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Taiwan Marks Crackdown Anniversary Amid China Tensions

Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, left, gives her regards to 96-years-old victim Fu Jen-hung during a memorial service marking the 228 Incident in Taipei, Taiwan, Feb. 28. Photo: Chiang Ying-ying / AP.

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen said Tuesday the island’s democracy is mature enough to handle a thorough investigation into a bloody crackdown on anti-government protesters 70 years ago, an event seen as a rallying point by those who reject China’s claim to the self-governing island.

Tsai, speaking at a gathering in Taipei, pledged to take a “rigorous and precise attitude” in the assigning of responsibility for the violent suppression of the protests that began on Feb. 28, 1947. The largely peaceful opposition movement was directed at the corrupt rule of Chiang Kai-shek’s Chinese Nationalist Party that had taken control of the former Japanese colony less than two years earlier.

Tsai had said during her inauguration last May that she expected within three years to see a full report on the suppression of the protests.

China considers the uprising a part of the overall struggle that led to the Communist victory in 1949, while many Taiwanese see it as a backlash against attempts to govern the island from China without the consent of the island’s native population.

“After 70 years, I believe that Taiwanese society now has the mature democratic mechanisms to discuss this matter,” Tsai told a gathering of victims, families and supporters in 228 Peace Memorial Park in central Taipei, named after the date of the uprising.

As many as 28,000 people were believed killed after Chiang dispatched troops to massacre participants in the largely peaceful protests, many of whom came from the Japanese-educated elite. Many more were imprisoned and killed in the decades of political persecution that followed, in what was widely known as the “White Terror.”

Suppressed under Nationalist rule, the uprising has become a rallying point for Taiwanese who say the island and China are separate nations. Opponents, including those in China, say the anniversary is being used for political purposes to further an anti-Beijing, pro-Taiwan independence agenda.

Even after seven decades, the events remain contentious. While hundreds of Tsai’s supporters rallied in the park, police kept out a separate group calling on the government to drop the issue.

This year’s commemorations are especially significant because the government is drafting a law that could rename a central Taipei tourist landmark dedicated to Chiang and remove his statue from the premises. Seeking to avoid confrontations, authorities on Tuesday closed the landmark Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall that is popular with tourists from China, where the one-reviled Chiang is now seen as a patriot who battled Japanese invaders.

Tsai’s independence-leaning administration is also releasing all previously secret government documents about the events that broke out when Nationalist policemen attacked a widow selling contraband cigarettes, sparking an outpouring of pent-up frustration with Chiang’s government.

Then based in the Chinese city of Nanjing, Chiang was driven from mainland China by Mao Zedong’s Communists in 1949 and ruled Taiwan under martial law until his death in 1975.

The then-Nationalist government offered an apology to victims in 1995, but moves to excise Chiang’s memory stalled under former Nationalist President Ma Ying-jeou, who left office last year.

“We are pretty dissatisfied and feeling impatient,” said Yang Chen-long, 65, chief executive officer of a foundation for victims of the 1947 crackdown. Although Yang’s family received 6 million Taiwan dollars ($195,000) for the persecution of his father and two other relatives at the hands of authorities, he said ascribing blame and educating the public are of primary concern.

“The compensation for me isn’t that important,” he said. “Chiang Kai-shek should take responsibility.”

This year’s commemorations were seen as especially significant given a sharp downturn in relations between Taiwan and China. Following a period of relative calm under Ma’s China-friendly government, Beijing has stepped up its pressure on Taiwan over Tsai’s refusal to endorse its principle that the island and the mainland are part of a single Chinese nation to be unified eventually.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office last week accused Taiwanese independence supporters of manipulating the anniversary to “to stoke conflict and split public opinion,” while official Chinese newspapers on Tuesday carried editorials accusing Tsai’s backers of sowing discord.

Also this week, marches have been held from the site where the initial protests broke out to Memorial Park, with participants calling for swifter action on the government’s drive for justice for victims and their families.

“The biggest thing this year is that most people related to Feb. 28 or who understand it will want a speeding up of transitional justice, and the second thing is to let people know the real truth,” said Cheng Tsing-hua, who marched with hundreds of others in a memorial event Monday.

The current chairwoman of the Nationalist Party, which was soundly defeated in elections for both the presidency and parliament last year, has been less than supportive of the commemorations.

“Taiwan’s society still has political parties that want to keep using this incident and keep stoking past wounds,” Hung Hsiu-chu said in a statement Monday. “Their mouths say they want the truth, but what they want is just the reality that serves their needs.”

Story: Ralph Jennings 

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Myanmar Now Has an Indie Film Scene. See Their Stuff This Weekend.

BANGKOK A Burmese monk’s conflict between his calling and rapidly changing society will be featured at weekend edition of what’s billed as the only festival bringing independent films from Myanmar.

“The Monk” will headline selections chosen for Thai audiences from Myanmar’s Wathann Film Festival in Bangkok this weekend in a library-arts space just off lower Silom Road.

Among the documentaries, features, shorts, experimental and art films will be The Maw Naing’s coming-of-age film about a young monk torn between the monkhood and a normal life. The 2014 film was one of Myanmar’s first independent films and won several awards at international festivals.

Festival founder Thaiddhi will be present in Bangkok on the first day to talk about film-making in Myanmar.

The two-day mini fest starts at 1pm on March 4 and 5. The schedule is available online.

The Reading Room, located in Soi Silom 19 across from Central Silom, can be reached by motorcycle or taxi from BTS Chong Nonsi or Surasak.

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Authorities Investigate Killing of Hippo at El Salvador Zoo

A hippopotamus named Gustavito is fed at the San Salvador Zoo in El Salvador. Image: Associated Press

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — El Salvador’s widespread violence reached an unexpected corner with the brutal and fatal beating of the national zoo’s beloved hippopotamus Gustavito.

Even among a population numbed by a staggering human death toll due to gang violence in recent years, the animal’s death late Sunday stirred outrage.

Salvadorans mourned through social media and some left flowers at the gate of the zoo, which has been closed until further notice.

“Here we’re used to seeing the dead every day,” Martin Castillo, a street vendor in the capital’s historic downtown, said Monday. “They kill us like flies, but this tops it all. They killed an animal that only entertained us.”

Zoo director Vladan Henriquez said at a news conference that the hippo was covered with bruises and puncture wounds after apparently being attacked with metal bars, knives and rocks.

The attack occurred last week, sometime Tuesday night. But zookeepers did not discover the hippo’s injuries until Thursday because he did not leave his pool. Gustavito died of his injuries late Sunday.

Justice Minister Mauricio Ramirez Landaverde said an investigation had been opened.

El Salvador is one of the world’s most violent countries, recording 5,278 homicides last year, or an average of 14 people killed per day. Most of the killings have been blamed on powerful street gangs.

Gustavito was born and raised in Guatemala, but was brought to El Salvador 13 years ago.

“We’re angry,” said Carmen Rogel, who often brings her grandson to the zoo. “We didn’t know they had killed Gustavito and were surprised when we arrived and the gate was closed.”

Story: Marcos Aleman

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Part of Rio Carnival Float Collapses, Injuring 12

An injured person lies on a stretcher on the top of a float as she is being rescued during the performing for the Carnival celebrations at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Feb. 28.

RIO DE JANEIRO — The top of a float collapsed during Rio de Janeiro’s world famous Carnival parade early Tuesday, injuring at least 12 people, officials said.

The incident involved the second float of the popular samba school Unidos da Tijuca, themed around the Carnival in New Orleans. Revelers cried on the pavement and in the stands as injured people were removed by rescuers.

Police were investigating the cause of the accident.

Rio state health secretary said in a statement that among the 12 injured at the city’s Sambadrome, nine were taken to local hospitals. Health officials also said eight people sought medical attention due to stress.

Rio City hall said two people were in serious condition. One suffered a head trauma, according to one doctor.

The parade had to be stopped for almost 25 minutes so the injured could get medical attention. The show was allowed to proceed.

Reveler Felix Souza said he was dancing next to the float when the incident happened.

“We heard a burst on the top,” he said. “People started screaming, we didn’t understand what it was. It was a moment of despair for all there.”

Ailton Freitas, a director at Unidos da Tijuca, said their floats had been tested repeatedly before the Carnival.

“We tested three times a week with more weight than we carried today. When the parade approached we started doing those tests every day. We are even more shocked than you all are,” Freitas told journalists. “I don’t know what is happening, but Rio’s Carnival is not being blessed this year.”

Minutes earlier a smaller incident happened with samba school Mocidade Independente. A platform detached from their fourth float and dropped a reveler to the ground. The samba school said she was not injured.

On Sunday, a float belonging to samba school Paraiso de Tuiuti crashed and injured at least 20 people, including three seriously. Following that accident, organizers also decided to proceed with the show.

Story: Mauricio Savarese

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Groom and Friends Charged After Guns-Blazing Wedding Kills Man

Sumet Lomrob, 25, appears with his bride in a invitation to his wedding party posted Friday to Facebook.

CHONBURI — A newlywed man turned himself into police Monday after celebratory gunfire at his wedding killed a man in a widely watched case that has provoked outrage.

Sumet Lomrob admitted to owning at least one of the weapons fired during Sunday morning’s wedding parade in Chonburi province which killed a neighborhood man. A fifth member of his wedding party turned himself in Tuesday, joining four who told police they fired guns during the celebration.

Thanet Kinwong, 37, was sitting in front of a friend’s home when a bullet suddenly struck the left side of his chest. It was one of many fired into the air from Sumet’s wedding parade approximately 100 meters away. He died instantly.

“I want to know what their hearts are made of,” said Thanet’s 46-year-old wife, Weerawan Suppachon. “Why did they dare fire a volley of shots in a residential area, where there are hundred of homes?”

When police later came to the wedding party to inquire about what happened, no one would give them information. Sumet, 25, appeared with his new bride in wedding photographs brandishing what look like assault rifles.

Their carelessness and subsequent reluctance to take responsibility drew widespread scorn after being called out in heavy media coverage.

“It’s your wedding but then you make it someone else’s funeral,” Facebook user Nakorn Wachirawarangkul wrote among thousands to comment on the story. “Your parents have raised you until you can get married and have your own family. How come you cannot know it is inappropriate to fire shots just for fun?”

Police said they have yet to determine which gun fired the shot that killed Thanet.

Four men had earlier turned themselves in late Sunday night, admitting to shooting guns during the parade: Wasin Kongkaew, 20; Arthit Lomrob, 20; Jirapat Lomrob, 20 and Tinnaphat Charoensiri, 23.

After turning himself in the next day, Sumet confessed to owning one of the guns used by his friends and relatives. He was charged with illegal weapons possession and freed on a 50,000 baht bail bond.

On Tuesday, another groomsman, Sahaphab Saboorum, 21, joined his four friends at the police station, saying he had also fired shots.

The five have been charged with illegally possessing and carrying firearms and discharging them in a public place.

They were denied bail and were due for a hearing in a Pattaya Court on Tuesday afternoon, according to police Lt. Col. Prasith Mansri.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yF3UOClJRlY

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Star Power: Michelin Guide Coming to Thailand

BANGKOK Bangkok’s rising stature as a place for fine dining will get the ultimate nod from the authorities on world-class cuisine when the Michelin Guide launches here later this year.

After progressive Indian restaurant Gaggan was ranked Asia’s best restaurant for a third year on a list increasingly crowded with Bangkok restaurants, global gastronomers will take note with coverage by Michelin, whose arrival had been rumored for several years.

Two weeks ago the interim cabinet approved 143.5 million baht for the tourism authority to invest in promoting travel relating to Michelin Guide Thailand’s coverage. Saying that Michelin would later expand beyond Bangkok, the cabinet made the five-year commitment in a bid to further elevate quality fine-dining, attract international chefs and boost tourism.

Michelin Red Guides are a series of guide books published by French tire company Michelin since 1900. Gaining or losing a Michelin star can be a source of soul-wrenching anxiety for the top-ranked eateries.

In Asia, Michelin guides are available in Japan, Seoul, Shanghai, Hong Kong-Macau and Singapore.

Bangkok will be the sixth Asian locale with a Michelin Guide. It’s expected to launch by the end of the year, with an initial focus on the Bangkok before expanding nationwide in the following years.

 

Related articles:

Threeplay: Bangkok’s Gaggan Tops Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants, Again

 

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Expelled Grand Chamberlain to be Charged

A photo distributed by Royal Thai Police showing Jumpol Manmai's mansion that allegedly encroaches on the Thap Lan National Park in Nakhon Ratchasima.

BANGKOK — The royal palace has fired the grand chamberlain to His Majesty the King, citing “grave disciplinary violations” and will charge him with land encroachment later this week, police sources said Tuesday.

The expulsion of Jumpol Manmai was announced nearly two weeks after police launched an investigation into allegations the 66-year-old former deputy police commissioner illegally built a luxury mansion in a national park.

Read: Who is Jumpol Manmai? 

An image of the expulsion order signed by junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha surfaced on social media Monday. It accused Jumpol of numerous transgressions.

“His behavior was unfit to be a senior bureaucrat close to His Majesty. He abused his bureaucratic position for his own interests, engaged in politics jeopardizing national security, and lost His Majesty’s trust. Such behaviors are grave disciplinary violations deserve expulsion,” the letter said.

Jumpol is believed to already be in custody. Sources in the police force said he will be brought to the Crime Suppression Division on Thursday, where he will be formally charged with land encroachment.

Junta chairman Prayuth-Chanocha declined to answer questions about Jumpol’s case after coming out of his Tuesday cabinet meeting.

Sources also said Jumpol is expected to be taken from Bangkok to a court in Nakhon Ratchasima province on the same day for a custody hearing.

Image jumpol
Police Gen. Jumpol Manmai

Regional police opened a criminal inquiry into Jumpol on suspicion that he intruded on the Thap Lan National Park in Nakhon Ratchasima with a 16-rai (2.6 hectare) estate, according to a Feb. 12 police statement.

Police are reluctant to discuss the investigation publicly, citing the sensitivity of the case.

Some details of this article have been been omitted to comply with the criminal royal defamation law.

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Driver Fined For Calling Passengers ‘Whores,’ Threatening to Rape Them

Screenshot of Kunyaphat Pitchayapukdee’s video showing taxi driver Wirat Thassanatikorn’s tirade, posted Sunday.

BANGKOK — A taxi driver recorded calling young female passengers “whores” and threatening to kill them was fined Tuesday and ordered to undergo three hours of etiquette training.

After police declined to take up a case against Wirat Thassanatikom based on the complaint of several students, the driver was called to report to the Land Transport Department at 9am this morning where he was fined 1,000 baht for his behavior and ordered to sit through a three-hour lecture on good manners.

The incident happened Sunday, when Kunyaphat Pitchayapukdee was in Wirat’s taxi with four friends. They were passing near an intersection in the capital’s western outskirts of Nong Khaem when a front-seat passenger adjusted an air conditioning vent, prompting the driver to erupt in misogynistic vitriol.

“What right do you think you have to adjust the aircon in my car? It’s not your car! What school do you go to? Do they not teach manners, you uneducated, evil karee?” Kunyaphat alleges Wirat said, using the word for “whore.”

That’s when they began to record the driver, who then went on to make menacing threats.

“I’m a former policeman. I could bury you like that tom, don’t you read the news? Or how about I don’t say anything and just drag out and rape you?” he can be heard saying in the video Kunyaphat later posted to Facebook.

One of the passengers directed Wirat to let them out nearby, but that didn’t stop him:

“If you’re pretty but have an evil personality, no one will want you. You’ll just have to be a whore. Look at you, looking all displeased when I’m talking to you. If you have any complaints, I live right here at Baan Uea Athorn.”

The students went and filed a complaint Sunday with Nong Khaem police.

Maj. Nikorn Haoboon confirmed receipt of the complaint but said police took no action.

“The kids adjusted the aircon, and he spoke rudely to them, so I put it down as evidence,” Nikorn said.

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N. Korea Sends Diplomats to Malaysia to Get Kim Jong Nam’s Body

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves at parade participants in 2016 at the Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — North Korea has sent a high-level delegation to Malaysia to seek the return of the body of leader’s Kim Jong Un’s slain half brother.

The delegation includes Ri Tong Il, former North Korean deputy ambassador to the United Nations. He told reporters Tuesday outside the North Korean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur that the diplomats were in Malaysia to seek the retrieval of the body and the release of a North Korean arrested in the case.

Malaysia has confirmed that North Korean killed Feb. 13 in a nerve-agent attack at Kuala Lumpur’s airport is Kim Jong Nam, half brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. North Korea, however, has identified the victim only as a North Korean national with a diplomatic passport.

Ri says the delegation also seeks the “development of friendly relationships” between North Korea and Malaysia.

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Firm Says Several Mistakes Caused Oscars Best Picture Gaffe

Producer of "La La Land," and cast member Emma Stone greet "Moonlight" cast members and filmmakers onstage after "Moonlight" was announced as the true winner of best picture at the Oscars on Feb. 26. Photo: Chris Pizzello / AP.

LOS ANGELES — The accounting firm responsible for the integrity of the Academy Awards said Monday that its staffers did not move quickly enough to correct the biggest error in Oscars history — the mistaken announcement of the best picture winner.

PwC, formerly Price Waterhouse Coopers, wrote in a statement that several mistakes were made and two of its partners assigned to the prestigious awards show did not act quickly enough when “La La Land” was mistakenly announced as the best picture winner. Three of the film’s producers spoke before the actual winner, the coming-of-age drama “Moonlight,” was announced.

“PwC takes full responsibility for the series of mistakes and breaches of established protocols during last night’s Oscars,” PwC wrote. It said its partner, Brian Cullinan, mistakenly handed presenters Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway an envelope containing the winner of the best actress award.

“Once the error occurred, protocols for correcting it were not followed through quickly enough by Mr. Cullinan or his partner,” the statement read.

It did not address in detail which protocols were violated, or say whether a tweet Cullinan sent about best actress winner Emma Stone before the best picture announcement contributed to the mistake.

The firm, which has handled Oscar winner announcements for eight decades, apologized to Beatty, Dunaway, the cast and crew of “La La Land” and “Moonlight,” the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and host Jimmy Kimmel.

“We wish to extend our deepest gratitude to each of them for the graciousness they displayed during such a difficult moment,” the statement said. “For the past 83 years, the academy has entrusted PwC with the integrity of the awards process during the ceremony, and last night we failed the academy.”

The statement came after nearly a day of speculation about how the worst gaffe in Oscars history unfolded. The fiasco launched countless punchlines, memes and a probe of what went wrong.

The mystery deepened Monday afternoon after the Wall Street Journal reported that Cullinan tweeted a behind-the-scenes photo of winner Emma Stone holding her statuette. “Best Actress Emma Stone backstage!” the tweet read. The tweet, sent moments before the best picture announcement, raised the question of whether the accountant was distracted from the task at hand. Although the tweet was deleted from the social media site, a copy of it was kept by Google and available through a cache page.

The mistaken announcement altered the usual celebration that follows the coronation of a best picture winner. The only Oscars mistake that came close occurred in 1964, when Sammy Davis was given the wrong envelope for best music score winner but made a quick correction.

The “La La Land”-”Moonlight” mix-up, in contrast, took a painfully long time to be announced, with two-plus minutes elapsing before it was announced to the moviemakers and the world at large.

The embarrassing episode stepped squarely on what should have been a night of high-fiving for the academy. After last year’s awards were clouded by the #OscarsSoWhite protests, diversity ruled Sunday as actors Viola Davis (“Fences”) and Mahershala Ali (“Moonlight”) were among the people of color claiming trophies, while “Moonlight” focused on African-American characters.

PwC, which originated in London over a century ago, was quick to apologize to the movies involved. The academy has not yet commented on the mistake.

On paper, the process for announcing Oscars winners seems straight-forward. As per protocol, Cullinan and PwC colleague Martha Ruiz toted briefcases to the awards via the red carpet, each holding an identical set of envelopes for the show’s 24 categories. The accountants also memorize the winners.

During the telecast, the accountants were stationed in the Dolby Theatre wings, one stage left and one stage right, to give presenters their category’s envelope before they went on stage. Most presenters entered stage right, where Cullinan was posted and where he handed Beatty and Dunaway the errant envelope.

Yet the previous award, best actress, had been presented by Leonardo DiCaprio, who entered stage left and received the envelope from Ruiz. That left a duplicate, unopened envelope for best actress at stage right.

“It’s a simple process, if a painstaking one,” said Dan Lyle, who had Oscar duties for Price Waterhouse for 11 years in the 1980s and ’90s. Accountants attended rehearsals to learn whether presenters would enter from the right or left. But given the possibility of last-minute changes, both accountants had a full set of envelopes.

When Lyle ended up with a redundant envelope for a category handled by his colleague, he said, he got it out of the way by stuffing it in a pocket or otherwise discarding it before moving on to the next award.

Lyle said there were always nerves no matter how much care was taken. Each time an envelope was dispensed, he said, he hoped that “I handed over the right one.” If the wrong winner was announced, a PwC accountant was to quickly dash to the stage to correct the error.

Such a rapid response should have occurred Sunday but didn’t, as confusion reigned onstage. Backstage, however, people were working calmly to right the ship, said Matt Sayles, a freelance photographer for The Associated Press.

“It was more crazy onstage. I feel like backstage knew that something was wrong and they handled it,” Sayles said. “They clearly knew that something was wrong.”

Sayles, who has shot five Academy Awards from a backstage position just out of the sight of television cameras, said the result of the mix-up was a more subdued celebration from winners including “Moonlight” director Barry Jenkins.

One observer said London-based PwC is scrambling now. Nigel Currie, an independent branding specialist in London with decades’ worth of industry experience, said this mistake is “as bad a mess-up as you could imagine.”

“They had a pretty simple job to do and messed it up spectacularly,” he said. “They will be in deep crisis talks on how to deal with it.”

Story: Anthony McCartney 

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