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Carbs Come 2nd to Drinks at ‘Carbar’

The salami picante pizza (340 baht) and the half charcuterie board (550 baht).

Do: Score some drinks and snacks at Carbar while taking in the late-year breeze at this casual, hip Italian joint in a Thonglor hotspot. Don’t: Expect to be dazzled by flavor.

Rather than think of Carbar as a Thonglor Italian join with drinks, better treat it as a bar with Italian-style snacks and 17 percent tax and service charge.

It’s located in 72 Courtyard, a two-story event that’s already home to Japanese, Thai and Spanish restaurants. Italian seems the next logical step. Thus Carbar, which quietly launched in September on the ground floor, serving pizzas, pastas and charcuterie boards.

But to best enjoy what Carbar has to offer (named for its pairing of carbs and booze), forgo the aforementioned and head straight to the antipastos and drinks. Bangkok winter is coming, and the breezy, open-air courtyard enhanced by outdoor air conditioning really make for an unbeatable atmosphere.

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Let’s start with the food.

Though the vegetarian arancini were delightful, crispy balls of tangy camembert, sundried tomatoes and rice cut with the sweetness of apricot jam dip (150 baht); the pastas served on a recent visit were costly disappointments. The spaghetti cacio e pepe (220 baht) tasted like sponge spammed with black pepper, and ordering the ravioli (290 baht) gives you four pieces stuffed with soft, but intensely salty short rib. Both were covered with parmigiano reggiano.

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Italian sausage pizza (290 baht).

The wood pizzas (eight large pieces for 220 baht to 340 baht) are not so different from neighborhood thin-crust pizza joints that have wood ovens. When chewing on the salami picante pizza (340 baht), the tongue hunts for “picante” amid all the cheese and too-sparse purple onions. The white sauce Italian sausage pizza (290 baht) delivers juicy sausage, but is mercilessly creamy – that lian flavor other palates may welcome heartily.

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Strawberry frose (250 baht)

Asked if there was anything to cut through the grease, staff offered what was probably the most relieving part of the meal: alcohol. The strawberry frose (250 baht), a smoothie of Australian prosecco and strawberries, the negroni with grapefruit bitters (280 baht) and the Babich Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc (320 baht) were tasty, tangy and tropical.

The charcuterie board (550 baht for half, 850 baht for a full board) delivered high-quality, imported slices. A few walnuts and olives, one dried apricot and a single grape round out the board, aided by three generic water biscuits you can get a box at Tops for about 60 baht. Some questionable pairings here: pecorino romano and mortadella?

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Vegetarian arancini (150 baht).

Dessert was a vanilla sundae topped with honey and sea salt – refreshing but super sweet (100 baht).

Hanging out at Carbar and enjoying the Courtyard 72 buzz can make for an enjoyable evening. But it doesn’t quite rise to meet the expectations of today for a new Italian restaurant on Thonglor, not when places like Al Dente are only 100 meters away.

Carbar is located on the ground floor of 72 Courtyard on Soi Sukhumvit 55, a short ride or walk from BTS Thong Lo.

Photos by Chayanit Itthipongmaetee

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Salami picante pizza (340 baht).
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Spaghetti cacio e pepe (220 baht).
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Ravioli (290 baht).

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Vanilla sundae (100 baht).
CARBAR 181102 0010
Italian sausage pizza (290 baht).

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Doc on Thai-Danish Love Part of Diaspora Film Fest

BANGKOK — A documentary that looks at hundreds of Thai women marrying Danish men will debut in Bangkok next month as part of a film festival.

The Global Migration Film Festival this year will show seven films with highlights including “Heartbound,” which follows Thai women who moved to Denmark to escape poverty and prostitution and married local men.

The story starts in the early ‘90s when sex worker Sommai meets Neils in Pattaya. They fall in love, get married, and Sommai leaves to Denmark. There she becomes a matchmaker for Thai women and Danish men.

The film – shot over a decade in both countries – is directed and written by Janus Metz and anthropologist Sine Plambech.

“Heartbound” will screen at 2pm on Dec. 16 at the Bangkok Screening Room. The screening will be followed by a Q&A with co-director Plambech.

The event’s other six offerings include “A Thousand Girls Like Me,” a docufilm on Khatera, an Afghan woman sexually abused by her father who goes public with her story on national TV in search of justice. Canadian drama “Monsieur Lazhar” follows an Algerian immigrant hired to replace an elementary school teacher who committed suicide.

A deeply moving story comes from “Sidney and Friends,” a documentary about Sidney – an intersex Kenyan from Nairobi – who flees to meet a group of transgender friends after his family tries to kill him.

The festival runs Dec. 14 through Dec. 16 at the Bangkok Screening Room on Soi Sala Daeng 1, which is not far from BTS Sala Daeng or MRT Silom. The alternative cinema seats 52 people.

Admission is free. Tickets for each film are available on the day of screening at the venue on a first-come, first-served basis.

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Singapore Passes ASEAN Gavel – and Garland – to Thailand

Singaporean PM Lee Hsien Loong enthusiastically claps along as PM Prayuth Chan-ocha brandishes his gavel Thursday.

BANGKOK — As the new chair of ASEAN, Thailand will promote mutual respect and shared benefits for its 10 member nations, junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha said at a handover ceremony Thursday.

Speaking in Singapore, where Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong presented a symbolic gavel to the junta leader, Prayuth said ASEAN is now the sixth largest economic power in the world, and he believes the bloc will rise to fourth by 2030.

“For this reason, the 10 nations will have to cooperate even more closely, based on the principle of ASEAN unity and 3Ms, which are mutual trust, mutual respect and mutual benefits,” Gen. Prayuth told the audience at the close of the annual ASEAN summit.

Thailand’s term as ASEAN chairman begins Jan. 1. A new logo was also unveiled to celebrate the occasion, showing a Thai traditional garland in mangosteen purple surrounding the ASEAN emblem.

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Australia, Malaysia Trade Words Over Israel Embassy Shift

Mahathir Mohamad speaks at a news conference May 10 in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: Associated Press
Mahathir Mohamad speaks at a news conference May 10 in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: Associated Press

SYDNEY — A top Australian official seized Friday on past comments from Malaysia’s prime minister seen as anti-Semitic, amid a diplomatic war of words over the possibility of Canberra moving its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad raised the potential embassy switch in a meeting with Australian counterpart Scott Morrison in Singapore on Thursday, later telling reporters such a move could increase the threat of extremism.

“I pointed out that in dealing with terrorism, one has to know the causes,” Mahathir said. “Adding to the cause for terrorism is not going to be helpful.”

Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg responded Friday, saying Canberra would make its own decisions. Frydenberg, the son of a Holocaust survivor, also pointed out past comments that the leader of Muslim-majority Malaysia has made about Jewish people.

“He has called Jews ‘hooked-nosed people.’ He has questioned the number of people that have been killed in the Holocaust. He banned ‘Schindler’s List’ as a movie being shown,” Frydenberg told reporters in Melbourne.

In an interview with the BBC last month, Mahathir said “the problem in the Middle East began with the creation of Israel,” and he defended his description of Jews as “hook-nosed” in his book, “The Malay Dilemma.”

“They are hook-nosed. Many people called the Malays fat-nosed. We didn’t object,” he told the BBC.

Mahathir also challenged historical accounts that 6 million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, saying the figure was 4 million.

In 1994, “Schindler’s List” became one of many films banned in Malaysia during Mahathir’s previous time as prime minister, with the country’s film board rejecting it as Zionist propaganda.

When asked by The Associated Press in an August interview about his past comments about Jewish people, Mahathir said “we should be able to criticize everybody.”

“Anti-Semitic is a term that is invented to prevent people from criticizing the Jews for doing wrong things,” he said.

Australia’s indication that it may follow the United States’ contentious move of relocating its embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv was seen by many Australians as a political stunt. Critics called it a cynical attempt to win votes in a by-election last month for a Sydney seat with a high Jewish population.

But on Friday, Frydenberg insisted shifting the embassy made sense, although it has also inflamed tensions with Australia’s closest neighbor, Muslim-majority Indonesia.

“Australia already recognizes Israel’s sovereignty over West Jerusalem. It’s where the Israeli Parliament is. It’s where the Australian ambassador presents his or her credentials. It will be the capital of Israel under any two-state solution,” Frydenberg said.

Morrison said Friday that a decision on the embassy would be made by Christmas, but rejected fears the plan had caused collateral damage by placing in jeopardy a proposed free trade agreement with Indonesia.

“I do not conflate the issues,” Morrison told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.

“What we need to understand is that Australia has to set its own foreign policy and all I have said is that we would consider this question if we believed that it would advance the issues of the two-state solution.”

Indonesian opposition politician Dian Islamiati Fatwa also warned this week that Australia moving its embassy may provoke Islamic radicals in his country.

Story: Trevor Marshallsea

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Activist Protests Higher Salaries for Generals

Generals observe a military parade in Bangkok on Sep. 28, 2018.

BANGKOK — A transparency activist on Friday slammed plans to increase salaries for top military brass.

Saying Thailand has more than enough generals, Srisuwan Janya urged the interim parliament to instead focus on helping farmers who are suffering from a drop in crop prices. The lawmakers are set to debate the bill today.

“At this moment our country has too many generals in the armed forces,” Srisuwan wrote online. “They should abolish half the positions, or more than half, even.”

The bill, which would increase monthly pay for five-star generals in all military branches by 5 percent from 72,965 baht to 76,604 baht, was proposed to the parliament by the defense ministry earlier this year. The latest hike was approved three years ago.

Defense spokesman Kongcheep Tantravanich was not available for comment as of publication time, while junta spokesman Winthai Suvaree referred questions to the defense ministry.

The Thai armed forces have long been criticized for their top-heavy structure. This year’s military reshuffle report says about 900 generals were promoted, but military experts believe the total number of Thai generals could be more than 1,000. That’s more than the United States military’s 886 generals, despite having thrice the number of troops.

Srisuwan said he would file a complaint with the national anti-graft agency against any lawmaker who votes in favor of the salary increase.

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Death Penalty Sought in Killing of Vietnamese Tour Leaders

An undated photo of Julius Trotter, 31. Photo: Associated Press
An undated photo of Julius Trotter, 31. Photo: Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — A 31-year-old convicted felon will face the death penalty in the robbery and killing of two Vietnamese tour leaders during a break-in to their room at a Las Vegas Strip hotel, a prosecutor said Thursday.

Julius Damiano Deangilo Trotter’s defense attorneys did not immediately respond to messages about the decision made public during Trotter’s brief appearance in custody in Clark County District Court.

Trotter could learn his trial date during his next court appearance Dec. 5, prosecutor Michelle Fleck said.

He is being held without bail at the Clark County jail in Las Vegas after pleading not guilty to murder, burglary and robbery in the June 1 stabbings of Sang Boi Nghia and Khoung Ba Le Nguyen in a room at the Circus Circus hotel.

Nghia owned a tour business in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and Nguyen was a tour employee.

Police later found the door latch to their 21st-floor room didn’t work properly. A court filing described a method in which would-be thieves walk hotel hallways checking room doors to see if they’ll push open.

Hotel owner MGM Resorts International said it was not clear if the door lock was broken before or after Nghia and Nguyen were killed.

Trotter was arrested June 7 in Chino, California.

Trotter was on five years’ probation at the time of the killings after pleading guilty last year to felony resisting a police officer with a weapon.

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How to Get Your Pets Vaccinated, Chipped and Snipped – For Free

A cat is prepared for sterilization at a free City Hall mobile health service in an undated file photo.
A cat is prepared for sterilization at a free City Hall mobile health service in an undated file photo.

BANGKOK — Want to take home that soi cat or dog but unsure what comes next? Meet your new forever friend but low on cash? Bangkok has free public pet care benefits located throughout the capital. Here’s how to make use of them.

Having pets can come with high costs, but City Hall has been providing free services that cover not only registration, but also vaccination and sterilization to ease the burden for cat slaves and dog BFFs alike.

If you have a dog, the first step is getting it chipped and registered, as the law requires.

Microchipping

LRG DSC03552First of all, cats can’t get free microchips as they are not yet mandated by law. So if you wanna get your little tiger chipped, you’ll still have to pay to get it done at a vet clinic.

Dogs on the other hand can get microchipped for free 8am to 4pm every weekday at eight public health care centers throughout the capital. Here’s the list with contact information (English is hit and miss, ask a friend for help if needed):

  1. Rabies control office, Bangkok Veterinary Clinic, Din Daeng: 02-245-3311
  2. Public Health Center 21 Wat Thatthong: 02-391-6082 / 02-381-6659
  3. Public Health Center 23 Si Phraya: 02-236-4055, Ext. 213
  4. Public Health Center 24 Bang Khen: 02-579-1342
  5. Public Health Center 29 Chom Thong: 02-476-6493 / 02-468-2570
  6. Public Health Center 33 Wat Hong Rattanaram: 02-472-5895-6, Ext. 109
  7. Public Health Center 43 Min Buri: 02-914-5822 / 02-543-7334
  8. Bangkok Veterinary Clinic 7, Bangkok Noi: 02-411-2432

Vaccination

theonResponsible owners keep their pets healthy and free from disease.

All places mentioned above provide free rabies vaccinations for both cats and dogs. In addition, the animal disease control office of the Livestock Department in Don Mueang district (02-929-9021, Ext. 104) also provides rabies and treatments for fleas and ticks for free. Owners are encouraged to call and book services in advance.

The next step is registering your pet. Owners should bring rabies and microchip certificates.

Registration

City Hall regulations compel owners to register dogs within 120 days of birth or 30 days after adoption. Those who don’t face fines of up to 5,000 baht. Cat registration is still not required by law, but it’s soon to be according to a new law passed by the cabinet last month.

Dog owners need a microchip certificate, a copy of their owner’s national ID or passport, home registration document, a copy of their landlord’s ID, and a certificate saying their pets have been vaccinated for rabies within the past year.

The documents should be brought to one of the city clinics or the local district office where you live, a list of which can be found online (Google translates a usable version). There’s no need to bring your pets with you for this step.

Time to Get Snipped

IMG 0030Get your dogs and cats spayed or neutered at the eight City Hall clinics or the livestock department’s animal disease control office by calling the numbers listed above to make an advanced appointment. Some offices have someone who can speak English; others do not.

Don’t have time to visit several places? Pet owners can also wait for the all-in-one free mobile health services which City Hall organizes twice a month in random locations. They’re usually announced by City Hall’s public relations team close to the event dates.

At these events, you can get your pets chipped, vaccinated, registered and snipped in one go. All services are free for both dogs and cats.

The next one will be Dec. 1 at the Bang Khae district office from 8am to 4pm.

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Bangladesh Scraps Rohingya Return, Says No One Wants to Go

An elderly Rohingya refugee holds a placard Thursday during a protest against the repatriation process at Unchiprang refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, in Bangladesh. Photo: Dar Yasin / Associated Press
An elderly Rohingya refugee holds a placard Thursday during a protest against the repatriation process at Unchiprang refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, in Bangladesh. Photo: Dar Yasin / Associated Press

COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh — Bangladesh’s plans to begin repatriating Rohingya Muslims to Myanmar on Thursday were scrapped because officials were unable to find anyone who wanted to return to the country that has been accused of driving out hundreds of thousands in a campaign of ethnic cleansing.

The refugees “are not willing to go back now,” Refugee Commissioner Abul Kalam told The Associated Press. He said officials “can’t force them to go” but will continue to try to “motivate them so it happens.”

Some people on the government’s repatriation list disappeared into the sprawling refugee camps to avoid being sent home, while others joined a large demonstration against the plan.

More than 700,000 Rohingya Muslims fled to Bangladesh from western Myanmar’s Rakhine state since August 2017 to escape killings and destruction of their villages by the military and Buddhist vigilantes that have drawn widespread condemnation of Myanmar.

The United Nations, whose human rights officials had urged Bangladesh to halt the repatriation process even as its refugee agency workers helped to facilitate it, welcomed Thursday’s development.

Firas Al-Khateeb, a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Cox’s Bazar, said it was unclear when the process might begin again. “We want their repatriation, but it has to be voluntary, safe and smooth,” he said.

Bangladesh officials declined to say whether another attempt at repatriation would be made Friday.

Bangladesh Foreign Minister A.H. Mahmood Ali told reporters in Dhaka late Thursday that “there is no question of forcible repatriation. We gave them shelter, so why should we send them back forcibly?”

At the Unchiprang refugee camp, a Bangladeshi refugee official implored the Rohingya on Thursday to return to their country over a loudspeaker.

“We have arranged everything for you, we have six buses here, we have trucks, we have food. We want to offer everything to you. If you agree to go, we’ll take you to the border, to the transit camp,” he said.

“We won’t go!” hundreds of voices, including children’s, chanted in reply.

Some refugees on the repatriation lists – which authorities say were drawn up with assistance from the UNHCR – said they don’t want to go back.

At the Jamtoli refugee camp, one of the sprawling refugee settlements near the city of Cox’s Bazar, 25-year-old Setara said she and her two children, age 4 and 7, were on a repatriation list, but her parents were not. She said she had never asked to return to Myanmar, and that she had sent her children to a school run by aid workers Thursday morning as usual.

“They killed my husband; now I live here with my parents,” said Setara, who only gave one name. “I don’t want to go back.”

She said that other refugees on the repatriation list had fled to other camps, hoping to disappear amid the crowded lanes of refugees, aid workers and Bangladeshi soldiers, which on Thursday were bustling with commerce and other activity.

Bangladesh had planned to send an initial group of 2,251 back from mid-November at a rate of 150 per day.

Myanmar officials, speaking late Thursday in the captal, Naypyitaw, said they were ready to receive the refugees. Despite those assurances, human rights activists said conditions were not yet safe for the Rohingya to go back.

The exodus began after Myanmar security forces launched a brutal crackdown following attacks by an insurgent group on guard posts. The scale, organization and ferocity of the crackdown led the U.N. and several governments to accuse Myanmar of ethnic cleansing and genocide.

Most people in Buddhist-majority Myanmar do not accept that the Rohingya Muslims are a native ethnic group, viewing them as “Bengalis” who entered illegally from Bangladesh, even though generations of Rohingya have lived in Myanmar. Nearly all have been denied citizenship since 1982, as well as access to education and hospitals.

The refugees survived the ransacking of villages, rapes and killings in Myanmar, but for many, life in Bangladesh’s squalid refugee camps has been bleak.

The refugees who’ve arrived in the last year joined a wave of 250,000 Rohingya Muslims who escaped forced labor, religious persecution and violent attacks from Buddhist mobs in Myanmar during the early 1990s.

Access to education and employment has been far from assured.

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who hopes to retain power in December elections, has repeatedly complained that hosting more than a million Rohingya is taxing local resources.

Negotiations for repatriation have been in the works for months, but plans last January to begin sending refugees back were called off amid concerns among aid workers and Rohingya that their return would be met with violence.

Foreign leaders, including U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, criticized Myanmar’s leader Aung San Suu Kyi this week on the sidelines of a summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Singapore for her handling of the Rohingya crisis.

But on Thursday, Pence said that U.S. officials were “encouraged to hear that” the repatriation process would begin.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his country would continue working with international partners including the U.N. “to ensure that the Rohingya themselves are part of any decisions on their future.”

Story: Julhas Alam, Emily Schmall

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Facebook Says It’s Better at Detecting Rule Violations

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies in April before a joint hearing of the Commerce and Judiciary Committees on Capitol Hill in Washington about the use of Facebook data to target American voters in the 2016 election. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies in April before a joint hearing of the Commerce and Judiciary Committees on Capitol Hill in Washington about the use of Facebook data to target American voters in the 2016 election. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Facebook said it’s making progress on detecting hate speech, graphic violence and other violations of its rules, even before users see and report them.

Facebook said that during the April-to-September period, it doubled the amount of hate speech it detected proactively, compared with the previous six months.

The findings were spelled out Thursday in Facebook’s second semiannual report on enforcing community standards. The reports come as Facebook grapples with challenge after challenge, ranging from fake news to Facebook’s role in elections interference, hate speech and incitement to violence in the U.S., Myanmar, India and elsewhere.

The company also said it disabled more than 1.5 billion fake accounts in the latest six-month period, compared with 1.3 billion during the previous six months. Facebook said most of the fake accounts it found were financially motivated, rather than aimed at misinformation. The company has nearly 2.3 billion users.

Facebook’s report comes a day after The New York Times published an extensive report on how Facebook deals with crisis after crisis over the past two years. The Times described Facebook’s strategy as “delay, deny and deflect.”

Facebook said Thursday it has cut ties with a Washington public relations firm, Definers, which the Times said Facebook hired to discredit opponents. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during a call with reporters that he learned about the company’s relationship with Definers only when he read the Times report.

On community guidelines, Facebook also released metrics on issues such as child nudity and sexual exploitation, terrorist propaganda, bullying and spam. While it is disclosing how many violations it is catching, the company said it can’t always reliably measure how prevalent these things are on Facebook overall. For instance, while Facebook took action on 2 million instances of bullying in the July-September period, this does not mean there were only 2 million instances of bullying during this time.

Clifford Lampe, a professor of information at the University of Michigan, said it’s difficult for people to agree on what constitutes bullying or hate speech – so that makes it difficult, if not impossible, to teach artificial intelligence systems how to detect them.

Overall, though, Lampe said Facebook is making progress on rooting out hate, fake accounts and other objectionable content, but added that it could be doing more.

“Some of this is tempered by (the fact that) they are a publicly traded company,” he said. “Their primary mission isn’t to be good for society. It’s to make money. There are business concerns.”

Facebook also plans to set up an independent body by next year for people to appeal decisions to remove – or leave up – posts that may violate its rules. Appeals are currently handled internally.

Facebook employs thousands of people to review posts, photos, comments and videos for violations. Some things are also detected without humans, using artificial intelligence. Zuckerberg said creating an independent appeals body will prevent the concentration of “too-much decision-making” within Facebook.

Facebook has faced accusations of bias against conservatives – something it denies – as well as criticism that it does not go far enough in removing hateful content.

Story: Barbara Ortutay

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2 Chilean Tourists Get 2 Years in Prison for Killing Malaysian

The Kuala Lumpur High Court in 2011. Photo: Smuconlaw / Wikimedia Commons
The Kuala Lumpur High Court in 2011. Photo: Smuconlaw / Wikimedia Commons

KUALA LUMPUR — Two Chilean tourists accused of killing a man in Malaysia were sentenced to two years in prison Thursday after they pleaded guilty to a reduced charge not amounting to murder.

Fernando Candia, 32, and Felipe Osiadacz, 28, were earlier charged with murdering 28-year-old Yusaini Ishak at a Kuala Lumpur hotel on Aug. 4 last year, less than 24 hours after arriving in Malaysia. They had pleaded not guilty to murder, which carries the death penalty, although the government has said it plans to abolish capital punishment.

Their lawyer, Venkateswari Alagendra, said prosecutors offered a lesser charge of culpable homicide not amounting to murder. The men decided to plead guilty to that after considering all options but they are “maintaining their innocence to murder,” she told The Associated Press. She said the two acted in self-defense after the victim demanded money from them in the hotel lobby and tried to attack them with his shoes.

She said the Chileans were tearful and both apologized to the dead men’s family.

The court sentenced them to two years in prison from the day of their arrest, which means they could be released as early as next month and be back home for Christmas, she said. Convicts in Malaysia can get one-third off their sentences for good behavior.

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