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France Issues Wanted Poster for Shooting Suspect

STRASBOURG, France — French authorities have issued a wanted poster and are calling for witnesses amid a massive manhunt for the suspected shooter nearly 24 hours after a deadly attack at the Strasbourg Christmas market.

A photo of Cherif Chekatt, 29, who was born in Strasbourg, was distributed publicly Wednesday evening.

The poster warns: “Dangerous individual, above all do not intervene.” It asks anyone with information that could help locate him to contact authorities.

Chekatt has been on the run since allegedly spraying gunfire at the city’s famous Christmas market on Tuesday night, killing two and leaving one person brain-dead. A dozen others were injured.

Hundreds of police and soldiers were combing Strasbourg in a search of him, blocking bridges that cross the border into Germany. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced a strengthening of security forces to secure Christmas markets.

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US Federal Jury Convicts 5 in Thai Sex Trafficking Trial

After the verdicts, U.S. Attorney for Minnesota Erica MacDonald called the sex trafficking operation one of largest, most sophisticated transnational sex rings ever dismantled on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2018, in St. Paul, Minn. Five people on trial for an alleged ring that prosecutors said sold Thai women for sex in the U.S. were convicted Wednesday on sex trafficking charges. (Stephen Montemayor/Star Tribune via AP)

ST. PAUL, Minnesota — Five people on trial for an alleged ring that prosecutors said sold Thai women for sex in the U.S. were convicted Wednesday on sex trafficking charges.

A federal jury in Minnesota found all five guilty of conspiracy to commit sex trafficking and other charges, the Star Tribune reported. Jurors returned their verdict just a day after receiving the case.

The defendants were Michael Morris, 65, of Seal Beach, California; Pawinee Unpradit, 46, of Dallas; Saowapha Thinram, 44, of Hutto, Texas; Thoucharin Ruttanamongkongul, 35, of Chicago; and Waralee Wanless, 39, of Colony, Texas.

Prosecutors alleged during the six-week trial that the defendants, along with 34 co-conspirators, ran a sex trafficking operation that lasted more than a decade and crossed borders.

Government attorneys called it a case of “modern day sex slavery,” with Thai women forced to have sex with multiple men daily to pay off “bondage debts” owed to traffickers for help coming to the U.S. Some victims testified during the trial.

Prosecutors said the victims were misled about how much they owed. The women were threatened if they tried to leave the business, prosecutors alleged.

Defense attorneys for all five contended the women were willful participants.

Paul Engh, an attorney for Thinram, predicted all five defendants will appeal.

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Change of Plans Led Thai Man to Strasbourg and Into Gunman’s Sights

Anuphong Seubsaman.
Anuphong Seubsaman.

CHACHOENGSAO — Wracked with grief at the news of their son’s death in France in a suspected terror attack, a sobbing Sukree Seubsaman and Yok-rhang Seubsaman declined to talk to reporters Wednesday.

Instead, 73-year-old Suchart Seubsaman came out to talk about the twist of fate that led to his nephew being shot dead in front of his wife on the first day of their French vacation in Strasbourg.

“Actually they were going to go to Paris, but because of the [yellow jacket] protests, they went to that city instead,” Suchart said. “But then this happened unexpectedly.”

Anuphong Seubsaman, a 45-year-old noodle factory owner from Chachoengsao, was among at least three people killed and 13 wounded in Place Kleber, the city’s central square, after a suspected extremist opened fire on crowds attending an evening Christmas market.

Suchart said that Anuphong and his wife Naiyana Seubsaman helped run the family noodle factory east of the capital and sold clothes in Bangkok’s Pratunam area. The couple loved to travel abroad for leisure and also to find clothing to sell, he said.

The factory continued to operate today while the family awaits help from the Foreign Affairs Ministry and their insurance company to bring back Anuphong home. The couple had no children.

“Unfortunately a Thai person was killed, and I offer my condolences to Khun Anuphong’s family,” Foreign Affairs Minister Don Pramudwinai said Wednesday.

Don said no other Thais were injured, and that the consulate in Paris would offer assistance to Anuphong’s widow, Naiyana Seubsaman, who was with him on the trip.

“This news directly affects Thais, but there are not a lot of Thais in Strasbourg, unlike in Paris,” Don said.

Anuphong was shot in the head outside a restaurant while Naiyana escaped injury. The couple was traveling alone and not with children as some outlets initially reported, the minister added.

According to local police, the 29-year-old gunman, Cherif Chekatt, was born and raised in Strasbourg and was on an extremist watch list. He has a long record of 25 criminal cases and remains at large.

A witness on the scene said they tried to save Anuphong and carried him into the restaurant, but he was too far gone.

Suchart Seubsaman on Wednesday.
Suchart Seubsaman on Wednesday.

Related stories:

Strasbourg Shooting Suspect Identified

5 Detained as France Hunts Xmas Market Shooting Suspect

Thai Tourist Among 3 Killed in French Xmas Market Shooting

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No Really, Do Not Eat Cockroaches: Thai Health Department

Photo: Dirk Schumacher / Pixabay

BANGKOK — In case there’s any doubt whether the cockroaches creeping into your home are edible, health officials weighed in Wednesday with a reminder: They’re not.

The Bureau of Non-Communicable Diseases today played down the nutritional value of the insects’ shiny brown bodies and hairy legs in a statement warning people against consuming them – at least those that emerge from sewer pipes.

“First, you have to understand that domestic cockroaches and farm-grown cockroaches are different. Some roaches are safer,” said Piti Mongkalangkun, a bureau expert.

The reason for this seemingly unneeded bulletin? A slew of online tabloid reports that a giant Chinese farm was turning roaches into medicine to solve all manner of ills, from the common cold and stomach ache to hair loss. They were even being made into diet pills.

Piti explained that the domestic roach is infested with bacteria because they “just eat everything.”

He further crushed hopes by saying no evidence exists of roach-based hair loss remedies. However, one might be able to lose weight if they switch to insect-only protein sources, he offered.

Again, to summarize: Household roaches are teeming with diseases and eating them is a great way to get sick.

Related stories:

Rainy Season is Roach Season. Here’s What to Do.

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Strasbourg Shooting Suspect Identified

French soldiers patrol Wednesday in the railway station of the city of Strasbourg following a shooting, eastern France. Photo: Christophe Ena / Associated Press
French soldiers patrol Wednesday in the railway station of the city of Strasbourg following a shooting, eastern France. Photo: Christophe Ena / Associated Press

STRASBOURG, France — Two police officials have identified the suspected Strasbourg gunman as 29-year-old Cherif Chekatt.

One police source said Chekatt’s criminal record mentions 25 judicial cases, including several serious cases of robbery.

The official said his apartment was searched by police on Tuesday morning – hours before the shooting – in an investigation for attempted murder. He was not at home at the time.

The two officials spoke anonymously because they were not allowed to speak publicly on an ongoing investigation.

The suspect was still on the run on Wednesday after he fired gunshots near the famous Christmas market of Strasbourg, killing three and wounding at least 13.

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Fire Cards and Paratroopers: A Look Back at Thailand’s ‘Dirtiest Election’

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha greets residents of Bueng Kan province with an "I love you" hand sign on Dec. 12, 2018.

BANGKOK — As Thailand edges closer to a long-elusive election – now scheduled for Feb. 24 – the junta faces a rising chorus of criticism for allegedly rigging the poll.

A pro-junta party voraciously poaching MPs. Government tours showering taxpayer money on potential voters. A gerrymandered electoral district map that baffles observers. A mystifying need to remove party logos from ballots. Uneven rules disadvantaging the opposition.

And that’s just in recent weeks.

All these signs prompted a prominent academic to warn the regime could be dragging Thailand into a future resembling its inglorious past.

Thirayuth Boonmee, who as a student activist helped spark an uprising that overthrew military rule four decades ago, raised concern Monday that junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha risks manipulating the upcoming poll to the point it loses all credibility.

“I’d like to plead with Gen. Prayuth … to prevent all sides from using legal manipulation or any other means to the point that there are accusations of a dirty election,” Thirayuth said on the occasion of an annual news conference where he offers his analysis on current affairs.

“Just like what the military dictators did in 1957,” he added in comments to an audience well aware that what followed was much worse.

That Monday remark has since seized the imaginations of politicians and editorial writers. Naewna, a reliably pro-establishment outlet, urged the government to heed Thirayuth’s “well-intended” words in a Tuesday column.

Weighing in online, the leader of what has been the most powerful political party went so far as to suggest the election junta-organized poll might turn out even worse.

“Will the 2019 election be written on a new page of Thai history as the most unfair?,” said Phumtham Vechayachai of the Pheu Thai Party, after discussing the 1957 poll in his post.

So what made it so notorious? Let’s take a look back at the plots, ruses and naked ploys by which another military government attempted to steal the vote in what went down as Thailand’s dirtiest election.

“In terms of trickery, there are similarities,” historian Thamrongsak Petchlertanan said in an interview. “There was cheating even before the election in order to perpetuate the junta regime in power.”

Old Soldiers, Same Tricks

When Thais went to the polls in 1957, they had been living under the military rule of Field Marshal Plaek Pibulsongkram for 10 years – a decade punctuated by political purges, internal coups and bloody rebellions.

There was no putting off the election – under the constitution, it was mandated because the parliament had completed its four-year term. A previous election a few years earlier had been boycotted by the opposition, including the Democrat Party, to protest a follow-up coup by Plaek to further consolidate his power.

But the Democrats and their allies changed tactics when the field marshal announced the 1957 election. They would contest it. The public was awash with excitement at the news. It would be the first time Plaek and his clique faced adversaries on the ballot.

“The question for the junta was: How do you organize an election and win it as a governing party, too?” Thamrongsak said, a question that rings with relevance then as now.

The answer was launching a pro-junta party called the Serimanangkasila – a reference to the Manangkasila Mansion on Lanluang Road, which served as a residence for the prime minister’s guests from overseas.

Founded two years prior to the election, the party was led by the triumvirate of power at the time: Plaek, Field Marshal Phin Choonhavan and army chief Sarit Thanarat.

The similarities to today pile up.

On the way to Election Day, the party poached MPs from other factions, either by buying them out or outright intimidation. Contemporary accounts allege that thugs hired by then-police chief Phao Sriyanond intimidated rural villagers to only vote for Serimanangkasila, and some Democrat candidates had human feces thrown at their homes.

Some ministers serving under Plaek also formed small parties allied with the Serimanangkasila to help stack up votes, Thamrongsak the historian said.

Vote Early, Vote Often

When polls opened Feb. 26, 1957, the shitshow that followed was one for the books. Fraud emerged in so many forms that observers assigned nicknames to each variety.

First there were the paratroopers: groups of soldiers “dropped in” to vote at various polling booths throughout the capital.

Others were less subtle. Security forces were spotted queuing up and voting at the same booths almost immediately after they already cast their ballots, earning them the nickname wian tian for a Buddhist ritual observed by marching around a temple thrice on religious days.

And when polls closed, there was the discovery of fire cards: mysterious ballots that appeared out of nowhere in the ballot boxes. Of course, they all were marked Serimanangkasila.

According to media reports at the time, one polling station where the pro-junta party trailed behind the Democrats had a blackout just as officials were counting votes. After power was restored, Serimanangkasila soon took the lead; activists observing the count accused officials of adding hundreds of bogus ballots.

Chaos soon erupted. Newspapers denounced the results. Students at two elite universities, Chulalongkorn and Thammasat, put aside their rivalry to march side by side in the streets of Bangkok to protest the outcome – marking the first time students engaged in political activism on a large scale.

The government responded by declaring a State of Emergency, enraging the students even further. By the night of March 2, protesters broke through police barriers and threatened to storm Plaek’s seat of power at the Government House. Tensions were only defused when Field Marshal Sarit met with the students in person and proposed to mediate a solution.

“I’ll see you all again when the nation needs me,” Sarit told the cheering students after they agreed to disperse.

He made good on his promise six months later when, citing discontent and corruption, Sarit seized power from Plaek. He went on to suppress dissent on a scale dwarfing that of the tyrant he deposed. Some of the students who applauded his intervention over election fraud were jailed on suspicion of being communists.

Dirtiest Myth?

Despite the many reported attempts to steal the election, Thamrongsak disagrees with historians who characterize the 1957 poll as the “dirtiest,” since it was never established if similar mischief occurred outside the capital.

He urged people today to exercise judgment when reading those accounts because much of the sensational coverage was fanned by Sarnseri, a tabloid newspaper owned by Sarit.

In fact, Thamrongsak even suspects that the field marshal, regarded by many progressive activists at the time as a reliable ally, might have encouraged the dirty tricks to discredit Plaek and play them to his advantage.

“Many media agencies chose to side with Sarit because they wanted to destroy Field Marshal Plaek,” the historian said. “They ended up as a tool in Sarit’s hands to destroy democracy.”

For its part, the current junta insists voting in February will be fair and free. On Tuesday, the regime lifted its nearly five-year-old ban on political gatherings, ostensibly to pave way for the poll.

But some remain unconvinced. On Wednesday, pro-democracy activists and politicians rallied at the Election Commission to demand it functions independently.

“The government must not dominate or interfere with the Election Commission,” Pheu Thai spokeswoman Laddawan Wongsriwong told reporters.

Related stories:

Battlefield Bangkok: The Time the Navy Defied the Army – And Lost

Why Was the 1932 Revolution Plaque So Important?

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Study Finds Female-Led Films Outperform Male Ones

This image released by Warner Bros. Entertainment shows Gal Gadot in a scene from
This image released by Warner Bros. Entertainment shows Gal Gadot in a scene from "Wonder Woman." Image: Associated Press

NEW YORK — A new study that analyzed four years’ worth of films found that female-led movies have consistently outperformed those in which men get top billing.

The study analyzed the 350 top-grossing films worldwide released between January 2014 and December 2017. Researchers found that in films with small, medium and large budgets, all averaged better global grosses when a woman was listed as the lead star.

Conducted by the talent agency Creative Artists Agency and the tech company shift7, the study found that films that passed the Bechdel test do better, too. The Bechdel test, an invention of the cartoonist Alison Bechdel, rates whether a movie features two female characters having a conversation about something other than a man.

Researchers found every USD$1 billion film at the box office – including films like “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” ”Jurassic World” and “Beauty and the Beast” – passed the Bechdel test. Among films that cost more than $100 million to make, the ones that passed the Bechdel test grossed on average $618 million worldwide, while those that didn’t averaged $413 million.

“Women comprise half the box office, yet there has been an assumption in the industry that female-led films led were generally less successful,” CAA agent Christy Haubegger, who participated in the research, said in a statement. “We found that the data does not support that assumption.”

For budget data and determining lead actor, researchers depended on data from the Nielsen’s box-office data collection company Gracenote. Gracenote’s Studio System defines a “female lead” as a woman who is listed first in official press materials.

Of the 350 films studied, 105 qualified as female-led and 245 registered as male-led. The greatest gap was in larger budgeted films. In movies with a budget greater than $100 million, there were 75 male-led films and 19 female-led films.

The study was conceived through a group that formed through the gender equality initiative Time’s Up, including Amy Pascal, former chairman of Sony Pictures. Earlier research by academics has chronicled similar rates of inequality in top-grossing Hollywood releases, and the financial benefits of inclusion.

“This analysis affirms data showing that diversity has a positive impact on a company’s bottom line,” said Lisa Borders, Time’s Up president and chief executive. “As studios consider their fiduciary responsibilities to their investors, these findings offer a clear approach to delivering the best results.”

Story: Jake Coyle

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5 Detained as France Hunts Xmas Market Shooting Suspect

Emergency services patrol Tuesday at the center of the city of Strasbourg following a shooting, eastern France. Photo: Jean-Francois Badias / Associated Press
Emergency services patrol Tuesday at the center of the city of Strasbourg following a shooting, eastern France. Photo: Jean-Francois Badias / Associated Press

STRASBOURG, France — French authorities detained five people as they hunted Wednesday for a suspected extremist who sprayed gunfire at one of Europe’s most famous Christmas markets in the eastern city of Strasbourg, killing three and wounding at least 13 and putting the whole country on edge anew.

The government raised the security alert level and sent police reinforcements to Strasbourg, where some 350 security forces are searching for the assailant. Police officials said he was wounded in a gunfight with soldiers after the Tuesday night attack but escaped, and a top official said he might have escaped to neighboring Germany.

The attacker is a 29-year-old with a police record in France and Germany who had been flagged for extremism, police said. Police detained five people in overnight searches around the city, Laurent Nunez, secretary of state for the Interior Ministry, said on France-Inter radio.

An investigation was opened, but the motive of the attack is unclear. Nunez said eight of the injured are in serious condition, and the city mayor said some had head wounds.

Witnesses described shots and screams after the gunman opened fire at the Christmas market Tuesday evening in a city that’s home to the European Parliament and considers itself a capital of Europe – and promotes itself as the “capital of Christmas.” For several hours swaths of the city were under lockdown.

The attack is a new blow to France, after a wave of Islamic extremist killings in 2015 and 2016, and amid a month of protests against President Emmanuel Macron that have blocked roads around the country, led to rioting in the capital and put heavy strain on police.

While authorities urged people in the area to stay inside after Tuesday’s attack, Strasbourg Mayor Roland Ries told BFM television Wednesday that “life must go on” so that the city doesn’t cede to a “terrorist who is trying to disrupt our way of life.”

The assailant got inside a security zone around the venue and opened fire from there, Mayor Roland Ries said on BFM television.

One possible reason for the attack: police tried and failed to arrest him earlier Tuesday for an attempted murder, Nunez said. The suspect had been identified as radicalized during past stays in prison, Nunez added. Authorities did not identify him publicly.

Police were out in force in Strasbourg on Wednesday morning, and the Christmas market was closed. Strasbourg, a city about 500 kilometers (310 miles) east of Paris on France’s border with Germany, promotes itself as the “Capital of Christmas” and the market set up around the local cathedral is a holiday tradition. The market was the target of an al-Qaida-linked plot at the turn of the millennium.

Many of Europe’s deadliest terror attacks in recent years have taken place in France. In response to Tuesday’s shooting, the government decided to take the country’s attack risk up a level on the official threat index and to send security reinforcements to Strasbourg, Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said in Strasbourg.

Some 350 officers and two helicopters were searching for the assailant after Tuesday’s drama, which involved shooting in multiple neighborhoods of Strasbourg, authorities said. The assailant confronted law enforcement officers twice, exchanging fire, while he “sowed terror,” Castaner said.

The shooter was shot and wounded by soldiers guarding the Christmas market, according to Stephane Morisse of police union FGP Police.

“I heard two or three shots at around 7:55 p.m., then I heard screams. I got close to the window. I saw people running. After that I closed the shutters. Then I heard more shots, closer this time,” said Yoann Bazard, 27, who lives in central Strasbourg.

“I thought maybe it’s firecrackers,” he said, speaking by phone. “And then, as it got close, it was really shocking. There were a lot of screams. … There were police or soldiers shouting ‘Get inside!’ and ‘Put your hands on your head.'”

Another witness, Peter Fritz, told the BBC one of the three people killed was a Thai tourist who was shot in the head and didn’t respond to lengthy attempts to revive him.

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UK PM Theresa May to Face No-Confidence Vote in Her Leadership

British Prime Minister Theresa May walks past the EU flag at the conclusion of an EU summit in Brussels, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2018. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press

LONDON — A British Conservative Party official says Prime Minister Theresa May will face a no-confidence vote from party lawmakers.

Graham Brady says the threshold of 48 letters from lawmakers needed to trigger a leadership vote has been reached. Brady chairs the party committee that oversees leadership contests.

Many lawmakers have been growing angry with May over her handling of Brexit.

If she loses the vote of party legislators, taking place on Wednesday evening, May must step down. If she wins, she can’t be challenged again for a year.

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Jailed Myanmar Journalists Join Khashoggi, ‘Guardians’ as Time Person of 2018

Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, at left, and Reuters journalists Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, were named TIME's Person of the Year for 2018 in two of four separate covers. Image: Time Magazine / Courtesy
Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, at left, and Reuters journalists Wa Lone, 32, and Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, were named TIME's Person of the Year for 2018 in two of four separate covers. Image: Time Magazine / Courtesy

NEW YORK — Time magazine on Tuesday recognized journalists, including slain Saudi columnist Jamal Khashoggi and two Reuters reporters jailed in Myanmar as its 2018 Person of the Year in what it said was an effort to emphasize the importance of reporters’ work in an increasingly hostile world.

The designation wasn’t intended as a specific message to the magazine’s runner-up choice, President Donald Trump, who has denounced “fake news” and called some reporters enemies of the people, said Ben Goldberger, executive editor.

Time cited four figures it called “the guardians.” Besides Khashoggi, they are the staff of the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Maryland, where five people were shot to death in June; Philippine journalist Maria Ressa; and Reuters reporters Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo, who have been jailed in Myanmar for a year.

It’s the first time since the magazine began the end-of-year tradition in 1927 that Time has featured a journalist or recognized someone posthumously.

Time said that 2018 has been marked by manipulation and abuse of information, along with efforts by governments to foment mistrust of the facts.

Goldberger said the magazine hopes the choice reminds people outside of journalism about the importance of the work.

Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, said he sees this message already starting to get through — sadly, in part because of the attention paid to Khashoggi’s killing. Khashoggi is one of at least 52 journalists murdered so far this year, the committee said.

“In some ways, I feel we’re at a turning point,” Simon said.

Khashoggi was killed two months ago when The Washington Post columnist, who had lived in the U.S., visited Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Turkey for paperwork so he could get married. He had been critical of the Saudi regime.

The Washington Post applauded Time for its message of support for journalists.

“We hope this recognition will prompt our nation’s leaders to stand up for America’s values and hold accountable those who attempt to silence journalists who cover our communities or in Jamal’s case, an oppressive authoritarian government,” said Fred Ryan, the Post’s publisher and CEO.

Reesa co-founded the online site the Rappler, which has aggressively covered the government of Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte. She was recently charged with tax fraud, with many in the Philippines seeing that as a reaction to the Rappler’s reporting.

Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo were imprisoned after investigating a massacre of Rohingya Muslims.

Four journalists and a sales assistant were killed by a gunman at the Capital Gazette newspaper last spring.

Time is producing four different covers featuring “the guardians.”

Last year Time recognized people who came forward to report on sexual misconduct. Trump, this year’s runner-up, was Person of the Year in 2016.

The third-place finisher this year was special counsel Robert Mueller, who Time indicated could move up in next year’s rankings depending on the findings of his investigation into the Trump campaign’s contacts with Russia.

Story: David Bauder

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