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Kodaline Bangkok Fans’ ‘High Hopes’ Come True

BANGKOK — A long-awaited gig is finally happening with the announcement by a local promoter today that the Irish rock band behind  “High Hopes,” “Brand New Day” and, of course, their debut single “All I Want,” is coming to Bangkok

Irish alt-rockers Kodaline will for the first time stage a show in the capital at the invitation of newbie promoter Mangosteen, who debuted their own music festival in May, whose Tuesday morning announcement surprised many.

The homegrown opening acts are British indie pop band Fickle Friends, Taiwanese alt-rockers Sunset Rollercoaster, up-and-coming Phum Viphurit and synth-pop band Polycat.

The concert will take place Feb. 22 at BITEC Bangna Hall. Get the from BTS Bang Na. Tickets start at 2,600 baht and will be available online Thursday. Entry is 18 and up.

Kodaline was founded in Dublin in 2006, formerly as 21 Demands. The quartet consists of Steve Garrigan, Mark Prendergast, Vincent May and Jason Boland.

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EU Says Time Running Out to Observe Thai Elections

Pirkka Tapiola, EU ambassador to Thailand, shakes hands with Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha on April 25 at Government House.
Pirkka Tapiola, EU ambassador to Thailand, shakes hands with Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha on April 25 at Government House.

BANGKOK — The European Union said time is running out if Thailand is to invite it to observe general elections slated for February.

The union’s representation in Thailand said in a Sunday statement on its Facebook page that the country had not extended the necessary invitation for the EU to send observers.

“Such invitation has so far not been received,” the statement read.

It said the union had therefore not prepared the deployment of an observation mission, but stressed it would need time to do if a request came in.

The statement came after leaders of the military regime last week expressed disapproval of having foreign election observers, including the union.

Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai said earlier this month that Thailand doesn’t need foreign election observers.

The union’s statement said it has observed elections in 65 countries since 1993, including three in ASEAN countries, namely Indonesia, Myanmar and Cambodia.

 

Related stories:

FM Says Thailand Doesn’t Need Foreign Election Observers

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Stan Lee, Spider-Man Creator and Comic Book Genius, Dead at 95

FILE - In this April 16, 2002, file photo, Stan Lee, 79, creator of comic-book franchises such as "Spider-Man," "The Incredible Hulk" and "X-Men," smiles during a photo session in his office in Santa Monica, Calif. Comic book genius Lee, the architect of the contemporary comic book, has died. He was 95. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File)

LOS ANGELES — Stan Lee, the creative dynamo who revolutionized the comic book and helped make billions for Hollywood by introducing human frailties in superheroes such as Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four and the Incredible Hulk, died Monday. He was 95.

Lee was declared dead at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to Kirk Schenck, an attorney for Lee’s daughter, J.C. Lee.

As the top writer at Marvel Comics and later as its publisher, Lee was widely considered the architect of the contemporary comic book. He revived the industry in the 1960s by offering the costumes and action craved by younger readers while insisting on sophisticated plots, college-level dialogue, satire, science fiction, even philosophy.

Millions responded to the unlikely mix of realistic fantasy, and many of his characters, including Spider-Man, the Hulk and X-Men went on to become stars of blockbuster films. Recent projects he helped make possible range from the films “Black Panther” and “Doctor Strange” to such TV series as “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D” and “Guardians of the Galaxy.” Lee was recognizable to his fans – he had cameos in Marvel films and TV projects, his hair gray and his glasses tinted.

“I think everybody loves things that are bigger than life. … I think of them as fairy tales for grown-ups,” he told The Associated Press in a 2006 interview. “We all grew up with giants and ogres and witches. Well, you get a little bit older and you’re too old to read fairy tales. But I don’t think you ever outgrow your love for those kind of things, things that are bigger than life and magical and very imaginative.”

Lee considered the comic-book medium an art form and he was prolific: By some accounts, he came up with a new comic book every day for 10 years.

“I wrote so many I don’t even know. I wrote either hundreds or thousands of them,” he told the AP in 2006.

He hit his stride in the 1960s when he brought the Fantastic Four, the Hulk, Spider-Man, Iron Man and numerous others to life.

“It was like there was something in the air. I couldn’t do anything wrong,” he recalled.

His heroes, meanwhile, were a far cry from virtuous do-gooders such as rival DC Comics’ Superman.

The Fantastic Four fought with each other. Spider-Man was goaded into superhero work by his alter ego, Peter Parker, who suffered from unrequited crushes, money problems and dandruff. The Silver Surfer, an alien doomed to wander Earth’s atmosphere, waxed about the woeful nature of man. The Hulk was marked by self-loathing. Daredevil was blind and Iron Man had a weak heart.

“The beauty of Stan Lee’s characters is that they were characters first and superheroes next,” Jeff Kline, executive producer of the “Men in Black” animated television series, told The Blade of Toledo, Ohio, in 1998.

Some of Lee’s creations became symbols of social change – the inner turmoil of Spider-Man represented ’60s America, for example, while The Black Panther and The Savage She-Hulk mirrored the travails of minorities and women.

Lee scripted most of Marvel’s superhero comics himself during the ’60s, including the Avengers and the X-Men, two of the most enduring. In 1972, he became Marvel’s publisher and editorial director; four years later, 72 million copies of Spider-Man were sold.

“He’s become our Mickey Mouse,” he once said of the masked, web-crawling crusader.

Lee also published several books, including “The Superhero Women” in 1977 and “How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way” the following year, when he was named publisher of the year by the Periodical and Book Association of America.

CBS turned the Hulk into a successful TV series, with Bill Bixby and Lou Ferrigno portraying the doomed scientist from 1978-82. A Spider-Man series ran briefly in 1978. Both characters were featured in animated TV series as well.

The first big-budget movie based on Lee’s characters, “X-Men,” was a smash in 2000, earning more than USD$130 million at North American theaters. “Spider-Man” did even better, taking in more than $400 million in 2002.

Stanley Martin Lieber was born Dec. 28, 1922, in New York. He grew up a fan of “Hardy Boys” adventure books and Errol Flynn movies, and got a job at Timely Comics after graduating from high school.

Within a few months, the editor and art director quit, leaving the 17-year-old Lee with creative control over the company, which grew and was renamed Atlas Comics and, finally, Marvel. Lieber changed his name, thinking Lee would be used for “silly little comics” and his real name would be reserved for novels.

His early work largely reflected popular movies – westerns, crime dramas, romance, whatever was the rage at the time. He worked for about 50 cents per page.

After a stint in the Army during World War II, writing for training films, he was back at Marvel to begin a long and admittedly boring run of assembly line comic book production.

Comics in the 1950s were the subject of Senate hearings pushed by the Comics Code Authority, which frowned on gore and characters that questioned authority. Major comic book companies adopted the code as a form of self-regulation to avoid sanctions.

Lee said he was also working for a publisher who considered comics as fare only for children.

“One day I said, ‘This is insane,'” Lee told the Guardian in 1979. “I’m just doing the same type of stories as everybody else. I wasn’t taking pride in my work and I wanted to quit. But my wife said, ‘Look, why don’t you do the kind of comics you want for a change?'”

The result was the first issue of “The Fantastic Four,” in 1960, with the characters, plot and text from Lee and the illustrations by famed Marvel artist Jack Kirby.

The characters were normal people changed into reluctant superheroes through no fault of their own.

Writing in “Origins of Marvel Comics,” Lee described the quartet this way: “The characters would be the kind of characters I could personally relate to; they’d be flesh and blood, they’d have their faults and foibles, they’d be fallible and feisty and – most important of all – inside their colorful, costumed booties they’d still have feet of clay.”

“The Amazing Spider-Man” followed in 1962 and before long, Marvel Comics was an industry behemoth.

Lee knew his work was different, proudly noting that stories were drawn out over several issues not to make money but to better develop characters, situations and themes. He didn’t neglect his villains, either. One, the Moleman, went bad when he was ostracized because of his appearance, Lee wrote, adding it was “almost unheard of in a comic book” to explain why a character was what he was.

Lee’s direct influence faded in the 1970s as he gave up some of his editorial duties at Marvel. But with his trademark white mustache and tinted sunglasses, he was the industry’s most recognizable figure. He lectured widely on popular culture.

Lee moved to Los Angeles in 1981 to head Marvel Productions, an animation studio that was later purchased, along with Marvel Comics, for $50 million by New World Entertainment.

As sales of comics declined, Marvel was forced into bankruptcy proceedings that meant it had to void a lifetime contract prohibiting Lee from working for anyone else. Lee later sued Marvel for $10 million, saying the company cheated him out of millions in profits from movies based on his characters.

In 2000, Lee agreed to write stories for DC Comics, reinventing Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and other signature characters for Marvel’s one-time rival. DC Vice President and Publisher Paul Levitz had nothing but praise when the agreement was made.

“With his artistic collaborators at Marvel, Stan co-created the richest imaginary universe a single comics writer has ever built,” he said.

The dapper, friendly comic book genius continued to work into his 90s on numerous projects, including comics, films and DVDs.

In the late 1990s, he looked to capitalize on the Internet craze, offering animated “Webisodes” of comic-like action. Stan Lee Media also sought to reach out to Web-savvy youth through deals with pop artists the Backstreet Boys and Mary J. Blige.

The company went bankrupt, and three men were indicted for allegedly defrauding the business in a check kiting scam. Lee wasn’t implicated.

After that initial failure, Lee formed the successful Pow! Entertainment company to launch animated Internet-based projects.

Lee is survived by his daughter, Joanie. His wife of 70 years died last year.

Story: Lindsay Bahr

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Bangkok Wants Canal Colorized, Homeowners Balk

Homes along the Khlong Ong Ang in Bangkok's Samphanthawong District.
Homes along the Khlong Ong Ang in Bangkok's Samphanthawong District.

BANGKOK — Another day and another City Hall project, this one to beautify the capital, is met with controversy.

Residents along the banks of Khlong Ong Ang complain they were forced to repaint their homes and pay 35,000 baht for a metropolitan administration campaign to make the area more colorful for the Loy Krathong festival. The local district chief on Monday said no such demands were made but that the authorities would like homeowners to “cooperate” with the effort.

Sombat Kanoktipwan said the district office has provided building owners free paint with cheap services available for those who can’t find painters.

“We want the canal’s landscape to become more beautiful and serve as a new attraction of Bangkok,” he said. “There’re some building owners who use painting services provided by the district, but many of them still refuse to cooperate.”

It was reported that the residents said if they refused to comply and use the district’s painting service, its staff would threaten to measure their estates and demolish the buildings they deem to encroach on the public waterway.

Sombat disputed that claim, but made it clear the city expects full compliance. He said the regulations will be enforced fairly for everyone. Owners who don’t feel comfortable with the painting project, Sombat said, should come to the district office to clear any doubts they have.

Asked what will they do if some homes don’t participate before the festival on Nov. 22, Sombat said they will continue to negotiate until all agree to participate.

“We’re in the process of negotiation with building owners to make them realize the importance of the redevelopment,” he said. “There’re a lot of one-floor building owners saying they don’t have money for painting, so the district sent workers there to do the job for free.”

He added that the problem remains with taller buildings that refused to join, which they can’t provide free service for.

The campaign, launched last week, is part of a bigger canal redevelopment effort which began in June.

City Hall said it would build pedestrian paths along the canal, plant more trees, improve the sewage system, repair bridges and install more security cameras.

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South Korea Grants Political Asylum to Thai Charged With 112

Chanoknan Ruamsap
Chanoknan Ruamsap

BANGKOK — Pro-democracy activist and lese majeste fugitive Chanoknan Ruamsap has become the first Thai political refugee in South Korea.

Speaking from Gwangju, South Korea, Chanoknan said she was surprised by the speed of Friday’s decision to grant her status, coming as it did 10 months after she fled Thailand. Long a target for what she described as harassment by the authorities for her pro-democracy activism, Chanoknan left in mid-January after learning she was wanted for insulting the monarchy.

“This is not easy. The statute of limitations for lese majeste is 15 years, and that means for the next 15 years, I cannot return without facing charges,” Chanoknan said Sunday night.

Read: Pro-Democracy Activist Flees Prosecution For Royal Insult

She was accused of defaming the monarchy for sharing on Facebook a biography of King Vajiralongkorn published by the BBC’s Thai-language service.

Another student activist, Jatupat “Pai Dao Din” Boonpattararaksa, is serving a two and a half year prison term for sharing the same article.

A Foreign Affairs Ministry spokeswoman said the ministry had just learned about South Korea’s decision through the media. She did not reply as of publication time whether the ministry would take any action or seek answers from their Korean counterparts.

Chanoknan, 25, graduated from Chulalongkorn University and was a spokeswoman for the now-defunct New Democracy Movement.

She said South Koreans are often puzzled to learn there’s a political refugee from Thailand.

“I am the first Thai to have received the refugee status. Most Korean activists know that I am an asylum seeker, but the general public, when told that I am from Thailand, they can’t connect that with a refugee in their heads and they will say, ‘really?’” she said. “Koreans will ask me why, and I will tell them stories about Thai politics. No matter where I go, I carry with me interviews of me in Korean as if they’re my calling cards.”

Chanoknan fled in haste and could not go to a nation that required a visa. South Korea is close enough to Thailand and she could stay without a visa for 90 days.

With the newly obtained refugee status, Chanoknan, who has been dependent on the support of her parents, can now legally seek employment. She can also obtain refugee travel documents from the South Korean government and enjoy social security as provided to Korean citizens.

She said she is meanwhile working on improving her Korean.

She stopped studying language at an pro-democracy NGO in July after she was sexually harassed by another non-Korean there.

She is also looking to obtain a scholarship and either continue a higher degree in either LGBT or refugee studies.

“The two issues are very sensitive in South Korea,” said the former student activist.

Chanoknan, who is also wanted for violating the junta’s ban on political gatherings of more than four people, said she believes the junta is on a downward trajectory. “I think those who used to support the dictator saw his cruelty and its irrationality, and people are more willing to express their discontent.”

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Vietnam Ratifies Pacific Rim Trade Pact Abandoned by Trump

Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc waves to children on Nov. 2 outside the Presidential Palace in Hanoi. Photo: Minh Hoang / Pool photo via AP
Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc waves to children on Nov. 2 outside the Presidential Palace in Hanoi. Photo: Minh Hoang / Pool photo via AP

HANOI — Vietnam’s National Assembly has ratified a Pacific Rim trade pact abandoned by U.S. President Donald Trump.

The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership will take effect at the year’s end after Australia became the sixth nation to ratify it last month.

President Trump pulled out of the pact just days after taking office last year. The remaining 11-members account for over 13 percent of the world’s GDP.

State-run online newspaper VnExpress reported the legislators unanimously approved a resolution to ratify the pact Monday.

It said the resolution asked government to prepare to take advantage of the trade pact while minimizing the negative impact it poses.

Vietnam is expected to be one of the members that benefits most from it.

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Singapore’s Lee and Former Rival Mahathir of Malaysia Renew Ties

Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, at left, shakes hands with Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on Monday at the Istana in Singapore. Photo: Feline Lim / Pool photo via AP
Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, at left, shakes hands with Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on Monday at the Istana in Singapore. Photo: Feline Lim / Pool photo via AP

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s leader vowed Monday to strengthen ties with Malaysia, which is now led by a historic rival following a game-changing election.

Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said during a visit by his Malaysian counterpart, Mahathir Mohamad, that the countries had a “special bond” and were each other’s second-biggest trading partners. Singapore is also Malaysia’s second-largest foreign investor.

“Singapore and Malaysia will always have a good place for each other in our hearts, and because of our proximity and interdependence, we will always have an interest in each other’s development and success,” Lee said, adding that he looked forward to working with Mahathir.

Mahathir led Malaysia for 22 years before stepping down in 2003. During his term there were frequent sharp exchanges with neighboring Singapore and Lee’s father, its first prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew.

In May, an electoral upset that toppled former Prime Minister Najib Razak brought Mahathir into power again. Mahathir had put aside a dispute with a former political nemesis to lead a four-party coalition to victory.

The 93-year-old plans to lead the country for at least two years before handing the reins to his former nemesis, Anwar Ibrahim.

Mahathir is on his first official visit to Singapore since winning the election. He said he hopes the two countries will maintain good relations, even with different administrations in power.

“Singapore and Malaysia are mutually dependent. Singapore has got no hinterland, but it must regard Malaysia as its hinterland. On the other hand, for a very long time, Malaysia had to depend on Singapore for its exports and imports,” Mahathir said.

Neither leader addressed bumps in projects since Mahathir has taken office. He has put the brakes on the construction of a high-speed rail connecting the country’s capital, Kuala Lumpur, and Singapore.

Mahathir is also renegotiating a decades-old water treaty, and plans to raise the price of water sold to Singapore by more than 10 times.

On Monday, Mahathir expressed hope that the countries will be able to work together despite having a rivalry.

“Malaysia and Singapore are twins, in a way. Except that perhaps the elder twin is a little bit bigger than the younger twin and a little bit older,” he quipped, to laughter.

“It is not often that we see countries which come together, and then separated and still be able to … work together and help each other,” Mahathir added.

The two countries were briefly merged in 1963, but they separated two years later due to political and economic differences.

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Mishaps, Protests and Litigation Overshadow Florida Recount

A crowd of protesters gathers Sunday outside the Broward County of Supervisor of Elections Office as a statewide election recount is underway. Photo: Carl Juste / Miami Herald via AP
A crowd of protesters gathers Sunday outside the Broward County of Supervisor of Elections Office as a statewide election recount is underway. Photo: Carl Juste / Miami Herald via AP

FORT LAUDERDALE, Florida — Mishaps, protests and litigation are overshadowing the vote recount in Florida’s pivotal races for governor and Senate, reviving memories of the 2000 presidential fiasco in the premier political battleground state.

All 67 counties are facing a state-ordered deadline of Thursday to complete their recounts and half already had begun. Many other counties were expected to begin the work Monday after a weekend of recount drama in Broward and Palm Beach counties, home to large concentrations of Democratic voters.

The developments added up to a tumultuous political day in Florida. More than half of Florida’s 67 counties began a recount process that’s unprecedented even in a state notorious for settling elections by razor-thin margins. State officials said they weren’t aware of any other time a race for governor or U.S. Senate required a recount, let alone both in the same election.

In Broward County, the recount was delayed for hours Sunday because of a problem with one of the tabulation machines. That prompted the Republican Party to slam Broward’s supervisor of elections, Brenda Snipes, for “incompetence and gross mismanagement.”

Broward officials faced further headaches after acknowledging the county mistakenly counted 22 absentee ballots that had been rejected. The problem seemed impossible to fix because dismissed ballots were mixed in with 205 legal ballots and Snipes said it would be unfair to throw out all the votes.

Gov. Rick Scott, the Republican candidate for Senate, filed suit against Snipes. He was seeking a court order for law enforcement agents to impound all voting machines, tallying devices and ballots “when not in use until such time as any recounts.” The suit accused Snipes of repeatedly failing to account for the number of ballots left to be counted and failing to report results regularly as required by law.

The court didn’t immediately respond, though the outcry from Democrats was immediate.

Juan Penalosa, executive director of the Florida Democratic Party, accused Scott of “using his position to consolidate power by cutting at the very core of our democracy.”

Meanwhile, in Palm Beach County, the supervisor of elections said she didn’t think her department could meet Thursday’s deadline to complete that recount, throwing into question what would happen to votes there.

The recount in other major population centers, including Miami-Dade and Pinellas and Hillsborough counties in the Tampa Bay area, has been continuing without incident. Smaller counties were expected to begin reviews between Monday and Wednesday.

State officials said they weren’t aware of any other time a race for governor or U.S. Senate required a recount, let alone both in the same election. The recount process in the two nationally watched midterm races is unprecedented even in a state notorious for settling elections by razor-thin margins.

Unofficial results showed Republican former U.S. Rep. Ron DeSantis led Democratic Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum by 0.41 percentage points in the governor’s contest. In the Senate race, Scott’s lead over Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson was 0.14 percentage points.

State law requires a machine recount in races where the margin is less than 0.5 percentage points. Once completed, if the differences in any of the races are 0.25 percentage points or below, a hand recount will be ordered.

As the recount unfolded, Republicans urged their Democratic opponents to give up and let the state to move on.

Scott said Sunday that Nelson wants fraudulent ballots and those cast by noncitizens to count, pointing to a Nelson lawyer objecting to Palm Beach County’s rejection of one provisional ballot because it was cast by a noncitizen.

“He is trying to commit fraud to win this election,” Scott told Fox News. “Bill Nelson’s a sore loser. He’s been in politics way too long.”

Nelson’s campaign issued a statement later saying their lawyer wasn’t authorized to object to the ballot’s rejection as “Non-citizens cannot vote in US elections.”

In Fort Lauderdale, Gillum appeared at a predominantly African-American church Sunday evening, warning against vote suppression and declaring voter disenfranchisement isn’t just about being blocked from the polling booth. He said it also includes absentee ballots not being counted and ballots with mismatched signatures that “a volunteer may have the option of … deciding that vote is null and void.”

Gillum and Nelson have argued each vote should be counted and the process should take its course.

Both the state elections division, which Scott runs, and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement have said they have found no evidence of voter fraud.

That didn’t stop protests outside Snipes’ office, where a crowd of mostly Republicans gathered, holding signs, listening to country music and occasionally chanting “lock her up,” referring to Snipes. A massive Trump 2020 flag flew over the parking lot and many members of a Bikers For Trump group wore matching shirts, mingling among a crowd that included a protester wearing a Hillary Clinton mask.

Registered independent Russell Liddick, a 38-year-old Pompano Beach retail worker, carried a sign reading, “I’m not here for Trump! I’m here for fair elections! Fire Snipes!” He said the office’s problems “don’t make me feel very much like my vote counted.”

Florida is also conducting a recount in a third statewide race. Democrat Nikki Fried had a 0.07 percentage point lead over Republican state Rep. Matt Caldwell for agriculture commissioner, one of Florida’s three Cabinet seats.

For some, the recounts bring back memories of the 2000 presidential recount, when it took more than five weeks for Florida to declare George W. Bush the victor over Vice President Al Gore by 537 votes, thus giving Bush the presidency.

Much has changed since then.

In 2000, each county had its own voting system. Many used punch cards — voters poked out chads, leaving tiny holes in their ballots representing their candidates. Some voters, however, didn’t fully punch out the presidential chad or gave it just a little push. Those hanging and dimpled chads had to be examined by the canvassing boards, a lengthy, tiresome and often subjective process that became fodder for late-night comedians.

Now the state requires all Florida counties to use ballots where voters use a pen to mark their candidate’s name, much like a student taking a multiple-choice test. And how counts proceed is now clearly spelled out.

Story: Kelli Kennedy and Terry Spencer

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Massive Weekend Flooding Kills Toddler, Woman in Prachuap

A truck drives through a flooded street Saturday in Bang Saphan district, Prachuap Khiri Khan province.
A truck drives through a flooded street Saturday in Bang Saphan district, Prachuap Khiri Khan province.

PRACHUAP KHIRI KHAN — Streets turned into fast-moving rivers as flash floods triggered by the heaviest rainfall in decades struck the southern coastal province of Prachuap Khiri Khan, killing two and affecting thousands.

Although the water levels have started to decrease, several communities in four districts of the province remained cut off Monday after flooding and landslides destroyed a number of roads and bridges during the weekend. A toddler drowned and a woman died after being unable to make it to a hospital.

In the worst-hit district of Bang Saphan Noi, 21 people including a toddler were rescued this morning after three days stranded atop a hill without food or water near the Ban Tha Yai community after 237 millimeters of rain fell Friday. More torrential rain and subsequent flooding had blocked their escape.

Since 2003, Prachuap had experienced no single-day rainfall over 200 millimeters until 2017, according to the National Weather Service.

At Ban Lang Mook in the same district, about 220 households were trapped after high-running water cut off seven roads. According to residents, rescue teams with relief packages and food supplies were able to reach the community for the first time today after floods first hit them Friday.

It was the second year in a row that Prachuap experienced devastating flooding.

More than 300 people also face a shortage of food after six roads and bridges to Ban Chong Lom were damaged by flash floods Thursday, according to the community chief.

About 3,500 households and 10,000 people in Prachuap Khiri Khan City, Bang Saphan, Bang Saphan Noi and Thap Sakae districts have been affected by the latest disaster, said Chayapol Thitisak, director-general of the disaster department on Sunday.

Provincial Gov. Pallop Singhaseni said a 2-year-old boy drowned in the floods, and a 60-year-old woman died en route to a hospital after she was delayed by road conditions.

The province was hit by torrential rains Thursday and Friday, with the highest accumulated rainfall in Bang Saphan Noi district reaching 237 millimeters in 24 hours. The rain stopped Saturday and water levels are falling, allowing residents and work crews to start clearing and rebuilding.

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Hospital That Refused Acid-Burned Woman Denies it Was Emergency

An attorney representing the family of the deceased, Atchariya Reungrattanapong, points at Peera Kananuwat, an executive with Rama II Hospital.
An attorney representing the family of the deceased, Atchariya Reungrattanapong, points at Peera Kananuwat, an executive with Praram 2 Hospital.

BANGKOK — The husband accused of fatally attacking his wife with acid has been arrested, while the hospital under fire for refusing to treat her denies she was in an emergency condition when they turned her away.

Police arrested Kamtan Singhanat on suspicion of murder Sunday night in Nakhon Sawan province, where he fled after allegedly killing his wife Chorladda Tarawan, 38, by splashing her face with acid.

Police spokesman Col. Krissana Pattanacharoen said Sunday that after killing his wife in a jealous rage, he escaped to stay with a friend in the central province’s Banphot Phisai district. Kamtan, 50, arrived at Ta Kham Police station just after midnight and was to be questioned Monday afternoon.

Read: Woman Dies After Hospital Refuses to Treat Acid Attack by Husband

After the early morning attack, Chorladda’s 12-year-old daughter Techinee took her by taxi to the Praram 2 Hospital at 5am, where she alleges nurses refused to render aid and forced her to take another taxi to Bangmod Hospital.

Atchariya Reungrattanapong, who runs the victim advocacy group Help Crime Victims Club and is representing the family, filed a complaint against the hospital with the Health Ministry.

“This isn’t the first case. Tens of thousands of people die nationwide when they’re refused care at private hospitals,” Atchariya said.

At the ministry, he met with Praphas Jittasirinuwat, the deputy director of Health Service Support.

Praphas reiterated that patients can be admitted to any hospital emergency room and have their bills waived for the first 72 hours, and that Praram 2 Hospital would be investigated.

A Sunday news conference organized by the hospital fell apart after it turned into a shouting match, with the family disputing the hospital’s version of events.

Peera Kananuwat, hospital executive told reporters that the hospital refused to treat or admit Chorladda because she was not “in an emergency condition.”

Peera said that Chorladda came running into the hospital through the back door of the emergency room around 5am with toothpaste all over her burns. The nurses told her to wash it off her face herself, he said.

He then said that a check of Chorladda’s vitals found they were okay, and she was therefore ineligible for emergency services.

“All her vital signs were regular. She had no fever, 130/80 blood pressure, 80 heart beats per minutes and 20 breaths per minute,” he said. “Therefore, she did not fall into the category of a medical emergency.”

Police in Nakhon Sawan arrest Kumtun Singnad, in blue tank top, Sunday.
Police in Nakhon Sawan arrest Kamtan Singhanat, in blue tank top, Sunday.

He also said the burns were only first-degree chemical burns. Though the hospital would have admitted her, he said, it found her public healthcare benefits were linked to Bangmod Hospital. The hospital is about 10 minutes away by car. It didn’t arrange an ambulance for her.

“The host hospital is supposed to send an ambulance to pick her up, according to social security rules. But there are always problems between hospitals, so it takes a long time, so we recommended that since she was in pain, she should go use her social security benefits by taking a taxi. At that time, she was still able to talk to us,” Peera said.

Peera said that nurses wheeled Chorladda to the taxi in a wheelchair. Her daughter said that was not true, that her mother was slumped on the floor and people had to carry her.

Atchariya and the family exchanged heated words with Peera, especially regarding the discrepancies between the two stories.

“Don’t go back on your word. You are a heartless monster. I’ll see you in court!” Atchariya said to Peera and Wallapha Chaiyamanowong, a Praram 2 Hospital doctor also present Sunday.

“Are you going to let me talk or not?” Peera said while giving a thumbs-up to Atchariya.

“My little sister is dead. Don’t just say things to get yourself out of trouble,” an unidentified family member yelled while sobbing. “Fucking shitty hospital!”

Clarification: An earlier version of the story stated that Chorladda was declared dead upon arrival at Bangmod Hospital. However, the taxi driver who took her there has since told police she was still slightly conscious.

Related stories:

Woman Dies After Hospital Refuses to Treat Acid Attack by Husband

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