officials have revoked his permission to stay in the country. He has been transferred to the Narcotics Suppression Bureau for prosecution under Thai law, while authorities coordinate with domestic and foreign agencies, including those in Taiwan, to expand the investigation and pursue other members of the network.

Lt. Gen. Archayon Kraithon, commissioner of the Narcotics Suppression Bureau, said the arrest marked a significant success in dismantling a sophisticated transnational drug network.

He said authorities would continue expanding the investigation to prevent Thailand from becoming a safe haven for international criminal groups and would work closely with Taiwanese officials to ensure legal proceedings are carried out to their full extent.

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Italian-Thai Developer Wins Contracts Worth More Than 26 Billion Baht After Audit Office Building Collapse

Italian-Thai Wins Contracts Worth More Than 26 Billion Baht After Audit Office Building Collapse
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Steel rod falls from luxury condo crane into Phuket home

Steel rod falls from luxury condo crane into Phuket home

PHUKET — 15 January 2026, A homeowner in Phuket has complained after a large steel reinforcing bar fell from a crane at a luxury condominium project and pierced her house, prompting safety concerns and an ongoing dispute over responsibility.

On 15 January 2026, the Phuket based Facebook page “โหดจัง จังหวัดภูเก็ต” shared a 1 minute 12 second video showing a woman filming the aftermath of the incident, in which a heavy steel rod dropped from a crane and crashed through her home. The incident occurred within a luxury condominium project near Surin Beach, known as The Petit Tycoon by The Chardonnay, located on Soi Surin 8/3 in Choeng Thale subdistrict, Thalang district, Phuket. The incident happened on the night of 14 January 2026 at about 20:00.

The page captioned the video: “Phuket is no exception!! A luxury condo project in the Surin Beach area dropped steel from a #crane through a house. Residents are terrified — there are small children and a bedridden patient. Fears it could happen again!!”

In the video, the homeowner, visibly shaken, describes the incident, saying she had already experienced problems linked to the same project, including water leaking previously that caused cracks throughout the house. She said rainwater had earlier poured from the roof onto several cars. Referring to the steel bar, she said it was extremely large and landed in an area where family members usually sit and work, adding that the impact appeared to have shaken the entire house.

After the clip circulated online, many users posted comments expressing concern that as urban development increases, so do dangers. Others questioned who would be responsible if the falling steel had struck a person and criticised the company for failing to ensure safety. Some advised the homeowner to hire an independent engineer or professional inspector to assess the damage rather than relying on personnel from the project, warning she could be at a disadvantage. Many also noted it was fortunate no one was injured or killed, amid wider public concern over a recent spate of crane-related accidents.

Police said the homeowner filed a complaint with investigators at Choeng Thale police station after the incident. Officers later inspected the scene and met with a representative of the condominium project.

However, following discussions, responsibility remained unclear, with parties within the project reportedly shifting blame among themselves. As a result, the steel rod that fell from the crane remains lodged in the damaged house, with no concrete repair or remedial action taken so far.

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Thai-Korean newlyweds killed in train-crane tragedy, one day after marriage registration

Surattiyakorn Kanya, 35, and Kim Yongho, 37, a South Korean national, who died in the train accident one day after registering their marriage.

SISAKET — A Thai woman and her South Korean husband who had registered their marriage just one day earlier were among those killed when a construction crane collapsed onto a passenger train in Nakhon Ratchasima province.

The victims were identified as Surattiyakorn Kanya, 35, also known as “Kai,” and her husband Kim Yongho, 37, a South Korean national.

The couple had been travelling on Special Express Train No. 21, which runs from Bangkok’s Krung Thep Aphiwat Central Terminal to Ubon Ratchathani, when the crane fell onto the train in Nakhon Ratchasima, causing multiple deaths and injuries.

On 15 January, reporters visited the couple’s family home in Wang Hin district, Sisaket province, where relatives and local residents were preparing the site to receive the bodies for funeral rites. The atmosphere was sombre as family members gathered to mourn.

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Lam-yong Kanya, Surattiyakorn Kanya’s mother, at her home after learning of her daughter’s death in the train accident.

Surattiyakorn’s mother, Lam-yong Kanya, 60, said her daughter had been in a relationship with her husband for more than 10 years before the couple decided to return to Thailand to formally register their marriage.

They arrived in Thailand on 19 December 2025 and spent time with family before registering their marriage at the Department of Consular Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on 13 January 2026, just one day before the fatal accident.

After registering their marriage, the couple boarded the train to return home to Wang Hin district, planning to register their marriage again at the local district office.

“I learned around 10:00 on 13 January that my daughter and son-in-law had been killed by the crane collapse. I was devastated. I don’t know how to go on,” Lam-yong said. “My two grandchildren have now lost their mother, and I will have to take care of them.”

A check of Surattiyakorn’s Facebook account showed her final post was a photo of herself and her husband in front of the Department of Consular Affairs, captioned simply: “Successfully completed.”

It became her last message before the couple’s newly begun life together ended in tragedy.

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A single sound that changed everything: the Korat train crane tragedy and the lives it shattered

Flowers are placed at the scene of the Korat train crash, where a crane collapsed onto a passenger train, killing more than 30 people.

A single, dull sound marked the beginning of one of Thailand’s deadliest rail disasters.

A construction crane for the high speed rail project collapsed onto a passenger train near Sikhio district in Nakhon Ratchasima province, killing more than 30 people. Metal debris, fire and smoke replaced what had been an ordinary journey home and left families facing sudden loss.

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Rescue workers walk through the scene of the Korat train crash after a crane collapsed onto a passenger train.

Among the survivors is Teaw Eimer Tenbrink, 63, who was injured in the crash and later travelled to Sikhio Hospital to claim the body of her German husband, who was killed in the incident.

She said the couple had boarded Train No. 3 to return to their home in Surin, a journey they made regularly and believed to be safe.

“Everything happened very fast,” she said. “I heard a loud sound and then I saw metal come through the roof and hit my husband. I tried to help him.”

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Taew Eimer Tenbrink, a survivor, speaks to a reporter after the incident.

“But someone shouted that we had to get out because fuel was leaking. I climbed out through the window and asked people to help my husband, but it was too late.”

After learning of his death, she contacted the embassy and called her daughter in Germany, who is now travelling to Thailand to collect her father’s body.

She said she remains in shock and has difficulty sleeping since the accident.

The couple had been married for 40 years. Her husband enjoyed spending time in Thailand and visited regularly. They had planned a trip to Koh Samui but decided to return home first.

At the crash site, another mother arrived to light incense for her 40 year old son, who was killed in the disaster.

She said her son was an engineer who preferred travelling by train because he believed it was safer than other forms of transport.

“He was coming home,” she said. “He never arrived.”

She called for those responsible to be held accountable, saying her son had been supporting the family and had planned to continue working for several more years.

Seventy one year old Boonyuen Jathong came to collect the body of his daughter, Aricha, 40, who was travelling from Bangkok to Sisaket for a funeral.

She had stayed in contact during the journey, sending photos and making phone calls until communication suddenly stopped.

“When I heard there was a crane collapse on the train, I thought it might be her,” he said.

Boonyuen, who has worked as a village undertaker for more than 60 years, said he never imagined he would one day collect the body of his own child.

Local resident Somjai, 55, was among the first to enter the damaged carriage to help.

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Somjai, a local resident who arrived at the scene minutes after the accident, helped victims.

He broke a window and climbed inside carriage three, where he saw injured passengers and several bodies. He helped free a young boy who was trapped and then returned to help the boy’s mother before the fire spread further.

Another witness, Bee, who runs a food stall nearby, said she heard a loud crash and saw smoke coming from the train.

“People were climbing out to escape. There were children, elderly people and foreigners,” she said. “We tried to help as many as we could, but the fire became too strong.”

Authorities are continuing to investigate the cause of the collapse and the safety conditions at the construction site.

What remains are damaged carriages, an ongoing investigation and families whose lives have been permanently changed by the accident.

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Foreign media question Thailand’s safety standards after two crane collapses

A crane collapse on Rama II Road comes just one day after the train-crane accident, raising fresh safety concerns.

BANGKOK A series of crane collapses in Thailand over two consecutive days has drawn intense international media attention and renewed scrutiny of the country’s construction safety standards.

The latest incident occurred on Rama II Road in Bangkok on the morning of 15 January, a day after a construction crane collapsed onto a passenger train in Nakhon Ratchasima province, killing and injuring dozens of people.

The BBC reported that the two incidents involved the same contractor, Italian-Thai Development Plc, one of Thailand’s largest construction companies. The broadcaster said the accidents highlighted how serious incidents at construction sites remain frequent in Thailand, partly due to weak enforcement of safety regulations.

The BBC added that over the past seven years, about 150 people have been killed in accidents on the highway from Bangkok to southern Thailand, much of which has been under construction. The road has been dubbed a “road of death” because of repeated accidents.

It also reported that the same contractor had been responsible for a high-rise building that collapsed after a strong earthquake in March last year, while other nearby buildings did not collapse.

The South China Morning Post reported that Thailand’s poor construction safety record had again come under heavy criticism after the two crane collapses, placing Italian-Thai Development under renewed scrutiny as the contractor at both sites.

The Associated Press reported that the crane collapse in Sikhio district, Nakhon Ratchasima, killed 32 people after a crane used for the Thai–Chinese high-speed rail project fell onto a passing train. It said the railway is intended to link China with Southeast Asia.

AP also noted that a tunnel on the same high-speed rail project collapsed in August last year, killing three workers.

The news agency said the latest accidents had fuelled public anger, as Italian-Thai Development was also the contractor for a State Audit Office building in Bangkok that collapsed after an earthquake in March last year, killing nearly 100 people. It was described as the deadliest earthquake-related building collapse in Thailand.

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Is People’s Party a tamed and diluted version of Move Forward Party?

To avoid repeating past failures, key leaders of the main opposition People’s Party (PP) are urging voters not only to support them but to propel the party to a landslide victory on 8 February. They argue that only by winning more than half of the seats in the House of Representatives can the party be assured in forming the next government.

Many supporters were left heartbroken when then Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat failed to become prime minister, later reflecting on the experience in a Thai-language book titled in English The Almost Prime Minister.

On 7 August 2024, more than a year after the 2023 general election, the Move Forward Party (MFP) was disbanded by the Constitutional Court in a ruling that banned Pita and other executives from politics for 10 years. The party is now known as the People’s Party and is led by a much less charismatic leader, Mr. Natthapong Ruengpanyawut.

With three weeks left before the election, both the People’s Party and Natthapong are leading in most polls, although winning half the parliamentary seats is no guarantee and there is fear that the deep state will sabotage the party’s bid to form the next government, regarding the party as too radical and anti-establishment.

Truth be told, the People’s Party is no longer campaigning for the amendment of the anachronistic and draconian royal defamation law since the dissolution of the MFP. The court deemed it an attempt to overthrow the political system. Thus, there is no longer an earth-shattering call to reform the monarchy institution this time by People’s Party leaders and candidates.

On the military issue, the People’s Party used to call for wide-ranging reforms of the Thai military, long regarded as a state within a state, addicted to staging coups and holding an unfair proportion of radio waves and TV stations. The People’s Party now proposes drafting a new constitution with greater public participation, overhauling independent agencies in a bid to permanently end the legacy of power succession by coup-makers.

The party also plans to abolish compulsory military conscription and replace it with a voluntary system, while increasing welfare benefits and fair compensation to build a professional military that is transparent and accountable.

The military is enjoying a renewed popularity, more popular than any other time over the past two decades, due to their ‘successful’ war waged against Cambodia which led Thailand to occupy a dozen of disputed spots along the Thai-Cambodian border. As a result, the People’s Party is no longer portraying the Thai military as a burden to democracy.

Last week Pita, who is still active as one of the so-called ‘spiritual leaders’ of the party, even issued a public apology for having questioned, two years ago, what the Thai military are good for.

Additionally, the People’s Party has elevated the crackdown on scammers to a national agenda through a three-tier strategy: sealing loopholes in the financial system, dismantling border strongholds in Cambodia, and linking global networks to resolve the problem comprehensively. It therefore came as no surprise when the party’s current leader and prime ministerial candidate recently told the press that he supported the use of Gripen fighter jets to bomb targets in Cambodia, as the military insists they were attacking scam centres, although no definitive proof has been provided.

Given these significant changes in their stance on the monarchy and the military, it is fair to ask whether the People’s Party is a tamed or even mutated version of Move Forward Party.

The party’s new focus is on bringing in senior professionals and former top bureaucrats into the fold as prospective Cabinet members. While I welcome some of the people on the revealed Cabinet member list such as former Thammasat University dean of Faculty of Science for Learning and Education and one-time head of the progressive Thammasat Secondary School Anuchart Puangsamlee who on 7 January was formally introduced as prospective education minister under a People’s Party-led government and whom I have known personally for decades and believe that he would be more than qualified, the same cannot be said of the party’s prospective foreign minister, Mr. Pisan Manawapat.

Pisan was appointed as Thai Ambassador to Washington D.C following the May 2014 military coup led by Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha, yet he is now denying that he had ever supported the 2014 military coup. Do you really think dictator Gen Prayut chose someone who doesn’t support him and the junta as Thai Ambassador to Washington D.C.?

An article by The Washington Diplomat back in 2016 suggests otherwise, however, as the article stated that the New York Times wrote that, “After seizing power last year, General Prayuth [Chan-ocha] promised elections and a return to civilian rule of law,” wrote the New York Times editorial board in April 2015. “Not only do those promises remain unfulfilled, but General Prayuth, in place of martial law, has now granted himself sweeping executive, legislative and judicial powers under Article 44 of Thailand’s interim Constitution.”

The article on The Washington Diplomat went on to say that Pisan then wrote a letter to NYT defending the military junta.

“The ambassador struck back on those accusations in a response to the New York Times in which he wrote that, “Since May 2014, Thailand’s leaders have lifted the country out of political paralysis and violence. Until then, Thailand’s version of democracy was plagued by rampant corruption, abuse of power and absence of rule of law.”

In case you wonder why Pisan was chosen by the People’s Party, despite such disturbing record, it is worth noting that Pisan, who later became a junta-appointed senator, was among the minority of the junta-appointed senate members who voted in the failed bid to support Pita as PM. Natthapong says the man has changed, and the past is not of importance.

This invites a more pointed question: how—and how much—has the party changed since it was the Move Forward Party? Even some from within the party are asking whether the party has changed and lost its identity.

On 6 January, former People’s Party MP Ms. Kanyapat Rachitaroj posted a message on the X platform stating that she had officially decided to resign from her membership of the People’s Party.

She wrote that she had drafted this message before the announcement of the party-list results, in order to avoid accusations that she was acting out of spite after failing to get through, or that if she did get through, she would once again be told to “sit on her hands.”

Kanyapat said she had been thinking about this decision for around six months in total—dating back to the time she was told by her own party to raise her hand in support of Anutin Charnvirakul, Bhumjai Thai Party leader. Kanyapat went on to say that, in her view, the party has now changed and that the party wants enough numbers to form a government that it has to “swallow blood” and compromise in order to obtain state power, otherwise it will forever be belittled as a party that has never governed.

She reminded readers that the party won mass support precisely because it was itself, adding that one senior party leader once said that the party would not accept outside ministers or an outsider prime minister—everyone should be an MP, because they were truly elected by the people.

Kanyapat stated: “You can bring in hundreds more technocrats, professors, PhDs, and elites, but they are not worth as much as a single person with ideals who has to leave. Hundreds of doctors cannot replace people like Luk-kade, TOTO, Kaewta, or P’Mart. For me, I want to clarify that I respect the senior academics and professionals who may come in as outside cabinet members. But I place greater importance on those who have spent sufficient time with the party, who carry the party’s DNA, and who understand its identity….

“How far back do we have to retreat? You might say the retreat is to gain more conservative votes or swing voters in order to obtain power. Obtaining power is good—anyone who runs to be an MP and does not want to be in government would be unusual. But if we keep making ‘great grand compromises’ like this, then what is the point of winning in the first place?

“I want to ask you: have you ever looked at yourselves in the mirror and seen how much you have changed? Have you forgotten why you entered politics in the first place? Most importantly, you have turned friends into enemies, continually losing allies, because one leader said that people would have to choose us anyway because they have no alternative. The people are not a given. I insist on this as an ordinary citizen today—the final decision lies with the people,” Kanyapat wrote.

I also noted many months ago that Natthapong once posted photos of himself volunteering to help with the celebration of the current King’s coronation celebrations. One wonders why Natthapong eventually joined a party known to be critical of the monarchy institution instead of many other parties which claim to be royalist. There was a missing part of his ‘origin story’ and he had never clarified the matter publicly beyond saying that he would resign if the party seeks to abolish the monarchy institution. While everyone has an origin story, I feel that something about Natthapong’s is amiss. After all, Bruce Wayne didn’t become batman without a crucial origin story where, when he was a boy, his parents were killed in front of him.

Thinking about how the People’s Party is different from MFP, and whether it is a diluted version of its former self reminds me of some well-known foreign restaurants in Bangkok.

Anyone who has tried a foreign restaurant chain in Thailand knows the pattern: opening day brilliance, followed by a slow but unmistakable decline. Once the foreign chef who designed the kitchen flies home, the recipes are adjusted, intentionally or not, shortcuts creep in, and the food gradually mutates—no longer quite what it was.

This makes me think of the People’s Party, which has changed its “head chef” many times within just a few short years. As for the Democrat Party, it kept changing until things fell apart—so much so that the old chef, Abhisit Vejjajiva, had to now return to take personal charge of the kitchen. But the story about Abhisit is for another column.

#Thailand #PeoplesParty #Natthapong #Election2026 #Abhisit #Democrat #retention

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Thai business questions US visa halt, urges quick clarity

Thai business questions US visa halt, urges quick clarity

BANGKOK — Thai private-sector leaders are closely watching a reported US plan to suspend visa issuance, warning it could hurt the investment climate and questioning why Thailand has been placed on a watch list, while urging the Foreign Ministry to seek urgent clarification.

Kriengkrai Thiennukul, chairman of the Federation of Thai Industries, said reports that the United States under President Donald Trump is preparing to suspend visa issuance to 75 countries from 21 January, including Thailand, are consistent with Trump’s campaign stance to reset and reform domestic problems. Those include crime, homelessness and illegal immigration, which US leaders have blamed on past liberal and refugee policies.

“A broad visa suspension is not surprising in policy terms. What is surprising is why Thailand has been included,” Kriengkrai said. “Given bilateral relations, Thailand should not be viewed as an undesirable country in the eyes of the United States.”

There has so far been no official explanation for Thailand’s inclusion among the 75 countries. Kriengkrai said the Foreign Ministry should urgently seek direct clarification from US authorities to identify the real reasons and pursue Thailand’s removal from the list as soon as possible.

Although the reported suspension would cover only certain visa categories and would not directly affect tourism, it could still damage Thailand’s international image, he said. Visa exemptions or favourable treatment reflect confidence in a country’s systems, credibility and standards.

Thailand is one of the world’s major tourism destinations. More than 33 million foreign visitors arrived last year, including nearly 1 million Americans.

The United States is also a key source of foreign direct investment in Thailand, particularly in technology and data centres.

Kriengkrai said Thailand’s placement on a watch list could be linked to several factors, including transnational crime, scam gangs or perceptions related to money laundering. Negative news on these issues is often assessed collectively, even if it remains unclear which factors carry the most weight in US considerations.

With the global economy fragile and Thailand still seeking an economic recovery, attracting foreign investment remains crucial, he said.

“Being on such a list, even indirectly, affects investors’ risk assessments and could weigh on investment decisions,” Kriengkrai said.

He added that the government needs to act proactively, both diplomatically and by improving the country’s image, to maintain confidence.

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Chemical spill sends dozens to hospital in Thailand

Chemical spill sends dozens to hospital in Thailand

SAMUT PRAKAN — Rescue workers and medical teams evacuated nearly 50 residents to hospital after a chemical leak contaminated a drainage canal in Samut Prakan province, prompting a multi-agency emergency response.

At about 09:30 on 15 January 2026, emergency medical teams from several hospitals in Phra Samut Chedi district, volunteers from the Ruamkatanyu Foundation and local authorities deployed more than 10 vehicles to evacuate residents from a community behind Khu Sang Market in Moo 1, Pak Khlong Bang Pla Kod subdistrict. The area is home to about 60 households.

The evacuation followed a leak of ethyl acetate, a colourless, flammable organic solvent with a sweet, fruity smell commonly used in adhesives, nail polish remover and printing inks, from a cargo vessel while chemicals were being transferred at a private company’s pier. The substance flowed into a nearby canal, affecting residents, particularly the elderly, children and bed-bound patients.

Authorities said more than 20 people were initially taken to nearby hospitals after suffering symptoms linked to chemical exposure.

Chemical spill sends dozens to hospital in Thailand

One resident, 59-year-old Phat Saimanee, said she first noticed a strong, acrid smell around 05:00 while inside her home. She experienced dizziness, nausea and vomiting and initially thought the odour came from a nearby hospital. After investigating a floodgate across from the community, close to the company involved, she saw fumes rising from the water and said the smell was far stronger than ordinary wastewater.

Other residents reported waking between 04:00 and 05:00 to a pungent odour resembling thinner, alcohol or fresh paint. As the smell intensified through the morning, many felt dizzy, vomited or struggled to breathe, forcing them to leave their homes. Some complained of chest tightness and shortness of breath and were taken to hospital for checks.

Skulwalai Cheewbangyang, director of public health and environment at Phra Samut Chedi municipality, said preliminary inspections confirmed the leaked substance was ethyl acetate, which the company stores for industrial clients and transports by boat. She said a contractor made an error during transfer, releasing the chemical into the wrong pipeline.

The company told authorities the leak began around 02:00 and was contained within 30 minutes. The spill has since been stopped, she said, but the chemical can cause throat and eye irritation and skin inflammation. At least seven residents were confirmed hospitalised at the time of her briefing, with figures still being compiled.

Local officials, public health workers, disaster prevention teams, hospital staff and rescue volunteers assisted with evacuations throughout the morning, moving nearly all residents out of the affected area except for a small number at the far end of the community who were not impacted.

Later, company representatives deployed foam agents to neutralise remaining chemicals and began pumping contaminated water from the canal. Officials said water quality and oxygen levels would be monitored and restored as quickly as possible, and affected residents would receive compensation and assistance.

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Myanmar NUG urges nationals in Thailand to respect law and cultural traditions

Myanmar’s opposition National Unity Government (NUG) on 14 January urged Myanmar nationals living in Thailand to respect Thai law, avoid political involvement and live peacefully with local communities, following a widely reported street violence incident in Bangkok.

In a statement issued by its Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the NUG said many Myanmar citizens had fled to Thailand because of “ongoing atrocities and brutal repression” by the military junta and limited economic opportunities at home.

The NUG called on Myanmar nationals in Thailand to refrain from involvement in Thai political or administrative affairs, avoid illegal activities, respect Thai laws and cultural traditions, and live in harmony with host communities.

It also expressed gratitude to King Maha Vajiralongkorn, the Royal Thai Government and the Thai people for providing protection and refuge, and appealed for continued humanitarian support.

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The statement followed a violent incident involving Thai motorcycle delivery riders and Myanmar workers in Bangkok earlier this week.

According to Thai media reports, a road dispute between a rider and a Myanmar worker escalated when three riders later went to a restaurant to resolve the issue, but were allegedly attacked by a group of about six Myanmar workers using weapons, damaging one motorcycle.

The restaurant owner said all staff involved had been dismissed. However, the incident triggered anger among riders, with nearly 400 reportedly gathering outside the restaurant in protest, prompting widespread criticism and debate on Thai social media.

The National Unity Government is a government-in-exile formed by opponents of Myanmar’s military junta following the 2021 coup.

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