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5 More Arrested in Snooker Gunfight Investigation

Police on Monday investigate the snooker bar where an altercation there escalated into a shootout.

BANGKOK — Five more people were arrested in connection to a deadly gunbattle that killed a foreign tourist earlier this week in Bangkok.

Police announced the arrests Wednesday after they raided 12 buildings to look for evidence related to the shootout, which they said involved two rival gangs. An Indian tourist was killed in the crossfire and four others were wounded.

Col. Nakarin Sukhonthawit said 11 arrest warrants have been issued. Five suspects remain on the run.

Police said the fight broke out Sunday night between two gangs at a parking lot of the Watergate Pavillion shopping mall in Ratchathewi district. The two gangs were reportedly playing snooker in a nearby bar before they got into a heated argument, which escalated into a gun battle.

Col. Nakarin said multiple firearms was used in the incident, including an assault rifle, at least two handguns and a hunting rifle.

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Poaching Suspects Post Bail as Park Rangers Seek More Evidence

A machete, hunting gears discovered along with four bearcat paws Oct. 7 at Sai Yok National Park, Kanchanaburi province.
A machete, hunting gears discovered along with four bearcat paws Oct. 7 at Sai Yok National Park, Kanchanaburi province.

KANCHANABURI — A dozen suspects posted bail Tuesday after they were arrested and found with hunting gear and bearcat paws in their vehicles in Sai Yok National Park.

A Kanchanaburi court on Tuesday afternoon set the bond at 200,000 baht for each suspect.

Today, police and park rangers – led by park chief Panatchakorn Phobandit – will search the Tao Dam monastery and its vicinities for evidence.

According to Panatchakorn, authorities do not believe one of the suspects’ claims who said he bought the paws from local people in the park.

Read: Jaw, Skin Found at Park Where 12 Were Charged With Poaching

The 12 people were arrested Sunday. On Monday night officers found an animal jaw, skin, bullet shells and a machete near Tao Dam monastery, which the group claimed to have visited to make merit.

Among the suspects is Watcharachai Sameerak, permanent secretary of Dan Makham Tia district in Kanchanaburi. He was suspended from duty Monday.

In addition to poaching, the 12 face charges such as illegal possession of a protected animal and taking a vehicle into an off-road area without authorization.

Bearcats are a protected species under the 1992 Wildlife Protection Act.

Related stories:

Jaw, Skin Found at Park Where 12 Were Charged With Poaching

Govt Official Among 12 Charged With Poaching in Kanchanaburi

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Govt Mulls First Bangkok Underground Expressway

Traffic at the Mahaisawan Intersection underpass in Bangkok.
Traffic at the Mahaisawan Intersection underpass in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Transport officials Tuesday said they’re considering building the country’s first underground expressway to solve traffic jams in the capital.

The plan from Transport and Traffic Policy Plan Office said the roadway would be 9 kilometers long, starting from Naradhiwat Rajanagarindra road in central Bangkok to Sam Rong district in Samut Prakan province.

“Initial research found the possibility to build the first underground expressway in Thailand there,” deputy director general Chayatan Phromsorn said. “It could help ease high traffic congestion in Sathorn, Silom and nearby areas in the long run.”

He said the expressway, if greenlit, would collect a toll and could be divided in two levels for public transport and private vehicles. Construction costs could run high, ranging from 2 to 10 billion baht per kilometer.

After the junta leader ordered a way be found to urgently solve the chronic traffic jams, Transport Minister Arkhom Termpittayapaisith said more underground roads in Bangkok could follow, as space on and over the ground may be scarce.

A recent study by the Urban Design and Development Center of Chulalongkorn University found streets cover 7 percent of land in Bangkok, while the average in most major cities is about 20 percent to 25 percent.

Chayatan said the project needed further study, and that his office could propose the results to the Transport Ministry within two to three months.

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From Squalid Refugee Camp, Rohingya Teen Plans for Higher Ed

Rohingya refugee woman Minara Begum, mother of Rahima Akter, holds her youngest daughter Arohi Zannat inside the family hut in August in Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh. Photo: Altaf Qadri / Associated Press
Rohingya refugee woman Minara Begum, mother of Rahima Akter, holds her youngest daughter Arohi Zannat inside the family hut in August in Kutupalong refugee camp, Bangladesh. Photo: Altaf Qadri / Associated Press

KUTUPALONG, Bangladesh — At an age when many young Rohingya women have children, Rahima Akter has other plans.

From the refugee camp in southern Bangladesh where she was born, Akter, a 19-year-old with a confident smile who goes by the name Khushi, says she aspires to become the most educated Rohingya woman in the world.

Akter was born and has lived her whole life in the camp, a makeshift settlement of bamboo and tarpaulin huts spread out over rolling hills that were once protected forestland.

Her parents were among a wave of 250,000 Rohingya Muslims who escaped forced labor, religious persecution and violent attacks from Buddhist mobs in Myanmar during the early 1990s.

She sees education as her ticket out of the camp.

“If we take education then we will be able to lead our life as a life,” she said.

Akter has supplemented her family’s income by working as a translator for aid groups and journalists responding to a new influx of Rohingya refugees who have flooded the camp since August 2017, when the Myanmar military and Buddhist mobs began “clearance operations” against Rohingya in retaliation for insurgent attacks on security posts in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

A United Nations fact-finding mission reported last month that at least 10,000 Rohingya are believed to have died in the violence. The U.N. has called for Myanmar’s top military generals to be prosecuted for genocide and crimes against humanity.

But while the Rohingya have found a measure of safety in southern Bangladesh, access to education is far from assured.

Akter said she is among only a few Rohingya refugee girls to have completed the Bangladeshi equivalent of high school, a feat she could only achieve by sneaking past the camp’s checkpoints and bribing Bangladeshi public school officials for a placement.

More than 1,200 temporary schools teach English, math, Burmese, science and the arts to about 140,000 children between the ages of 6 and 14, just over a quarter of the more than half a million refugee children living in the camp, according to UNICEF.

But the schooling only goes up to 5th grade, so Akter and other refugees have had to secretly enroll in schools in Cox’s Bazar or other towns to complete their studies.

Because of the limited educational opportunities for them, UNICEF calls the refugee children “a lost generation.”

“The international community has failed these children,” UNICEF spokesman Sakil Faizullah said, adding that the agency plans to start offering basic classes for older refugee students on the assumption they will receive formal education when they return to Myanmar.

But in the current anti-Rohingya climate in Myanmar, Akter said her family’s return has not been possible.

In order to go to school, Akter said she disguised her Rohingya identity by speaking only in Bengali, and dressing like a Bangladeshi girl.

But it was the battles she had to fight at home that were the most challenging, she said.

Most Rohingya girls are expected to get married by the age of 16, and sometimes as early as 14. She had to fight off her father who said her time for marriage had come.

Akter cried for days and begged her parents with hands clasped to let her continue studying.

Her mother, Minara Begum, a refugee who fled Myanmar as a child and never attended school, not only convinced her husband to let their eldest daughter study, but also fought off rebukes from the elders in her community who warned that sending girls out into the world was a sin.

“I told them ‘let Allah punish me then,'” Begum said. “What about our lives as refugees that have gone in vain because of our illiteracy? If I can help my children get a better future by education, then that is what I am going to do.”

Begum now sends three of her four daughters to school and hopes to educate her youngest daughter and only son as well. Akter and two of her sisters live on their own near the school in Cox’s Bazar, about two hours’ drive from the camp. Akter’s sisters were able to enroll in the Bangladeshi school after she had secured a place for herself there.

Begum said the family has skimped on food to cover the costs of sending the children to school, hoping that they can build a future for themselves that is not bound by the stigma of being a refugee.

“We are Rohingya. There is no land under our feet. We have no future. We are in the same situation as chicken in a cage,” Begum said, adding that they “can’t even claim ownership over the fruit from a tree that we planted.”

Begum’s dedication to her children’s education seems to be paying off already. Akter now earns more money than the rest of her family’s income combined.

While she is mostly busy preparing university applications, Akter also spends time going door-to-door at the expansive camp, documenting accounts of people who fled Myanmar last year.

She hopes to eventually publish her research when she is in college, where she plans to study human rights.

“Why do people have to lead their lives in such a situation?” she said. “One day maybe I’ll be able to raise up my voice about human rights for the Rohingya.”

Story: Rishabh R. Jain

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Malaysia Plans New Taxes to Help Pay off Snowballing Debt

An investor walks in front of trading boards at a private stock market gallery in September in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Yam G-Jun / Associated Press
An investor walks in front of trading boards at a private stock market gallery in September in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Yam G-Jun / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said Tuesday the government plans to introduce new tax measures to help raise funds to pay off national debt that has snowballed due to corruption under the previous government.

Lim said it will take the government three years to resolve its fiscal woes due to more than 1 trillion ringgit (USD$240.5 billion) in debt and another 35 billion ringgit ($8.4 billion) in newly discovered unpaid tax refunds that were not disclosed by the previous government.

“Fiscal consolidation will not be achieved easily, and we must be willing to expect some pain and even offer some sacrifice. We would need 3 years to resolve the fiscal issues,” Lim told an economic forum. He didn’t give details of the tax measures but said these will be announced in the 2019 federal budget that will be unveiled Nov.2.

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad told the forum the fiscal problems have turned Malaysia from an Asian tiger into a “small kitten.”

“It is going to be tough for the government because it inherited a country that is completely disoriented,” said Mahathir, who was elected a second time to become the world’s oldest leader at 93. “We may have to devise new taxes in order to have the money to pay our debts. Of course the other thing we can do is to sell our assets.”

Anger over massive corruption at the 1MDB state investment fund prompted Mahathir – who led Malaysia for 22 years until 2003 – to make a political comeback and turn on his former party. Mahathir’s alliance won a stunning victory in May 9 elections to oust scandal-tainted former Prime Minister Najib Razak, ushering in the country’s first change of power since independence from Britain in 1957.

The country’s huge debt is partly due to losses from the 1MDB fund set up by Najib that led voters to abandon him, and sparked investigations in the U.S. and several other countries. U.S. investigators say Najib’s associates stole and laundered at least $4.5 billion from the fund.

Najib and his wife Rosmah have been charged with multiple counts of corruption and money laundering linked to 1MDB, after Mahathir reopened investigations into the fund that were suppressed during Najib’s rule. The couple have both pled not guilty and Najib has accused the government of seeking political vengeance against his family.

The new government has reviewed large infrastructure projects, including Chinese investment, to cut costs. It also is seeking ways to bolster revenues to pay off debts and plug deficits expected after it scrapped an unpopular goods and services tax.

Lim said the government may sell its equity in state-owned companies to raise funds but will aim to strike a balance between fiscal consolidation and ensuring productive spending and investment.

“While it is imperative for the government to be prudent with our expenditure, we are equally cognizant that we must not fall into the austerity trap. What we want is merely to get a bigger bang for the buck,” Lim said at the forum.

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Japanese Passport Tops 2018 Visa-Free Travel Index

Photo: Toshiyuki IMAI / Flickr
Photo: Toshiyuki IMAI / Flickr

LONDON — Japan has overtaken Singapore to claim the top spot on the 2018 Henley Passport Index, having gained visa-free access to Myanmar this month.

Japan now enjoys visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 190 destinations, compared to Singapore’s 189. The countries both climbed to 1st place in February, pushing Germany down to 2nd place for the first time since 2014.

Germany now shares 3rd place with South Korea and France. Their nationals enjoy visa-free access to 188 countries. France moved up a place Friday when it gained visa-free access to Uzbekistan. Iraq and Afghanistan continue to sit at the bottom (106th) of the index according to data from the International Air Transport Association.

The US and the UK, both with 186 destinations, slid from 4th to 5th place, with neither having gained access to new jurisdictions since the start of 2018. With stagnant outbound visa activity compared to Asian high-performers.

The United Arab Emirates made the most remarkable ascent, from 62nd place in 2006 to 21st place this year. the most dramatic climb could come from Kosovo, which officially met all the criteria for visa-liberalization with the EU in July and is now in discussions with the European Council.

Thailand ranked 68th, with visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to 77 countries.

Russia received a boost in September when Taiwan announced a visa-waiver, but the country nonetheless fell from 46th to 47th place due to movements higher up the ranking. The same is true of China: Chinese nationals obtained access to two new jurisdictions (St. Lucia and Myanmar), but the Chinese passport fell two places, to 71st overall.

Christian H. Kälin, Group Chairman of the index, said countries with citizenship-by-investment, or CBI, programs all fall within the top 50 of the index. Newcomer Moldova, due to launch its CBI program in November, climbed 20 places since 2008.

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Seoul Says Kim Jong Un Wants Pope Francis to Visit N Korea

Pope Francis delivers his weekly address in 2015 in St. Peter's Square in the Vatican City. Photo: EPA / Ettore Ferrari

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wants Pope Francis to visit the officially atheist country, South Korea said Tuesday.

South Korea’s presidential office said in a statement that Kim told President Moon Jae-in during their summit last month that the pope would be “enthusiastically” welcomed in North Korea.

Kim has been intensely engaged in diplomacy in recent months in what’s seen as an effort to leverage his nuclear weapons program for an easing of economic sanctions and military pressure.

North Korea strictly controls the religious activities of its people, and a similar invitation for then-Pope John Paul II to visit after a 2000 inter-Korean summit never resulted in a meeting. The Vatican insisted at the time that a papal visit would only be possible if Catholic priests were accepted in North Korea.

Moon plans to convey Kim’s desire for a papal visit when he travels to the Vatican next week. Moon said on Monday that he expects Kim to visit Russia soon and possibly hold a summit with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

Moon did not comment on the likelihood of a papal visit.

Following an unusually provocative run of weapons tests last year, Kim has been on a diplomatic offensive since the start of this year.

He initiated offers for summits with Seoul and Washington, which led to three meetings with Moon and a highly choreographed June summit with U.S. President Donald Trump at which they issued an aspirational goal of a nuclear-free peninsula, without describing how or when it would occur.

Kim has presented himself as an international statesman, sharing food, wine and laughs with South Korean officials and appearing thoroughly at ease during his meeting with Trump in Singapore.

But post-summit nuclear negotiations between North Korea and the United States got off to a rocky start, with the North accusing Washington of making “gangster-like” unilateral demands for denuclearization, and calling for sanctions to be lifted before any further progress in nuclear talks.

There are doubts whether Kim is willing to fully relinquish his country’s nuclear weapons, which he may see as a stronger guarantee of survival than whatever security assurances the United States could provide.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visited Kim in Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital, on Sunday for talks on setting up a second summit with Trump.

The Vatican’s priests were expelled by North Korea long ago and state-appointed laymen officiate services.

Estimates of the number of North Korean Catholics range from 800 to about 3,000, compared to more than 5 million in South Korea.

Story: Kim Tong-hyung

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Activist Groups Launch Network to Monitor Elections

Activists on Tuesday pose during their meeting at Thammasat University.
Activists on Tuesday pose during their meeting at Thammasat University.

BANGKOK — Pro-democracy activists from more than a dozen organizations formed a network Tuesday to monitor and ensure general elections slated for February are free and fair.

Called Free, Fair and Fruitful Election, or FFFE, the network – formed during a meeting at Thammasat University in Bangkok – comprises anti-junta groups such as Democracy Restoration Group, iLaw, Start Up People and Thai Academic Network for Civil Rights.

“We want [elections] to be a chance to return the country to normalcy,” Anusorn Unno, a sociologist at the university and key members of the network, said during a press conference on campus. He said there’s clear evidence that the government is attempting to prevent polls from being free and fair, citing the regime’s and pro-junta political parties’ attempts to garner public support during the continued ban on political activities – which critics consider campaigning.

“The imposition of laws banning people from expressing themselves freely continues while pro-junta groups continue full-steam to meet people… This is tantamount to electoral cheating,” said Narongsak Niamsorn, a representative form law reform advocacy group iLaw.

Earlier Tuesday, Jakarta-based ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights, or APHR, issued a statement calling for restrictions on political parties to be lifted.

Tanawat Wongchai, a Chulalongkorn University student and representative of the Student Union of Thailand – which is a member of the FFFE – expressed concern about the 250 senators to be appointed by junta-leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, and how this would impact the fairness of elections. He called it “the senate party” as opposed to the 500 MPs to be elected.

“The senate party will be the largest in parliament. They will only need another 126 MP seats to form a government… It is unfair and takes advantage of other political parties,” Tanawat said.

Anusorn said the network had yet to establish what it would take before it regards the elections as free and fair, adding that they will outline concrete criteria soon.

Anusorn was noncommittal when asked if having a senate appointed entirely by the junta leader would make elections unfair. He said however that there’s a need for people to become more involved in the electoral process.

“It’s a game, and if society has no role in directing it, it will get worse,” Anusorn said.

The network said it would invite at least seven political parties for a Q&A session and hope to have the parties commit to some policies, Anusorn said.

Other concerns the network expressed included Prayuth retaining absolute power until a new cabinet assumes office.

In a related development, APHR – the group of ASEAN parliamentarians – on Tuesday called for the military junta to lift restrictions on political parties so campaigning can take place without restrictions.

“The past four years of military rule have been a human rights disaster for Thailand. Authorities have muzzled free speech and cowed civil society as the junta has wielded power with complete impunity. A return to democracy is urgently needed to end this crisis,” Indonesian MP and APHR Board Member Eva Kusuma said in a statement.

Kusuma said repealing repressive laws and allowing political parties to campaign and voice opinions without restrictions is needed to ensure a free electoral process.

“It will be impossible to hold a genuinely free and fair vote in Thailand under the current conditions. How can Thai people make an informed choice about the future if they are not allowed to hear what political parties have to say?” APHR board member and Philippine congressman Teddy Baguilat said. “Regional and international governments should push the Thai military junta to remove all restrictions on political parties well in advance of polling days.”

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Asian Stocks Fall After IMF Downgrades Economic Outlook

Asian Stocks Fall After IMF Downgrades Economic Outlook
A man walks past an electronic stock board showing Japan's Nikkei 225 index at a securities firm in 2017 in Tokyo. Photo: Shuji Kajiyama / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Asian markets are mostly lower after the IMF downgraded its economic outlook, citing rising interest rates and mounting tensions over trade.

 

Keeping Score

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 fell 1.4 percent to 23,457.00 on Tuesday. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng added 0.2 percent to 26,261.26. The Shanghai Composite index extended its losses by 0.1 percent to 2,712.67, after tumbling 3.7 percent on Monday. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gave up 1.0 percent to 6,041.10. Stocks rose in Taiwan, Thailand and Indonesia but fell in Singapore. Markets in South Korea were closed for a national holiday.

 

Wall Street

Banks advanced and technology companies sank for the third day in a row on Monday. Bond markets were closed, leading U.S. indexes to a mixed finish after a day of light trading. The S&P 500 index edged 0.1 percent lower to 2,884.43, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.2 percent to 26,486.78. The Nasdaq composite lost 0.7 percent to 7,735.95. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks shed 0.2 percent to 1,629.51.

 

IMF Downgrade

The International Monetary Fund revised its outlook for the world economy, citing rising interest rates and growing tensions over trade. It said the global economy will grow 3.7 percent this year, the same as in 2017 but down from the 3.9 percent it was forecasting for 2018 in July. The report comes on the eve of the Oct. 12-14 meetings in Bali, Indonesia, of the IMF and its sister lending organization, the World Bank.

 

US-China Talks

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that Washington had a “fundamental disagreement” and “great concerns” about Chinese actions, before a meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and another senior official in Beijing on Monday. Pompeo said that he was looking forward to discussions, but his polite, edgy tone shone a spotlight on deteriorating U.S.-China relations. The Trump administration has confronted China on its technology policies and territorial claims in the South China Sea, and the countries have raised tariffs on tens of billions of dollars of each other’s goods.

 

Analyst’s Take

“Renewed tension between the U.S. and China has capped risk sentiment as a range of issues from trade to diplomacy are likely to challenge China-U.S. relationship,” Zhu Huani of Mizuho Bank said in a commentary.

 

Google Slips

On Monday, Google said it will shut its Plus social network because a flaw may have caused the leak of personal information belonging to as many as 500,000 people. Google found the problem in March. The winding down of operations will end next August, to give customers time to download and migrate their data. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, fell 1 percent to USD$1,155.92.

 

Energy

Benchmark U.S. crude added 38 cents to $74.67 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract lost 0.1 percent to settle at $74.29 per barrel in New York. Brent crude, used to price international oils, rose 42 cents to $84.33 per barrel. It dropped 0.3 percent to $83.91 per barrel in London.

 

Currencies

The dollar slipped to 113.08 yen from 113.21 yen on Monday. The euro fell to $1.1485 from $1.1489.

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#MakeMyMark and Amulets: Fight for Dem Top Post Begins

Democrat Party leadership election contenders Warong Dechgitvigrom, Abhisit Vejjajiva and Alongkorn Pollabutr pose for photos on Oct. 8, 2018.
Democrat Party leadership election contenders Warong Dechgitvigrom, Abhisit Vejjajiva and Alongkorn Pollabutr pose for photos on Oct. 8, 2018.

BANGKOK — Former Democrat Party chairman Abhisit “Mark” Vejjajiva launched a social media campaign Tuesday in a bid to defend his seat from two party contenders.

The former prime minister urged followers to use the hashtag #MakeMyMark to show their support for him in the three-way race, to be decided in a Nov. 5 vote. His challengers, former MP Warong Dechgitvigrom and former deputy leader Alongkorn Pollabutr, also announced their own campaigns.

Speaking to reporters, Abhisit said the slogan isn’t about himself but also meant to encourage young people to make their mark on the world.

“It has a lot of meanings. It’s not about my name,” the 54-year-old said. “It’s about expressing yourself and participating in the changes.”

While Abhisit appears to be aiming for the younger voters, Warong outright employed the traditional way of campaigning: supernatural power. Warong told reporters he recently prayed at a temple in Ubon Ratchathani province where a monk predicted he would win the race.

For good measure, the monk also gave him several charms and amulets as blessing, Warong said.

In secular terms however, Warong promised to reform the Democrat Party by granting more power to regional chapters, pushing for reconciliation and pressing ahead with anti-corruption agendas.

“We will ease conflicts and division among the people,” Warong wrote online today.

Alongkorn, who sat on a junta reform body until last year, said he would detail his platforms at a Wednesday news conference. He also told reporters he would start campaigning in Khon Kaen province.

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