30 C
Bangkok
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Home Blog Page 1826

New Tokyo Fish Market Starts Traditionally with Tuna Auction

A prospective buyer checks frozen tunas before bidding during the first auction at the newly opened Toyosu Market, new site of Tokyo's fish market, in Tokyo on Oct. 11, 2018. Photo: Eugene Hoshiko / Associated Press

TOKYO — Tokyo’s famous fish market reopened Thursday at a new location but retained its most famous tradition: the tuna auction.

The customary clanging of bells opened the auction for raw and frozen tuna, which crammed the huge warehouse wall-to-wall, at the waterfront Toyosu facility. The rhythmical shouts of the auctioneers and the special hand signals by the bidders that followed were unchanged from Tsukiji, the smaller, more accessible home the market recently left after more than eight decades.

The top bid for tuna, a delicacy much like premium-grade beef in Japan, was 4.28 million yen ($38,000), not an unusually high price for quality tuna.

The more than 400 kinds of seafood at the market come from all over Japan, as well as from abroad, including octopus, eel, sea urchin and other items special to Japanese cuisine.

The market serves top restaurants and everyday supermarkets alike. The move was delayed for two years because of worries about contamination, including arsenic, at the Toyosu site. Measures were taken to ensure safety, such as better water pumps and extra concrete sealing.

Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike attended the opening and expressed hopes for the location’s success.

“Of course, things are different here,” she said of how the new place may take getting used to.

“We must build the Toyosu brand, day by day, to make it a symbol of Tokyo, and of Japan. I hope to move forward with all of you.”

Officials and workers then clapped rhythmically in celebration of Toyosu’s opening, the same customary gesture for good luck that had closed Tsukiji on Oct. 6.

Free-of-charge tours for the public start Saturday, including seeing the auction from a huge glass window. Visitors will not be able to go on the auction floor as they could at Tsukiji. Reporters got a tour of the grounds Thursday.

Like Tsukiji, Toyosu also has a vegetable wholesale area, where auctions also take place. In several spots in the same market complex are tiny restaurants, including the ones that used to be at Tsukiji but also new ones.

Still, much of the humbly quaint atmosphere of Tsukiji was gone in the sterile factory-like environment of Toyosu. Whether Toyosu can attract tourist traffic remains to be seen.

Serving as reminders were the people zipping around in their scooting carts, as busy as ever.

Toyosu is a bit farther to get to than Tsukiji, which is within walking distance of downtown Ginza. Toyosu is reachable by an unmanned monorail called Yurikamome. A walkway from Shijo-mae station, which means “in front of the market,” leads right to the Toyosu market.

About 40,000 people used to visit Tsukiji each day, not just retailers and restaurant operators but also “salarymen” on lunch breaks and tourists from all over the world.

It’s unclear whether the stalls serving noodles and raw-tuna bowls that remain in the area surrounding Tsukiji will continue to be a draw without the backdrop of a real market.

Many fish wholesalers, workers and supporters had opposed the move out of Tsukiji, alleging that Toyosu was inefficient and unsafe. A handful of businesses were continuing to sell inside Tsukiji, saying they hoped to fight the planned tearing down of the old construction.

Tsukiji is being turned into a parking lot for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. What gets built afterward is undecided, according to the Tokyo city government. But it’s clearly prime real estate, and plans under consideration include a casino.

Story: Yuri Kageyama

Advertisement

‘Learn Self-Defense’: MMA Artist After Strange BTS Encounter

Photo: ONE Championship / Facebook

BANGKOK — After an uncomfortable encounter with a stranger on the BTS, one of the nation’s top female mixed martial artists on Wednesday recommended that Thai women take up Brazilian jiu-jitsu for self-defense.

After a man on Sunday struck up unwarranted conversation with MMA fighter Rika Ishige on the BTS, she recommended that Thai women take up Brazilian jiu-jitsu to defend themselves.

Read: Train Under a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Master in October in Bangkok

“At first I was scared because he was speaking nonsense, but then I assumed he was unwell,” Rika, 29, said in an exclusive interview at Bangkok Fight Lab. “He asked to touch me but I refused, and he didn’t try to do so.”

Rika filmed the encounter with the man and posted the video on her Facebook page, which by Wednesday had almost 200,000 views.

In the video, the man asks her several fast-paced questions, such as “Can I flirt with you?”, “Can you come to my house?”, “Where is your father?” as well as questions about soap actresses and cars.

Rika said she was riding the Skytrain from BTS On Nut to BTS Phrom Phong at about 1pm or 2pm, a day after her win against Myanmar’s Bozhena Antoniyar in the One Championship Kingdom of Heroes.

“Some people commented and asked why I didn’t just walk away, or stop engaging because it was like I was leading him on,” Rika said. “Even if he’s unwell, he’s still human.”

Rika wasn’t quick to pull out her fists, instead moving to another carriage when the man became distracted.

“Martial arts definitely gave me confidence to react to people who approach me, whether as self-defense or to run away,” she said. “I’ve never had to fight anyone outside the ring yet.”

“Self defense is very suitable for women to learn,” Rika added. “Brazilian jiu-jitsu can even the odds between the differences of women’s and men’s bodies, so you have a higher chance of winning.”

She also recommended MMA.

“It’s not just for fighting onstage; it can be used for self-defense too.”

Still, she hoped that getting physical with self-defense is the last resort a woman would need, even though harassment is common.

“This isn’t the first time I’ve encountered this. It’s since I was a kid,” she said.


Related stories:

Train Under a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Master in October in Bangkok

#DontTellMeHowtoDress, Thai Women Say

Why Few Thai Women Are Saying #MeToo

One Championship Lands More Investment, Tops $250 Million

One MMA Fight Cards Out to Stoke Pan-ASEAN Bloodlust in Bangkok

Meet a Thai Couple Who Just Fight All the Time (Video)

Women’s Fights a Strong Part of One’s Expansion Plans

Women Fighters to Smash Bangkok as MMA Penetrates Homeland of Muay Thai

Advertisement

Cops to Abolish Jurisdiction Limits for Criminal Complaints

A 2017 file photo of a theft victim filing complaints with police.

BANGKOK — Victims of crimes may soon be able to file their complaints at any police station in the country.

In a meeting held Monday, police commissioner Chakthip Chaijinda approved the abolition of restrictions that require crime victims to report only at police stations where the incident occurred, a police spokesman said Wednesday. However, there is no information of when the change will actually come to effect.

“There are many laws that need to be amended,” Lt. Gen. Piya Uthayo said by phone. “He agreed with a committee on reforms of police. The change will definitely benefit the public.”

Lawmakers in favor of the new policy must submit an amendment to the interim parliament for a debate, Piya said.

“We don’t know how long it would take, but the police commissioner marked this issue as urgent,” the spokesman said.

Proponents of the reform argue that the restriction prevents crime victims from seeking timely help and investigation.

Advertisement

Activists to Seek Gradual End to Capital Punishment

Gothom Araya, second from left, speaks Wednesday at a panel about the death penalty.
Gothom Araya, second from left, speaks Wednesday at a panel about the death penalty.

BANGKOK — Abolitionists will look to gradually reduce the amount of crimes liable to capital punishment instead of pushing for an outright end to the death penalty in Thailand, activists said Wednesday.

Gothom Araya, an advocate against capital punishment, said at a panel organized by the European Union mission in Bangkok that him and his colleagues would propose new legislation to change the punishment for some crimes from the death penalty to life imprisonment. He said some believe that convicts are executed because of their bad karma.

“Maybe capital punishment is going along with your karma,” Gothom said, adding that Thais believe in dualism – a clear distinction between good and evil – and that the process towards abolition wouldn’t occur immediately. “I think we need time.”

The move comes after the first execution in nine years took place in June, leaving capital punishment opponents surprised. The panel, held at the Alliance Francaise, marked the 16th World Day Against Death Penalty.

Gothom said he and his colleagues wanted “drug trafficking and corruption” removed from crimes punishable by the death penalty.

Gothom acknowledged that there’s popular support for the retention of the death penalty. He said opponents who protested against the latest execution in June had been accused of “siding with the criminals.” This, he added, is supported by a belief that if there’s no death penalty, convicts will return to society and do harm.

Calling death penalty “cruel, inhumane and irreversible”, EU Ambassador to Thailand Pirkka Tapiola urged Thais to keep the conversation about its abolition civil.

“It’s important to keep the discussion as civil as possible,” he said, adding that the death penalty is cruel and that there’s a possibility of executing the wrong person. Tapiola said capital punishment is not a deterrent, judging from how EU member states have lower crime rates than many countries with the death penalty.

Pornpen Khongkachonkiet, Director of the Cross Cultural Foundation NGO and an advocate for the end of capital punishment, said it’s not uncommon for some of the accused to be tortured or forced to confess by police, which he said made the reliability of the judicial process dubious.

Emilio de Miguel Calabia, Spanish ambassador to Thailand, said at the event that for many years, it seemed as if the death penalty would never be abolished in Spain when it was under the dictatorship of Gen. Francisco Franco.

De Miguel added that it is the state’s choice to keep or remove capital punishment.

“It’s a political decision,” de Miguel said.

Katia Chirizzi, deputy representative of the United Nations’ human rights office, called the execution this year a “setback” and a “very unfortunate and surprising development.”

She said at least 90 percent of Thai women on death row faced execution due to drug-related convictions.

Related stories:

Prison Officials Carry Out First Execution in 9 Years

8 Years Since Last Thai Execution, Future of Death Penalty Uncertain

iPhone Killer Gets Death Sentence

Thailand Death Sentences Increase, China Tops List, Report Says

Murder and Rape Reignites Death Penalty Campaign

Thai Govt ‘Willing’ To Abolish Death Penalty: Official

Train Rapist & Murderer Sentenced to Death

Editorial: Death Penalty Is Not The Solution To Rape

Advertisement

Japan Urges Myanmar to Conduct Credible Rohingya Probe

Myanmar's leader Aung San Suu Kyi delivers her speech beside Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during their joint press remarks following their bilateral meeting at the Akasaka Palace state guest house Tuesday in Tokyo. Photo: Toshifumi Kitamura / Associated Press
Myanmar's leader Aung San Suu Kyi delivers her speech beside Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during their joint press remarks following their bilateral meeting at the Akasaka Palace state guest house Tuesday in Tokyo. Photo: Toshifumi Kitamura / Associated Press

TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told Myanmar’s leader Tuesday that a credible investigation into alleged human rights violations against Rohingya Muslims is key to resolving tensions in the country’s Rakhine state.

Abe told a joint news conference after holding talks with Aung San Suu Kyi that Japan will support efforts by Myanmar to accommodate Rohingya who return home from refugee camps in neighboring Bangladesh.

“This problem is complicated and serious, and Japan will think with Myanmar and support its effort in resolving the problem,” Abe said. “A credible investigation by the independent panel is particularly important.”

Buddhist-majority Myanmar’s military is accused of widespread rights violations, including rape, murder, torture and burning villages, which sent about 700,000 Rohingya fleeing to Bangladesh since August last year.

Suu Kyi’s government has rejected independent international investigations into the alleged abuses and has commissioned its own probe.

Suu Kyi agreed Tuesday on the importance of an “accurate and appropriate” investigation. She defended the government-commissioned panel as free and effective, and its members – one each from Japan and the Philippines and two from Myanmar – as experts on human rights and international issues.

“I welcome Japan’s support for our efforts for the refugees’ return,” said Suu Kyi, who is in Tokyo for a six-nation Mekong regional summit hosted by Japan.

Myanmar commissioned the panel after rights groups called for the International Criminal Court to investigate the alleged abuses. Myanmar’s government, which is not a member of the court in The Hague, rejected any participation in its proceedings.

Myanmar authorities, including the army, have conducted their own inquiries and declared their forces free of criminal actions, leading critics to treat the latest government-formed commission as an effort to whitewash what the United Nations has characterized as ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya.

Story: Mari Yamaguchi

Advertisement

Bangkok Alt-Cinema to Couple Live Music, Italian Horror ‘Suspiria’

BANGKOK — A downtown alternative cinema will give horror-movie mavericks a new lease of spine-chilling experiences next week.

For the Halloween season, a screening room in Sathorn area will show Italian supernatural classic “Suspiria” along with a live music performance.

The 1977 movie focuses on an American girl who transfers to a German ballet academy before she discovers that the school is a front for sinister organization. It is the first film of “The Three Mothers” trilogy, and regarded as director Dario Argento’s masterpiece with stylistic elements and vibrant color palettes.

The movie will be a remastered version with English and Thai subtitles. It will screen Oct. 18 through Nov. 6 at the Bangkok Screening Room.

Only one screening, at 8pm on Oct. 20, will be accompanied with a live music score ending, performed by Bangkok-based producer-musician Pakorn “Beam” Musikaboonlert.

Tickets for the screening with the music performance are 400 baht for the general audience, 380 baht for students and 360 baht for Bangkok Screening Room members.

Tickets for the shows without live music performance are 240 baht for members, 250 baht for students and 300 baht for the general audience.

Find Bangkok Screening Room on the second floor of the Woof Pack Building on Soi Sala Daeng 1, reachable from MRT Lumphini’s exit No. 2 or BTS Sala Daeng’s exit No. 4.

Advertisement

Businessman Gets 9 More Years in Jail Over Fake Bomb Detector

Two soldiers demonstrate use of GT200 bomb detector on live TV in 2010. Image: Channel 3
Two soldiers demonstrate use of GT200 bomb detector on live TV in 2010. Image: Channel 3

BANGKOK — A court on Wednesday convicted and sentenced a Thai entrepreneur to nine years in jail for selling bogus bomb detectors to the Justice Ministry.

The Don Mueang district court said Sutthiwat Wattanakij and his company Ava Satcom Ltd. were guilty of fraud for selling the so-called GT200 devices worth 6.8 million baht to the ministry’s Central Institute of Forensic Science from 2007 to 2009.

The ruling came two weeks after he was handed down the same sentence for selling the devices to the Royal Thai Aide-De-Camp Department in 2008.

Read: Thai Entrepreneur Convicted in Bogus Bomb Detector Scam

He was also fined 18,000 baht and ordered to repay 6.8 million baht in damage.

Two other co-defendants, Sasakorn Pluemjai and Pantaweesap Sudyajai, were acquitted. The court said both were just employees and that there was not enough evidence to suggest they were conspirators in the scheme.

Claimed to be able to detect explosive materials from far distance, the devices made by a British firm were revealed to be ineffective. Its owner was jailed in 2013 for fraud.

It’s the fourth legal judgement Suttiwat and the company receive over the fraudulent deal. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison last month for selling GT200s worth 600 million baht to the army.

Related stories:

Defender of Fake Bomb Detector Appointed Top Forensic Science Job

Fake Bomb Detectors in Attacked Pakistani Airport Used By Thai Army

Advertisement

Love Yuzu Much? Citrusy Ramen Comes to Bangkok

Photos by Chayanit Itthipongmaetee

Top: Spicy Yuzu Tonkotsu Ramen (฿320).

A citrus fruit comes front and center in a ramen shop that tries to give traditional Japanese dishes a zesty Thai kick.

Open almost two months, Yuzu Ramen in Siam Square attempts to inject the zest of the yuzu fruit into mild-mannered Japanese dishes to appeal to spicy Thai tongues, with largely acceptable results.

“I like yuzu so much that I bought the recipe and adapted to be more zesty and modern for Thais,” owner Poramin Pruangmethangkul, 26, said. “And I didn’t want to make a traditional Japanese shop. I don’t want it to be boring, but to have a Shinjuku, Brooklyn kind of vibe.”

Choose the spiciness levels and noodle type for your dish, such as the signature Spicy Yuzu Tonkotsu Ramen (฿320). Although it’s pushed as the star dish, there’s only a nasal hint of yuzu in the aftertaste, which it tries to make up for with milky, spicy soup. Opt instead for the more refreshing Yuzu Tsukemen (฿320), where you dip noodles and pork slices into a bright-orange broth. The Truffle Ramen – though filled with truffles mixed into the broth and on top – is still an unrealistic ฿790.

Appetizers aren’t just pushed-aside dishes either, with the Spicy Tuna Tartare (฿290) a fusion food done right – possibly better than most of the ramen dishes. Tuna cubes are mixed with crunchy yellow radish and crispy tempura flakes, drizzled with a satisfying spicy mayo-like sauce. Wrap a spoonful into a sheet of nori, and enjoy the varying flavors.

DSC03315
Yuzu Tsukemen (฿320), surrounded by various toppings.

The gyoza, with pork, taro and purple potato fillings (฿140 for 6 pieces) are small but crunchy and add a playful purple tinge to regular gyoza. The Agedashi Tofu (฿130) is crispy on the outside but soft, white and wiggly on the inside and topped with a generous heap of bonito fish flakes.

Although they’re ฿135 and ฿140 respectively, the Yuzu Honey Soda and Yuzu Honey Slushies are must-orders. Cutting through the creamy oiliness, the drinks might be the most yuzu thing there.

The rice dishes, such as the Teriyaki Glazed Chashu Over Rice (฿130), aren’t the stars of the shop. Although sweet, fatty and filling, it’s not so unique from other Japanese restaurants.

The shop imports most its products – the yuzu and seaweed from Japan and the truffles from France. On the other hand it’s not exactly an ad for sustainability and local sourcing.

DSC03228
Spicy Tuna Tartare (฿290).

Vegetarians can try the Yuzu Shoyu Ramen (฿320), Shoyu Ramen (฿220), Yuzu Tsukemen (฿320) and Zaru Soba (฿260) – just ask for no meat with your order.

The interior is decorated in a Japanese-street style and plays music of the same genre. The walls have a Heian period-style mural and lanterns. Half the shop has individual booths where solo diners can eat undisturbed, but the dividers can be folded to chat with the person beside them.

“Thai people like to eat together, so I made the booth divider foldable,” Poramin said.

Yuzu Ramen is open from 11am to midnight every day. Located in Siam Square Soi 3, it’s reachable via BTS Siam.

YUZURAMEN SELECTED 181010 0018 e1539157922620
Truffle Ramen (฿790).
DSC03253
Spicy Tuna Tartare (฿290).
DSC03240
Red Shiso Plum Fried Rice (฿180).
DSC03256
Double-cooked Pork Belly over Rice (฿160).
DSC03321
An extra topping of pork belly (฿65).
DSC03224
Gyoza Combo (฿140).
YUZURAMEN SELECTED 181010 0003 e1539158045710
Agedashi Tofu (฿130).

DSC03333 DSC03336 DSC03345

Advertisement

Driver Fined 6,000 Baht for Lorry Crash That Flattened Car

Scene of the accident on May 27.

BANGKOK — A criminal court on Wednesday found the driver of an 18-wheeler guilty of drunk driving for flattening another car in a May accident, in which the victim narrowly escaped death.

Narong Wongpetch, 33, was driving a 46-ton container on a road in Lat Krabang district when it toppled on a Toyota Fortuner, trapping the motorist for almost three hours before rescue workers could extract him from the flattened vehicle. He was later charged with DUI and reckless driving.

Read: Man Recounts Escape from Car Flattened by Lorry (Video)

In a verdict delivered today, the court convicted Narong of drunk a driving offense and dismissed the other charge. He was fined 6,000 baht.

Narong was working for a company called KPS Transport Ltd at the time of the accident.

Video footage released by police shows the truck approaching a bend at high speed before it topples onto the car.

Worawut Yooyatmak, who spent two hours and 45 minutes trapped inside the wreck, told reporters in July that he had yet to receive compensation from Narong’s company. A separate civil lawsuit Worawut filed against the firm is ongoing.

Related stories: 

Loose Container Crushes Public Van, Killing 1

Advertisement

Pakistani Rupee Plunges 7% as Country Seeks IMF, China Loans

Photo: Peretz Partensky / Flickr
Photo: Peretz Partensky / Flickr

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s currency plunged by about 7 percent on Tuesday after the government said it would seek emergency bailout loans from the International Monetary Fund.

The Pakistani rupee briefly weakened to 138 to the dollar on Tuesday before settling at 133.6. The rupee was trading at 124.3 at close of business Monday, before the announcement was made.

A Pakistani delegation will meet with IMF officials in Indonesia later this week.

After a visit last week, the IMF said Pakistan is facing significant economic challenges, with diminishing growth, high fiscal and current account deficits, and low foreign exchange reserves.

Pakistan is also seeking fresh loans from China, which is already heavily invested in its transport and energy sectors.

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
30 ° C
30 °
30 °
74 %
4.4kmh
100 %
Sat
29 °
Sun
36 °
Mon
35 °
Tue
33 °
Wed
32 °