Heavy smog is seen in the sky over Bangkok on Monday morning. Photo: @SuGiRii / Twitter
BANGKOK — Weather conditions and vehicle emissions are being blamed for the return of smoggy skies over the capital.
As of Monday morning, Bangkok’s air pollution had risen to unhealthy levels, according to independent measurements. The Pollution Control Department said the level of ultrafine particles in 36 areas across the metropolitan area exceeds acceptable levels.
Citing information from the Meteorological Department, officials said the increased pollution was due to higher temperatures, a lack of wind and the return to traffic as usual following the long New Year’s holiday.
They encouraged people to use public transportation, discontinue use of older vehicles and refrain from setting fires in open spaces.
According to the international Air Quality Index, Bangkok’s pollution ranked 164 as of 10am, well within its range of unhealthy air that people should avoid prolonged exposure to. Over two weeks ago, it ranked Bangkok’s higher at 184. City Hall has announced a few active attempts to remedy the situation, including spraying water in areas where the smog is heaviest.
The cast and crew of "The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story" pose in the press room with the award for best television limited series or motion picture made for television at the 76th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Sunday in Beverly Hills, California. Photo: Jordan Strauss /Invision / AP
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Complete list of winners at the 76th annual Golden Globe Awards, presented Sunday in Beverly Hills, California, by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association:
Film
Drama: “Bohemian Rhapsody”
Actress, Drama: Glenn Close, “The Wife”
Actor, Drama: Rami Malek, “Bohemian Rhapsody”
Comedy or Musical: “Green Book”
Actor, Comedy or Musical: Christian Bale, “Vice”
Actress, Comedy or Musical: Olivia Colman, “The Favourite”
Actress-Supporting Role: Regina King, “If Beale Street Could Talk”
Thailand's head coach Milovan Rajevac reacts during the AFC Asian Cup group A match Sunday between Thailand and India at the Al Nahyan Stadium in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Photo: Kamran Jebreili / Associated Press
BANGKOK — The Football Association of Thailand has fired Milovan Rajevac as head coach after the national team’s 4-1 opening loss to India at the Asian Cup.
President Somyot Poompanmoung had warned ahead of the continental tournament that Rajevac’s job was on the line if he couldn’t take the team to the second round.
He announced the decision to fire Rajevac after Sunday’s game in Abu Dhabi, despite Thailand still having group games against Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates to play.
In a statement released early Monday he says, “It was not the playing format that Thai FA and the team supporters desired. I hereby announce the suspension of the contract with Milovan Rajevac as the coach of Thailand’s national team.”
Assistant Sirisak Yodyathai will take over as interim head coach for the tournament.
Rajevac was hired as the Thailand head coach in April 2017 to replace Kiatsisak Senamuang and had been under increasing pressure since Thailand failed to defend the AFF Cup title last month, losing to Malaysia in the semifinals on away goal rules.
The 65-year-old Serbian was voted the African confederation’s coach of the year in 2010 after guiding Ghana to the World Cup quarterfinals.
Officers in front of the Immigration Bureau Police operation center on Monday afternoon at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok.
SAMUT PRAKAN— A Saudi woman who says she fled her family to seek asylum in Australia is surrounded by police in an airport hotel room where she faces imminent deportation by Thai authorities.
Police have cordoned off the Miracle Transit Hotel and are not allowing anyone inside after Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun, 18, refused to leave her room this morning and board an 11:15am Kuwaiti Airlines flight to take her back to her family she fled while on vacation.
Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun Monday morning at Suvarnabhumi Airport. Photo: Sophiemcneill / Twitter
Pruettipong Prayonsiri, commander of the Immigration Bureau’s airport immigration division, said this morning that police were working with Saudi Arabia’s embassy to send her back to her family.
“Wherever they came from, they have to go back there. If someone came from China, then they have to return to China. If they came from Japan, they have to come from Japan. They can’t go to a third country,” Maj. Gen. Pruettipong said.
Alqunun says she was fleeing years of abuse at the hands of her family and faces death if she is deported. She began tweeting late Saturday after Thai authorities stopped her in transit from Kuwait. She possesses a visa for Australia, where she was planning to seek asylum.
“She’s not a refugee. She’s a child, and her guardians want her back,” Pruettipong said. “The embassy did all the work with us.”
A source close to the owners of the airport hotel, who asked not to be identified, said just before 2pm that the authorities were pressuring them to kick her out.
Just before 3pm, a court denied an injunction that would have allowed Alqunun to travel freely, according to a statement posted by lawyers representing the Saudi teen. Nadthasiri Bergman of Human Rights Lawyer Association said they would appeal.
The hashtag #SaveRahaf is trending on Thai social media. Thai Raksa Chart politician Chaturon Chaisang, whose passport was seized by the junta following the coup, tweeted in support of her right to fly to Australia. The Future Forward Party also issued a statement supporting Alqunun.
Deputy junta chairman Prawit Wongsuwan maintained that Alqunun would be sent back to her home country.
“This is a matter between Thailand and Saudi Arabia,” Gen. Prawit told reporters.
On Twitter, Alqunun wrote of being in “real danger” if forced to return to her family under pressure from Saudi authorities. She also posted a copy of her passport to provide evidence of her identity.
“I’m calling for all people inside the transit area in Bangkok to protest against deporting me to Kuwait. Please I need u all,” Alqunun tweetedMonday morning. “I’m shouting out for help of humanity.”
I’m calling for all people inside the transit area in Bangkok to protest against deporting me to Kuwait Please I need u all I’m shouting out for help of humanity
— Rahaf Mohammed رهف محمد القنون (@rahaf84427714) January 7, 2019
German Ambassador to Thailand Georg Schmidt tweetedMonday that he was concerned about her case.
For runaway Saudi women, fleeing can be a matter of life and death, and they are almost always doing so to escape male relatives.
Alqunun told Human Rights Watch she was fleeing abuse from her family, including beatings and death threats from her male relatives who forced her to remain in her room for six months for cutting her hair and renouncing Islam.
“I am giving my family 48 hours (to) either stop or I will publish everything that will incriminate them,” she wrote on Twitter.
The Associated Press reached Alqunun by telephone in her hotel room where she spoke briefly, saying that someone took her passport after telling her she could get a visa for Thailand. She said an hour later, several people came and told her they knew she had run away, that her family wants her and she should return to Saudi Arabia. She did not elaborate.
Alqunun told Human Rights Watch that she arrived at Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok Saturday evening from Kuwait, but that a diplomat from the Saudi Embassy in Bangkok seized her passport to prevent her traveling to Australia. Saudi and Thai officials then told her she would be returned to Kuwait on Monday, where her father and brother are awaiting her.
Saudi Arabia’s charge d’affaires in Bangkok Abdullah al-Shuaibi denied Saudi authorities were involved in any way.
He was quoted in Saudi press saying that Alqunun was stopped by Thai authorities because she did not appear to have a return ticket, a hotel reservation or itinerary to show she was a tourist. He said the Saudi Embassy has no authority to stop anyone at the airport and that this decision rests with Thai officials.
There are guards outside Rahaf’s hotel room. It’s 6.20am in Thailand. She’s been threatened to be put on the 11.15 am @KuwaitAirways flight. She’s been denied access to a lawyer. She wants to speak to @UNHCRThailand and claim asylum #SaveRahafhttps://t.co/yHaOBom9E7
“She was stopped by airport authorities because she violated Thai laws,” he was quoted as saying in Sabq, a state-aligned Saudi news website.
“The embassy is only monitoring the situation,” al-Shuaibi said.
Alqunun’s plight mirrors that of other Saudi women who have tried to flee abusive or restrictive family conditions.
A Saudi activist familiar with other cases of females who’ve runaway said often the women are young, inexperienced and unprepared for the obstacles and risks involved in seeking asylum when they attempt to flee.
Speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of repercussion, the activist said there have been instances where Saudi women runaways were stopped by authorities in Hong Kong or the Philippines en route to Australia or New Zealand. In some cases, Saudi authorities have been involved in forcing women to return to their families and in other cases local authorities suspect the women of seeking asylum and deport them.
The Thai authorities’ intervention in Alqunun’s case comes one month after it detained a Bahraini political refugee on vacation in Thailand. After public attention was drawn to the imminent deportation of Hakeem Ali Mohamed Ali AlAraibi, who was detained at his government’s request while returning to Australia, Thailand jailed him and set a hearing date. He remains in custody at the Bangkok Remand Prison.
Alqunun appears to have attempted to flee while on a family visit to Kuwait.
Saudi Arabia requires that a woman have the consent of a male relative — usually a father or husband — to obtain a passport, travel abroad or marry.
Saudi women runaways, however, have increasingly turned to social media to amplify their calls for help.
In 2017, Dina Lasloom triggered a firestorm online when she was stopped en-route to Australia where she planned to seek asylum. She was forced to return to Saudi Arabia and was not publicly heard from again, according to activists tracking her whereabouts.
Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated Nadthasiri’s firm.
Additional reporting Teeranai Charuvastra, Associated Press’ Grant Peck and Aya Batrawy
Anthony Rossomando, from left, Andrew Wyatt, Lady Gaga and Mark Ronson pose in the press room with the award for best original song, motion picture for "Shallow" from the film "A Star Is Born" at the 76th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Sunday in Beverly Hills, California. Photo by Jordan Strauss / Invision / Associated Press
NEW YORK — Lady Gaga won for “A Star Is Born,” Christian Bale thanked Satan for inspiration in playing former Vice President Dick Cheney and co-host Sandra Oh took home an award, too, after speaking passionately about “faces of change” at the 76th Golden Globes.
Politics were largely absent from the ceremony Sunday at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California, before Bale took the stage for winning best actor in a musical or comedy for his lead performance in Adam McKay’s “Vice.”
“What do you think? Mitch McConnell next?” joked the Welsh-born actor, referring to the Senate’s majority leader. “Thank you to Satan for giving me inspiration for this role.”
Oh and Andy Samberg opened the Globes, put on by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, on a note of congeniality, including a mock roast of attendees and a string of jokes that playfully commented on critiques of Hollywood. Oh performed an impression of a sexist caveman film executive who casts like the title of Damien Chazelle’s Neil Armstrong drama: “First … man!”
Noting the success of “Crazy Rich Asians,” Oh alluded to films with white stars in Asian roles like “Ghost in the Shell” and “Aloha,” the latter of which prompted Emma Stone, who starred in “Aloha,” to shout out “I’m sorry!” from the crowd.
But Oh, who later also won for her performance on the BBC America drama series “Killing Eve,” closed their opening monologue on a serious note explaining why she was hosting with Samberg.
“I wanted to be here to look out at this audience and witness this moment of change,” said Oh, tearing up and gazing at minority nominees in attendance. “Right now, this moment is real. Trust me, this is real. Because I see you. And I see you. All of these faces of change. And now, so will everyone else.”
This image released by NBC shows the cast of “Black Panther,” from left, Chadwick Boseman, Danai Gurira, Lupita Nyong’o and Michael B. Jordan presenting the award for best animated feature during the 76th Annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Sunday in Beverly Hills, California. Photo: Paul Drinkwater / NBC via Associated Press
Some of those faces Oh alluded to won. Mahershala Ali, whom the foreign press association overlooked for his Oscar-winning performance in “Moonlight,” won best supporting actor for “Green Book.” While the Globes, decided by 88 voting members of the HFPA, have little relation to the Academy Awards, they can offer a boost when it matter most. Oscar nomination voting begins Monday.
“Green Book,” Peter Farrelly’s interracial road trip through the early ’60s Deep South, also won for its screenplay, giving a boost to a film that has been much criticized for relying on racial tropes.
As expected, Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Anthony Rossomando and Andrew Wyatt won best song for the signature tune from “A Star Is Born,” the film most expected to dominate the Globes.
“Can I just say that as a woman in music, it’s really hard to be taken seriously as a musician and as songwriter and these three incredible men, they lifted me up,” Gaga said.
Though the Globes are put on by foreign journalists, they don’t including foreign language films in their two best picture categories (for drama and musical/comedy). That left Netflix’s Oscar hopeful, Alfonso Cuaron’s memory-drenched masterwork “Roma” out of the top category. It still won best foreign language film.
Best supporting actress in a motion picture went to the Oscar front-runner Regina King for her matriarch of Barry Jenkins’ James Baldwin adaptation “If Beale Street Could Talk.” King spoke about the Time’s Up movement and vowed that the crews of everything she produces in the next two years will be half women. She challenged others to do likewise.
“Stand with us in solidarity and do the same,” said King, who was also nominated for the TV series “Seven Seconds.”
The cast and crew of “The Americans” pose in the press room with the award for best television series, drama at the 76th annual Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Sunday in Beverly Hills, California. Photo: Jordan Strauss / Invision / Associated Press
A year after the Globes were awash in a sea of black and #MeToo discussion replaced fashion chatter, the red carpet largely returned to more typical colors and conversation. Some attendees wore ribbons that read TIMESUPx2, to highlight the second year of the gender equality campaign that last year organized the Globes black-clad demonstration. Alyssa Milano, the actress who was integral in making #MeToo go viral, said on the red carpet that in the past year a “really wonderful sisterhood has formed.”
The night’s first win went to Michael Douglas for the Netflix series “The Kominsky Method.” Douglas dedicated the honor to his 102-year-old father. The second award went to the acclaimed “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” for best animated film.
For its sixth and final season, FX’s “The Americans” took best drama series over shows like Amazon’s conspiracy thriller “Homecoming” and Oh’s own “Killing Eve.” Richard Madden, the breakout star of the terrorism suspense series “Bodyguard,” won best actor in a drama series. Ben Wishaw took best supporting actor in a limited series for “A Very English Scandal.”
The press association typically likes to have first crack at series that weren’t eligible for the 2018 Emmys. They did this year in not just “The Kominsky Method” and “Bodyguard” but also the Showtime prison drama “Escape at Dannemora.” Its star, Patricia Arquette, won for best actress in a limited series.
Usually the Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s ceremony is known for its freewheeling frivolity and fun. The free-flowing booze helps. But the 2018 Globes were the first major televised awards in Hollywood following the downfall of Harvey Weinstein and the subsequent push for greater gender equality in the film industry.
Last year’s show, like a lot of recent awards shows, saw ratings decline. Some 19 million tuned in to the Seth Meyers-hosted broadcast, an 11-percent decline in viewership. This year, NBC has one thing in its favor: an NFL lead in. Ahead of the Globes, NBC broadcast the late afternoon wild card game between the Chicago Bears and the Philadelphia Eagles, which proved to be a nail-bitingly close game — likely delivering the network a huge audience.
Jeff Bridges received the Globes’ honorary Cecil B. DeMille Award and in his speech said actors could change society and “turn this ship around.” A similar television achievement award was also launched, dubbed the Carol Burnett Award. Its first honoree was Burnett, herself.
“I’m kind of really gob-smacked by this,” said Burnett. “Does this mean that I get to accept it every year?”
Sultan Muhammad V, center, salutes after his welcome ceremony as he walks with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, right, in 2016 at the Parliament House in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian King Sultan Muhammad V has abdicated after just two years on the throne.
The palace said in a statement Sunday that the 49-year-old Sultan Muhammad V had resigned with immediate effect, cutting short his five-year term. No reason was given in the statement.
It’s the first abdication in Malaysia’s history.
Sultan Muhammad V, ruler of northeast Kelantan state, was installed in December 2016 as one of Malaysia’s youngest constitutional monarchs.
He is said to have married a 25-year-old former Russian beauty queen in November. The reports in Russian and British media and on social media featured pictures of the wedding, which reportedly took place in Moscow.
Under a unique system maintained since Malaysia’s independence from Britain in 1957, nine hereditary state rulers take turns as king for five-year terms.
Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park, the first and only Marriott Marquis hotel in the Asia Pacific region, has appointed Simon Bell as its new General Manager, effective January 7th, 2019.
A highly experienced hospitality professional, Simon has spent the last 26 years with Marriott International, having commenced his career in 1992 at Surfers Paradise Marriott Resort & Spa, Australia Since then he has worked his way up through the leadership ranks in a series of departments, including operations, finance, revenue management and sales & marketing.
Simon’s first General Manager role came in 2009 at Courtyard by Marriott Seoul Times Square, which he successfully opened to become the first Courtyard by Marriott hotel in South Korea. His leadership prowess then helped this new property win the coveted “Hotel of the Year” award for 2010.
In June 2011, Simon transferred to Renaissance Seoul Hotel, South Korea as General Manager, spending three successful years at this iconic hotel. He was then appointed as General Manager at Singapore Marriott Tang Plaza Hotel in June 2014 – his most recent role. Additional to his managerial assignments, Simon also served as Chairman of the Seoul Business Council and Singapore Business Council.
He now takes over as General Manager of Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park from Bob Fabiano, who led this landmark downtown hotel through its extensive refurbishment program and grand reopening in 2016. Marriott International would like to thank Bob, a 41-year company veteran, for helping to successfully re-establish Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park as one of Thailand’s leading hotels.
Nestled in the heart of Sukhumvit, Bangkok’s most popular downtown district, Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park features 1,388 rooms and suites, over 5,000 square meters of conference and banqueting space, ten restaurants and bars and extensive leisure facilities. This makes it the largest hotel in Thailand’s capital city and a destination in its own right.
Diageo Moet Hennessy (Thailand) Co., Ltd., invites all cocktail lovers to explore Phuket’s vibrant cocktail culture and nightlife in “Diageo Reserve World Class Phuket Bar Hopping”. The bar-hopping tour is aimed at offering participants a taste of Phuket’s alluring cocktail culture through 5 leading outstanding Phuket bars known for their own distinct identities. They will get to taste the specially designed signature cocktails that capture the quintessence of the “Pearl of Andaman”.
Phuket, one of Thailand’s most popular tourist destinations, attracts millions of visitors annually. Apart from its multitude of attractions, Phuket is known for its cuisine as well as its cocktail culture that’s full of charm and character.
Amid the plethora of restaurants, Phuket boasts top-quality bars whose bartenders have a real knack for concocting some of the world’s best cocktails. Phuket is a melting pot of cultures and cuisines, and its cocktail scene is so vibrant and distinctive with drinks using local ingredients and a particular mixology technique. Phuket bartenders are known for their prowess in mixing up great tasting drinks. No surprise then that this tropical paradise continues to attract visitors from all around the world.
Given the potential of Phuket’s cocktail culture for further growth, Diageo Moet Hennessy (Thailand) Co., Ltd., the leading importer and distributor of top-quality alcoholic beverages including whiskies and spirits in Thailand, is organizing “Diageo Reserve World Class Phuket Bar Hopping” to introduce a selection of Phuket’s outstanding and unique bars to tourists and cocktail lovers alike and promote the holiday resort as a new destination for tourists from all over the world.
Pornseak Parksuwan, Diageo Reserve Channel Director of Diageo Moet Hennessy (Thailand) Co., Ltd., says, “Over the past several years, the bartending profession in Thailand has secured an elevated status. Bartenders in Phuket have taken part in national competitions, and the bartending scene has grown into a professional circle with lots of bartending professionals and ranging training activities. As a result, Phuket’s cocktail culture has been growing by leaps and bound so much so that Phuket is now a full-fledged cocktail culture with its own unique bars, talented bartenders, quality drinks and incredible flavors. The bar-hopping tour seeks to proclaim Phuket to be a destination for new cocktail perspectives that are worthy of exploring and savoring. Its bar scene is full of charm as befitting this island paradise. In the future when more consumers stream through Phuket to absorb Phuket’s cocktail culture, its bar scene will become more competitive and Phuket’s society of professional bartenders stronger. The development of the potential of Phuket’s cocktail culture will carry on continuously and sustainably. Consequently Phuket will become a destination that appeals to drinkers from all over the world.”
“Diageo Reserve World Class Phuket Bar Hopping” will be held from September 14-15. The tour will take in 5 Phuket bars: Dibuka, DibukHouse, TuKabKhao, Joe’s Downstairs and Catch Beach Club. Each place is unique and interesting in its own way and designed to satisfy diverse lifestyle needs and cater to different tastes. The highlight is that one of Phuket’s top World-Class bartenders will make an appearance at each participating bar to concoct a special-recipe cocktail that captures to the quintessence of Phuket and the character of each bar.
The first destination on the bar-hopping tour is Dibuka, a restaurant that serves local delicacies in a fusion style using the restaurant’s own recipes. On the menu are Thai and Italian cuisines. The atmosphere is airy with the decorations mimicking a tin mine in the past. The restaurant serves both classic and signature cocktails.
DibukHouse is a bar that many cocktail lovers fall in love and is dear to their hearts. The bar owes much of its character to its drinks created in the style of craft cocktails by bartenders renowned for their scrupulous attention to detail. Its regular cocktails feel much more special than those found elsewhere. What brings great excitement to customers are the country’s celebrated bartenders who take turns to make appearances at the bar to create incredible cocktails every now and then.
Tu Kab Khao is a restaurant that serves local specialties and shines with Sino-Portuguese architecture. The menu celebrates original Phuket recipes that tend toward strong pungent tastes that define authentic southern-style food. It boasts a wide and varied repertoire of cocktails including the signature “Cocktail Tu Kab Khao” that conveys the restaurant’s sense of identity quite well.
Joe’s Downstairs is one of Phuket’s notable seaside restaurants known for its “Sunset Cocktails”. Cocktail lovers will enjoy sipping from their glasses while savouring the magnificent sunset view. The atmosphere is airy and relaxed thanks to the restaurant’s all-white decor. Its terrace bar is one of Phuket’s most impressive.
Catch Beach Club is a premium establishment on Bang Thao Beach and a favorite hangout for those who enjoy partying. It houses a restaurant, lounge and quality bar under one roof. It serves great tasting food and incredible cocktails carefully concocted for everyone’s enjoyment. Catch Beach Club is teeming with tourists at night. But its relaxed atmosphere attracts quite a few cocktail lovers during daytime as well.
Diageo is hoping that these unique Phuket-style cocktails – to be created by leading WORLD CLASS bartenders at the leading bars participating in “Diageo Reserve World Class Phuket Bar Hopping” – will enable tourists to love Phuket’s awe-inspiring cocktail culture and regard this beautiful island as a special destination that cocktail lovers the world over must visit once in their lifetime.
CHICAGO — A suburban Detroit woman and South Side Chicago man are recovering in a Chicago hospital following rare triple transplant surgeries that gave them the healthy heart, liver and kidney each needed — and a new friendship they never expected.
University of Chicago Medicine doctors announced Friday that they successfully completed the triple organ transplants on Sarah McPharlin, a 29-year-old woman of Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan, and Daru Smith, a 29-year-old father from Chicago’s South Side, within 30 hours of one another.
McPharlin had two transplants canceled earlier in the year, pushing her surgery back.
“Maybe because it’s only luck that both of those transplants were supposed to be at the same time,” Nir Uriel, the director of heart failure, transplant and mechanical circulatory support for the hospital, said at a news conference Friday. University of Chicago Medicine has performed the most heart-liver-kidney transplants in the world.
Just eight minutes after a medical team finished Smith’s liver transplant on Dec. 20, hospital staff learned that donor organs were available for McPharlin. Smith, who finished surgery that day, became only the 16th person in the U.S. to undergo a heart-liver-kidney transplant and hours later on Dec. 21 McPharlin became the 17th.
Each surgery required a 22-person team, with some staffers working on both patients. The hospital also performed five other organ transplants during that time period.
Smith and McPharlin, who had her first heart transplant at the age of 12, arrived at the Chicago hospital in November. But neither knew they were both seeking a triple transplant when they first met during pre-therapy sessions ahead of surgery. The sessions were quiet and patients didn’t share details about their transplants.
But McPharlin’s mother, who quit her job as a school teacher in Michigan to be with her daughter for treatment, pried out of Smith that he was awaiting the same organs as McPharlin.
“It’s been mind-blowing and amazing, having someone go through the process with me, gave me more motivation,” Smith, a truck driver, said during a video interview at the hospital Friday.
The pair, who are recovering on the same hospital floor, share walks and give each other high-fives when they pass one another in the hallways. Their families are already planning a dinner together in the city once the two are released and feeling better. Nurses say they notice a difference in recovery for the two compared to other transplant patients, because they have gone through the same unusual and debilitating surgery together.
McPharlin and Smith notice too.
“It was so cool to know we would be able to see each other progress together,” McPharlin, an occupational therapist, said Friday. “It was really cool to see how Daru was getting up in the hall and I knew eventually, or pretty soon, I would be doing the same.”
BANGKOK — The tropical storm that left at least two people dead and hundreds of homes damaged has moved over the western coast of Thailand where its ferocity has dropped, the national weather service said Saturday.
Although the storm – called Pabuk – is now a tropical depression since entering the Andaman Sea, its effects continue to be felt in multiple provinces of Thailand, including the south and Bangkok. Rains are expected in the capital city while residents in the southern region are advised to keep boats ashore today.
Affected provinces include Phetchaburi, Prachuap Khiri Khan, Chumphon, Surat Thani, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Ranong, Phang Nga, Phuket and Krabi. Those living in these areas are advised to be on the lookout for possible flash floods caused by severe rain.
Along the paths where Pabuk left a scene of devastation, officials and residents are inspecting the damage. Government Savings Bank announced today its debtors whose homes were damaged or destroyed by the storm would have their loan payment deferred for two years.
One fisherman drowned after his boat capsized in the storm, and a motorist was killed in Nakhon Si Thammarat after he crashed his car into a tree amid the heavy rainstorm.
Damages are still being assessed as of Saturday. Authorities in Songkhla said more than 6,000 households were affected by the storm in that province alone. In Pak Phanang district in Nakhon Si Thammarat, believed to be the worst hit area, many houses were completely torn down.
Samui Airport, which closed yesterday due to the strong winds, reopened today. Nakhon Si Thammarat Airport is set to reopen in the afternoon.
Rough waves also struck a district as far northeast as Sattahip in Chonburi, damaging some homes there. Road floods were reported in Phetchaburi and Samut Prakan provinces.
But in Nakhon Si Thammarat, where Pabuk made landfall yesterday, the rains appeared to ease Saturday morning and the sun was shining over the battered coasts. Evacuees in some shelters were allowed to return home this morning.
Those still needing assistance in the south can contact tourist police or disaster offices for information about shelters and evacuation orders at:
Phuket Area (DDPM): 076-218-444
Koh Samui and Nearby Islands : 077-430-018 (Tourist Police); 077-420-953 or 199 (DDPM)
Krabi and Nearby Islands (Tourist Police): 075-637-208
Nakhon Si Thammarat (DDPM): 081-797-5499
Scenes of devastation in Nakhon Si ThammaratScenes of devastation in Nakhon Si Thammarat