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After Delay, Democrats to Settle Leadership Question Tonight

Democrat Party leadership election contenders Warong Dechgitvigrom, Abhisit Vejjajiva and Alongkorn Pollabutr pose for photos on Oct. 8, 2018.
Democrat Party leadership election contenders Warong Dechgitvigrom, Abhisit Vejjajiva and Alongkorn Pollabutr pose for photos on Oct. 8, 2018.

Saturday 12:21pm update: Party spokeswoman Kanjana Dhokmai said party members were in a meeting and would announce the results within Saturday.

Update: The party announced Friday evening it plans to announce the results at 10am on Saturday.

BANGKOK — A three-way contest for the Democrat Party’s top post is expected to conclude Friday evening, and party officials say preliminary results could be available as early as tonight.

The race, marked by fierce campaigns and delayed by technical mishaps, is expected to chart the direction of Thailand’s oldest and largest political party. Supporters of the incumbent, Abhisit Vejjajiva, are hoping he will fend off challenges from those seeking a break from the past.

Party members were asked to choose between Abhisit, Warong Dechgitvigrom and Alongkorn Pollabutr.

Promising to usher in “clean politics,” Alongkorn said that if chosen to lead the party, he would not support a prime minister who wasn’t elected to the parliament, a path to power expected to be pursued by junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha.

Warong said he would oppose working with parties that engage in corruption or insult the monarchy, a seeming rebuke of calls for the party to throw in with the rival Pheu Thai Party to break the military’s grip on power.

Party members in the northeast and south cast votes Monday. Polls in the north, central and capital regions set for Nov. 1 were delayed until Friday due to an eight-day technical problem.

Party officials blamed glitches in their voting machines, which were somehow set to the British time zone where they were made. The system also crashed repeatedly on Monday in some voting districts.

Early results are expected within hours, but an official tally will have to wait till Saturday. The party will convene its assembly on Sunday to endorse the results.

Media pundits and analysts expect a smooth victory for Abhisit – a seasoned politico who in 2008 became the first Democrat prime minister in nearly a decade.

When a reporter asked Alongkorn on Thursday what he felt about the imminent showdown, he sighed before giving a reply.

“I was away from politics for four years,” said Alongkorn, who served in the junta’s reform steering assembly. “And I only had three weeks to campaign.”

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Netflix Announces 2 Original Thai Series

Thai soap opera ‘Blood and Treasure’ available on Netflix

BANGKOK — Thai teens are stranded in a sci-fi island fantasy while a supernatural thriller unfolds in northern Thailand in the first two Thai-language series produced by Netflix.

The Stranded” and “Shimmers” were announced Thursday by Netflix in Singapore as two entries in a line of 17 Asian original productions being brought to the service by the California-based streaming giant.

Directed by Sophon Sakdaphisit, “The Stranded” follows dozens of teens fending for themselves at their elite island school after a devastating tsunami hits the Andaman Sea. Mysterious events occur and the students must find a way off the island – or die.

Sophon is best known for producing Thai horror films such as “Ladda Land,” inspired by a real-life story about a haunted Chiang Mai home, and 2004’s “Shutter,” about the phenomenon of spirit photography.

“The Shimmers” is a joint effort by Wisit Sasanatieng and Sitsiri Mongkolsiri. The horror film is set in a remote school in the north of Thailand where five students are haunted by their past demons.

Release dates for the two shows have yet to be announced.

Netflix originally offered no Thai-language programming when it launched in Thailand in January 2016. Customers outside the United States now account for over half of all memberships, and the company has been investing heavily in producing original content in different markets.

Online stats firm Statista projects the company will have more than 200,000 subscribers in Thailand by the end of 2018. Monthly subscriptions range from 280 baht to 420 baht.

Its biggest competitor, Iflix, launched several months earlier with a raft of programming available in several regional languages. It’s become a crowded market for on-demand, streaming services with the addition of Hollywood TV and Primetime.

Related stories:

Netflix Now Speaks (Some) Thai

Netflix Finally Enters Thailand

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Imelda Marcos Convicted of Graft, Court Orders Her Arrest

US President Lyndon B. Johnson and Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcos dance in 1966 in an unspecified location. Photo: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum / Wikimedia Commons
US President Lyndon B. Johnson and Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcos dance in 1966 in an unspecified location. Photo: John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum / Wikimedia Commons

MANILA — A Philippine court found former first lady Imelda Marcos guilty of graft and ordered her arrest Friday in a rare conviction among many corruption cases that she’s likely to appeal to avoid jail and losing her seat in Congress.

The special anti-graft Sandiganbayan court sentenced Marcos, 89, to serve 6 to 11 years in prison for each of the seven counts of violating an anti-corruption law when she illegally funneled about USD$200 million to Swiss foundations in the 1970s.

Neither Marcos nor anyone representing her attended Friday’s court hearing and no one issued any reaction on her behalf.

The court disqualified Marcos from holding public office, but she can remain a member of the powerful House of Representatives while appealing the decision.

Imelda Marcos’s husband, former President Ferdinand Marcos, was ousted by an army-backed “people power” revolt in 1986. He died in 1989.

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Chula Alleges Student ‘Impersonator’ Broke 3 Laws

Sakol “Boy” Aiemsaard. Photo: Tariris Nrohtas / Facebook

BANGKOK — Police are weighing criminal charges against a man accused of passing himself off as an elite university student after the school filed a complaint to the authorities.

A Chulalongkorn University legal representative alleged to police Thursday that Sakol “Boy” Aiemsaard broke three laws: impersonating a state university student by wearing its uniform, violating the Computer Crime Act by uploading false information online and document fraud.

Lt. Preecha Khemsiri of Pathum Wan police said Friday that police are investigating the case to see if Sakol may be charged. He first came to public attention in September when he was accused of falsely claiming to be enrolled as a Chula economics student.

He denies all accusations of wrongdoing, explaining that the venom directed against him is the result of a misunderstanding.

Ariya Tongpeerapan, the university legal rep, said that Sakol broke the law by wearing a university uniform in photographs posted to his now-private Instagram account, leading others to believe he was a student and damaging the university’s reputation.

Sakol also allegedly claimed to be an enrolled student when he signed up to join the school’s spirit team. Ariya said that amounted to fraud.

Earlier this month, Sakol told reporters he had never falsely implied that he was a Chula student. He filed counter-complaints against two Burapha University students who went public with allegations Sakol had stolen class funds.

Related stories:

‘Boy Sakol’ Denies Impersonating Student

Chula ‘Student’ Exposed for Years of False Enrollment Claims

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Blaze Reduces 5-Star Samui Villa to Ashes (Video)

KOH SAMUI — A foreigner suffered minor burns Thursday night when a five-star beachfront villa on Koh Samui was destroyed in a blaze.

At about 10pm, fire broke out in a two-story wooden residence inside the Erawan Villa Hotel. It spread quickly due to wind conditions. It took firefighters with eight trucks an hour to extinguish the blaze.

Bophut police said one foreign national suffered minor burns. It was unclear if he was a guest at the hotel.

The villa was damaged irreparably, a loss estimated at 3 million baht.

Police on Friday were investigating the cause of the fire and questioning the hotel’s French owner, identified only as Philippe.

 

 

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Bangladesh Rescues Rohingya Illegally Heading for Malaysia

An ethnic Rohingya holds a banner during protest after Friday prayers outside the Myanmar Embassy in 2016 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
An ethnic Rohingya holds a banner during protest after Friday prayers outside the Myanmar Embassy in 2016 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

COX’S BAZAR, Bangladesh — Police are interrogating six people suspected of human trafficking after Bangladeshi guards separately rescued nearly 50 Rohingya refugees from boats heading for Malaysia through the Bay of Bengal, an official said Thursday.

Pradip Kumar Das, officer-in-charge at Teknaf, said they were questioning the suspects to learn about a network of smugglers who may be luring refugees from sprawling camps ahead of a plan to repatriate them.

He said 33 refugees including nine children were rescued from a fishing boat near the Saint Martins Island on Wednesday while another 14 Rohingya were rescued at Shahporir Island a day before. Six suspected Bangladeshi traffickers were also arrested while the rescued refugees were sent back to their camps in the district, he said.

Das said they were lured by the traffickers with promises of marriages and jobs in Malaysia.

He said the rescued refugees told them they paid money to the traffickers who said they would soon land in Malaysia amid fears that they would have no future in Myanmar’s Rakhine state if they are sent back.

“I paid 10,000 takas (USD$120) to a Rohingya man who told me he will send me to Malaysia. He has chosen a man there for me for my marriage,” 17-year-old Shawkat Ara said.

“I attempted once at night but returned as my boat left before I could reach there recently,” she said.

Bangladesh and Myanmar said recently that the countries want to start repatriation of the refugees in a limited scale from mid-November.

Abul Kalam, a senior Bangladeshi repatriation official in Cox’s Bazar, told The Associated Press that they were preparing to start the repatriation of some 2,660 refugees from 485 families on Nov. 15. But many of the refugees are reluctant to go back, fearing persecution and an uncertain future.

On Tuesday, the United Nations in a statement in Geneva urged Bangladesh and Myanmar to halt the process of sending them back from this month, saying it does not see any guarantee that they would not suffer “the same persecution and horrific violence”.

More than 700,000 Rohingya have fled Myanmar since last year amid an army-led crackdown. Thousands were killed in the violence.

Rohingya Muslims have lived for centuries in Myanmar but they have long been treated as outsiders in a largely Buddhist nation who are denied citizenship and many basic rights. Many in Myanmar ridicule them as “Bengalis” who came from Bangladesh.

The refugees are seeking U.N. protection to return home. The U.N. refugee agency and Bangladesh had earlier finalized a memorandum of understanding that said the repatriation process must be “safe, voluntary and dignified … in line with international standards.”

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Global Animal Welfare Concern Underpins Thai Pig Farm More Awareness

The recent survey from World Animal Protection’s (WAP) reported that animal welfare is among the top factors for Thai consumers to consider when choosing pork products. They prefer a pork from higher welfare source and would like the supermarket to offer higher welfare pork products.

WAP’s survey pointed out the consumers would reward supermarkets selling pork from higher welfare farms, where pigs are allowed to exercise and behave naturally.

“Consumers do not want to see cages, neither barren pens nor painful piglet procedures which they found ‘shocking’ and ‘wrong’. They want to see [animals express their] natural behaviors and experience a life worth living. It is also important to investors. Many of the investors around the world are starting to look at animal welfare as an indicator because they see low animal welfare as a market risk. They also expect companies, like CP Group, to be consistent across their global operations” Dr. Kate Blaszak, Global Farm Animals Advisor, stressed the importance of animal welfare during the meeting with concerned experts at Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CP Foods).

They also expected supermarket’s commitment against low welfare practices. Over 65% of the consumers, who conducted the survey, said they would consider to stop purchasing from supermarket that source pork products from low welfare pig farms.

Moreover, antibiotic drugs in farming process is one of major concerns in Thailand. Eighty-six per cent of Thai consumers surveyed worried about the use of antibiotics in pig production, mostly unaware they are often linked to stressful, barren conditions and painful procedures. The number is among the highest from surveys across the world. WAP added that low welfare farms could lead to more frequent antibiotic use and higher chance to leave antibiotic residue in the meat.

A growing interest in animal welfare among Thai consumers led to a major shift of industry’s practice in the recent years.

CP Foods announced a global policy on animal welfare in April 2018 in line with internationally recognized animal welfare standard. The company said the practice aims to ensure the consumers that all animals are raised with the humane practices.

The key highlight for pig welfare is the company attempt to move toward group pen gestation, which allows mother pigs to move freely and express their natural behaviors. The global transition is expected to be complete within 2028.

To achieve the goal, CP Foods has consulted with experts across the world. During the recent workshop, Dr. Thomas D. Parsons., Associate Professor of Swine Production Medicine, Department of Clinical Studies – New Bolton Center, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, who was invited as a speaker, said increasing consumers’ concerns on animal welfare, and especially on individual gestation stall has become a global trend. Moving toward a better welfare for pigs is, therefore, inevitable.

“More and More customers are wondering where the food come from and it is important to understand that pigs are raised in ethical and safe way. That is driving a lot of the changes, certainly, gestation. The movement from the gestation stall to pen gestation is a big part of the industry stepping forward to meet consumer demand.” he said.

Dr. Damnoen Chaturavittawong (D.V.M), Senior Vice President of Swine Veterinary Service Department at CP Foods, added that the company has developed toward new approaches to phase out farming processes that may cause pain to animals. For example, using rope test to collect diagnostic sample instead of collecting blood sample and using Needle-free injection techniques to reduce pain and distress.

“Good welfare also help the company to keep animals healthy, therefore, reducing its reliance on antibiotics,” Dr. Damnoen pointed, adding that “Antimicrobials and antibiotics are being used prudently under a strict veterinary supervision to ensure food safety of all pork products from the company. Animal welfare practices are implemented to keep animals healthy and prevent diseases that will further minimize the need for antimicrobial drugs.”

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UN Researcher Calls for Cambodia to Speed up Trials

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, right, walks together with opposition Cambodia's Rescue Party Deputy President Kem Sokha, center in 2016 during a break at National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, right, walks together with opposition Cambodia's Rescue Party Deputy President Kem Sokha, center in 2016 during a break at National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — The U.N.’s specially appointed researcher on human rights in Cambodia expressed concern Thursday over the country’s use of pre-trial detention and its failure to conduct trials speedily.

Speaking at a news conference at the end of an 11-day mission, Rhona Smith specifically expressed concern about people arrested in politically linked cases, including Kem Sokha, the former leader of the dissolved opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party.

Kem Sokha was freed on bail in September after being jailed without trial for a year on a treason charge, but the conditions of his release amount to a form of house arrest.

Smith said a judge denied her request to meet Kem Sokha, and she called for him to be quickly brought to trial or released.

“Access to justice also requires speedy trials and I am concerned at the time taken to conduct trials and the significant number of people in pre-trial detention,” Smith said in a statement. “I repeat my recommendations to use pre-trial detention only when absolutely necessary in accordance with Cambodia criminal procedure code; to carefully document the use of pre-trial detention; and to regularly review the ongoing need in each case.”

Smith’s comments about Cambodia were unusually mild. U.N. human rights investigators are typically highly critical of Cambodia’s restrictive political environment and harassment of critics and opponents. She told reporters that for her latest mission in Cambodia, she chose to focus on “the localization of the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals,” which means broadly addressing how human rights policies can contribute to a nation’s overall social and economic development.

Cambodia was harshly criticized by many rights groups and Western nations for holding a general election in July that they judged unfair and undemocratic. The election extended the rule of Prime Minister Hun Sen into a fourth decade.

The only credible opposition force, the Cambodia National Rescue Party, was disbanded last year by the courts in a move seen as politically motivated. The 19 other parties that contested the election were seen as either having trivial support or being promoted by the ruling party to foster the illusion of democratic choice.

The government had already cracked down on the opposition last year as the ruling party’s prospects for the general election were looking shaky. The opposition had made a strong showing in 2017 local elections, building on its surprisingly strong challenge in the 2013 general election.

Kem Sokha was arrested in September last year on the basis of years-old videos showing him at a seminar where he spoke about receiving advice from U.S. pro-democracy groups. His party denied the treason allegation, calling it politically motivated.

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Vietnam Protests China’s Weather Stations in Disputed Sea

Protesters hold banners and shout anti-China slogans during a rally against China in Hanoi, Vietnam, 11 May 2014. About a thousand protesters gathered near the embassy of China in Hanoi to call for an end to 'Chinese aggression in the South China Sea', parts of which are claimed by both countries (DPA).

HANOI — Vietnam strongly protested China’s launch of weather stations in the disputed Spratly islands, saying Thursday they seriously violate Vietnam’s sovereignty and complicate the situation in the South China Sea.

China last week announced it started operations of the stations on three islands to offer weather forecasts to fishermen in the South China Sea region and neighboring countries as well as passing ships.

Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Le Thi Thu Hang told reporters at a regular briefing Thursday that Vietnam has legal basis and historical evidence to assert its sovereignty over the Spratlys and Paracels and asked China to stop the action.

“The fact that China started use of meteorological observation stations on the illegally built structures in the Spratlys has seriously violated Vietnam’s sovereignty over the islands,” she said.

“Vietnam persistently opposes this act and asks China to immediately stop the above-said actions,” she said.

Hang said China should abide by the principles reached between the two countries guiding the settlement of the maritime issues and the Declaration of the Code of Conduct in the South China Sea “without complicating the situation, affecting peace, security and stability” in the South China Sea.

Vietnam and China along with five others claim all or parts of the Spratlys. Tensions have flared after China turned seven disputed reefs into islands, which it later equipped with missile defense systems.

Vietnam has become the most vocal against China’s growing assertiveness in the South China Sea, which has triggered concerns and protests in the region as well as the United States.

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Nonprofit Says Rohingya Men Also Victims of Sexual Violence

In this Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2017, photo, Shafir Rahman, 50, describes how he watched a soldier hammering a four-inch nail into the side of a man's head with a rifle butt during an interview with The Associated Press in his tent in Jamtoli refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press
In this Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2017, photo, Shafir Rahman, 50, describes how he watched a soldier hammering a four-inch nail into the side of a man's head with a rifle butt during an interview with The Associated Press in his tent in Jamtoli refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

NEW YORK — A refugee organization says new research indicates that Rohingya Muslim men and boys were victims of sexual abuse by Myanmar’s army and border police.

The Women’s Refugee Commission said in a report released Thursday that 30 of the 89 Rohingya men and adolescent boys who participated in focus groups in Bangladesh “personally knew a Rohingya man or boy who had directly experienced conflict-related sexual violence in Myanmar.”

The report said the most common forms of sexual violence against men reported by refugees and informants include genital violence such as burning, mutilation, electroshocks and anal rape.

Over 700,000 Rohingya fled to Bangladesh after a violent crackdown by Myanmar’s military following attacks by Rohingya insurgents on Myanmar security personnel in August 2017.

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