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Actress Fan Bingbing Ordered to Pay Massive Tax Fine

A 2017 file photo of Fan Bingbing poses for photographers as she arrives for the screening of the film The Beguiled at the 70th international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Photo: Alastair Grant

BEIJING — Chinese tax authorities have ordered “X-Men” star Fan Bingbing and companies she represents to pay taxes and penalties totaling $130 million but would spare her from criminal prosecution, state media said Wednesday.

The announcement ended months of speculation over one of China’s highest-profile entertainers since she disappeared from public view three months ago amid reports she was being investigated for tax fraud.

Of the total amount, Fan is being personally fined around $70 million for tax evasion. The official Xinhua News Agency cited tax authorities as saying Fan would not be held criminally accountable for tax evasion as the taxes, fines and late fees amounting to nearly 900 million yuan ($130 million) were paid on time.

The announcement, carried by Xinhua, gave no indication as to Fan’s whereabouts but indicated her agent was being held by police for allegedly obstructing the investigation.

Fan has starred in dozens of movies and TV series in China and is best known internationally for her role as Blink in 2014’s “X-Men: Days of Future Past,” a cameo in the Chinese version of “Iron Man 3,” and star turns on the red carpet at Cannes as recently as May. Before her disappearance, she had been booked to star with Penelope Cruz in the Hollywood film “355.” She has a role in the upcoming Bruce Willis-Adrien Brody feature “Air Strike.”

Fan posted an apology on her official account on the social media site Weibo.com saying that she accepts the tax authorities’ decision and would “try my best to overcome all difficulties and raise funds to pay back taxes and fines.”

“I am unworthy of the trust of the society and let down the fans who love me,” she wrote in her first update of her Weibo.com microblog since June 2.

A man surnamed Liang, who identified himself as a staff member of Fan’s studio when reached by phone, refused to comment on the announcement or on Fan’s location.

Her disappearance coincided with a crackdown by the authorities on high salaries for actors that can eat up much of the cost of a production. In June, regulators capped star pay at 40 percent of a TV show’s entire production budget and 70 percent of the total paid to all the actors in a film.

Fan evaded 7.3 million yuan in taxes by using a secret contract worth 20 million yuan that she signed for starring in the film “Air Strike,” the report said. She had instead paid taxes on a contract for only 10 million yuan, Xinhua said. This referred to a reportedly common entertainment industry practice — an actor having a public contract stating an official salary and a private contract detailing actual, much higher pay.

A talk show host, Cui Yongyuan had said in May that Fan had such an arrangement, which allegedly helps facilitate tax evasion, and revealed details that sparked a public outcry. Cui later apologized.

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New JJ Green? New Night Market to Open Friday in Ratchada

Photo: Green Vintage Ratchada / Facebook

BANGKOK — Two weeks after iconic night market JJ Green was shut forever, a new night market will pop up only a few kilometers away.

On Friday, Green Vintage Ratchada market will take over a shopping mall-residential building on Ratchadaphisek Road. With hundreds of vendors selling everything from cheap tees and cool toys to stylish handcrafts and antiques.

The market will be located at Suan Lum Night Bazaar Ratchada. It will open 4pm through 1am from Friday to Sunday.

Suan Lum Night Bazaar Ratchada is located on Ratchadaphisek Road and at the Ratchada-Lat Phrao intersection. It can be reached from MRT Lat Phrao.

In mid-September, JJ Green night market closed forever after the contract on its land expired and wasn’t renewed. The plot will be used for the construction of a larger park which will combine Wachirabenchathat (Suan Rodfai), Queen Sirikit and Chatuchak parks.

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Suan Lum Night Bazaar Ratchada. Photo: Green Vintage Ratchada / Facebook

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Canada Revokes Myanmar Leader’s Honorary Citizenship

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi briefs the media after a meeting with Norway Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg at the Norway government guest house in 2012 in Oslo, Norway. Photo: Markus Schreiber / Associated Press
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi briefs the media after a meeting with Norway Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg at the Norway government guest house in 2012 in Oslo, Norway. Photo: Markus Schreiber / Associated Press

OTTAWA, Ontario — Canada’s Parliament formally stripped Aung San Suu Kyi of her honorary Canadian citizenship on Tuesday for complicity in the atrocities committed against Myanmar’s Rohingya people.

The Senate voted unanimously to strip Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s civilian leader, of the symbolic honor bestowed on her in 2007.

The upper house’s move follows a similar unanimous vote in the House of Commons last week.

Suu Kyi is the first person to have her honorary Canadian citizenship revoked.

A United Nations fact-finding mission reported last month that the Myanmar’s military has systematically killed thousands of Rohingya civilians, burned hundreds of their villages and engaged in ethnic cleansing and mass gang rape. It called for top generals to be investigated and prosecuted for genocide.

The Senate has also followed the lead of the Commons in recognizing that the crimes against humanity committed by the Myanmar military against the Rohingya constitute a genocide.

“We must recognize this atrocity for what it is,” said Sen. Ratna Omidvar, who introduced the motion to revoke Suu Kyi’s citizenship Tuesday.

“It is genocide. We must call it as it is.”

Suu Kyi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for her fight for democracy in Myanmar.

“At that point she was a champion for change and human rights … The world pinned its hope on her as the shining light and hope for a democratic and peaceful Myanmar,” said Omidvar. “As we all now know, that was not to be.”

Omidvar said Suu Kyi has denied the atrocities, restricted access to international investigators and journalists, defended the military and denied humanitarian aid for the Rohingya.

“We need to send a strong signal here in Canada and around the world that if you’re an accomplice of genocide, you are not welcome here. Certainly not as an honorary Canadian citizen.”

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Desperation Grows as Death Toll Soars From Indonesia Quake

Indonesian soldiers line up the bodies of earthquake and tsunami victims for a mass burial Tuesday in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Photo: Rifki / Associated Press
Indonesian soldiers line up the bodies of earthquake and tsunami victims for a mass burial Tuesday in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Photo: Rifki / Associated Press

PALU, Indonesia — Trucks carrying food for desperate survivors of the earthquake on Indonesia’s Sulawesi island rolled in with a police escort Tuesday to guard against looters, while the death toll from the disaster soared past 1,200.

Four days after the magnitude 7.5 earthquake and tsunami struck, supplies of food, water, fuel and medicine had yet to reach the hardest-hit areas outside Palu, the largest city that was heavily damaged. Many roads in the earthquake zone are blocked and communications lines are down.

“We feel like we are stepchildren here because all the help is going to Palu,” said Mohamad Taufik, 38, from the town of Donggala, where five of his relatives are still missing. “There are many young children here who are hungry and sick, but there is no milk or medicine.”

The death toll reached 1,234, national disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in Jakarta, the capital. Hundreds of other people were injured, and scores of uncounted bodies could still be buried in collapsed buildings in Sigi and Balaroa under quicksand-like mud caused by Friday’s quake.

The U.N. humanitarian office reported that “needs are vast,” with people urgently requiring shelter, clean water, food, fuel and emergency medical care.

Water is the main issue because most of the supply infrastructure has been damaged, U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York.

More than 25 countries offered assistance after Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo appealed for international help. Little of that, however, has reached the disaster zone, and increasingly desperate residents grabbed food and fuel from damaged stores and begged for help.

Haq said the government is coordinating emergency efforts, and U.N. and relief agencies are on the ground or enroute. He said the agencies are working closely with the government to provide technical support.

An aircraft carrying 12,000 liters (3,170 gallons) of fuel had arrived. and trucks with food were on the way with police escorts to guard against looters. Many gas stations were inoperable either because of quake damage or from people stealing fuel, Nugroho said.

The frustration of waiting for days without help has angered some survivors.

“Pay attention to Donggala, Mr. Jokowi. Pay attention to Donggala,” yelled one resident in a video broadcast on local TV, referring to the president. “There are still a lot of unattended villages here.”

The town’s administrative head, Kasman Lassa, all but gave residents permission to take food – but nothing else – from stores.

“Everyone is hungry and they want to eat after several days of not eating,” Lassa said on local TV. “We have anticipated it by providing food, rice, but it was not enough. There are many people here. So, on this issue, we cannot pressure them to hold much longer.”

Nearly 62,000 people have been displaced from their homes, Nugroho said.

Most of the attention has been focused so far on Palu, which has 380,000 people and is easier to reach than other hard-hit areas.

More aid was being distributed, but “we still need more time to take care of all the problems,” Nugroho said.

Teams continued searching for survivors under destroyed homes and buildings, including a collapsed eight-story hotel in Palu, but they needed more heavy equipment to clear the rubble.

Many people were believed trapped under shattered houses in the Palu neighborhood of Balaroa, where the earthquake caused the ground to heave up and down violently.

“I and about 50 other people in Balaroa were able to save ourselves by riding on a mound of soil which was getting higher and higher,” resident Siti Hajat told MetroTV, adding that her house was destroyed.

A handful of disaster personnel arrived in the neighborhood Tuesday morning. A lone backhoe cleared a path into the jumble of twisted buildings.

Sa’Adon Lawira, who lost a grandchild, was angry that rescue efforts focused so quickly on places such as the Palu hotel where tourists were staying.

“Why did the search-and-rescue agency and others prioritize the search for victims in hotels?” he said, holding back tears as he spoke. “Neighborhoods like this should take precedence because the bodies of residents are buried, but there are no rescuers who have searched for them.”

Near the coast, the tsunami shattered buildings, uprooted concrete and thrust boats inland. The deadly wave reportedly reached as high as 6 meters (nearly 20 feet) in places,.

In Palu’s Petobo neighborhood, the quake caused loose, wet soil to liquefy, creating a thick, heavy quicksand-type material that resulted in massive damage. Hundreds of victims are still believed to be buried in the mud there.

Liquefaction of soil can be compared to walking on a sandy beach.

“If you walk across some wet sand a little back from the water’s edge, it is usually firm walking, even though you might leave footprints,” said Adam Switzer, an expert at the Earth Observatory of Singapore. “However, if you stand still and wiggle your toes and feet, you will probably sink a little as the sand around your feet becomes soft and unstable. This is similar to what happens during liquefaction.”

Nugroho said 153 bodies were buried Monday in a mass grave in Palu and that the operation continued Tuesday.

He said generators, heavy equipment and tents are among the most-needed aid items. The countries that offered assistance include the United States and China, he said.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said his government has given USD$360,000 to help victims and is in talks with Indonesian authorities about a second round of aid. The initial funds are to go to the Indonesian Red Cross for the most obvious emergency aid needs, such as tarpaulins.

Nugroho said only two of the 122 foreigners in the area remained unaccounted for – one from South Korea and the other from Belgium.

The U.N.’s Haq said the Indonesian Ministry of Social Affairs has asked the U.N. children’s agency, UNICEF, to send social workers to the affected area to support children who are alone or became separated from their families. And he said the World Health Organization is warning that a lack of shelter and damaged water sanitation facilities could lead to outbreaks of communicable diseases.

Indonesia, a vast archipelago of 260 million people, is frequently struck by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis because of its location on the “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin. A powerful quake on the island of Lombok killed 505 people in August.

Story: Niniek Karmini, Stephen Wright

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‘You Will Shine,’ Amir Khan Tells Aspiring Thai Boxers

From left: Blair MacDonald, Amir Khan, Faryal Makhdoom and Oliver Clark pose Saturday evening at the premiere of
From left: Blair MacDonald, Amir Khan, Faryal Makhdoom and Oliver Clark pose Saturday evening at the premiere of "Team Khan" at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.

Top, from left: Blair MacDonald, Amir Khan, Faryal Makhdoom and Oliver Clark pose Saturday evening at the premiere of “Team Khan” at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.

LONDON — A two-time British boxing world champion sent a message of encouragement to aspiring Thai boxers at the premiere of his documentary in England.

In an interview with Khaosod English, 31-year-old Amir Khan advised young Thai boxers to never give up training even if they receive criticism and do not win, adding that boxing could change their career in one match.

“There come times when you think you’re not going to get there or are not getting the support,” Khan said after the premiere of his documentary “Team Khan” at the 26th Raindance Film Festival held Saturday in London, comparing his early beginnings and the difficulty of being noticed to his eventual success on the world stage.

“Keep training hard because one day you will get that chance and you will shine, and you will get that one fight to put you through that next round,” the British-Pakistani light welterweight said.

Accompanied by his family and wife Faryal Makhdoom, Khan attended the documentary premiere – which follows his career from 2014 through 2016, during which he cemented his rise to stardom and at one point looked likely to fight boxing powerhouses Manny Pacquiao from the Philippines and the American Floyd Mayweather Jr.

The documentary also follows Khan’s personal life, regular trips to Pakistan and his balance between boxing, Islam and family.

With him during the long process were Australian directors and producers Oliver Clark and Blair MacDonald – Khan said he went from initially getting stressed by them appearing at his door every day to expecting them at training.

“Virgil would tell them off for turning up at practice,” Khan said laughing, referring to his American coach Virgil Hunter, who put him through rigorous training routines and often frowned at the directors’ presence.

“it’s been really tricky for us, you know […] because we also produced it ourselves, so I think kind of the learning curve of how to deliver a film, you know, all the legals involved,” 33-year-old Clark said Saturday when asked about the challenges faced during the four-year project. “I couldn’t name one more than another, but it’s been tricky from start to finish.”

From left: Blair MacDonald, Amir Khan and Oliver Clark pose Saturday evening at the premiere of "Team Khan" at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England. Photo: Suraj Karmacharya / Courtesy
From left: Blair MacDonald, Amir Khan and Oliver Clark pose Saturday evening at the premiere of “Team Khan” at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England. Photo: Suraj Karmacharya / Courtesy

Clark – who along with MacDonald never went to film school – added that the effort had however been rewarding and described the comforting feeling.

“I’m relieved, I’m just relieved it’s done, because many times it could have just ended up on the floor you know, in a pile somewhere,” he said, adding that a former editor quit after six months and that they had to start anew. “It was horrible – it was hard, really hard.”

Khan however said he was happy with the result and praised the pair’s commitment, before talking about boxing again – and entertaining the possibility of fighting in Thailand.

“I mean I’d love to, but you never know. This is boxing and it mainly stays in England and America,” Khan said. “There’s so much money and – the pay per view and – they got the whole platform sorted out but… it could happen, you never know!”

Khan has won 33 of his 37 professional boxing matches. He became Britain’s youngest silver medallist in the 2004 Summer Olympics and was twice light welterweight world champion.

Asked however if he’d ever consider switching disciplines to muay Thai, the Briton had a clearer answer.

“Never, never!” Khan said laughing. “I don’t want to get kicked in the head bro, I take enough punches to the head, I wouldn’t want to get kicked in the head!”

“Team Khan” will screen mid-November in cinemas in the United Kingdom, United States, Pakistan and the Middle East, as well as online streaming platforms. More information will be released at a later date. Updates can be followed online.

Amir Khan, left, poses Saturday evening with an attendee of the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.
Amir Khan, left, poses Saturday evening with an attendee of the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.
From left: Oliver Clark, Blair MacDonald and Amir Khan speak Saturday following the screening of "Team Khan" at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.
From left: Oliver Clark, Blair MacDonald and Amir Khan speak Saturday following the screening of “Team Khan” at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.
From left: Oliver Clark, Blair MacDonald and Amir Khan speak Saturday following the screening of "Team Khan" at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.
From left: Oliver Clark, Blair MacDonald and Amir Khan speak Saturday following the screening of “Team Khan” at the Raindance Film Festival in London, England.
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‘A Scary Time’: Trump Taps Fears of #Metoo Run Amok

President Donald Trump boards Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Tuesday, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md. Photo/Evan Vucci / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Men of America, be afraid. This could happen to you.

That’s the alarm President Donald Trump and his GOP allies are increasingly sounding as they try to defend their Supreme Court nominee from sexual assault allegations. The three-decade-old accusation facing Brett Kavanaugh is not only false, they argue, but an example of the #MeToo movement gone too far in its call to believe the women — and not the men. It’s a message that looks to channel the frustration and anxieties of the party’s bedrock voters — white men — just weeks before an election.

This is “a scary time,” Trump said Tuesday. “It’s a very scary time for young men in America when you can be guilty of something that you may not be guilty of. You can be somebody that was perfect your entire life and somebody could accuse you of something … and you’re automatically guilty.”

At a campaign rally later in Mississippi, Trump pretended to be a son asking his mother how to respond to such an accusation. “It’s a damn sad situation,” Trump said.

Trump also mocked one of Kavanaugh’s accusers, Christine Blasey Ford, for her Senate testimony last week. He imitated Ford responding “I don’t know” and “I don’t remember” to questions about her claim that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her more than 30 years ago.

“And a man’s life is in tatters,” Trump said.

Trump’s comments came as Republicans stare down a challenging midterm election and need to motivate their most reliable voters. All signs suggest Democratic women are energized by opposition to Trump’s presidency. The primary season yielded record numbers of female candidates. Kavanaugh’s confirmation battle and the national soul-searching over sexual consent it has provoked threaten only to further motivate liberal female voters, leaving Republicans searching for a counterweight.

In his warning, Trump echoed some of his allies. Rep. Steve King of Iowa said “if Kavanaugh is not confirmed, every man is subject to seeing their life’s work and their reputation destroyed by an unsubstantiated allegation.” Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana declared: “This is no country for creepy old men. Or young men. Or middle-aged men. But this is no country at all.” And Trump’s oldest son, Donald Trump Jr., told the Daily Mail this week: “I’ve got boys, and I’ve got girls. And when I see what’s going on right now, it’s scary,” adding that right now he fears more for his sons.

The rising frustration came as the Kavanaugh confirmation process played out before the country, with Kavanaugh and Ford appearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week to discuss her accusation. Kavanaugh’s confirmation continues to hang in the balance as the FBI investigates the allegation, which Kavanaugh has forcefully denied.

With the midterm elections just weeks away, Republicans risk losing the House and possibly the Senate as they face an energized Democratic party — particularly educated, suburban women and minorities — and a wave of GOP retirements, as well as the president’s sagging approval ratings and the tide of controversy around his White House.

Trump’s GOP badly needs to motivate men, especially the white, working-class men who fueled the president’s political rise, experts say.

Trump’s electoral strategy has long revolved around the argument that men “are somehow victims or they’re losing out to other people or they’re unfairly persecuted in an age of political correctness,” said Julian Zelizer, a political historian at Princeton University.

The November elections are “all about turnout, enthusiasm and motivation,” which Democrats have shown they have. “The question is: How can Trump or the Republicans counterbalance that? And this is the way that can do that,” Zelizer said. “It’s another way to shore up his base.”

Indeed, a Quinnipiac University poll released Monday found a gaping gender gap when it comes to support for Kavanaugh’s nomination. The poll found 55 percent of women do not believe the Senate should confirm him, versus just 40 percent of men. And 52 percent of men believe Kavanagh has been treated unfairly, versus just 43 percent of women.

“The disparity is stunning,” said Jim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll. “You usually don’t see this kind of divide between men and women on seminal, important issues.”

Polls show Republicans are more likely to be skeptical of the #MeToo movement, which has spurred women to come forward with their stories of sexual assault and harassment, and to believe it has gone too far.

Republicans argue the Kavanaugh debate will drive enthusiasm among men and women.

Barry Bennett, a former senior Trump campaign adviser, accused Democrats of “hijacking the #MeToo movement,” and argued the way Kavanaugh has been treated is driving Republican enthusiasm with men and women.

“The one thing we’re seeing across is the country is (Republicans) are really energized. They’ve been woken up because of what’s happening to Brett,” he said. “If we play this smart, there maybe will not be a blue wave.”

Indeed, the Republican National Committee said it has seen a surge in donations over the last week, with Sunday marking the committee’s largest online fundraising day ever, according to an RNC official. The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to publicly reveal the figures, also said the party had logged 1,000 new small-dollar donors that day who had never previously given to the committee.

But Democratic strategist Jim Manley questioned the strategy.

“I think they’re playing a dangerous game with this overt play to generate enthusiasm from their white, male base. As far as I can tell they already have those folks,” he said. “My bet is that this will just make Trump and the Republican Party even more radioactive with women voters.”

Story: Catherine Lucey and Jill Colvin

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Taut Thriller on Woman’s Rape, Vengeance to Take Bangkok Stage

A scene from the 1994 ‘Death and the Maiden,’ directed by Roman Polanski.

BANGKOK — Participating in the annual Bangkok Theatre Festival, English-language theatre company Peel the Limelight will take the stage with suspenseful thriller “Death and the Maiden.”

The play, set in a Latin American country, revolves around a woman tortured and raped under a repressive regime before she runs into a doctor she believes to be her rapist and seeks justice through vengeance.

The play is based on the original 1990 work by Ariel Dorfman. It won the Laurence Olivier Award’s best new play in 1991 and a Tony Award for best actress, which went to Glenn Close for the 1992 Broadway production.

Roman Polanski directed the 1994 film adaptation, starring Sigourney Weaver, Ben Kingsley, and Stuart Wilson.

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Argentine-Chilean-American playwright Ariel Dorfman

The upcoming Bangkok version, will be directed by Peter O’Neil of Peel the Limelight studio and star Kelly B Jones, James Laver and Jaime Zuniga.

“We wanted to raise awareness about the brutal repression unleashed by certain governments in Latin America,” wrote actor Jaime Zuniga, who is originally from Nicaragua – where ongoing unrest has killed hundreds this year. “The play tells a story that seems to repeat itself more than 20 years later.”

It’s no coincidence that Peel the Limelight’s productions take a main focus on women’s rights this year. Marking International Women’s Day in March, the theatre company showed all-female production “Agnes of God” in response to the #MeToo movement. April saw “I Am My Own Wife,” a story about a transgender survivor in Nazi Germany.

Hollow” followed in July. The play is dedicated to girls and women forced into sexual slavery during the World War II.

“Death and the Maiden” will raise the curtain at 8pm on Nov. 2, then take place at 8pm every Friday and Saturday through Nov. 24 at Peel the Limelight Studio in Soi Sukhumvit 23. It can be reached via BTS Asok or MRT Sukhumvit.

Tickets are available online and start at 600 baht. Discounts are offered to studio members, students and groups of more than 10 guests. The show is recommended for audiences aged 14 and older.

Part of the proceeds will go to Nicaraguan refugees in Guatemala and Costa Rica.

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Democrats Announce Party Membership Registration

Democrat Party chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva meets last month with Alongkorn Pollabutr, a former deputy party leader now challenging him for party leadership.
Democrat Party chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva meets last month with Alongkorn Pollabutr, a former deputy party leader now challenging him for party leadership.

BANGKOK — The Democrat Party announced Tuesday that it would accept member registrations through Oct. 15 and that those registered would have the right to participate in a primary vote to select its new leader.

The announcement was made on the party’s Facebook page along with the names of three candidates for party leadership: incumbent Abhisit Vejjajiva, Alongkorn Pollabutr and Warong Dechgitvigrom.

The announcement said aspiring members can register in person or online, by visiting the party headquarters in Bangkok’s Phaya Thai district or any of the party’s 350 branches nationwide. It added that those interested can also register online.

Warong, a candidate and former Democrat MP for Phitsanulok province, said Tuesday that the party would attract more members if he becomes leader. He complained that the e-registration system was “difficult,” adding that paying membership fee online was also difficult.

The candidate acknowledged trailing Abhisit – a former prime minister and party leader for the past 13 years. Warong said some ex-MPs who have fled the party told him they would return if he became party leader and that he vowed to decentralize the party’s power if elected.

He denied that his goal was to take over the party and use it to support junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha in becoming prime minister again, adding that it’s too early to commit on the issue.

He added that it’s more important to think about what people will gain from the government after elections.

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Cops Bust Tuk-Tuk Who Harassed, Kicked Grab Driver (Video)

"Welcome to Chiang Mai"

CHIANG MAI — Police on Tuesday arrested a tuk-tuk driver filmed berating and kicking a GrabCar driver in front of two foreign tourists in the northern city of Chiang Mai.

Rungruj Jinaruen, 37, was charged with various offenses, including intimidation, carrying of weapons and driving a tuk-tuk without license. Rungruj was also identified as the man who was arrested for giving a middle finger to another motorist last year.

“I arrested him myself in that case,” Deputy Chiang Mai police chief Piyapan Pattarapongsin said in an interview. He said police would recommend a harsh penalty to the court because Runruj is a repeat offender.

In a video that went viral on social media, Rungruj blocks a GrabCar driver and orders him and two passengers, said to be Americans, leave the vehicle. He said the driver does not have a license to operate public transport.

“You get out right now!” Rungruj, wearing a “Welcome to Chiang Mai” shirt, shouts to the driver before kicking him. “These are my customers!”

“Oh God,” one of the tourists can be heard in the video. The pair were eventually forced out.

Speaking to reporters at police station today, Rungruj apologized for his actions and said he’s frustrated with the rise of unlicensed vehicles that steal passengers from him and fellow tuk-tuk drivers.

Lt. Col. Piyapan said Rungruj was carrying a wooden stick as a weapon at the time. Despite the kick, police did not press assault charges against the tuk-tuk driver, Piyapan said.

He added that transport officials suspended Rungruj’s driving license earlier today, while the GrabCar driver has been charged with driving without proper license.

Tensions between state-regulated taxis and private ride-hailing applications such as GrabCar have risen in recent years. Confrontations have sometimes flared up in the streets.

On the same day Rungruj surrendered to police, about 60 tuk-tuk drivers staged a protest in front of the provincial Land Transport Department office, demanding a tougher crackdown on GrabCar operations. They dispersed after rallying for 10 minutes.

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Double Entry, Free Visa Mulled to Boost Falling Chinese Tourism

Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sept. 4, 2017, at the BRICS summit in Xiamen, China.
Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sept. 4, 2017, at the BRICS summit in Xiamen, China.

BANGKOK — The tourism minister said he was considering granting Chinese tourists a double entry visa into Thailand, hoping to increase their influx after numbers are set to drop for the first time ever.

Weerasak Kowsurat told reporters after a Tuesday meeting with the business sector – including the Association of Thai Travel Agents, or ATTA – that he was planning to give Chinese tourists a visa that would allow them to enter the kingdom twice hoping to boost their arrivals. The comments came after it was announced that the number of Chinese tourists would likely decrease in 2018.

Following years of growth, the Tourism Authority of Thailand said it expects the arrival of Chinese tourists in 2018 to be lower than last year’s 9.8 million – which generated 561 billion baht.

The minister cited a number of factors for the decline, such as concerns about China’s economy – particularly the real estate sector – and events in Thailand such as the July capsizing of a ferry of Chinese tourists in Phuket – in which at least 40 people died. Weerasak added that warnings about dengue fever in parts of the kingdom and the Thursday assault on a Chinese tourist at Don Mueang Airport would also have an impact.

The minister also mulled the possibility of waving Chinese visa fees altogether.

The Chinese are the largest group of tourists in Thailand. During the so-called Chinese Golden Week which started Monday. The ATTA expects the number of Chinese tourists arriving in Thailand to decline by 10 percent, and predicts a possible loss of 2.1 billion baht from China in 2018 as compared to last year.

Japan meanwhile overtook Thailand this year as the most popular destination for Chinese tourists, according to the China Tourism Academy survey. As many as 71.3 million Chinese traveled abroad during the first six months of 2018 alone.

Weerasak said there’s a need to upgrade the standards of tourism services in Thailand to ensure the safety of visitors.

“We have to also produce correct information in Chinese to inform them that warnings about dengue fever are normal in countries in tropical zones,” the minister said.

In a related development, Immigration Police Bureau Commander Pol Maj. Gen. Surachet Hakpan admitted Tuesday that some Chinese tourists are asked for extra money in exchange of speeding up their visa on arrival process. Surachet said police would soon seek a court order to arrest wrongdoers.

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