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Elderly Benz Driver Charged For Fatal Expressway Wreck

Surang Supornsuk talks to police Tuesday night at the Rattanathibet Police Station in Nonthaburi city.
Surang Supornsuk talks to police Tuesday night at the Rattanathibet Police Station in Nonthaburi city.

NONTHABURI — An elderly woman who crashed into a disabled truck and sent two men plummeting their deaths has been charged with fatal reckless driving.

Surang Supornsuk, 72, was also charged Tuesday night with destroying government property after she plowed her Mercedes-Benz into a furniture delivery truck on the Si Rat Expressway near Wat Bua Kwan on Tuesday in northern metro Bangkok. Woothichai Suracha and Caris Waraklan, 32 and 22 respectively, died after falling from the elevated roadway.

“She seems confused about what happened. She said she doesn’t know how she hit the car,” police Col. Kittisak Tiangkamol said. “I suppose she may have fainted or was reaching for something in the car, because she didn’t brake at all.”

Read: Deliverymen Fall to Death After Speeding Benz Plows Into Truck

Surang did not make any public comment after reporting to the Rattanathibet Police Station. She paid an undisclosed amount of monetary compensation to victims’ families.

“She seemed very sorry and said she would pay for everything, including the funeral and not abandon my family,” said Thida Suracha, Woothichai’s widow. “She understands that we lost our main breadwinner and said that she should help me find a job as well.”

Kittisak said Surang did not seem to suffer from any impairment. On Tuesday, Woothichai and Caris, who made deliveries for SB Furniture, had stopped their truck on the left shoulder of the highway after it broke down and exited the vehicle.

Tongpan Kotila-ong, a manager at SB Furniture, said that both Caris and Woothichai had worked there nine years.

“Both of them were nice, hardworking and responsible. When they made mistakes, they improved themselves,” Tongpan said. “As soon as I heard the news, I was shocked,”

Tongpan said that he would help find jobs at SB Furniture for the families if they needed income.

The Expressway Authority of Thailand issued a statement Tuesday warning people to stay inside their vehicle and call the 1543 hotline for help if their car breaks down on the highway. Alternatively, it advised stranded motorists to use call boxes located every 500 meters to 1 kilometer before returning to one’s vehicle to wait.

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Deliverymen Fall to Death After Speeding Benz Plows Into Truck

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Jason Momoa Swims but ‘Aquaman’ Sinks

Superheroes who travel by sea horse never get any respect.

Since Paul Norris and Mort Weisinger first dreamed him up in 1941, Aquaman’s fate has largely been as the Rodney Dangerfield of DC Comics – a regular punchline for his not-so-potent powers. Sure, he can talk underwater and brandishes a big fork for weapon. But like Luca Brasi, he sleeps with the fishes.

Yet Aquaman’s day has finally arrived. And if there was one inspired stroke behind the first solo movie for the Atlantis hero, it was in casting Jason Momoa in the Justice League role, one he begun in 2016’s “Batman v Superman.” It’s almost a dare: Try telling this guy your Aquaman jokes.

In James Wan’s waterlogged, fitfully entertaining “Aquaman,” a heavy metal guitar riff blares at our first close-up of the long-haired, much-tattooed, shirtless Momoa. “Permission to come aboard?” he says with a sly, over-the-shoulder grin.

It’s a welcome arrival. As Momoa showed on his recent “Saturday Night Live” hosting gig, his charisma is as formidable as his brawn. So why is “Aquaman” so soggy with Atlantis mythology and drowning in special effects when all it really needs to do is let Momoa’s Aquaman rock?

There are pleasures in Wan’s extravagant underwater pageant. It’s surely the only movie around where you can enjoy a floating Willem Dafoe (as Vulko, royal counselor to Atlantis ruler Orm, played by Patrick Wilson), see a gladiatorial showdown sounded by an octopus on drums and, in one of the many scenes where water is weaponized, witness death by Chianti, in a tussle that tumbles into a Sicilian wine store.

“Aquaman” weighs in somewhere between the lugubrious “Justice League” and the less leaden “Wonder Woman” on the uneven scales of recent DC films. To both the movie’s benefit and detriment, the seas here are choppier than in the predictably (and sometimes boringly) smooth sailing of a Marvel movie. But the bright spots (Momoa, that octopus) can be difficult to really relish amid the oceans of exposition and a typically pulverizing, overelaborate screenplay.

A war is brewing underwater, but David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick and Will Beall’s script takes a while to get us there. They have origin stories to map out, beginning with Atlanna, the banished Atlantis princess (Nicole Kidman, a screen goddess without the need to play an aquatic one), washing up on the rocky Maine shores of a lighthouse keeper (Temuera Morrison). They fall in love and have a child named Arthur (our Aquaman to be) before Atlanna is forced to return to the sea.

As an adult, Arthur – trained by Vulko as a kid – moonlights as a hero in between happy-hour trips to the bar. But he’s reluctantly drawn into a struggle for the throne of the seven seas with his younger brother Orm, who’s plotting a battle with “surface dwellers.” He regards Arthur as a “half-breed” not fit for the underwater kingdom he grew up outside of. The red-haired Xebel princess Mera (Amber Heard), herself a formidable fighter, joins with Arthur on a globe-trotting mission to save Atlantis and prevent war by finding a sacred trident (oh, there is so very much trident action), with occasional, half-hearted gestures of romantic banter along the way.

After centuries of invisibility and peace, Orm and his conspirators have had enough of the landlubbers above. (Why they weren’t earlier pushed over the edge by jet skis or, for that matter, “Baywatch,” is unclear.) In one tidal wave of vengeance, he washes the ocean’s garbage and warships onto beaches around the world.

But “Aquaman” is too timid to take this thread seriously (or even to substantially include sea animals for Aquaman to, you know, talk to). Instead we have a tiresome tale of royal power struggle that could almost as easily happen on Krypton or in ancient Greece, albeit without the benefit of a floating Dafoe.

Wan, the director of the “Saw” franchise and “Furious 7,” deserves both criticism for soaking the film so thoroughly in kitschy CGI and praise for the glowing synthetic beauty of Atlantis. The movie zips along too quickly before we get much more than a float-over view of Atlantis. (Many mysteries, such as how plumbing functions on the seafloor, go unanswered.) But in almost “Tron”-like contours of luminous neon, Atlantis is a cinema world well built, at least on the outside. But the movie’s only truly visually stunning sequence is a deep-sea chase lit by a lone flare while hordes of frightful creatures close in.

But both Wan and Momoa have a surprisingly firm grasp of who Aquaman is, and they ultimately – more than two hours later – steer their film toward sincerity and away from bombast. It’s surely some measure of accomplishment that “Aquaman,” for all its messy grandiosity, culminates in its hero therapeutically saying “Let’s talk,” and it’s uttered not to a manatee but to a brother.

“Aquaman,” a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG-13 for sequences of sci-fi violence and action, and for some language. Running time: 143 minutes. Two stars out of four.

Story: Jake Coyle

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China Detains Canadian Diplomat Hours Before Huawei CFO Gets Bail

Supporters hold signs and a Chinese flag outside the British Columbia Supreme Court in Vancouver during the third day of a bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Huawei Technologies, on Dec. 11, 2018. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press via AP)

VANCOUVER — A Canadian court granted bail 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.

Hours before the bail hearing in Vancouver, China detained a former Canadian diplomat in Beijing in apparent retaliation for the Dec. 1 arrest of Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei and daughter of the company’s founder.

After three days of hearings, a British Columbia justice granted bail of $10 million Canadian (US$7.5 million) to Meng, but required her to wear an ankle bracelet, surrender her passports, stay in Vancouver and its suburbs and confine herself to one of her two Vancouver homes from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m.

The decision was met with applause in the packed courtroom, where members of Vancouver’s Chinese community had turned out to show support for Meng. She left the courthouse late Tuesday surrounded by a security detail and was driven away in a black SUV without responding to questions from reporters.

Amid rising tension between China and Canada, Canadian Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale confirmed earlier that a former Canadian diplomat had been detained in Beijing. The detention came after China warned Canada of consequences for Meng’s arrest.

“We’re deeply concerned,” Goodale said. “A Canadian is obviously in difficulty in China. … We are sparing no effort to do everything we possibly can to look after his safety.”

Michael Kovrig, who previously worked as a diplomat in China and elsewhere, was taken into custody by the Beijing Bureau of Chinese State Security on Monday night during one of his regular visits to Beijing, said the International Crisis Group, for which Kovrig works as North East Asia adviser.

Rob Malley, head of the Brussels-based non-governmental group, said Canadian consular officers had not been given access to Kovrig. He thinks Kovrig was in Beijing on personal matters and was definitely not there for any reason that would undermine Chinese national security.

Canada had been bracing for retaliation for Meng’ arrest. The Canadian province of British Columbia canceled a trade mission to China amid fears China could detain Canadians to put pressure on Ottawa over Meng’s detention.

“In China there is no coincidence,” Guy Saint-Jacques, a former Canadian ambassador to China, said of Kovrig’s detention. “Unfortunately Canada is caught in the middle of this dispute between the U.S and China. Because China cannot kick the U.S. they turn to the next target.”

Earlier in the day, China vowed to “spare no effort” to protect against “any bullying that infringes the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese citizens.”

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi didn’t mention Meng by name. But ministry spokesman Lu Kang said Wang was referring to cases of all Chinese abroad, including Meng’s.

Washington accuses Huawei of using a Hong Kong shell company to sell equipment to Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions. It says Meng and Huawei misled banks about the company’s business dealings in Iran.

On Tuesday, U.S. State Department spokesman Robert Palladino told reporters in Washington “the charges against Meng pertain to alleged lies to United States financial institutions” about Huawei’s business dealings in Iran.

“It is clear from the filings that were unsealed in Canada, Meng and others are alleged to have put financial institutions at risk of criminal and civil liability in the United States by deceiving those institutions as to the nature and extent of Huawei’s business in Iran,” Palladino said.

Meng has denied the U.S. allegations through her lawyer in court, promising to fight them if she is extradited to face charges in the United States.

“We have every confidence that the Canadian and U.S. legal systems will reach a just conclusion in the following proceedings,” Huawei said in a statement.

“As we have stressed all along, Huawei complies with all applicable laws and regulations in the countries and regions where we operate, including export control and sanction laws of the UN, US, and EU. We look forward to a timely resolution to this matter.”

Huawei, the biggest global supplier of network gear for phone and internet companies, is the target of U.S. security concerns. Washington has pressured other countries to limit use of its technology, warning they could be opening themselves up to surveillance and theft of information.

The U.S. and China have tried to keep Meng’s case separate from their wider trade dispute and suggested Tuesday that talks to resolve their differences may resume.

But President Donald Trump undercut efforts to distinguish between trade talks and the Huawei case. In an interview with Reuters, he said Tuesday that he would consider intervening in the Justice Department’s case against Meng if it would be in the interest of U.S. national security or help forge a trade deal with Beijing.

Roland Paris, a former foreign policy adviser to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, called Trump’s comments troubling.

“Canada is acting in good faith, according to the law, in response to a U.S. extradition request,” Paris tweeted.

The Chinese government said its economy czar had discussed plans with U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Trade Rep. Robert Lighthizer for talks aimed at settling the two countries’ differences. Lighthizer’s office confirmed he had spoken by phone with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He.

The news that trade negotiations may resume lifted stock markets around the world.

The United States has slapped tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese imports in response to complaints Beijing steals American technology and forces U.S. companies to turn over trade secrets.

Tariffs on $200 billion of those imports were scheduled to rise from 10 percent to 25 percent on Jan. 1. But Trump agreed to postpone those by 90 days while the two sides negotiate.

___

Associated Press writer Jim Morris reported this story in Vancouver, AP writer Rob Gillies reported from Toronto and AP writer Paul Wiseman reported from Washington. AP writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Joe McDonald in Beijing contributed to this report.

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Malaysian Ex-PM Slapped With New Charge Over 1MDB Scandal

Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak in May arrives at Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) Office in July in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak in May arrives at Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) Office in July in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak was charged Wednesday with tampering with the final audit report into a defunct state investment fund, adding to a long list of corruption allegations against him since his ouster in May elections.

Najib was charged along with Arul Kanda Kandasamy, the former head of the 1MDB fund, which is being investigated in the U.S. and other countries for alleged cross-border embezzlement and money laundering.

Najib pleaded not guilty to abusing power to order the modification of the report in February 2016 before it was presented to the Public Accounts Committee, in order to protect himself from disciplinary and legal action. Kandasamy, who was detained overnight by anti-graft officials, pleaded not guilty to abetting Najib.

The charges came after the auditor-general revealed last month that some details had been removed from the 1MDB report. Kandasamy led 1MDB from 2015 until he was terminated in June. The two men were released on bail, and face up to 20 years in prison if found guilty.

Najib set up 1MDB when he took power in 2009 to promote economic development, but the fund amassed billions in debts. U.S. investigators say Najib’s associates stole and laundered USD$4.5 billion from the fund, including some that landed in Najib’s bank account.

Public anger over the scandal led to the defeat of Najib’s long-ruling coalition in May 9 elections and ushered in the first change of power since Malaysia gained independence from Britain in 1957.

The new government reopened the investigations stifled under Najib’s rule. Najib, his wife and several top-ranking former government officials have been charged with multiple counts of corruption, criminal breach of trust and money laundering.

Najib, 65, has accused the new government of political vengeance.

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Thailand Post Apologizes for Dumping Mail at Grocery Store

A box of undelivered mail left at Lamoon Takerdpol’s shop Monday in Buriram province.

BURIRAM — Perhaps not to be outdone by convenience store delivery services, one mailman turned a local grocery store in Buriram into a postal hub for the community – without anyone’s consent.

The national post service on Tuesday apologized to the shopkeeper on behalf of the mailman, who, instead of delivering mail to its proper destination, had been dropping it all off at her shop in the eastern province for three years for her to sort out for the recipients.

The mailman in question, who was not identified, was disciplined and transferred, Thailand Post said in a statement.

“We have reminded every delivery staff member to conduct their duty with honesty, send their mail punctually and give good service to customers,” the statement read.

The shopkeeper, Lamoon Takerdpol, complained to the media on Monday that the mailman started asking her three years ago to send various packages to area residents.

Lamoon said she didn’t mind it at the time, but the amount of mail kept increasing to the point she could no longer handle it. Lamoon said she had asked the mailman to stop, only to be told to simply dump some letters deemed unimportant into the trash.

“I had to take responsibility for sending mail to the residents. Some thought I was hired by the post. If some letters were delayed or lost, they scolded me,” Lamoon told reporters.

Asking other people to deliver packages or failing to deliver them to assigned addresses is against Thailand Post’s regulations, a mail official in charge of Buriram reassured the media.

Thailand Post, a state enterprise marred by a record of poor service, drew increased scorn recently for urging Thais to use their service to “show gratitude” to the country.

The slogan was met with criticism online, where many users shared their unpleasant experiences of delays and occasional damage when entrusting their mail to the carrier.

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US Mother, Boyfriend Face Charges After Toddler Shoots Infant

Shayanne Nelson, left, and Tyrell Bitsilly on Saturday following their arrest. Photo: Associated Press
Shayanne Nelson, left, and Tyrell Bitsilly on Saturday following their arrest. Photo: Associated Press

GALLUP, New Mexico — An 8-month-old girl is fighting for her life after police say her 3-year-old brother accidentally shot her in the face in a New Mexico motel room while their mother and her boyfriend were in a shower.

The infant girl is listed in critical condition and her condition has not changed since she was found by police after she was shot Saturday in Gallup, New Mexico, Gallup Police Capt. Marinda Spencer said.

According to a criminal complaint, Shayanne Nelson, 18, and her boyfriend, Tyrell Bitsilly, 21, were in a motel shower when Nelson’s child found a gun and accidentally shot the baby.

Officers arrived at the hotel along the historic Route 66 to find an adult holding a baby with a gunshot wound to her face, the complaint filed Monday said.

Nelson told police she didn’t know a gun was in the room and that it may have been left by a previous occupant, the complaint said. She told officers her son likely found the gun and decided to play with it, the complaint said.

Police said no other adults were in the room when the pair went to take a shower.

A witness told police he saw Bitsilly wipe the gun after the shooting.

The baby was taken to Gallup Indian Medical Center.

Nelson and Bitsilly face child abuse charges and were booked into the McKinley County Adult Detention Center. Bitsilly also was charged with tampering with evidence. Court records show Nelson was released on a USD$5,000 unsecured bond. Bitsilly was ordered held on a $70,000 bond.

It was not known if either is represented by an attorney.

Gallup, New Mexico, is located 140 miles (225 kilometers)west of Albuquerque and borders the Navajo Nation near the Arizona border.

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Lumpini Cop Shoots Frenchman to Death After Brawl: Police

Flanked by two senior officers, Maj. Gen. Surachate Hakparn speaks to reporters at the scene where a French national was shot to death by a Bangkok police officer.
Flanked by two senior officers, Maj. Gen. Surachate Hakparn speaks to reporters at the scene where a French national was shot to death by a Bangkok police officer.

BANGKOK — A Bangkok police officer was arrested Wednesday after allegedly shooting a Frenchman to death.

Senior Sgt. Maj. Kantapong Huadsri, 49, a squad leader at Lumpini Police Station, was discharged from the force after police said he was caught on security camera shooting 41-year-old Djamel Malik Ait Kaki near BTS Nana this morning.

Ait Kaki was shot in the chest and hip inside the Trendy Office and Plaza in Soi Sukhumvit 13. He died at the scene.

Update: No Bail For Bangkok Cop That Shot Frenchman

A friend of the victim told police he had gotten into an altercation with Kantapong at a nearby bar. She said Kantapong was upset that he lost the fight and followed the victim back to the building and shot him in front of a Dunkin’ Donuts stall.

Speaking to reporters, Maj. Gen. Surachate “Big Joke” Hakparn said Kantapong has confessed to shooting Ait Kaki out of rage in a fight over a woman. He added that the officer was convicted on a weapons-related charge for a shooting six years ago.

According to Bangkok police commander Sutthipong Wongpin, Kantapong shot and killed a taxi driver in a drug-related case in 2012. He said the incident was ruled self-defense as the driver tried to run over Kantapong with his car.

Surachate said the family of the victim has been notified, adding that Ait Kaki had relocated to Thailand to look for a job within the past year.

Maj. Gen. Mongkol Warunno of Metropolitan Police Division 5 said the other involved party was a waiter at the bar with whom Kantapong left his gun while he was drinking.

Police spokesman Kritsana Pattanacharoen promised Kantapong would be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

Update: This story has been updated with additional information about the shooting and officer Kantapong’s previous shooting incident.

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Thai Tourist Among 3 Killed in French Xmas Market Shooting

Soldiers patrol after a shooting Tuesday in Strasbourg, eastern France. Photo: Associated Press
Soldiers patrol after a shooting Tuesday in Strasbourg, eastern France. Photo: Associated Press

STRASBOURG, France — A man who had been flagged as a possible extremist sprayed gunfire near the city of Strasbourg’s famous Christmas market Tuesday, killing three people, wounding 12 and sparking a massive manhunt. France immediately raised its terror alert level.

It was unclear if the market – a popular gathering place that was the nucleus of an al-Qaida-linked plot in 2000 – was the intended target. The assailant got inside a security zone around the venue and opened fire from there, Mayor Roland Ries said on BFM television.

Authorities did not give a motive for the shooting, though prosecutors said they had opened a terrorism investigation. Strasbourg is home to the European Parliament, one of several places that was locked down after the shooting.

Authorities said they had identified a suspect, and he had a criminal record. The prefect of the Strasbourg region said the man also was on a watch list of people who had potentially radicalized. No other details about him were disclosed.

Hours before the shooting, French gendarmes went to the suspect’s home to arrest him, but he wasn’t there, Stephane Morisse of police union FGP said. They found explosive materials during a search, he said.

France, where most of Europe’s worst terror attacks of recent years took place, was raising its terror alert level and sending security reinforcements to Strasbourg, Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said early Wednesday.

The attack in Strasbourg came two years after a Tunisian man drove a hijacked truck into a busy Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 people. Strasbourg, which promotes itself as the “Capital of Christmas,” is located on France’s border with Germany, about 500 kilometers (310 miles) east of Paris. The market is set up around the city’s cathedral during the Christmas season.

Some 350 security forces and two helicopters were searching for the alleged assailant, who had been radicalized for “several years” and confronted law enforcement officers twice while he “sowed terror” in Strasbourg, Castaner said.

The death toll stood at three early Wednesday, he said. Two police union officials said earlier there were four victims. Officials did not explain the conflicting numbers.

A dozen more people were wounded, half of them in “absolute emergency” critical condition, Castaner said. The shooter was also shot and wounded by soldiers guarding the Christmas market, according to Stephane Morisse of police union FGP.

French military spokesman Col. Patrik Steiger said the shooter didn’t seem to be aiming for the soldiers patrolling in and around the market, but appeared to target civilians instead.

Witnesses described hearing gunshots, screams and shouts of police officers ordering people to stay indoors before the area fell silent and the officers fanned out.

“I heard two or three shots at around 7:55 p.m. (1855 GMT), 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,” 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.'”

Freelance journalist Camille Belsoeur was at a friend’s apartment when they heard the gunfire, which she at first mistook for firecrackers.

“We opened the window. I saw a soldier firing shots, about 12 to 15 shots,” Belsoeur said,

Other soldiers yelled for people to stay indoors and shouted ‘Go home! Go home!'” to those outside, he said.

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

“We tried our best to resuscitate him. We applied CPR. We dragged him into a restaurant close by,” Fritz said.

He said it took more than 45 minutes for an ambulance to arrive, during which time an emergency doctor advised by telephone “that any further efforts would be futile.”

The victim “is still here in this restaurant but we have abandoned all hope for him,” Fritz said.

France previously endured several high-profile extremist attacks, including the coordinated attacks at multiple Paris locations that killed 130 people and wounded hundreds in November 2015. A 2016 truck attack in Nice killed dozens.

President Emmanuel Macron adjourned a meeting at the presidential palace Tuesday night to monitor the emergency, his office said, indicating the gravity of the attack.

Castaner and the Paris prosecutor, who is in charge of anti-terror probes in France, headed to Strasbourg. The prosecutor’s office said the investigation was being conducted on suspicion of murder and attempted murder in relation with a terrorist enterprise charges, suggesting officials think the alleged shooter may have links to extremists.

In multiple neighborhoods of Strasbourg, the French Interior Ministry urged the public to remain indoors. Local authorities tweeted for the public to “avoid the area of the police station,” which is close to the city’s Christmas market.

European Parliament spokesman Jaume Duch said that “the European Parliament has been closed and no one can leave until further notice.” It wasn’t immediately clear how many people were inside.

The attack revived memories of a new millennium terror plot targeting Strasbourg’s Christmas market. Ten suspected Islamic militants were convicted and sentenced to prison in December 2004 for their role in a plot to blow up the market on the New Year’s Eve ushering in 2000..

The Algerian and French-Algerian suspects – including an alleged associate of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden – went on trial in October on charges they were involved in the foiled plot for the attack.

They were sentenced to prison terms ranging from one to nine years.

Story: Sylvie Corbet, Jean-francois Badias, Elaine Ganley

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Bangkok to Become John Mayer Wonderland in April

Photo: John Mayer / Facebook

BANGKOK — Got the afternoon and room for two? Discover John Mayer discovering Bangkok when the Grammy-winning singer-songwriter comes to the capital next year.

Mayer will perform in April 3 at Impact Arena Muang Thong Thani as part of his 2019 world tour, local promoter Bec-Tero Entertainment announced online.

Tickets start at 2,000 baht. They can be purchased via Thaiticketmajor from Jan. 26. Feb. 9.

It will mark the American artist’s first show in Thailand.

The 41-year-old guitarist – whose soft rock and melodic blues brought him fame and audiences worldwide – is best known for his songs “Your Body is a Wonderland,” “Gravity” and “Daughters.”

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Cash Rush! Commotion as Crowds Hustle for 500B Holiday Handout

Welfare card holders wait in line Dec. 9 to withdraw 500-baht holiday stipends in Yala province.
Welfare card holders wait in line Dec. 9 to withdraw 500-baht holiday stipends in Yala province.

BANGKOK — Chaos erupted in front of Krung Thai Bank offices and ATMs nationwide as crowds flocked to receive a government stipend just in time for the holidays.

While an ATM withdrawal may be routine for many, that wasn’t the case for all of the 11.4 million welfare card holders who turned up to get their cash, especially in rural areas. A scarcity of bank branches and lack of familiarity with the system resulted in lengthy queues and long waits punctuated by brawls and lurking opportunists.

The 500-baht handouts, described as a “New Year’s gift” to registered low-income Thais, were included in a 38 billion baht raft of measures approved last month by the interim cabinet to improve their living conditions.

Read: New Welfare Cards a Boost For Rich or Poor?

Though many praised the money as a bonus that would help “extend the lifeline,” its distribution caused major disruptions and confusion at most – if not all – branches of Krung Thai, the sole institution used by those enrolled in the welfare program known commonly as “cards for the poor.”

Not all card holders could receive the money on the same day. They were divided into three groups based on their identification numbers. The money was deposited in three rounds Saturday through Monday, which also happened to be a national holiday.

Banks were closed, leaving ATMs the only option.

Apart from monthly cash stipends for seniors over 60 and about 4 million other recipients of government vocational training, it was the first time cash was deposited onto the cards used in the program. They normally are furnished with limited credits for transportation, groceries, school supplies and agricultural products which are renewed monthly and cannot be accrued.

Many who showed up with their cards thought they had to do so immediately or risk losing it, while others just wanted the money in hand as soon as possible.

And thus the disarray began. In Songkhla City, several card holders, not knowing about the system, rushed to the banks on the first day only to later leave empty-handed because it wasn’t their day yet.

Aggravated delays piled up as many forgot their PIN numbers, or simply didn’t know how to activate the cards to withdraw money from the machines.

Napakhwan Phaiyasaen, 29, said she went to withdraw the money yesterday for several of her family members who had no idea how to do so in her hometown of Uttaradit’s Thong Saen Khan district, where about 32,000 people live.

It has no Krung Thai branch, leading to a chaotic scene at its sole Krung Thai ATM.

“It was really messy, because the procedure is quite complicated. … Many entered the wrong PINs until their cards were suspended,” she said. “People were lining up since 4am, and there was still a queue there at 10pm.”

In Trat City, 66-year-old Bulloon Sangsuwan said Monday that the withdrawal process was too complicated, especially for seniors who had never used such machines before. He said he normally asks bank staff for help, but this time he couldn’t as it was closed for the holiday.

Machines in other provinces, such as Ranong and Ratchaburi, simply ran out of money due to the massive cash rush.

Heated arguments broke out in the crowd Sunday in front of an ATM in Uthai Thani province and had to be settled by police. Officers said the frustration was caused by line cutters, some which carried numerous cards to withdraw from in one go, a few of which had yet to receive the deposit.

Nampheung Pongsawas, who was among the dozens in line at the scene, said she arrived at 9am and had waited several hours. She added that some enterprising people were charging 10 baht to 60 baht from those who didn’t want to wait or didn’t know how to do withdraw.

The program, initiated by the junta after it seized the power, has long been criticized for its restrictions as the wrong way to help the poor. The program has been accused of being yet another spending stimulus and means of passing money from the poor to business owners. Critics of the military government said the New Year’s stipend amounted to illegal campaigning in the run-up to an election just over two months away.

Napakhwan, who works at the Thong Saen Khan Hospital, also mentioned people taking advantage to profit from the situation.

“Some were hired by the whole community to withdraw the money for 10 to 20 baht each. They carried like a hundred cards with them,” she said. “One grocery shop owner I know told the people to take any goods from the shop within 500 baht, and took the cards from them to withdraw the cash later.”

Although she thinks giving stipends to seniors is a good thing, she believes it won’t be a sustainable way to help other low-income Thais, as most of the money will be spent in vain if they aren’t educated about savings and encouraged to find viable income sources.

“Most holding the cards are people who don’t have a permanent job or land of their own. More than half of whom I know are just lazy and alcoholic. They’ll spend it all on booze,” she said. “Giving them cash won’t improve their lives at all. It only encourages them to wait for help from others.”

There’s no time limit to withdraw the one-time stipend. Those who obtain cards before year’s end will receive the cash Jan. 5 and Feb. 1.

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