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City Hall to Launch BTS Extension with Free Service

Photo: BTS Skytrain / Facebook

Update Nov. 26: City Hall said the extension line will be free until April 15. 

BANGKOK — The new BTS Skytrain extension line to Samut Prakan province will be free when it first opens, Bangkok’s governor said Tuesday.

As a way to ease the financial burden on the capital’s residents, Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang said the 13-kilometer line of city rail network – connecting BTS Bearing to the southern metro Bangkok area – will be free until about mid-2019 after it opens Dec. 5 for Father’s Day.

He said City Hall is still discussing with the skytrain operator how many months the service will be free.

The construction of the extension – comprising nine stations – started in 2012. The first station of this line, BTS Samrong, opened in April last year.

Aswin said the fare for the entire BTS network would range from 15 baht to 65 baht. The maximum price was lowered from 136 baht.

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Abhisit Steps Down as Race for Dem Leadership Intensifies

BANGKOK — Abhisit Vejjajiva won praise from his Pheu Thai rival Thursday after he resigned from his post as chairman of the Democrat Party.

Abhisit said he stepped down to make way for the upcoming vote on its top leadership seat, which three people are now contending. Former Pheu Thai MP Watana Muangsook said Abhisit set an admirable precedent and urged the military junta to do the same.

“This is a show of political spirit,” Watana, who often lashes out at the regime and Democrat Party, wrote online. “Even though there is no rule requiring him to do so, he came to realize on his own volition that keeping the post would cause unfairness … I wish him best of luck.”

He contrasted Abhisit’s resignation with four ministers under junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha who refused to quit despite their recent foray into politics.

“It’s different to behavior of NCPO’s government who exploits the advantage they gained from the coup to advance the interest of their own people,” Watana wrote.

Abhisit is defending his seat from two challengers: Warong Dechgitvigrom and Alongkorn Pollabutr. Other potential contenders have until Oct. 8 to apply for the race. The vote itself has yet to be scheduled.

Deputy Democrat chairman Jurin Laksanavisit was appointed interim party leader in the meantime.

Related stories:

Democrats Announce Party Membership Registration 

Democrat Party Leadership Becomes Three-Way Contest

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Vietnam Nominates Communist Party Chief to Become President

Vietnam's Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong poses in January as he meets with U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis before their talks in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Tran Van Minh / Associated Press
Vietnam's Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong poses in January as he meets with U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis before their talks in Hanoi, Vietnam. Photo: Tran Van Minh / Associated Press

HANOI — The ruling Communist Party of Vietnam has decided to nominate its general secretary as the sole candidate for the presidency, succeeding late President Tran Dai Quang.

The government said in a statement on its website late Wednesday that members of the Party Central Committee unanimously agreed to nominate “comrade Nguyen Phu Trong” for the position.

If confirmed by the rubber-stamp National Assembly which convenes later this month, the 74-year-old Trong will be the first Vietnamese leader to hold the two positions since founding President Ho Chi Minh in 1960s.

Quang died last month after battling a viral illness for more than a year.

Economist Le Dang Doanh, former government economic adviser, said it makes sense to unify the powerful position of party general secretary with the largely ceremonial presidency, but he cautioned that there should be a mechanism to control power.

“The question here is there needs to be a mechanism to supervise power to avoid the abuse of power if the power is concentrated too much on an individual,” he told The Associated Press on Thursday.

Doanh said it’s unclear whether the country’s next leader will hold the two positions and that the party will decide on a specific candidate whether to give him or her the two positions, he added.

The party’s former chief ideologue, Trong was elected to the all-powerful Politburo in 1997, serving as the Communist Party chief of Hanoi and chairman of the National Assembly before being promoted to general secretary in 2011. He was re-elected to another five-year term in January 2016.

The country has seen stepped up crackdown on corruption with scores of high-ranking officials and executives jailed since 2016 under Trong’s watch.

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Volcano Erupts on Same Indonesian Island as Earlier Quake

Plumes of volcanic ash rise out of Mount Soputan, Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2018, from the village of Tombatu, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Photo: Yehezkiel Dondokambey / Associated Press
Plumes of volcanic ash rise out of Mount Soputan, Wednesday, Oct. 3, 2018, from the village of Tombatu, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. Photo: Yehezkiel Dondokambey / Associated Press

JAKARTA — A volcano erupted Wednesday on the same central Indonesian island struck last week by a powerful earthquake and tsunami, but no evacuations were ordered.

Mount Soputan on the northern part of Sulawesi island spewed ash more than 6,000 meters (19,700 feet) into the sky in the morning. Lava was visible at the summit during an evening eruption that sent up another ash column. The danger zone around the peak is small and has no residential areas, officials said.

A government volcanologist said it’s possible the eruption was accelerated by the magnitude 7.5 earthquake that struck on Friday.

“It could be that this earthquake triggered the eruption, but we have seen an increase in volcanic activity since July and this began surging on Monday. Yet we can’t say there a direct link, as the mountain is quite far away,” Kasbani, the head of Indonesia’s Volcanology and Geology Disaster Mitigation Agency, said on local television.

Kasbani, who uses one name, said planes were warned to avoid the area. Volcanic ash is hazardous to plane engines.

Soputan’s eruption status was raised from an alert to standby 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) from the summit and up to 6.5 kilometers to the west-southwest. National disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said at a news conference in Jakarta that no residential areas are within the 4-kilometer radius.

The volcano agency said the public should avoid the area nearest the volcano and have masks available in the event of ash fall.

Nazli Ismail, a geophysicist at the University of Syiah Kuala in Banda Aceh on Sumatra island, stressed there was no concrete evidence to show the two incidents are linked.

“People talk about the butterfly effect. The concept is that when a butterfly flaps its wings, it can cause a catastrophe,” he said. “So it is possible for the earthquake to trigger the volcano eruption, but it’s not conclusive. This needs to be further investigated.”

Danny Hillman Natawidjaja, a geologist with Indonesia’s Institute of Science, echoed the views, saying there was not enough data to make a link.

“In principle, the seismic waves from the earthquake could increase pressure in the volcano’s magma chamber and could cause an eruption. We don’t know for sure,” he said. He cited the example of the eruption of Mount Talang volcano in Indonesia’s Sumatra province in April 2005, which geologists have said was connected to the devastating December 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.

Ismail said the Soputan volcano eruption isn’t surprising as Indonesia sits on the seismically active Pacific “Ring of Fire,” and Soputan is one of the most active volcanoes on the island.

The eruption would not affect planes transporting aid and supplies to the quake disaster areas, Nugroho said. The earthquake set off a tsunami and both devastated several communities, causing more than 1,400 deaths and displacing more than 70,000 residents.

The two areas are about 940 kilometers (585 miles) apart, and Nugroho said the volcanic ash was blowing in a different direction from Palu, the largest city in the quake disaster zone. He said it hasn’t disrupted plane services or affected any evacuations from the disaster areas.

Nugroho denounced as hoaxes videos that appeared on social media allegedly showing villagers fleeing billowing volcanic smoke and a smoldering lava river. The videos appeared to show old eruptions elsewhere.

Government seismologists monitor more than 120 active volcanoes across the Indonesian archipelago.

Story: Eileen Ng

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New Commando Unit to Monitor ‘Threats’ to Monarchy

Police commandos conduct a raid on a suspected drug dealer home in Bangkok on June 1, 2016.

BANGKOK — The government on Monday announced the formation of a new police force tasked with protecting the monarchy.

The Special Service Division unit consists of police commandos transferred from the Crime Suppression Division. Their jobs include providing security to the Royal Family members and collecting information on “individuals or groups whose behaviors pose a threat to the national security and His Majesty the King.”

The taskforce must also carry out “royal wishes” from His Majesty the King, according to the announcement published in the Royal Gazette.

Heading the new commando teams is Col. Torsak Sukvimol, who said in an interview with Matichon that the force consists of 1,600 officers.

Torsak said he handpicked all members based on their “attitude and loyalty [to the monarchy].” Those chosen have completed training in parachuting, assault tactics and VIP protection, the police colonel said.

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Wife of Malaysian Ex-PM Grilled a Third Time Over Graft

Rosmah Mansor, wife of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, arrives at the Anti-Corruption Agency for questioning Wednesday in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
Rosmah Mansor, wife of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, arrives at the Anti-Corruption Agency for questioning Wednesday in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — The wife of Malaysian former Prime Minister Najib Razak is being grilled by the anti-graft agency for a third time over a massive graft scandal involving the 1MDB state investment fund.

Rosmah Mansor smiled at reporters Wednesday but didn’t speak as she was escorted into the agency’s building. Her presence for a second time in a week at the agency fueled speculation that she could soon face criminal charges like her husband.

Najib has pleaded not guilty to multiple counts of money laundering, corruption, abuse of power and criminal breach of trust over the 1MDB scandal and will face trial next year. Rosmah was first summoned by the agency on June 5 and again just a week ago, when she was questioned for nearly 13 hours.

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Missing Key Blamed for Flood in Northern Bangkok

Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang listens to briefing on Tuesday.

BANGKOK — Parts of northern Bangkok were left flooded for several hours because city staff couldn’t find the key to a waterpump, Bangkok Governor Aswin Kwanmuang said Tuesday.

Aswin blamed the confusion on private contractors who failed to give City Hall the key. In a Wednesday news conference, he also outlined more plans to build more waterways and combat flood in the metropolitan area.

“I have instructed relevant officials to make spare sets of keys,” the governor said. “This kind of problem shouldn’t have happened.”

Because the water pump didn’t work, major roads and intersections in Chatuchak and Bang Khen districts were briefly inundated Monday.

Anticipating more heavy rains in the last leg of the monsoon season, Aswin said he has ordered 14 water pump stations in northern Bangkok to increase their capacity.

He said he has also approved a plan to build more ditches and tunnels to connect flood canals along the Vibhavadi-Rangsit Road, where a new elevated railway is being constructed. The project will take about a year to complete, Aswin said.

น้ำท่วมสระก็มีเครื่องสูบน้ำ แต่ติดสระไม่มี “กุญแจ” ก็ออกไปไหนไม่ได้! พบกับ “เคน ธีรเดช” ใน #ThePool #นรก6เมตร วันนี้ที่ เมเจอร์ ซีนีเพล็กซ์#ThePoolนรก6เมตร

โพสต์โดย Major Group เมื่อ วันอังคารที่ 2 ตุลาคม 2018

“No escape without the key,” a promotional image for a Thai horror film mocks the news. 

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City Promises to Pay BACC Utility Bills – But Nothing Else

Photo: Bangkok Art and Culture Centre / Courtesy

BANGKOK — A week after the city sent a utility termination notice to a downtown public arts venue, City Hall officials said they had agreed to pay for it – but no other maintenance costs.

Director Pawit Mahasarinand of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre said Wednesday after a meeting with Deputy Gov. Taweesak Lertpraphan that city hall promised to pay for the venue’s utility bills – but nothing else in the proposed budget. Earlier this year, the administration proposed turning the venue into a coworking space, before sending a utility termination notice to the BACC last week.

“Are they just paying for the water and electricity because everyone saw the bill about cutting it?” Pawit said.

The BACC’s yearly utility bills are approximately 8 million baht. The administration promised to pay them for the fiscal year 2018, which ended Sunday, and the fiscal year 2019, which ends in September 2019. Still, that may not come to pass, Pawit said. The center’s contract with the city prevents the government from legally paying for the venue’s expenses – which includes bills.

“This is another thing I personally don’t understand. They’re contradicting themselves. They have to amend it so the city’s support can be legal,” Pawit said.

Read: Starved of Funding, BACC Unable to Pay its Bills

The center recently submitted the administration a 53 million baht budget proposal to the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration.

At a news conference Sept. 26 – where Pawit announced the city sent a utility termination notice – he said the center will only operate until the middle of next year. Therefore, the promised 8 million for utility bills is only a small portion of that sum.

“The situation remains the same, that we can only continue operating like this until the middle of next year,” he said.

Supporters of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre display signs Wednesday in Bangkok.
Supporters of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre display signs Sept. 26 in Bangkok.

Utility bills aside, Pawit said all other maintenance costs are unaccounted for: exhibitions cost about 11 million baht, educational activities 4 million baht, performing arts activities about 3 million baht – almost a million for maintaining the library and so on – including a budget to replace the decade-old elevators and escalators.

“I was stuck last week in an elevator at 11pm,” Pawit said.

The center started a public call for donations last week. Although donations aren’t large, “it shows that symbolically, a lot of people care,” Pawit said. He said he hasn’t checked out the exact donated amount yet.

“Gallery Drip Coffee on the ground floor donated their net sales, not their profits, which accounts for 42,000 baht. Another shop, It’s Going Green, donated 20,000,” Pawit said.

Related stories:

Starved of Funding, BACC Unable to Pay its Bills

City to ‘Investigate’ Management of BACC

City Hall Won’t Take Over BACC – Won’t Fund it Either

Famed Artists Say No to City Hall Takeover of BACC

City Hall Signals Retreat on BACC Takeover Plan

The City Actually Wants to Turn BACC Into a ‘Coworking Space’

Take Risks, Include More: New Bangkok Art Center Head

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Asian Shares Mostly Fall on Weak Japan Data, US-China Trade

An investor looks at the Chinese market index in 2017 at a brokerage in Beijing, China. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press
An investor looks at the Chinese market index in 2017 at a brokerage in Beijing, China. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Asian markets are mostly lower on jitters over the simmering U.S. trade dispute with China.

 

Keeping Score

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 fell 0.8 percent to 24,088.63. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.4 percent to 27,017.75 after closing at a two-week low on Tuesday. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.3 percent to 6,143.70. Stocks fell in Taiwan but rose in Singapore and Indonesia. Markets in South Korea and the Chinese mainland were closed for a national holiday. Thailand’s SET was trading at 1,754.80 Wednesday afternoon, a 0.38 percent gain.

 

Wall Steet

Most indexes closed lower as retailers sank after Amazon said it will raise hourly wages for U.S. employees. But gains by several big industrial companies like Boeing, 3M and Caterpillar pushed the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a record high. The Dow added 0.5 percent to 26,773.94. The S&P 500 index dropped less than 0.1 percent to 2,923.43, and the Nasdaq composite gave up 0.5 percent to 7,999.55. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks tumbled 1.4 percent to 1,672.99, its worst loss since late June.

 

North American Deal

The North American trade agreement hammered out late Sunday between the United States and Canada following an earlier U.S.-Mexico deal shakes up – but likely won’t revolutionize – the way businesses operate within the three-country trade bloc. Separately, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday that the U.S. has never experienced such an extended period of low, stable inflation and very low unemployment since 1950. Powell maintained the Fed’s economic forecast and said he sees no need to drop the central bank’s current gradual approach to raising interest rates.

 

Japan Services PMI

Japan’s services industry grew at the slowest pace in two years in September, a private survey showed Wednesday. The Markit/Nikkei Japan services purchasing managers index came in at 50.2 in September, down from 51.5 in the previous month. Readings above 50 indicate expansion on the index’s 100-point scale.

 

Energy

Benchmark U.S. crude was flat at USD$75.23 a barrel. Brent crude, used to price international oils, added 5 cents to $84.85 per barrel in London. It slipped 0.2 percent to $84.80 per barrel in London.

 

Currencies

The dollar was flat at 113.69. The euro strengthened to $1.1580 from $1.1545.

Story: Annabelle Liang

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Thai Tourists Can Now Pay For Stuff in Singapore Through an App – and Vice Versa

Original images by kaige / Flickr and Rattanakosilgiant / WordPress

BANGKOK — Exchanging currency and carrying your wallet with you everywhere is now a thing of the past.

Thanks to a new mobile wallet technology unveiled yesterday, Thai tourists can now pay for goods and services in Singapore through an app. The same goes to Singaporean tourists visiting Thailand.

Unveiled under the name VIA by telecom giants AIS and Singtel Group, the system debuted on Wednesday as the first cross-border mobile payment alliance that connects the two countries together. At least 1.6 million vendors are included in the service, which operates via Line messaging application for Thais and Singtel for Singaporeans.

“This is a game changer for the Singtel Group and the region,” said Arthur Lang, CEO of Singtel’s International Group. “The VIA alliance is aimed at unifying Asia’s fragmented
payments scene by connecting different mobile wallet systems across the region.”

In 2017, there were more than 80 million tourist arrivals across the Singtel Group’s
markets in Asia. Of this, over 1.5 million visitors travelled between Singapore and
Thailand.

AIS CEO Somchai Lertsutiwong said the company is committed to serving an ever growing demand for mobile payments.

“This partnership offers Thais a seamless digital payment experience at home and abroad, and adds a new dimension which will take the cashless society to the next level,” Somchai said.

Here’s how it works for Singaporean tourists visiting Thailand. They can use Singtel Dash for entertainment, buying food and beverage and goods at any shop displaying the VIA logo and Thai QR code.

These include popular shopping areas such as CentralWorld, Chatuchak Weekend Market,
MBK Center, and JJ Mall.

To make purchases, customers can simply scan the merchant’s QR code or let merchants scan their unique QR code in the Dash app.

Thai tourists in Singapore need to download AIS Global Pay to use the e-wallet feature on their Rabbit Line Pay.

After that is done, they can pay for taxi rides, services or dining at thousands of merchant points, including Comfort Delgro, Singapore’s largest taxi company, KFC, Pizza Hut, Breadtalk and 7-Eleven.

Yuen Kuan Moon, CEO of Singtel’s Consumer Singapore, teased that VIA will soon expand to cover other countries in the region.

“We are extremely excited to give Dash customers the ability to use their wallets in Thailand and soon, even more countries in the region,” Moon said. “Now, our customers not only stay connected with our mobile roaming service when overseas, they also have a roaming wallet which they can use to make purchases while abroad.”

For more information, visit viaconnects.com

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