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Lost Souls Rejoice: SoulBar Reopens Next Week in Silom

Photo: SoulBar / Facebook

BANGKOK — Four months after its Charoen Krung location went dark, a bar dedicated to live jazz and other music will reopen next week in a new neighborhood.

Moving from the old town area over to the big-hit nightlife zone of Silom, SoulBar is ready to belt it out again in a venue that will be familiar to denizens of the dark.

The ground floor of Whiteline will offer a little more space for the same bevy of talented artists. Hear the stirring vocals of Washington D.C.’s Coco Rouzier while house band the Supergoods (Silpakorn University) will make a comeback with a set of neo-soul, R&B and more. Before and after their performances, audiences will hear DJs Obba and A spin golden grooves.

The jazz bar’s former location closed on its fourth anniversary this past August. Co-owner Romain Dupuy said it would soon reopen at a new, nearby venue. Apparently that fell through, and after some struggles, the bar has settled on Silom. Dupuy said the change follows the “opportunities that made sense to us being in a different corner of Bangkok.”

“Hopefully one day it would come back to Chinatown,” Dupuy continued.

SoulBar will reopen Dec. 19 at Whiteline on Soi Silom 8, which is also home to second-floor, underground music venue Safe Room.

Related stories:

SoulBar Makes a Move on Fourth Anniversary

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Official Defends New Election Twist: Removing Party Logos From Ballots

A 2011 file photo of a sealed ballot box in Bang Rak district of Bangkok.

BANGKOK — The Election Commission is slated to vote tomorrow on a proposal to remove the names and party emblems of candidates from ballots in the upcoming election.

Election commissioner Krit Urwongse said the issue will be discussed at an urgent meeting called by the agency Tuesday in the wake of widespread criticism from political parties and pro-democracy activists who accuse the military government of foul play.

The agency will announce its decision next week, Krit said.

Read: Billboard Praising Prayuth as Next PM Replaced

His colleague Nath Laoseesawakool told reporters that stripping any reference to candidates and their parties on the ballots would make it easier for officials to print the papers and send them to overseas voters.

Pro-democracy campaigner Nuttaa Mahattana accused the Election Commission, supposedly an independent agency, of following the junta’s bidding.

บัตรเลือกตั้ง2554
A ballot paper for party list candidates in the 2011 general election.

She said she will stage a protest at the commission’s headquarters tomorrow to voice her disagreement with the plan.

The proposal was first made public last week by chief election commissioner Jarungvith Phumma, who gave a similar rationale. Jarungvith said nameless ballots that bear only the numbers of candidates are easier to produce and transport.

But the explanation failed to satisfy politicians and critics of the junta. There has never been a prior issue printing ballots for overseas voters that, like those used domestically, feature the names, logos and names of the candidates’ parties.

The move is the latest in a series of government policies that critics say are meant to diminish the power of traditional civilian parties and disenfranchise voters.

Pheu Thai Party spokesman Anusorn Iamsa-ard said the plan, if implemented, would place a new burden on voters to remember the names and parties they want to vote for, while Panthongtae Shinawatra, son of influential former PM Thaksin Shinawatra, said older voters might mark the wrong box altogether.

Democrat MP Wirat Kanyasiri called the idea “ridiculous.” Democrat deputy leader Nipit Intarasombat also mocked the Election Commission for “trying to rationalize an irrational” proposal.

A government spokesman has denied accusations the regime is meddling in the election, now scheduled to take place in late February. Puttipong Punnakan said the government is not involved in the proposal, which he said was entirely the work of election officials.

https://www.facebook.com/Devil.Magazine/photos/a.211331432243576/2165972386779461/?type=3&theater

A fanpage of Manchester United football team posted a spoof scoreboard result, which removes the names and logos of all clubs, to hide the fact that its rival Liverpool is currently the leading team.

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Nearly 85 Percent of UN Nations Back Migration Deal; Not US

Wazzizi, a sub-Saharan migrant from Guinea, sits Thursday outside the tent where he lives at at Ouled Ziane camp in Casablanca, Morocco. Photo: Mosa'ab Elshamy / Associated Press
Wazzizi, a sub-Saharan migrant from Guinea, sits Thursday outside the tent where he lives at at Ouled Ziane camp in Casablanca, Morocco. Photo: Mosa'ab Elshamy / Associated Press

MARRAKECH, Morocco — Defying fierce opposition from the U.S. and a few other nations, nearly 85 percent of U.N. member states agreed Monday on a sweeping yet non-binding accord to ensure safe, orderly and humane migration.

The debate over the Global Compact for Migration, the first of its kind, has proven to be a pivotal test of the U.N.-led effort to crack down on the often dangerous and illegal movements across borders that have turned people smuggling into a worldwide industry, and give people seeking economic opportunity a chance.

“Unregulated migration bears a terrible human cost: a cost in lives lost on perilous journeys across deserts, oceans and rivers; and a cost in lives ruined at the hands of smugglers, unscrupulous employers and other predators,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told a migration conference in Marrakech, Morocco.

“More than 60,000 migrants have died on the move since the year 2000,” he said. “This is a source of collective shame.”

Migration affects hundreds of millions of people across the globe – farmers coming off the land or forced by climate change to head to cities, families fleeing war or persecution at home, impoverished workers from the developing world looking for jobs in rich countries. It can also involve high-skilled workers from developed nations looking for opportunities beyond their homelands.

Defenders say migration greases the wheels of the world economy by diversifying and rejuvenating workforce in aging rich countries and providing a needed source of cash to poorer countries through remittances sent home by migrants.

Opponents often fear that an influx of migrants can dilute their countries’ character, import poverty or crime, reduce wages and take jobs from tax-paying citizens.

A total of 164 countries among the 193 U.N. members approved the agreement by acclamation Monday. The U.N. General Assembly will meet on Dec. 19 to endorse it.

At the two-day conference, U.N. leaders were hoping to lure in holdouts from mostly Western nations who were not signing: Australia, Austria, the Czech Republic, the Dominican Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Poland and Slovakia along with the United States, which under President Donald Trump did not participate in drafting the accord.

Louise Arbour of Canada, a former U.N. human rights chief, said the issue also has been tied up in parliamentary debates in Belgium, Bulgaria, Estonia, Italy, Israel, Slovenia and Switzerland – although some of them did participate in creating the accord, which has since been ensnared by tough political headwinds.

The conference is the capstone of efforts set in motion two years ago when all 193 U.N. member states, including the U.S. under President Barack Obama, adopted a declaration saying that no country can manage international migration on its own and agreed to work on a global compact.

The U.N.’s International Organization for Migration defines migrants as anyone working or living far from home. It says every refugee – people who flee persecution in places like Myanmar or Syria – is a migrant. Unlike refugees, some migrants can be motivated by economic opportunity, and many of those head to rich, developed countries in the West or the Persian Gulf.

The Trump administration – which is demanding a wall on the Mexican border and has sent U.S. military troops to the border to block a migrant caravan moving toward the U.S. through Central America – pulled out of the accord a year ago. It claimed that parts of the compact clashed with “U.S. immigration and refugee policies.”

Some European Union countries, including Italy, Poland and Hungary, now have anti-migrant populist governments that have reacted strongly after over 1 million migrants – mostly refugees fleeing conflict in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan – poured into Europe in 2015.

Proponents of the compact decried “false information,” such as the claim it will force countries to legalize immigration.

Defenders of the pact simply want to remind some politicians and countries that migrants are people too, and have human rights. The U.N. was also celebrating the 70th anniversary of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights on Monday.

“The easiest fear to stoke up is the fear of the foreigner,” U.N. human rights office spokesman Rupert Colville said.

Story:  Amira El Masaiti, Jamey Keaten

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US to Return 3 Bells Seized From Philippines a Century Ago

U.S. soldiers of Company C, 9th Infantry Regiment who survived a Filipino ambush in 1901 pose with a church bell used to signal the attack. Photo: Fred R. Brown / Wikimedia Commons
U.S. soldiers of Company C, 9th Infantry Regiment who survived a Filipino ambush in 1901 pose with a church bell used to signal the attack. Photo: Fred R. Brown / Wikimedia Commons

MANILA — The United States is to return three church bells seized by U.S. troops as war trophies from the Philippines more than a century ago in a move long demanded by Filipino leaders, including the current president, who is critical of Washington and has gravitated toward China.

A representative of Defense Secretary James Mattis is to turn over the bells to the Philippine defense chief in a ceremony Tuesday at an air force base in Manila, closing a dark chapter in the treaty allies’ love-hate relationship.

American forces took the bells after Filipino villagers killed 48 U.S. troops on central Samar island in 1901. President Rodrigo Duterte asked the U.S. last year to return the bells, saying “This is painful for us.”

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Danish Facilities Group Closes in 13 Countries, Trims Staff

The International Service Systems, or ISS, headquarters in 2017 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photo: Castellbo / Wikimedia Commons
The International Service Systems, or ISS, headquarters in 2017 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photo: Castellbo / Wikimedia Commons

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — A leading facility services company says it will shut down operations in 13 countries as it tries to boost growth and simplify its business.

Denmark-based International Service System, or ISS, says the aim of the two-year plan is “reducing complexity and risk,” and once completed, the number of its customers is expected to have been reduced by half.

ISS said Monday it wants reduce its staff by 20 percent, from the present 490,000 worldwide to around 390,000.

It added that operations in Thailand, Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Brazil, Chile, Israel, Estonia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia and Romania will be divested.

Ultimately, it aims for annual organic growth of up to 6 percent.

The Copenhagen-based group has activities in more than 70 countries, serving both public and private sector customers.

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Iranian Drug Gang Targets Japanese Tourists as Mules: Police

Maj. Gen. Surachate Hakparn, immigration chief, on Monday shows evidence seized from an Iranian man accused of tricking Japanese tourists to smuggle drugs during a press briefing in Bangkok.
Maj. Gen. Surachate Hakparn, immigration chief, on Monday shows evidence seized from an Iranian man accused of tricking Japanese tourists to smuggle drugs during a press briefing in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — An Iranian man was arrested in Bangkok and accused of being involved in an international crime ring tricking Japanese tourists to smuggle drugs into Asian and European countries, police said Monday.

Police said they detained Mohamad Ali Ezazi, 43, on Friday and seized several kilograms of methamphetamine from him following a complaint from a Japanese tourist. The tourist told authorities he was given the contraband after arriving in Thailand last week on a free tour he won from a travel website in his home country, deputy immigration police chief Itthipol Itthisarnronchai said.

The raids of Ezazi’s rooms in Bangkok found suitcases packed with clothes soaked in liquid methamphetamine, including about 3 kilograms of crystal meth, police said. He was charged with illegal drug possession.

The unidentified tourist told immigration police and the Japanese Embassy that he was awarded a trip to Bangkok, Shanghai and Frankfurt along with about 200,000-baht pocket money. After landing in Thailand on Wednesday, he told police that the website’s staff asked him to pick up a suitcase to bring to China, claiming it had been forgotten by another tourist arriving before him.

Maj. Gen. Itthipol said the Japanese man alerted authorities after he opened the suitcase and found the clothes inside had a suspicious texture. The Immigration Bureau then instructed him to pretend to be too sick to travel. He asked to return the luggage and Ezazi was arrested when he showed up to reclaim it.

The investigation later confirmed the clothes in the suitcases were doused with liquid methamphetamine, Itthipol added.

According to police, Ezazi confessed to preparing the suitcases and delivering one of them to the victim, and said he had worked with Iranian associates and a network of Yakuza crime syndicates tricking Japanese tourists and using them as drug mules going into Asia and Europe for about two years.

Ezazi told police that the group specifically targeted Japanese tourists as the their passport is now the most accepted, with visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 190 countries.

Itthipol said further investigation will be conducted to crack down on the network.

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Colder Weather Coming to Bangkok, North Through This Week

Tourists line up Monday morning on Doi Inthanon in Chiang Mai province. Photo: Matichon
Tourists line up Monday morning on Doi Inthanon in Chiang Mai province. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — Cooler temperatures are coming to the capital and northern Thailand this week, the national weather agency said Monday.

Expect cooler mornings as Bangkok’s average lows will drop by up to 2C to about 21C from Wednesday to Sunday. The north and northeast will face gusty winds, while temperatures could fall by 4C to as low as 15C during the week.

As tourists start flocking to mountain areas to feel the chill, the forecast said northern mountains will be even cooler starting Thursday with the average low falling 6C to 13C.

The south, however, will experience torrential rain throughout the week, which could trigger flash floods.

Related stories:

Bangkok Gets Cooler: Temperatures to Drop by 3C

Storm, Flood, Fire Warnings as Cold Season Begins Saturday

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Asian Shares Fall as Huawei Arrest Risks China-US Fallout

Specialist Meric Greenbaum, center, works with traders at his post in May on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press
Specialist Meric Greenbaum, center, works with traders at his post in May on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Asian markets were broadly lower Monday after China protested the arrest of a senior executive of Chinese electronics giant Huawei, who is suspected of trying to evade U.S. trade curbs on Iran.

 

Keeping Score

Thailand’s SET lost 0.2 percent Monday morning and traded at 1,649.99. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 slid 2.3 percent in early trading to 21,191.23, after revised data showed that its economy shrank by 2.5 percent in the third quarter, more than expected. South Korea’s Kospi fell 1.2 percent to 2,051.82. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng shed 1.6 percent to 25,660.76 and the Shanghai Composite was 0.8 percent lower at 2,585.94. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was down 2 percent at 5,569.90. Shares fell in Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia and the Philippines.

 

Keeping Score

Stocks tumbled on Friday on weaker-than-expected jobs growth and worries that the U.S.-China trade dispute will not be resolved within a 90-day timeframe. The S&P 500 index slipped 2.3 percent to 2,633.08 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gave up 2.2 percent to 24,388.95. The Nasdaq composite tumbled 3 percent to 6,969.25. The Russell 2000 index of small-company stocks dropped 2 percent to 1,448.09.

 

Huawei Arrest

China has slammed the “extremely egregious” detention of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou and demanded that the U.S. cancel an order for her arrest, the official Xinhua News Agency reported on Sunday. Meng, who is accused of attempting to evade U.S. sanctions on Iran, was arrested in Canada on Dec. 1. In a meeting with Terry Branstad, the U.S. ambassador to Beijing, Vice Foreign Minister Le Yucheng urged Washington to “immediately correct its wrong actions” and vowed to take further steps based on its response, Xinhua said. The two countries recently agreed to hold off on further tariffs for 90 days while they attempt to resolve a range of issues from trade to technology development.

 

Analyst’s Take

Although the Huawei arrest “falls under the purview of independent courts, the timing of it is unfortunate and could jeopardize the truce that was just agreed,” Chang Wei Liang of Mizuho Bank said in a commentary. “Markets have correspondingly responded by reducing risk on the table, waiting to assess the extent of any political fallout.”

 

Slowing Chinese Exports

On Saturday, Chinese customs data showed that exports rose 5.4 percent to USD$227.4 billion in November over a year earlier. This is a broad decline from the 12.6 percent surge in the previous month. Imports gained 3 percent to $182.7 billion, as compared to a 20.3 percent jump in October. The numbers paint a picture of a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy, which could weigh on global growth.

 

Energy

Oil futures settled after the OPEC cartel and other major oil producers agreed to reduce production by 1.2 million barrels a day starting from January. The cuts will last for six months. U.S. benchmark crude fell 3 cents to $52.58 a barrel. It gained $1.12 to $52.61 a barrel in New York on Friday. Brent crude, used to price international oils, rose 45 cents to $62.12. The contract added $1.61 to $61.67 a barrel in London.

 

Currencies

The dollar weakened to 112.32 yen from 112.72 yen late Friday. The euro rose to $1.1435 from $1.1379.

Story: Annabelle Liang

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Unfold Magical Moments at the Park Hyatt (Sponsored)

BANGKOK – Festive occasions are exceptionally stimulating at Park Hyatt Bangkok’s various elevated venues. Christmas and New Year celebrations at the elegant restaurants and sky high bars embrace timeless traditions and sophisticated innovations alike, setting the stage for memorable and fulfilling experiences for all.

CHRISTMAS CAROUSING

Celebrate a classic Christmas and be serenaded in the festive spirit by soul-stirring diva singer Demi Nova and her latest five-piece band, Blaq Pocket, enlivening the ambiance with rhythmic Christmas cheer.

Book through EVENT POP before November 30th to receive 10% discount.

FESTIVE AFTERNOON TEA (15 December-5 January)

Afternoon tea is such a feature of the Christmas build-up and Park Hyatt Bangkok’s pastry chefs are inspired to make it memorably mouth-watering. Enjoy double portions of four savoury and six sweet dainties making a perfect Christmas tea-for-two ensemble.

Immerse in the Christmas spirit together over: salmon gravlax/sour cream & lemon; foie gras/quince paste served on pain d’épice; raspberry croquet en bouche/lychee; and so much more.

CHRISTMAS EVE DINNER AT EMBASSY ROOM (Monday, December 24th, 2018)

Feast on a 5-course set Christmas Dinner co-created by Executive Chef Franck Detrait and Chef de Cuisine Pierre Tavernier and culinary team, interspersed with live Christmas carol singing, the action from the theatre kitchen, and free-flowing festive ambiance.

Among the festive delicacies are Alaskan king crab/Oscietra caviar & avocado/pear & watercress; Hokkaido scallop/parsnip & shitake mushroom/chestnut & black truffle; Australian lamb fillet/green asparagus & peas, just for starters.

THB 3,300++ per person

THB 4,500++ per person with wine pairing

6:00p.m. – 10:00 p.m.

CHRISTMAS EVE DINNER AT PENTHOUSE GRILL (Monday, December 24th, 2018)

Soak up the Christmas spirit where the lights can be seen sparkling in celebration across Bangkok. Indulge in chef’s special Festive Set Menu, select from the indulgent a la carte menu, or lay claim to the Chef de Cuisine Andew Dickie’s coveted Chef’s Table and let him personally pamper your party’s palates beyond expectations.

THB 3,950 per person

THB 5,500++ per person with wine pairing

6:00p.m. – 10:30 p.m.

*Seats up to 8 persons with minimum spending of THB 50,000++

CHRISTMAS DAY BBQ BRUNCH AT EMBASSY ROOM (Tuesday, December 25th, 2018)

Gather in a fabulous Christmas BBQ Brunch by poolside terrace. Explore the rewards of free-flow beverage packages, bubbles & fizz, and festive-crafted sodas.

THB 2,850++ food + soft drinks/drinking water/coffee &tea

THB 3,850++ food + boutique wine/bubbles & fizz + gin garden & curated festive drinks

THB 4,850++ food + all above including Champagne

12:00p.m. – 3:00 p.m.

Highlights include oysters/lobster/tiger prawn/mussels on ice; yellow fin tuna tartar with mango; Scottish smoked salmon; beef tartar station; salted crust salmon; “a la minute” duck foie gras & celeriac and Hokkaido scallop & cauliflower. From the BBQ terrace and carving station, Australian beef, tiger prawn, lamb and chicken skewers, lamb leg and Australian ribeye. Not to mention truffle brie and Parma ham. And for a sweet sensation? Bûche de Noël, Cherry chestnut eclairs; and Christmas tree financier.

PENTHOUSE GRILL

Savur the Christmas moment over chef’s Festive Set Menu, select a la carte delicacies, or let Chef de Cuisine Andew Dickie personally regale your gathering with delightful surprises at the Chef’s Table.

THB 3,950 per person

THB 5,500++ per person with wine pairing

6:00p.m. – 10:30 p.m.

For reservations at Penthouse Bar + Grill, call +66 2 011 7480 or email [email protected]

For reservations at the Embassy Room, Living Room and The Bar, call +66 2 011 7430 or email [email protected]

*All prices are subject to 7% government tax and 10% service charge

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Love It When ‘The 1975’ Makes it to Bangkok Next Year

Update Feb. 26: Organizer added the second show on Sept. 14 

BANGKOK — Four years after rocking a Bangkok hall with a beer in one hand and a mic in the other, Matt Healy and his alt-rock folks announced their return to the capital for next year.

Confirming their awaited return, The 1975 will be performing in September in Bangkok, promoter Viji Corp announced Monday morning.

The gig will take place Sept. 13 at Thunder Dome, Muang Thong Thani. Tickets start at 2,800 baht and they are available online.

The indie pop rock group played in Bangkok for the first time in January 2015. It is best known for their songs “Chocolate,” “Somebody Else,” “Love It If We Made It” and “Robbers.”

The band consists of Matthew Healy, Adam Hann, Ross MacDonald and George Daniel. The quartet was formed in Manchester, England and has released three studio albums so far. The fourth album, called “Notes on a Conditional Form,” will be released in May.

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