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Appeals Filed for 2 Myanmar Journalists in Secrets Case

Reuters journalist Thet Oo Maung Maung, known as Wa Lone, is escorted by police upon arrival at court Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2018, outside Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Thein Zaw / Associated Press
Reuters journalist Thet Oo Maung Maung, known as Wa Lone, is escorted by police upon arrival at court Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2018, outside Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Thein Zaw / Associated Press

YANGON — Lawyers for two Reuters journalists imprisoned in Myanmar have appealed the verdict that sent them to prison for seven years for illegal possession of official documents.

Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo had been reporting on the brutal crackdown on the Muslim Rohingya minority when they were arrested and charged with violating Myanmar’s colonial-era Official Secrets Act. They had pleaded not guilty, contending that they were framed by police.

Reuters president Stephen Adler said in a statement Monday that the court’s ruling had ignored “compelling evidence of a police set-up, serious due process violations, and the prosecution’s failure to prove any of the key elements of the crime.”

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Grief, Anger Overflow as Families Confront a Silent Lion Air

A Lion Air passenger jet is parked on the tarmac in 2012 at Juanda International Airport in Surabaya, Indonesia. Photo: Trisnadi / Associated Press
A Lion Air passenger jet is parked on the tarmac in 2012 at Juanda International Airport in Surabaya, Indonesia. Photo: Trisnadi / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Distraught and angry relatives of those killed when a Lion Air jet crashed last week have confronted the airline’s chief executive during a meeting arranged by Indonesian officials.

Transport Minister Budi Karya Sumadi did not invite Rusdi Kirana to speak during the meeting, which featured relatives and officials overseeing the search effort and investigation. But when relatives demanded he identify himself, Kirana stood and bowed his head.

After the meeting, Kirana left in a hurry, avoiding questions from reporters.

The Lion Air jet crashed into the Java Sea on Oct. 29 just minutes after taking off from Jakarta. All 189 people aboard were killed.

Many families face an agonizing wait for missing relatives to be identified.

Kirana founded Lion Air with his brother in 1999.

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Eat, Drink, Dance in Bangkok This Month at 2nd ‘Beamfest’

BANGKOK — Not long after it packed in revelers donned in costumes for a wild Halloween night, red-hot dancefloor Beam will throw another epic party later this month.

Beamfest will return for its second year running, featuring three days of food and clothing pop-up stalls – and of course, music from techno and mor lam to hip-hop.

An international lineup will be in charge of center stage – British deep house DJ Hot Since 82, French electro-house producer Busy P and American hip-hop recording artist MadeinTYO. They will be joined by local talents Sunju Hargun, Dan Buri, hip-hop heads from Bangkok Invaders and more.

The venue’s terrace this time will be packed with mor lam fans when Studio Lam pops up with ya dong cocktails and familiar tunes by DJs Maft Sai, Ben and Kanehbos.

Offline Disco Club by DJ Supersonic and Pichy will run at Blaq Lyte’s pop-up store Auntys Haus where streetwear will be available for sale.

Food will fuel the fun. Roman trattoria Appia will bring fresh seafood and pasta to the table while, straight out from Yangon, Myanmar bistro will join forces with Sawbwa Coffee Co to run Vietnamese tacos and coffee-based cocktails.

Barbecue guru Meat & Bones will cross the street from The Commons to 72 Courtyard to serve their specialty eight-hour smoked ribs.

Beamfest starts 6pm on Nov. 16 and runs through Nov. 18 at Beam. The Thonglor nightclub is located on 72 Courtyard between sois Thonglor 16 and 18. It’s reachable by motorbike or taxi from BTS Thong Lo.

Early bird tickets are 600 baht a day and available online. Regular tickets are 700 baht per day.

Beamfest debuted last year, running six days across two weeks.

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Related stories:

Bangkok’s Beam Nightclub to Host Music, Art Fest

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New Crown Property Law Comes Into Effect

A file photo of the Grand Palace. Image: Matichon

BANGKOK — A revised law governing His Majesty the King’s assets came into effect Saturday.

The amended Crown Property Act retains much of the older legislation enacted a year ago, but redefines the king’s possessions to include what the monarchy had accumulated under “ancient royal traditions.” King Vajiralongkorn has the final say over what is included in the category.

“Any dispute over what assets are considered Crown Property under the royal ancient traditions must be referred to His Majesty’s judgment,” Section 5 of the new law said.

Like the 2017 version of the law, His Majesty the King has the authority to handpick members for a committee to oversee and manage the Crown Property on his behalf. The committee is permitted to spend or invest King Rama X’s wealth, per His Majesty’s approval.

Related stories:

New Law Places Crown Property Under HM King

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Netizens Slam Pro-Junta Rap Song ‘Thailand 4.0’

BANGKOK — A pro-junta music video released in response to a wildly popular anti-establishment rap, was widely mocked Monday online.

Netizens were unsparing in their criticism of “Thailand 4.0,” a music video released by the military government last week, days after a track that harshly criticized its rule went viral in the country.

“I’ve lived for 29 years, and this is the first song I’ve heard that claims to be rap. I thought it was a Sports Day song at a temple,” user Suphachon P Phattara wrote in a comment.  “So lame. The beats are so out of date. Is this era 0.04? Don’t make more songs like this, I’m getting second-hand embarrassment.”

“Thailand 4.0” was presented Thursday at a government conference on business startups and played to introduce junta chairman Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha. It was released Saturday on YouTube. By Monday morning, the track had gained 1.3 million views and 20,000 dislikes in contrast to 871 likes.

It’s seen as the state’s answer to “Prathet Ku Mee,” or “My Country’s Got,” a viral anti-junta track released Oct. 22, which to date has more than 28 million views, 950,000 likes and 25,000 dislikes. It features 10 underground rappers who take turns tearing down political and social injustices in Thailand and criticizing the junta’s ongoing grip on power.

Read: Artists Should ‘Speak the Truth,’ Says Director of Anti-Junta Rap Video

Police flirted with prosecuting the rappers, even threatening the safety of their families, but have since backed down.

Some netizens, such as user Yaha Inv said having a response at all was undignified on the regime’s part.

“Is this the government’s response to ‘Prathet Ku Mee?’ Are these the actions of poo yai who think youngsters are being silly? Did they really have to respond at all?”

The video also made its way across Facebook.

Some were inspired by the song, however.

“Su su. Thailand can do it,” Facebook user Sarawut Glinliam wrote.

Here’s the unofficial translation of “Thailand 4.0.”

“Thailand 4.0”

Sawasdee, good morning Thailand,
Stop yawning, get up, get up!
Don’t just sit there sighing,
Let’s get it going, make it more wow, more wow!

The world is changing so let’s adjust to it,
Think of new things to build it up, build it up!
Wanna be cool, pretty, rich,
Nothing’s for sure. You gotta make it, make it!

Us, our kids, our grandkids,
Won’t be worse than anyone if our world is more open,
The coconut that’s covering our heads,
Take it off, so it’s brighter, brighter!

There are many talented Thais,
If we work together, we’ll be stronger, stronger!
Just come outside the coconut shell,
Whoever says we’re crazy will only get stupider, stupider!

Chorus:

Let’s meet up, Thais,
Think of new, great ideas together!
Think of far-out ideas,
It will get us far, if we work together!

We just need to cooperate,
So we can go farther, do better!
The world keeps spinning,
New innovations help Thailand fight!

Do your best today and tomorrow,
Things will be better if we agree,
Do good. Be cool, you can do it,
Just understand the new world, then you’ll be cooler, cooler!

Gen M, Gen Z, any Gen,
If you say yes, things are easier, easier!
Thai brains are all over the world,
It’s not a joke, Thais are smart.

We’ve got brains and good ideas,
Just add technology, we can go farther,
Who says innovating is hard?
Know. Think. Create. Build it up, build it up!

Whether you’re farming, growing vegetables, tilling fields,
Add in ideas, the prices will be better, better!
Inventors, app developers, rocket makers,
Enter contests to be sharper, sharper!

Employees, students, university students,
Think outside the curriculum, and get ready to be richer!
Office workers, manufacturers,
Don’t stop thinking, and your lives will get better!

Pull out the roots! Dig out the stumps!
Hit the coconut shell on the head. Thailand is leaping farther ahead!

Related stories:

Govt, Knocked by Rappers, Responds With Own Tune

Artists Should ‘Speak the Truth,’ Says Director of Anti-Junta Rap Video

Anti-Junta Rap Video is ‘Abominable,’ Suthep Says

Rap Video Blasting Junta Reaches 6M Views After Police Threats

Police to Summon Rappers Who Criticized Military Govt

With ‘My Country’s Got,’ Thai Rap Voices Rare Dissent Against Junta

‘Torn Down’ Prayuth Vows to ‘Fight’ in Latest Single

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Cuban President Meets North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang

Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel arrives Thursday at Moscow's Government Vnukovo airport for an official visit to Russia. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press
Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel arrives Thursday at Moscow's Government Vnukovo airport for an official visit to Russia. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press

PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Cuba’s President Miguel Diaz-Canel – both hoping to get out from under U.S. economic sanctions – have agreed to expand and strengthen their strategic relations, North Korea’s state media reported Monday.

Diaz-Canel, who is in Asia on his first international tour since assuming office in April, arrived in Pyongyang with his wife on Sunday. He was met at the airport by Kim, who joined him on the ride into the city past flower-waving and cheering crowds.

North Korea’s state media reported the two held talks at the Paekhwawon State Guest House and stressed their shared socialist history and vowed continued solidarity. The official media offered few specifics, but said the talks proceeded in a “comradely and friendly atmosphere.”

The meeting with Kim could be seen as a shot across the bow for Washington, which has run into increasing difficulty in its efforts to wrest significant progress from the North on the denuclearization issue.

Pyongyang, which has also been quietly cozying up to Moscow recently, has been hardening its rhetoric ahead of a meeting in New York later this week between Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the North’s main negotiator, Kim Yong Chol.

Over the weekend, Pyongyang used its official media to criticize the U.S. for its continued support of sanctions – a political tool Washington has also used extensively on Cuba and Russia – and hinted it may resume nuclear development if Washington doesn’t change is tune.

Sanctions-busting has been high on Diaz-Canel’s agenda.

While in Moscow, Diaz-Canel discussed a nearly USD$50 million arms deal with Russia and won a similar vow of expanded political, economic and military ties from Putin. The two then issued a joint statement denouncing U.S. “interference into domestic affairs of sovereign nations.”

The U.S. economic embargo on Cuba, initially imposed in 1958 and subsequently expanded, has remained in place. Russia faced an array of crippling U.S. and EU sanctions over the annexation of Crimea and its support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Diaz-Canel was to leave Pyongyang on Tuesday and visit China, Vietnam and Laos.

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Former Malaysian State Chief Detained, Face Graft Charges

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

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia’s anti-graft agency says the former leader of a timber-rich eastern state has been arrested and will face corruption charges as it widens its crackdown on graft.

The agency said Musa Aman, the former chief minister of Sabah state on Borneo island, has been detained at its office and will be brought to court later Monday to face several corruption charges. It didn’t give details.

Local media said the charges against Musa involved millions of dollars related to timber concessions.

Musa is the latest former high-ranking official to be prosecuted following the shocking ouster of scandal-tainted Prime Minister Najib Razak’s government in May’s elections. Najib, his wife and his former deputy are among those who have been charged with corruption. Najib has accused the new government of seeking political vengeance.

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Data Recovered From Crashed Lion Air Data Recorder: Official

Navy divers inspect Saturday what is believed to be engine of the crashed Lion Air jet after it was retrieved from the sea floor, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Fauzy Chaniago / Associated Press
Navy divers inspect Saturday what is believed to be engine of the crashed Lion Air jet after it was retrieved from the sea floor, at Tanjung Priok Port in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Fauzy Chaniago / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Investigators succeeded in retrieving hours of data from a crashed Lion Air jet’s flight recorder as Indonesian authorities on Sunday extended the search at sea for victims and debris.

National Transportation Safety Committee deputy chairman Haryo Satmiko told a news conference that 69 hours of flight data was downloaded from the recorder including its fatal flight.

The Boeing 737 MAX 8 jet crashed just minutes after takeoff from Jakarta on Oct. 29, killing all 189 people on board in the country’s worst airline disaster since 1997.

The flight data recorder was recovered by divers on Thursday in damaged condition and investigators said it required special handling to retrieve its information. The cockpit voice recorder has not been recovered but searchers are focusing on a particular area based on a weak locator signal.

National Search and Rescue Agency chief Muhammad Syaugi said Sunday the search operation, now in its 7th day and involving hundreds of personnel and dozens of ships, would continue for another three days.

Syaugi paid tribute to a volunteer diver, Syahrul Anto, who died during the search effort on Friday. The family of the 48-year-old refused an autopsy and he was buried Saturday in Surabaya.

More than 100 body bags of human remains had been recovered. Syaugi said the number would continue to increase and remains were also now washing up on land.

He said weak signals, potentially from the cockpit voice recorder, were traced to a location but an object hadn’t been found yet due to deep seabed mud.

Flight tracking websites show the plane had erratic speed and altitude during its 13 minute flight and a previous flight the day before from Bali to Jakarta. Passengers on the Bali flight reported terrifying descents and in both cases the different cockpit crews requested to return to their departure airport shortly after takeoff. Lion has claimed a technical problem was fixed after the Bali fight.

Syaugi said a considerable amount of aircraft “skin” was found on the seafloor but not a large intact part of its fuselage as he’d indicated was possible Saturday.

He and other top officials including the military chief plan to meet with families on Monday to explain the search operation.

The Lion Air crash is the worst airline disaster in Indonesia since 1997, when 234 people died on a Garuda flight near Medan. In December 2014, an AirAsia flight from Surabaya to Singapore plunged into the sea, killing all 162 on board.

Indonesian airlines were barred in 2007 from flying to Europe because of safety concerns, though several were allowed to resume services in the following decade. The ban was completely lifted in June. The U.S. lifted a decadelong ban in 2016.

Lion Air is one of Indonesia’s youngest airlines but has grown rapidly, flying to dozens of domestic and international destinations. It has been expanding aggressively in Southeast Asia, a fast-growing region of more than 600 million people.

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‘Fantastic Beasts’ Stars: Depp’s Villain (Mostly) Isn’t Trump

Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures
Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures

LOS ANGELES — Johnny Depp’s charismatic leader at the center of the new “Fantastic Beasts” sequel isn’t modeled on U.S. President Donald Trump.

But the stars of “Fantastic Beasts: Crimes of Grindelwald,” the film written by J.K. Rowling about a dark wizard who becomes a divisive leader in the magical world, tell The Associated Press that there are some similarities.

The film is set in the “Harry Potter” universe and finds Depp’s character, Gellert Grindelwald, seeking to gain power and divide “pureblood” wizards from humans in 1920s Paris.

“It’s shining a light, isn’t it, on things that have happened before as well,” said Callum Turner, who plays Theseus, the older brother to Eddie Redmayne’s hero main character in the film. “And how seductive and easy things can take a turn for the worse. And not just be specific to any one moment.

“That’s the question. Why are we — people being seduced in that way? What is it in the moment, in the zeitgeist, what is that? And that’s what is interesting about that — that’s the similarity. Not the person. The message.”

Katherine Waterston, who plays a magical law enforcement agent, says the villain crafted by the politically outspoken Rowling is more “subtle” than the real-life president.

“Every bad guy is more nuanced and subtle than Trump. He is like the most overt bad guy of all time,” she said. “But it’s amazing because she was actually writing this long before the election happened — this chapter of the story. So yeah, it’s interesting actually with brilliant people, if they’re paying attention to the way the world is going, they actually tend to predict the future. Yeah, but it really is I think from paying close attention. And she’s so politically active.”

Ezra Miller plays a mysterious character named Credence Barebone, whose powers include a destructive magical parasite. He says Grindelwald shares similarities to many leaders throughout history.

“I think it’s approaching universal themes that sure, can you look at all of the autocrats in all of history and be like, ‘Yup, they are all kind of that guy, sure,'” Miller said. “There’s a period where they just convince everyone that they are on their team and they’re going to get them good jobs and it’s going to be awesome.

“And that’s like how tyranny works. Like at first they convince you that they have the right to rule you. And then they arm up and get it on. It’s a universal story.”

“Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald,” the second of five planned movies in the franchise, hits theaters in Thailand on Nov. 15.

Story: Ryan Pearson

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China Seeks to Rebrand Global Image With Import Expo

Workers last week prepare a lawn outside the venue for the upcoming China International Import Expo in Shanghai. Photo: Chinatopix / AP
Workers last week prepare a lawn outside the venue for the upcoming China International Import Expo in Shanghai. Photo: Chinatopix / AP

BEIJING — Facing a blizzard of trade complaints, China is throwing an “open for business” import fair hosted by President Xi Jinping to rebrand itself as a welcoming market and positive global force.

More than 3,000 companies from 130 countries selling everything from Egyptian dates to factory machinery are attending the China International Import Expo, opening Monday in the commercial hub of Shanghai. Its VIP guest list includes prime ministers and other leaders from Russia, Pakistan and Vietnam.

The United States, fighting a tariff war with Beijing, has no plans to send a high-level envoy.

Xi’s government is emphasizing the promise of China’s growing consumer market to help defuse complaints Beijing abuses the global trading system by reneging on promises to open its industries.

“This says, look, we’re not a global parasite that is creating massive deficits, we are buying goods,” said Kerry Brown, a Chinese politics specialist at King’s College London.

The event also is part of efforts to develop a trading network centered on China and increase its influence in a Western-dominated global system.

President Donald Trump and his “American first” trade policies that threaten to raise import barriers to the world’s biggest consumer market loom in the background.

Exporters, especially developing countries, want closer relations with China to help “insulate themselves from what is happening with Trump and the U.S.,” said Gareth Leather of Capital Economics.

China has cut tariffs and announced other measures this year to boost imports, which rose 15.9 percent in 2017 to $1.8 trillion. But none address the U.S. complaints about its technology policy that prompted Trump to impose penalty tariffs of up to 25 percent on $250 billion of Chinese imports. Beijing has responded with tariff hikes on $110 billion of American imports.

Chinese leaders have rejected pressure to roll back plans such as “Made in China 2025,” which calls for state-led creation of global champions in robotics and other fields, ambitions that some American officials worry will undermine U.S. industrial leadership.

To keep the economy growing, China needs to nurture its consumer market and that requires more imports.

But foreign companies say regulators are still trying to squeeze them out of promising industries and that they face pressure to hand over technology.

The Shanghai expo “will be of little consequence to U.S. and other companies unless its pageantry is matched by meaningful and measurable changes in China trade practices,” Kenneth Jarrett, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, said in an email.

Some companies might get a brief sales boost, “but its long-run impact will be defined by China’s willingness to end many of its unfair trade practices,” said Jarrett.

Europe, Japan and other trading partners have been leery of Trump’s tactics but echo U.S. complaints.

They say Beijing improperly hampers access to finance, logistics and other service industries. European leaders are frustrated that Beijing bars foreign acquisitions of most assets while its own companies are on a global buying spree.

Writing in a Chinese business magazine, the French and German ambassadors to Beijing appealed for changes including an end to requirements that foreign companies operate in joint ventures with state-owned partners. They called for an overhaul of rules they say hinder companies from profiting from and protecting their technology.

“We encourage China to address these issues through concrete and systematic measures that go beyond tariff adjustments,” Ambassadors Jean-Maurice Ripert of France and Clemens von Goetze of Germany wrote in the magazine Caixin.

China already is the No. 1 trading partner for all its Asian neighbors, though a big share of the iron ore, industrial components and other goods it buys are turned into smartphones, TV sets and other goods for export.

Tariff cuts announced over the past year were aimed at giving Chinese consumers better access to foreign goods. Chinese leaders emphasize those include anti-cancer drugs and other medical products. But many are specialty goods such as high-end baby strollers, avocados and mineral water that don’t compete with Chinese suppliers.

The Shanghai expo also gives Beijing a chance to repair its image following complaints about its “Belt and Road” initiative to expand trade by building ports, railways and other infrastructure across a vast arc of 65 countries from the South Pacific through Asia to Africa and Europe.

Governments including Nepal, Sri Lanka and Thailand have scrapped or scaled back projects due to high costs or complaints too little work goes to local companies. Sri Lanka, Kenya and other nations have run into trouble repaying Chinese loans.

“It’s become too associated with debt and China getting what it wants,” said Brown. “They are trying to get out this more positive message that China is open for business.”

Story: Joe McDonald

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