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Lawmakers Scramble to Find a Place to Meet

A 2013 file photo of a parliament debate in session.

BANGKOK — There’s less than a month to go before the parliament reconvenes, but junta-appointed lawmakers have yet to decide on where to meet.

With the 44-year-old Parliament Building slated to be shut down and returned to the palace on Dec. 26, the National Legislative Assembly said Friday that proposals to rent conference halls to use are still under consideration. The choices are now shortlisted to three potential venues, a deputy house speaker told reporters.

Surachai Liengboonlertchai said the candidates are – in the order of viability – the TOT auditorium in Chaeng Wattana, the army-owned Channel 5 conference hall in Phaya Thai and the UN offices on Ratchadamnoen Avenue. He said he wished he had more time to consider other options.

“We’re running into obstacles because there’s little time left,” Surachai said. “It doesn’t allow us to talk to a lot of venue owners.”

The next parliament meeting is scheduled for Jan. 10, and the new parliament building is still under construction. Work isn’t expected to be finished until June at the earliest.

Surachai wouldn’t say how much money will be spent on rent.

“I cannot disclose details of rent, because I still have to negotiate,” the deputy speaker said. “But, because this is an urgent matter, we aren’t prioritizing cost in finding a location. We are prioritizing security.”

The current parliament building, located in the Dusit district, will be returned to the Royal Household Bureau. Plans for the facility have yet to be announced.

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Dusit Zoo That Recalled Old Bangkok Soon Just a Memory (Photos)

Nang Loeng Race Track to Close After 102 Years

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Nancy Wilson, Grammy Winning Jazz Singer, Dead at 81

LOS ANGELES — Grammy-winning jazz and pop singer Nancy Wilson has died.

Her manager Devra Hall Levy tells The Associated Press late Thursday night that Wilson died peacefully after a long illness at her home in Pioneertown, a California desert community near Joshua Tree National Park. She was 81.

Influenced by Dinah Washington, Nat “King” Cole and other stars, Wilson covered everything from jazz standards to “Little Green Apples” and in the 1960s alone released eight albums that reached the top 20 on Billboard’s pop charts.

Sometimes elegant and understated, or quick and conversational, she was best known for such songs as her breakthrough “Guess Who I Saw Today” and the 1964 hit “(You Don’t Know) How Glad I Am,” which drew upon Broadway, pop and jazz.

Wilson retired from touring in 2011.

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Week’s Asia Photos: Thailand Hosts Miss Universe as Enemies Shake Hands

Miss El Salvador Marisela de Montecristo displays her costume Monday during Miss Universe National Costume Show in Chon Buri, Thailand. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
Miss El Salvador Marisela de Montecristo displays her costume Monday during Miss Universe National Costume Show in Chon Buri, Thailand. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

Officers from North and South Korea shake hands at the Demilitarized Zone that divides the two countries during an on-site inspection of guard posts that each side had removed as part of measures to reduce tensions.

In other images from the Asia-Pacific region this week, a Chinese policeman stands outside the Canadian Embassy in Beijing as tensions between the two countries soared following the detentions of two Canadians on charges of endangering national security.

Myanmar activists light candles during a rally in Yangon to mark the anniversary of the arrests of two Reuters reporters who are among a group of journalists being honored by Time magazine as its “Person of the Year.”

Philippine air force personnel unload three church bells that were returned by the United States after they were seized by American colonial forces in 1901 as war booty.

Iceland's Anton Svein McKee competes Thursday in heats for the men's 200m breaststroke during the 14th FINA World Swimming Championships in Hangzhou, China Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press
Iceland’s Anton Svein McKee competes Thursday in heats for the men’s 200m breaststroke during the 14th FINA World Swimming Championships in Hangzhou, China Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press
Visitors huddle under umbrellas Thursday in the snow at the Gyeongbok Palace, the main royal palace during the Joseon Dynasty, and one of South Korea's well known landmarks in Seoul, South Korea. Photo: Ahn Young-joon / Associated Press
Visitors huddle under umbrellas Thursday in the snow at the Gyeongbok Palace, the main royal palace during the Joseon Dynasty, and one of South Korea’s well known landmarks in Seoul, South Korea. Photo: Ahn Young-joon / Associated Press
A Kashmiri man shouts at an Indian policeman Sunday as he stands inside a damaged house at the site of a gun-battle in Mujagund area some 25 Kilometers (16 miles) from Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir. Photo: Mukhtar Khan / Associated Press
A Kashmiri man shouts at an Indian policeman Sunday as he stands inside a damaged house at the site of a gun-battle in Mujagund area some 25 Kilometers (16 miles) from Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir. Photo: Mukhtar Khan / Associated Press
Philippine Air Force personnel unload three church bells Tuesday seized by American troops as war trophies more than a century ago, as they arrive in suburban Pasay city, southeast of Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press
Philippine Air Force personnel unload three church bells Tuesday seized by American troops as war trophies more than a century ago, as they arrive in suburban Pasay city, southeast of Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press
A policeman stands watch Wednesday outside the Canadian Embassy in Beijing. A Canadian court granted bail on Tuesday to a top Chinese executive arrested at the United States' request in a case that has set off a diplomatic furor among the three countries and complicated high-stakes U.S.-China trade talks. Photo: Andy Wong / Associated Press
A policeman stands watch Wednesday outside the Canadian Embassy in Beijing. A Canadian court granted bail on Tuesday to a top Chinese executive arrested at the United States’ request in a case that has set off a diplomatic furor among the three countries and complicated high-stakes U.S.-China trade talks. Photo: Andy Wong / Associated Press
Protesters clench their fists Wednesday during a rally at the Lower House to coincide with the joint Senate and Congress vote for the third extension of martial law in southern Philippines in suburban Quezon city, northeast of Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press
Protesters clench their fists Wednesday during a rally at the Lower House to coincide with the joint Senate and Congress vote for the third extension of martial law in southern Philippines in suburban Quezon city, northeast of Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press
South Korean army Col. Yun Myung-shick, right, shakes hands Wednesday with North Korean army Lt. Col. Ri Jong Su before crossing the Military Demarcation Line inside the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) to inspect the dismantled North Korean guard post in the central section of the inter-Korean border in Cheorwon. Photo: Associated Press
South Korean army Col. Yun Myung-shick, right, shakes hands Wednesday with North Korean army Lt. Col. Ri Jong Su before crossing the Military Demarcation Line inside the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) to inspect the dismantled North Korean guard post in the central section of the inter-Korean border in Cheorwon. Photo: Associated Press
Activists light candles Wednesday while others hold signs with the Time Magazine cover with wives of two Reuters journalists during a rally to mark one year anniversary of the journalists' arrest in front of city hall in Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Thein Zaw / Associated Press
Activists light candles Wednesday while others hold signs with the Time Magazine cover with wives of two Reuters journalists during a rally to mark one year anniversary of the journalists’ arrest in front of city hall in Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Thein Zaw / Associated Press
Miss Uruguay Sofia Marrero displays her costume Monday during Miss Universe National Costume Show in Chon Buri, Thailand. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
Miss Uruguay Sofia Marrero displays her costume Monday during Miss Universe National Costume Show in Chon Buri, Thailand. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
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EU Leaders Wary of May’s Plea for Help Selling Brexit Deal

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, left, greets British Prime Minister Theresa May during a round table meeting in December at an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, left, greets British Prime Minister Theresa May during a round table meeting in December at an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press

BRUSSELS — British Prime Minister Theresa May implored European Union leaders Thursday to help her sell the Brexit divorce deal at home, only to be told that her proposals are not clear enough for the bloc to offer a helping hand now.

Instead, the EU said it would plow ahead with plans for a cliff-edge “no-deal” Brexit on March 29, with a raft of contingency measures to be presented next week.

May came to an EU summit in Brussels seeking support after a week that saw her Brexit deal pilloried in Parliament and her job threatened by lawmakers from her own party. She pleaded with the 27 other EU leaders to “hold nothing in reserve” in helping her sell the Brexit deal to hostile British lawmakers.

“There is a majority in my Parliament who want to leave with a deal, so with the right assurances this deal can be passed,” May said, warning her EU counterparts that failure could mean Britain crashing out of the bloc without a deal, “with all the disruption that would bring.”

EU officials, however, seemed exasperated at the lack of concrete new ideas from Britain. A proposal for encouraging wording offering to give the U.K. further assurances was left out of the leaders’ final summit conclusions on Brexit.

“I do find it uncomfortable that there is an impression perhaps in the U.K. that it is for the EU to propose solutions,” European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said at a news conference early Friday. “It is the UK leaving the EU. And I would have thought it was rather more up to the British government to tell us exactly what they want.”

He said the British must “set out their expectations” within weeks if they want to make progress and avoid tumbling out of the EU without a deal.

May had earlier acknowledged that major progress was unlikely at the two-day summit, even as she tried to get tweaks to the withdrawal package that she could use to win over opponents – particularly pro-Brexit lawmakers whose loathing of the deal triggered a challenge to her leadership this week.

“I don’t expect an immediate breakthrough, but what I do hope is that we can start work as quickly as possible on the assurances that are necessary,” May said.

Her week from hell began Monday, when she scrapped a planned vote in Parliament on her Brexit divorce deal at the last minute to avoid a heavy defeat.

Anger at the move helped trigger a no-confidence vote among May’s own Conservative lawmakers Wednesday. May won, but more than a third of her party’s lawmakers voted against her in a sign of the unpopularity of her Brexit plan. To secure victory, she promised she would step down as Conservative leader before Britain’s next national election, which is scheduled for 2022.

The 27 other EU nations are adamant there can be no substantive changes to the legally binding agreement on Britain’s withdrawal from the bloc and declared that the deal was “not open for renegotiation.”

“It is important to avoid any ambiguity,” said French President Emmanuel Macron. “We can’t renegotiate something which has been negotiated over several months.”

The Brexit deal has many critics but one intractable issue – a legal guarantee designed to prevent physical border controls from being imposed between Northern Ireland, which is part of the U.K., and the Republic of Ireland, a member of the EU. Northern Ireland’s 1998 peace accord depends on having an open, invisible border with Ireland.

A Brexit provision known as the backstop would keep the U.K. part of the EU customs union if the two sides couldn’t agree on another way to avoid a hard border.

Pro-Brexit lawmakers strongly oppose the backstop, because it keeps Britain bound to EU trade rules and unable to leave without the bloc’s consent. Pro-EU politicians consider it an unwieldy, inferior alternative to staying in the bloc.

May told EU leaders that to win U.K. backing for the deal, “we have to change the perception that the backstop could be a trap from which the U.K. could not escape.”

But while Britain would like a guarantee that the backstop will be temporary, the EU insists there can be no fixed end date.

“If the backstop has an expiry date, if there is a unilateral exit clause, then it is not a backstop,” said Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar. “That would be to render it inoperable.”

The leaders gave May a few crumbs of comfort in their summit conclusions. As a sign of goodwill, the EU said preparations for trade relationships would start as soon as possible after British and EU legislatures approved the deal.

They promised to work for speedy new trade deal with Britain to avoid triggering the backstop, and underscored that the measure was intended to be temporary, saying it “would only be in place for as long as strictly necessary.”

But May remains a weakened leader atop a government and a Parliament whose members are deeply and damagingly divided over Brexit.

Juncker said it sometimes was tough to fathom his own state of mind but added: “It is even harder to understand the state of mind of the British MPs. ”

Story: Jill Lawless, Raf Casert

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Human Heart Prompts Southwest Flight to Return to Seattle

A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-300 before touching down in 2007 at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. Photo: Brian / Wikimedia Commons
A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-300 before touching down in 2007 at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. Photo: Brian / Wikimedia Commons

SEATTLE — Southwest Airlines says a Dallas-bound flight returned to Seattle last weekend because a human heart was left on board.

The Seattle Times reports that Flight 3606 arrived in Seattle from Sacramento, California. Someone forgot to unload the heart before the plane left for Dallas, and the captain announced over Idaho they were turning back.

The heart was being sent to a tissue processor to recover a valve for use in a future transplant.

Deanna Santa of Sierra Donor Services in Sacramento, California, said the organ-procurement organization sent the heart through a courier, who picked it up in Sacramento for shipment to Seattle. The delay did not impair the heart’s usefulness, and no patient needed it imminently.

The flight took off again for Dallas after a five-hour delay.

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Cambodian Lawmakers Pass Measure to Ease Political Ban

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, center, sees King Norodom Sihamoni off in September in front of the National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, center, sees King Norodom Sihamoni off in September in front of the National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — Cambodia’s Parliament passed legislation Thursday that could allow the lifting of a five-year ban on political activity by some top opposition politicians.

The action is the latest in a low-key charm offensive to improve relations with Western nations that accuse Prime Minister Hun Sen’s government of suppressing human and democratic rights. The U.S. and Germany have already instituted some diplomatic sanctions against Cambodia, and Washington and the European Union have threatened to extend economic ones as well.

The main point of contention has been this past July’s general election, which critics charge was neither free nor fair because the only credible opposition party had been dissolved and its candidates barred from politics. The late-2017 dissolution of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party by court order was generally seen as a move to ensure an election victory by Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party.

The legislature’s action would allow the 118 top members of the Cambodia National Rescue Party to apply to have their bans lifted.

However, there are conditions for restoring political rights that some opposition politicians have already rejected.

Hun Sen, at a meeting Wednesday with garment workers, said the ban would be rescinded only for those politicians who had honored it, while those who violated it could face a prison term.

Cambodia’s Foreign Affairs Ministry earlier this month listed the legislation that could cut short political bans as one of several examples of how the government is seeking “to improve the political climate and democratic space for the citizens to exercise their legitimate rights and freedoms in the spirit of national reconciliation.”

Since the election, Hun Sen’s government has made a series of gestures in an effort to burnish its reputation.

These include the freeing, either on bail or with pardons, of political prisoners including the head of the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, Kem Sokha, who was charged last year with treason on the basis of scant evidence. He is now being held under house arrest.

Many of the banned opposition politicians fled Cambodia in fear of arrest, and restoration of their political rights alone would appear to leave them in the political wilderness. There are no guarantees that new legal actions would not be taken against them in the courts, which are generally seen as being under the government’s influence.

Sam Rainsy, another former leader of the opposition party now in exile, said on his Facebook page Tuesday that he wished to tell Hun Sen “that he doesn’t need to reconsider our cases because we are not interested in recovering our political rights as long as Mr. Kem Sokha, who is the CNRP President, has not recovered his full freedom and as long as all charges against him have not been dropped.”

However, feuding between factions of the opposition party loyal to its two former presidents, Kem Sokha and Sam Rainsy, jeopardize a united front against the government’s invitation to rejoin the political scene.

Story: Sopheng Cheang

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Strasbourg Market Attack Suspect Killed in Police Shootout

A hooded police officer holds his gun Thursday in Strasbourg, eastern France. Photo: Jean-Francois Badias / Associated Press
A hooded police officer holds his gun Thursday in Strasbourg, eastern France. Photo: Jean-Francois Badias / Associated Press

STRASBOURG, France — The man authorities believe killed three people during a rampage near a Christmas market in Strasbourg died Thursday in a shootout with police at the end of a two-day manhunt, French authorities said.

The Paris prosecutor’s office, which handles cases of extremism in France, formally identified the man killed in the eastern French city as 29-year-old Cherif Chekatt, a Strasbourg-born man with a long history of convictions for various crimes, including robberies. Chekatt also had been on a watch list of potential extremists.

Interior Minister Christophe Castaner, speaking earlier from Strasbourg, said police had spotted a man matching the suspect’s description in the city’s Neudorf neighborhood.

“The moment they tried to arrest him, he turned around and opened fire. They replied,” killing the man, Castaner said.

Chekatt was suspected of killing three people and wounding 13 near Strasbourg’s Christmas market on Tuesday night. Castaner said earlier Thursday that three of the injured had been released from hospital and three others were still fighting for their lives.

“Our engagement against terrorism is total,” French President Emmanuel Macron, who was in Brussels for a European Union summit, said in a tweet thanking security forces.

Five people have been arrested in connection with the investigation, including Chekatt’s parents and two of his brothers. The Paris prosecutor’s office said the fifth, who was arrested Thursday, was a member of Chekatt’s “entourage” but not a family member.

Witnesses said the gunman shouted “God is great!” in Arabic and sprayed gunfire from a security zone near the Christmas market on Tuesday. Security forces wounded the man but he managed to escape in a taxi, which dropped him off in the Neudorf neighborhood.

More than 700 officers searched for Chekatt, government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux told CNews television.

Chekatt was well-known to police but as a common criminal, not an extremist. He had his first conviction at 13, and had 26 more by the time he died at age 29. He served jail time in France, Germany and Switzerland.

A local police official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly, said the man who shot at police Thursday night had been armed with a pistol and a knife.

Strasbourg Mayor Roland Ries said police had acted on a tip from a woman.

Residents described hearing shots on the street where Chekatt faced off with police, prompting new jitters after two days marked by tension in and around Strasbourg, which lies on the border with Germany and is considered as symbol of European unity.

The SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors extremist activity online, said the Islamic State group’s Amaq news agency was claiming the gunman as a “soldier” of the group, although IS claims of responsibility have often been considered opportunistic.

Chekatt’s motives remain vague. Authorities had put him on a watch list three years ago for suspected radicalism, but said they didn’t detect signs he was ready to act on it – a pattern in several past attacks in France.

France raised its three-stage threat index to the highest level after Tuesday’s attack and deployed 1,800 additional soldiers across the country to help patrol streets and secure crowded events.

Security forces, including the elite Raid squad, spent hours Thursday searching in the Neudorf neighborhood where Chekatt had grown up based on “supposition only” he might have been hiding in a building nearby, a French police official said.

Residents of the Neudorf neighborhood expressed relief after Chekatt was killed.

“Everybody’s quite happy that the killer has been finally shot. I think now, the city and life can keep going on in Strasbourg,” resident Pierre Plasse said.

One of the three who died in Tuesday’s attack was a Thai tourist, 45-year-old Anupong Suebsamarn, according to the Thai Foreign Ministry. An Italian journalist was in critical condition, Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said. The Europhonica radio consortium said Antonio Megalizzi, 28, was in Strasbourg to follow the session of the European Parliament.

The leaders of the 28 European Union countries held a moment of silence for the victims at their summit Thursday.

Before Thursday’s shootout, hundreds of people gathered in Strasbourg’s renowned 500-year-old cathedral to mourn and seek comfort.

“Evil does not prevail,” Archbishop Luc Ravel said. “And the message of Christmas has not been contradicted but rather confirmed by Tuesday’s dramatic night: Evil and good are both there, but in the end the good will have last word.”

Story: Samuel Petrequin, Elena Becatoros, Mstyslav Chernov

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Siam Square’s Lido Cinema to Become ‘Live House?’

Concept art showing the former Lido cinema as a forthcoming Live House venue. Image: The Cloud

Update Dec. 18: Lido cinema will be turned into a multi-purpose cultural hub called “Lido Connect.”

BANGKOK — The future of a recently shuttered cinema in Siam Square got strong hints Thursday that it will reopen as “Live House.”

According to concept art briefly posted online, the former alternative cinema will become either Live House or Lido Live House. Whether that refers to a concert and events venue like CentralWorld’s GMM Live House will have to wait until an official announcement on Tuesday.

Update: Record Label to Keep ‘Lido Connect’ All About Performances

A report posted by online outlet The Cloud said the renovated building would be comprised of a theater, stalls and other spaces before it was removed this afternoon.

A representative with landowner Chulalongkorn University’s property management department would not confirm any information and said people would have to wait for the details to be announced.

Cinephiles bid farewell to Lido cinema in May just as it was to turn 50 years old after the university did not renew its contract.

Lido last day ๑๘๐๖๐๑ 0025
Lido cinema on May 31, its last opening day

Related stories:

1968-2018: Tears, Feels as Lido Takes a Bow (Photos)

Bangkok Reminisces, Bids Fond Farewell to Lido Cinema

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Wife, Son of Republican Leader Detained, Activists Say

‘The national revolution has begun!’ the Organization for Thai Federation proclaimed in an image published Monday.

BANGKOK — At least four people are being held incommunicado by the military on suspicion of belonging to an underground republican movement, a rights watchdog said Thursday.

The four include the wife and a son of Chucheep Cheewasut, aka Uncle Sanam Luang, who has been identified as the leader of group, according to a statement released by Thai Lawyers for Human Rights.

The soldiers who arrested the four reportedly told their families they would be taken to the 11th Infantry Regiment headquarters in Bangkok, but army spokesman Winthai Suvaree said he was as yet unaware of the matter.

The watchdog added that up to a dozen people were questioned this past weekend for their alleged connection to the republican activists.

The Organization for a Thai Federation uploaded a video condemning the arrests Thursday afternoon.

The group, believed to operate from Laos, also called upon its supporters to storm the army base to rescue those held inside.

Related stories:

Men in Republican Shirts Questioned by Police: Rights Group

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‘Extremely Drunk’ Monks Living in Bus Station Busted For Harassment

Phra Wittaya Pholyano and Phra Supphachok Katadharmo on Thursday after being forced to leave the monkhood.
Phra Wittaya Pholyano and Phra Supphachok Katadharmo on Thursday after being forced to leave the monkhood.

BANGKOK — Two heavily intoxicated monks were arrested Thursday after causing a disturbance at a major Bangkok bus terminal.

Police said Phra Wittaya Pholyano, 45, and Phra Supphachok Katadharmo, 38, were ordered to leave the monkhood today after a security guard found them drunk and making a scene at the Mo Chit 2 Bus Terminal.

According to Maj. Jetnipat Siriwat of the Crime Suppression Division, the two monks were ordained at a Nakhon Phanom provincial temple but had been living in the bus station’s area reserved for monks instead of a temple. He didn’t know how long they had been staying there.

“They were just making a living there,” he said. “A security guard found them with liquor bottles lying next to them,” adding that one of them was “extremely drunk.”

Passengers in the terminal complained to police that the monks were incessantly heckling people waiting nearby and even entered a 7-Eleven store to verbally harass a female employee, Jetnipat said.

He added that the division will step up the efforts to crack down on monks engaging in “inappropriate behavior” across the country to prevent further damage to the reputation of Buddhism.

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