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Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, Triumphed in Football and Business, Dead at 60

Leicester City's chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha on July 8, 2016, in London. Photo: Adam Davy / PA via AP
Leicester City's chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha on July 8, 2016, in London. Photo: Adam Davy / PA via AP

BANGKOK — Billionaire Leicester City owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, who died when his helicopter crashed in a parking lot next to the football club’s stadium, was known to fans as a smiling, benevolent man who gave away free beers and hot dogs on his birthday and brought the club its fairytale English Premier League title in 2016. He was 60.

The business world remembers Vichai as the retail entrepreneur who started with one shop and grew Thailand’s massive King Power duty-free chain.

The sight of his personal helicopter taking off from the middle of the field — to take Vichai to his English base near London in Berkshire — was a regular feature after Leicester’s home games. On Saturday evening, it turned into a horror scene when the chopper appeared to suddenly lose power, plummeting to the ground in a parking lot outside the empty stadium and bursting into flames.

Read: Leicester City Confirms Chopper Crash Killed Vichai

The crash sparked emotional scenes in Leicester, the East Midlands city whose devoted football fans will forever be grateful to Vichai for bankrolling not only the club’s first title in the world’s foremost football league, but one of the most incredible stories in world sports history.

A man takes a photo Sunday near a mural of Leicester City's owner, Thai billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha near the Leicester City Football Club. Photo: Aaron Chown / PA
A man takes a photo Sunday near a mural of Leicester City’s owner, Thai billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha near the Leicester City Football Club. Photo: Aaron Chown / PA

Leicester, only two years after being promoted from England’s second-tier league, was a 5,000-to-1 shot to win the Premier League at the start of the 2015-16 season. But after Vichai brought in veteran Italian manager Claudio Ranieri at the start of the campaign, the Foxes produced a stunning season. They lost only three of their 38 games, to win the title by a comfortable 10-point margin, ahead of far more illustrious rivals Arsenal, Tottenham, Manchester City and Manchester United.

Though his public comments were limited, Leicester’s ever-smiling chairman became a talisman of the campaign, watching on from his seat in the stadium at home games beside his son, Aiyawatt, the club’s vice chairman.

While many foreign owners have been viewed with suspicion by their English club’s fans — for reasons such as a lack of respect for supporters or their club’s traditions — Vichai was held in the highest regard by the Leicester faithful. They showed it during one match late in that 2015-16 season, when their title was secured, with the 32,000-strong King Power Stadium crowd rising to give their chairman an emotional and spontaneous standing ovation.

A man prays Sunday next to floral tributes outside Leicester City Football Club after a helicopter crashed in flames the day before, in Leicester, England. Aaron Chown: PA via AP
A man prays Sunday next to floral tributes outside Leicester City Football Club after a helicopter crashed in flames the day before, in Leicester, England. Aaron Chown: PA via AP

Vichai became known for his generosity around the club. When Leicester narrowly avoided the threat of relegation to the second tier at the end of 2014-15, he sent “bottle after bottle” of champagne to the dressing room, according to British media reports. He also treated fans in the stadium to a free Thai Singha beer at the end of successful campaigns.

Vichai bought Leicester for 39 million pounds (1.65 billion baht) in 2010. After the club’s turnaround, it is now valued at 371 million pounds (15.7 billion baht), according to Forbes.

Such a transformation was in keeping with Vichai’s success in the business world, after starting his duty-free interests from modest beginnings.

In 1989, he was granted a license to open Thailand’s first downtown duty-free store. Expansion into Thai airports followed, with King Power ultimately granted a monopoly for duty-free stores at all the country’s main airports.

Today the King Power empire is worth 3.8 billion pounds (161.3 billion baht), according to Forbes, with Vichai having been the fifth-richest person in Thailand.

His family’s empire also included Accor’s Pullman hotels in Thailand, and a 7.5 billion baht stake, bought in 2016, in Thai AirAsia. Last year, Vichai also enlarged his football interests, buying Belgian second-tier club Oud-Heverlee Leuven.

Vichai’s rise in business did not happen without some drama.

The granting of King Power’s monopoly status at Thailand’s airports — set in motion in 2004 by the government of since-ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra — caused some controversy.

And this year, King Power has defended itself against a lawsuit lodged by a former anti-graft official alleging it had not paid the government its due share of revenue from its airport franchise. King Power has denied the allegation. While Thailand’s main corruption court threw the case out last month, an appeal is reportedly likely.

Aside from business and football, Vichai quickly became a noted polo devotee in England, playing on occasion with Princes Charles and William. He spent millions establishing his polo team, the King Power Foxes, which began in 2014 and has enjoyed success at the top levels of competition in the U.K.

A devout Buddhist who had monks bless the King Power Stadium regularly for good luck, Vichai and his wife, Aimon Srivaddhanaprabha, had four children.

He was born Vichai Raksriaksorn, but in 2012, the king of Thailand recognized his achievements by bestowing on his family their new surname, which means “light of progressive glory.”

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Lion Air Jet Crashes Into Sea After Jakarta Takeoff, 188 on Board

A Lion Air passenger jet takes off from Juanda International Airport in Surabaya, Indonesia, in a 2012 file photo. Photo: Trisnadi
A Lion Air passenger jet takes off from Juanda International Airport in Surabaya, Indonesia, in a 2012 file photo. Photo: Trisnadi

JAKARTA — Indonesia’s disaster agency says a Lion Air passenger jet crashed into the sea shortly after takeoff from Jakarta and was carrying 188 passengers and crew.

Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho posted photos on Twitter of debris including a crushed smartphone, books, bags and parts of the aircraft fuselage that had been collected by search and rescue vessels that have converged on the area.

He said the flight was carrying 181 passengers, including one child and two babies, and seven crew members.

The Boeing 737-800 plane departed Jakarta, about 6:20 a.m. for Pangkal Pinang on an island chain off Sumatra. Data for Flight 610 on aircraft tracking website FlightAware ends just a few minutes following takeoff.

“We can confirm that one of our flights has lost contact,” said Lion Air spokesman Danang Mandala Prihantoro. “Its position cannot be ascertained yet.”

A telegram from the National Search and Rescue Agency to the air force has requested assistance with the search of a location at sea off Java.

A report to the Jakarta Search and Rescue Office cites the crew of a tug boat reporting a Lion Air flight falling from the sky. It said several vessels have headed to the location.

Indonesian TV showed dozens of people waiting anxiously outside the Pangkal Pinang airport and officials bringing out plastic chairs.

There was no immediate confirmation of how many people were on board, but the maximum capacity would be about 190.

Lion Air is one of Indonesia’s youngest and biggest airlines, flying to dozens of domestic and international destinations.

In 2013, one of its Boeing 737-800 jets missed the runway while landing on the resort island of Bali, crashing into the sea without causing any fatalities among the 108 people on board.

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Leicester City Confirms Chopper Crash Killed Vichai

Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha / Leicester City FC
Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha / Leicester City FC

LEICESTER, England — The Thai billionaire owner of English Premier League team Leicester City was among five people who died after his helicopter crashed and burst into flames shortly after taking off from the soccer field, the club said Sunday.

Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, a 60-year-old entrepreneur who owns duty-free retail giant King Power, bankrolled Leicester’s improbable league title triumph in 2016.

“The world has lost a great man,” Leicester said in a statement. “A man of kindness, of generosity and a man whose life was defined by the love he devoted to his family and those he so successfully led.”

Two members of Vichai’s staff, Nursara Suknamai and Kaveporn Punpare, also died along with pilot Eric Swaffer and passenger Izabela Roza Lechowicz.

Vichai bought Leicester for 39 million pounds (USD$50 million) in 2010 when it was in the second-tier Championship and funded the revival that peaked with the 5,000-1 outsiders producing one of the greatest upsets in sports by winning the title.

“I always believed in the power of our spirit,” Vichai said in 2016. “It drove us to reach the Premier League, it gave us the strength to stay in the Premier League, and now it has inspired us to win the Premier League.

“It is a spirit that has spread beyond Leicester, taking our story to the hearts of the world. Our spirit exists because of the love we share for each other and the energy it helps to create, both on and off the pitch, and in the years to come, it will continue to be our greatest asset.”

Vichai was ridiculed for hiring the manager who masterminded the title success. Claudio Ranieri had been out of work since being fired by the weak Greece national team and his only job in the Premier League at Chelsea ended 11 years earlier. But it proved to be an inspired recruitment, helping to turn a humdrum group of journeymen and modestly purchased signings into a side that overpowered the mega-rich giants of the Premier League.

Leicester’s players were rewarded handsomely for winning the Premier League. New bumper contracts were handed out and Vichai bought each player a BMW i8 worth about $135,000, including for goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel.

“You changed football. Forever,” Schmeichel wrote on Twitter. “You gave hope to everyone that the impossible was possible. You literally made my dreams come true.”

Vichai, who started with one shop and grew Thailand’s massive King Power duty-free chain, was known for arriving and leaving the stadium in central England in his helicopter.

After Saturday’s game against West Ham, the helicopter took off from the center circle on the field and cleared the stadium roof before plummeting to the ground in an adjacent carpark in a ball of flames.

“It is likely to take several days to fully complete the necessary work and to safely deal with the scene of this tragic accident,” Leicestershire Police Superintendent Steve Potter said.

Leicester’s next game, which was scheduled for Tuesday against Southampton in the League Cup, has been postponed.

“Everyone at the club has been truly touched by the remarkable response of the football family, whose thoughtful messages of support and solidarity have been deeply appreciated at this difficult time,” Leicester said.

With fans already fearing the worst, a makeshift shrine formed from early Sunday outside the stadium named after Vichai’s King Power company. Among the hundreds of visitors was a group of young footballers from Thailand on a trip to England who knelt on the ground and bowed their heads in front of the carpet of tributes.

“Without you the dream wouldn’t have become reality,” read one message on a club flag on the spot where fans gathered two years ago to celebrate the team’s first English title in its 134-year existence.

Life-long supporter Ian Hubber wrote a message on a hat commemorating the title win to place among the flowers.

“That was a dream,” the 59-year-old Hubber said. “This is a nightmare.”

The outpouring of emotion at the stadium on Sunday reflected how highly the ownership is regarded in the city, which has only one professional soccer team. Vichai has formed a close bond with the fans, sometimes mingling with them at games, in contrast to some Premier League owners who maintain a distance.

Vichai has been praised for his charity work, donating 2 million pounds ($2.5 million) toward a new local children’s hospital, and he often provided free beer and food for fans outside stadiums.

“They’ve brought so much to the club, and given the fans so much to like them for,” said Ian Bason, chairman of the Foxes Trust supporters’ group. “And not just that, because they’ve also invested in the local hospitals too. So they’ve done things well outside what most football club owners would do.”

Through the ownership, Leicester gained new fans in Thailand where they mourned Vichai’s sudden death.

“It’s Thailand’s team,” soccer fan Chatworachet Sae-Kow said in Bangkok. “It brought fame to Thailand when they won (the title). He carried the Thai flag with him and made people know more about Thailand, so I felt sad.”

Story: Rob Harris

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Maverick Vinales Wins Australian MotoGP

Spain's rider Marc Marquez of the Repsol Honda Team rides Oct. 6 during Thailand's inaugural MotoGP qualifying at the Chang International Circuit in Buriram. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
Spain's rider Marc Marquez of the Repsol Honda Team rides Oct. 6 during Thailand's inaugural MotoGP qualifying at the Chang International Circuit in Buriram. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

PHILLIP ISLAND, Australia — Maverick Vinales ended his and Yamaha’s lengthy droughts when he won the Australian MotoGP Sunday as newly-crowned world champion Marc Marquez failed to finish after starting from pole for the fifth straight year.

Vinales started in second place on the grid after finishing 0.3 second behind Marquez in qualifying and was able to control the race after Marquez came into contact with Johann Zarco on the 22nd lap.

He overcame a poor start to lead by more than four seconds before easing down to win by 1.54 seconds from Suzuki’s Andrea Iannone and Andrea Dovizioso, who helped Ducati narrow Honda’s lead in the constructor’s championship.

Yamaha had gone without a win in 25 races since Valentino Rossi won the Dutch GP last June, the longest winless streak in its history. Vinales, who has now reached the podium in Australia in three-straight years, had not won in 29 races since Le Mans last year.

Marquez retains an unassailable 86 point lead over Dovizioso on world championship standings while Valentino Rossi is 15 points back in third place and Vinales a further 15 points behind in fourth.

The Spanish world champ was involved in a frightening incident with Zarco on lap 22 when the Frenchman clipped his rear wheel and crashed heavily. Marquez kept control but his Honda suffered heavy damage to its rear suspension and he couldn’t continue.

Vinales had been in 10th place when the incident occurred and managed to stay out of trouble, seizing the lead in the second half of the race.

“It feels amazing,” Vinales said. “Honestly, it’s been so difficult here for me.

“I couldn’t realize that I won but the bike was perfect today and I just pushed my best. The team provided me a bike to win. That’s the target and for sure when I crossed the line there were only tears on my face.”

KTM rider Brad Binder of South Africa held on to win the MotoGP race by 0.036s from Spain’s Joan Mir, posting his third win of the season. Xavi Vierge was third.

Italy’s Francesco Bagnaia had a chance to clinch the world championship after his win in Japan last week but could only manage 12th, keeping the title race alive ahead of next weekend’s round in Malaysia. His closest rival, Miguel Oliveira, finished 10th, cutting Bagnaia’s title lead to 36 points.

“It was an insane race … I felt like I was back in Moto3,” Binder said. “I got quite a good start … then I decided to sit in the group and try to save something for the end.

“I was just trying to stay out of trouble really. There were a few hairy moments there.”

Spain’s Albert Arenas won the Moto3 race in a blanket finish in which only one second separated the first 14 riders.

Arenas took the lead at the start of a frantic final lap and held on for the second win of his career from Fario Di Giannantonio and 17-year-old Celestino Vietti, riding in only his second race.

The eventful 23-lap race saw seven of 27 riders crash, notably championship contender Marco Bezzecchi.

Bezzecchi started the race from 15th place on the grid but in second place on championship standings, a point behind Spanish star Jorge Martin. He worked his way into the lead and into virtual first place in the championship before being taken out with 12 laps to go in a collision with Gabriel Rodrigo.

Martin survived the chaos to finish fifth, increasing his championship lead to 12 points with two rounds remaining.

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King Power CEO Vichai Feared Dead in Helicopter Crash

Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha / Leicester City FC
Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha / Leicester City FC

By Todd Ruiz and Jintamas Saksornchai

BANGKOK — The billionaire founder of Thailand’s King Power is believed to have died when his helicopter crashed Saturday night local time in England.

Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, a powerful and politically savvy 60 year old, was believed to be leaving the King Power Stadium in Leicester, England, following a match in his personal helicopter when it went down for unknown reasons. No one is believed to have survived.

King Power has yet to release a statement on the fate of its chief executive, who founded the company back in 1989. The BBC reports it has confirmed with someone close to the family that he was aboard.

“We are assisting Leicestershire Police and the emergency services in dealing with a major incident at King Power Stadium,” Leicester City FC tweeted early this morning, Bangkok time. “The Club will issue a more detailed statement once further information has been established.” It is unclear who else was on the flight.

Vichai bought then second-tier English football team Leicester City in 2010 and became its chairman the following year. The plucky team became a rags-to-riches story in one of football’s greatest upsets when it grabbed the Premier League title in the 2015-16 season. It has remained in the major league ever since.

Vichai celebrated the win by buying a fleet of 19 BMW i8s – each worth around USD$135,000 (4.74 million baht) — for the team’s players.

Forbes in 2017 ranked Vichai the fourth richest man of Thailand, with overall assets worth 155 billion baht.

King Power became the country’s largest duty-free retailer after it was granted the concession to Suvarnabhumi International Airport by Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in 2004 after already obtaining the rights to Don Mueang Airport in 1995.

Last month, a court kicked out a 14 billion baht graft case against King Power and the national airport operator brought by a former official for allegedly failing to pay the government for the Suvarnabhumi franchise.

Related stories:
Leicester City Owner’s Helicopter Crashes After Match 
Corruption Commission to Question 4 Over Prawit Watch Scandal Link 
Magic Cloth to Guard ‘Virtuous Spending’ of Public Funds
No Outfoxing Leicester: Owners Aim to Keep Winners Together
Leicester Lads in Bangkok to Celebrate Big Win
5,000-1 Longshot Leicester Collects Premier League Trophy

Correction: A previous version of this story linked a video which reportedly showed the moment Vichai entered the helicopter prior to the crash. In fact, no such video has surfaced.

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Trump Calls Pittsburgh Synagogue Attack ‘Evil’ Anti-Semitism

US President Donald Trump answers a reporters question about Supreme Court Justice nominee Brett Kavanaugh during a meeting with Colombian President Ivan Duque in September at the UN General Assembly. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press
US President Donald Trump answers a reporters question about Supreme Court Justice nominee Brett Kavanaugh during a meeting with Colombian President Ivan Duque in September at the UN General Assembly. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press

MURPHYSBORO, Illinois — President Donald Trump mourned the dead and forcefully condemned anti-Semitism Saturday after a mass shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue that left 11 dead. But faced with another national tragedy, he did not long turn his focus away from the midterm elections or himself.

Nine days from elections that will determine the control of Congress, Trump stuck to his plans to appear at an agricultural convention and a political rally. Throughout the day, he expressed sorrow, called for justice and bemoaned hate, getting regular updates on the shooting. But he also campaigned for candidates, took shots at favorite Democratic targets House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Elizabeth Warren and made jokes about his hair.

At a massive rally in southern Illinois for U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, Trump condemned the shooting as an “evil anti-Semitic attack.” But he said cancelling his appearance would make “sick, demented people important.” He pledged to change his tone for the evening and did cool some of his most fiery rhetoric.

The slaughter at Sabbath services followed a tense week dominated by a mail bomb plot with apparent political motivations and served as another toxic reminder of a divided nation. It also again underscored Trump’s reluctance to step into the role of national unifier at tense moments as well as his singular focus heading into elections that could dramatically change his presidency.

Trump acknowledged the weight these moments carry, telling reporters that experiencing such events as president, “it’s a level of terribleness and horror that you can’t even believe. It’s hard to believe.”

The White House said Trump was getting regular briefings on the attack. He spoke with the governor of Pennsylvania and the mayor of Pittsburgh. He also spoke with his daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, who are Jewish.

Shortly after returning to Washington late Saturday, Trump ordered flags at federal buildings throughout the country to be flown at half-staff until Oct. 31 in “solemn respect” for the victims.

Trump sought to energize turnout for Bost, who is fighting to hold on to a seat that was once a Democratic stronghold, but turned out for Trump in 2016. To bolster his argument for sticking with the rally, Trump argued that the New York Stock Exchange was opened the day after 9/11, though in fact it was re-opened on September 17.

Speaking to a massive, cheering crowd at an airport hangar in southern Illinois, Trump said “the hearts of all Americans are filled with grief, following the monstrous killing.” He told reporters before the rally that he would travel to Pittsburgh, though he did not offer details. He also sought to distance himself from the man arrested in the shooting, calling him “sick” and saying “he was no supporter of mine.”

Although his tone was softer, he still targeted Pelosi and Democrats and the crowd gleefully shouted “lock her up,” in reference to Hillary Clinton, one of the targets of the bomb plot. And he continued to emphasize his hardline immigration rhetoric. “Republicans want strong borders, no crime, and no caravans,” Trump said.

Trump’s speech to a convention of the Future Farmers of America had all the hallmarks of a Trump rally, as the president riffed on trade, jobs and some of his political enemies. At one point he also joked about his hair. He said it was ruffled by the rain as he left Washington, adding “I said, ‘maybe I should cancel this arrangement because I have a bad hair day.”

Trump offered an unsparing denunciation of anti-Semitism, which he said was the motive behind the attack, in contrast to remarks after clashes between white supremacists and counterprotesters in Charlottesville last year. Then, he only inflamed tensions by blaming both sides for the violence.

Speaking to young farmers in Indianapolis, Trump called on the country to come together, before inviting a pastor and rabbi on stage to pray.

Earlier in the day, Trump speculated that the death toll in Pittsburgh would have been curbed if an armed guard had been in the building. With both the number of deaths and details of the synagogue’s security still to be disclosed, Trump said gun control “has little to do with it” but “if they had protection inside, the results would have been far better.”

But the attack did not persuade him that tighter gun controls are needed.

“This is a case where, if they had an armed guard inside, they might have been able to stop him immediately,” Trump said. “Maybe there would have been nobody killed, except for him, frankly. So it’s a very, very – a very difficult situation.”

In previous mass shootings, Trump has at times said he would consider tightening gun laws but in the main has called for more armed guards in places such as schools.

“The world is a violent world,” he said before his speech. “And you think when you’re over it, it just sort of goes away, but then it comes back in the form of a madman, a wacko. … They had a maniac walk in and they didn’t have any protection and that is just so sad to see, so sad to see.”

Trump said lawmakers “should very much bring the death penalty into vogue” and people who kill in places such as synagogues and churches “really should suffer the ultimate price.”

Story: Catherine Lucey

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Mexico Torn Between Stopping, Aiding Migrant Caravan

Migrants walk Saturday along the road after Mexico's federal police briefly blocked the highway in an attempt to stop a thousands-strong caravan of Central American migrants from advancing, outside the town of Arriaga, Mexico. Photo: Rebecca Blackwell / Associated Press
Migrants walk Saturday along the road after Mexico's federal police briefly blocked the highway in an attempt to stop a thousands-strong caravan of Central American migrants from advancing, outside the town of Arriaga, Mexico. Photo: Rebecca Blackwell / Associated Press

TAPANATEPEC, Mexico — The Mexican government seems torn between stopping several thousand Central American migrants from traveling toward the U.S. border in a caravan or burnishing its international human rights image.

On Saturday, more than a hundred federal police dressed in riot gear blocked a rural highway in southern Mexico shortly before dawn to encourage the migrants to apply for refugee status in Mexico rather than continuing the long, arduous journey north. U.S. President Donald Trump has urged Mexico to prevent the caravan from reaching the border.

Police let the caravan proceed after representatives from Mexico’s National Human Rights Commission convinced them that a rural stretch of highway without shade, toilets or water was no place for migrants to entertain an offer of asylum. Many members of the caravan have been travelling for more than two weeks, since a group first formed in San Pedro Sula, Honduras.

Not long after the caravan resumed the trek north Saturday, government officials were seen for the first time directly helping the migrants by giving rides in trucks and providing water along the scorching highway.

Martin Rojas, an agent from Mexico’s migrant protection agency Grupo Beta, said he and his fellow agents planned to use agency pickup trucks to help stragglers catch up with the caravan.

“There are people fainting, there are wounded,” said Rojas, who spoke to The Associated Press after dropping off a group of women and children in Tapanatepec, where the caravan planned to spend the night. Rojas transported the group to their destination after spotting them on a highway trudging through temperatures approaching 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius).

Most of the migrants in the caravan appeared determined to reach the U.S., despite an offer of refuge in Mexico.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto launched a program on Friday dubbed “You are home,” which promises shelter, medical attention, schooling and jobs to Central Americans who agree to stay in the southern Mexico states of Chiapas or Oaxaca, far from the U.S. border.

Mexico’s Interior Ministry said that temporary identity numbers have been issued to 111 migrants under the program. The IDs, called CURPs, authorize the migrants to stay and work in Mexico, and the ministry said pregnant women, children and the elderly were among those who had joined the program and were now being attended at shelters.

After another brutally hot day on the road with her husband and 8-year-old son, Alejandra Rodriguez said the possibility of health care and a work permit in Mexico sounded enticing. But as she laid out a tarp and blanket to sleep in a covered parking area in Tapanatepec, the 26-year-old from Tegucigalpa, Honduras said she’d prefer to start a new life further north. She had heard that job opportunities were scarce in southern Mexico.

Orbelina Orellana said she and her husband were determined to continue north as well.

“Our destiny is to get to the border,” said Orellana, who left three children behind in San Pedro Sula. She was also suspicious of the Mexican proposal, fearing that she would be deported if she applies for asylum in Mexico.

Mexican officials have greeted the caravan with a mixture of hospitality and hostility.

Several mayors have rolled out the welcome mat for migrants who reached their towns — arranging for food and camp sites. At other times, police have ejected migrants from passenger buses or prevented smaller groups from joining the caravan.

An official with the national immigration authority said Friday that 300 Hondurans and Guatemalans who crossed the Mexico border illegally had been detained. The group was walking in broad daylight, far from the main caravan.

The caravan still must travel 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) to reach the nearest U.S. border crossing at McAllen, Texas. The trip could be twice as long if the 4,000 or so migrants head for the Tijuana-San Diego frontier, as another caravan did earlier this year. Only about 200 in that group made it to the border.

This year’s caravans have earned the ire of Trump. The Pentagon approved a request for additional troops at the southern border, likely to total several hundred, to help the U.S. Border Patrol as the president seeks to transform concerns about immigration and the caravan into electoral gains in the Nov. 6 midterms.

Stoking fears about the caravan and illegal immigration to rally his Republican base, Trump insinuated that gang members and “Middle Easterners” are mixed in with the group, though he later acknowledged there was no proof of that.

Story: Peter Sherman

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Leicester City Owner’s Helicopter Crashes After Match

This image made from video shows a burning helicopter in a parking lot outside the King Power Stadium in Leicester, England shortly after a Premier League game on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2018. (Pool Photo via AP)

LEICESTER, England — A helicopter belonging to Leicester City’s owner – Thai billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha – crashed in flames in a carpark next to the soccer club’s stadium shortly after it took off from the field following a Premier League game on Saturday night.

The central England team said it was assisting authorities with “a major incident” at the stadium, after eyewitnesses reported seeing the helicopter plummet to the ground soon after takeoff, about an hour after Leicester’s match against West Ham.

While there was no official statement immediately forthcoming about who was on board, or their condition, the BBC reported a source close to the Srivaddhanaprabha family as saying the club’s 60-year-old chairman was on the helicopter.

Update: King Power CEO Vichai Feared Dead in Helicopter Crash

Some seven hours after the crash, police had still made no public statements about casualties.

However, in the early hours of Sunday, Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service’s Assistant Chief Fire Officer Andrew Brodie tweeted that the accident was “clearly serious and tragic”, adding “please don’t speculate on cause or who may be involved. Think of families, friends, responders, and (Leicester City) and their fans.”

Leicester Police said in a statement that its Air Accident Investigation Branch was working alongside the emergency services and the club to “establish the exact circumstances of the collision.”

Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper reported Leicester players and staff, including Denmark goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel, former Leicester and England goalkeeper Peter Shilton, and distressed club supporters were seen in tears as the helicopter fire raged.

The paper said it took more than 20 minutes for the flames to be extinguished before emergency services were able to survey the wreckage.

Srivaddhanaprabha, who owns Thai duty-free retail giant King Power and is said by Forbes to be the fifth-richest person in Thailand, bought Leicester in 2010 and provided the funds that helped the team improbably win the Premier League at odds of 5,000-1 in 2016.

In a scene regularly seen after matches, Vichai’s aircraft arrived in the King Power Stadium after Saturday’s 1-1 draw against West Ham before taking off from the center circle. The helicopter usually takes Srivaddhanaprabha back to his English base, in Berkshire, outside London.

Photographer Ryan Brown reported hearing the engine stopping after the helicopter cleared the stadium.

“I turned round and it made a bit of a whirring noise, like a grinding noise,” Brown told the BBC. “The helicopter just went silent, I turned round and it was just spinning, out of control. And then there was a big bang and then (a) big fireball.”

British broadcaster BT Sport was presenting its post-game show in the stadium when the helicopter took off.

“It suddenly got very serious,” BT presenter Jake Humphrey announced later on air. “The helicopter has crashed. It has crashed in the club carpark … we heard a commotion.”

The local ambulance service said it received reports of a helicopter crash at 8:38 p.m. local time and sent a doctor, two paramedics in ambulance cars, a crewed ambulance and its Hazardous Area Response Team.

“The first resource (arrived) within two minutes of the call,” the ambulance service said.

An indication of concerns within the Leicester squad came on social media.

The emoji of praying hands was tweeted by several players, including striker Jamie Vardy, whose goals helped the 134-year-old team win the English title for the first time in 2016.

The competition’s organizers tweeted: “Thoughts from all at the Premier League are with everyone affected by tonight’s incident.”

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‘French Spiderman’ Barred From Climbing UK Buildings

People watch from inside the building as urban climber dubbed the French Spiderman, Alain Robert scales the outside of Heron Tower building in the City of London, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2018. Heron Tower is over 200 metres Photo: Frank Augstein / Associated Press
People watch from inside the building as urban climber dubbed the French Spiderman, Alain Robert scales the outside of Heron Tower building in the City of London, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2018. Heron Tower is over 200 metres Photo: Frank Augstein / Associated Press

LONDON — French urban climber Alain Robert has been banned from climbing any building in Britain after scaling one of London’s tallest skyscrapers without ropes – and without permission.

Robert climbed the 662-foot (202-meter) Heron Tower on Thursday as police cordoned off the building, closed roads and ushered spectators away.

He was arrested after the climb and appeared in a London court on Friday. Robert pleaded guilty to causing a public nuisance and received a 20-week suspended sentence and a 5,500 pound (USD$7,000) fine. He was also barred from climbing all buildings in Britain “until further notice.”

The 56-year-old daredevil, known as “the French Spiderman,” has climbed many of the world’s tallest structures.

Before Thursday’s climb, he told reporters “I fully feel alive when my life is at stake.”

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Anti-Coup Punk Concert to Make Comeback at Thammasat Uni

BANGKOK — Anti-coup punk bands on Friday announced a comeback next month of a concert they were forced to cancel last minute in September.

The event called “BNK44,” emulating the name of a popular girl group idol recruited by the junta, will be held next Saturday at the memorial site of the 1976 student massacre in Thammasat University, according to the online post from the organizers.

“We wanted to emphasize this to the dictatorial regime, you might cancel our events, but you’ll never defeat us,” the post read.

It added that organizers sought permissions from the university and local district police, and said the event was approved by both in written form.

On Sep. 21, police came to their western Bangkok concert venue shortly before the show started and ordered the owners to call it off.

It was organized by the same people behind similar anti-junta concert “Almost Four Years, You Motherfucker” in May commemorating four years of military rule. It was also canceled abruptly when police raided the venue at the monument to those who perished in the 1973 popular uprising.

“We were very depressed and angry, that we’d disappointed fans who were waiting, and to see police surrounding and making threats against the venue owners,” the post wrote of the canceled event.

“We’ll make this fucking country learn that punk music and punkers can also write political history with our hands,” it added.

“BNK44: Four Years Later and All We Eat is Fortune Cookies,” will start at 3pm on Nov. 3 at the 6 October 1976 Memorial in Thammasat University, Tha Phra Chan campus. Entry is free.

Related stories:

Citing ‘National Security,’ Cops Cancel Bangkok Punk Show

Lambast the Junta Friday at Anti-Coup Punk Concert

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