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Social Media is Prayuth’s Empty Mirror (Opinion)

Photo: Stacey MacNaught / Flickr

If Thailand’s junta is truly sincere in its twisted claim that it is working hard toward democratizing Thailand, its ban on campaigning online should be lifted immediately.

Every day it remains in place deprives citizens of their right and opportunity to learn about each political party and their policies to take part in a democratic decision-making process that includes interactive online debate and deliberation.

Political communication through social media is very economical and can instantaneously reach a large swath of Thai voters.

Social media bypasses the traditional gatekeeping role of the mainstream mass media and well as state-controlled media.

According to the Electronic Transactions Development Agency’s internet user profile 2017, as much as 82 percent of the Thai population – 57 million of 69.1 million – is connected to the internet.

Seventy-four percent, or 51 million, of the public are active social media users. As a matter of fact, the number of mobile phone subscriptions is even higher than that of the Thai population, at 93.6 million, which means a substantial number of Thais use more than one.

Line and Facebook are the two most popular social media platforms. Twitter trails in eighth place.

What’s more, Thais 16 to 64 spend an average of nine hours and 38 minutes online every day, the longest in the world, according to the agency.

Spending three hours and 10 minutes on average using social media each day, the same age group ranks No. 4 globally after the Philippines (three hours, 57 minutes), Brazil (three hours, 39 minutes) and Indonesia (three hours, 23 minutes).  

These figures make it clear that social media has become the new public sphere, a new marketplace of communication and learning about many things including politics, democracy and human rights. The junta, despite its supposed absolute power and laws such as the Computer Crime Act, can do little to stop social media users learning from one another and criticizing its job running the country.

This explains why the junta has always been paranoid about social media and put an artificial lid on political campaigning in that space, despite its own deployment of state- and private-controlled media through traditional and new channels such as social media to promote itself in the run-up to elections promised for February.

After junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha this past week finally sort-of declared his interest being a civilian candidate for prime minister, after some mainstream mass media outlets surveyed the public online on whether voters would choose Prayuth as PM. Contrary to traditional pollsters, three media outlets, The Nation, Khaosod and TV Channel One, found Prayuth failed to obtain even 13 percent support on all three surveys.

More than 350,000 voted in the TV Channel One poll; 88 percent of them said they wouldn’t support Prayuth.

These results, though unscientific, are contrary to traditional pollsters (of dubious professional bases) who say Prayuth consistently comes out on top compared to other candidates.

While the accuracy of these media-sponsored surveys on social media can be debated, the results cast doubt on the level of support for Prayuth and suggest that social media users may not be as tame or impressed with the junta as some may have expected when watching state-controlled programs lauding the military regime and its leaders.

Social media users appear to be more independent-minded and the feedback to the junta too brutal for the liking of the military regime. The situation seems unpredictable, and it explains why the junta is very apprehensive about allowing political campaigning to take place on social media anytime soon.

    

 

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Indonesia Tsunami, Quake Devastate Coast; Deaths Top 380

Residents carry a body bag containing the body of a tsunami victim in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, Saturday, Sept. 29, 2018. A powerful earthquake rocked the Indonesian island of Sulawesi on Friday, triggering a 3-meter-tall (10-foot-tall) tsunami that an official said swept away houses in at least two cities. (AP Photo)

PALU, Indonesia — A tsunami swept away buildings and killed at least several hundred people on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, dumping victims caught in its relentless path across a devastated landscape that rescuers were struggling to reach Saturday, hindered by damaged roads and broken communications.

Disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said 384 people were killed in the hard-hit city of Palu alone.

The nearby city of Donggala and the town of Mamuju were also ravaged by the 3-meter (10-foot) -high tsunami but have not yet been reached by aid due to damaged roads and disrupted telecommunications.

Nugroho said “tens to hundreds” of people were taking part in a beach festival in Palu when the tsunami, which was triggered by a magnitude 7.5 earthquake, struck at dusk on Friday. Their fate was unknown.

Palu, which has more than 380,000 people, was strewn with debris from collapsed buildings. A mosque heavily damaged by the quake was half submerged and a shopping mall was reduced to a crumpled hulk. A large bridge with yellow arches had collapsed. Bodies lay partially covered by tarpaulins and a man carried a dead child through the wreckage.

The city is built around a narrow bay that apparently magnified the force of the tsunami waters as they raced into the tight inlet.

Indonesian TV showed dramatic smartphone video of a powerful wave hitting Palu, with people screaming and running in fear. The water smashed into buildings and the damaged mosque.

Hundreds of people were injured and hospitals, damaged by the quake, were overwhelmed.

Communications with the area were difficult because power and telecommunications were cut, hampering search and rescue efforts.

“We hope there will be international satellites crossing over Indonesia that can capture images and provide them to us so we can use the images to prepare humanitarian aid,” Nugroho said.

The disaster agency has said that essential aircraft can land at Palu’s airport, though AirNav, which oversees aircraft navigation, said the runway was cracked and the control tower damaged.

AirNav said one of its air traffic controllers, aged 21, died in the quake after staying in the tower to ensure a flight he’d just cleared for departure got airborne safely. It did.

More than half of the 560 inmates in a Palu prison fled after its walls collapsed during Friday’s quake, said its warden, Adhi Yan Ricoh.

“It was very hard for the security guards to stop the inmates from running away as they were so panicked and had to save themselves too,” he told state news agency Antara.

Ricoh said there was no immediate plan to search for the inmates because the prison staff and police were consumed with the search and rescue effort.

“Don’t even think to find the inmates. We don’t even have time yet to report this incident to our superiors,” he said.

Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo said Friday night that he instructed the security minister to coordinate the government’s response to the disaster.

Jokowi also told reporters in his hometown of Solo that he called on the country’s military chief to help with search and rescue efforts.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said U.N. officials were in contact with Indonesian authorities and “stand ready to provide support as required.”

Indonesia is frequently hit 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.

In December 2004, a massive magnitude 9.1 earthquake off Sumatra island in western Indonesia triggered a tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries. On Aug. 5, a powerful quake on the Indonesian island of Lombok killed 505 people, most of whom died in collapsing buildings.

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Dusit Zoo That Recalled Old Bangkok Soon Just a Memory (Photos)

In this Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 photo, a woman poses for a picture with a hippopotamus with a wide-open mouth at the Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. After in operation for 80 years, Dusit zoo will be closed permanently from September 30, 2018. Its more than 1,000 animals are to be sent to other zoos around the country till a new facility being constructed in north of the capital in Pathum Thani province. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls.

The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs.

Visitors over the years could ride a paddle boat with a sweetheart or join the youngsters on the zoo’s small train, shouting the names of the animals as the rail cars rolled by the enclosures.

Naturally, they could get to know the zoo’s residents, like 53-year-old hippopotamus Mali, who has given birth to 14 offspring and is the oldest of her kind in Thailand. On hot days, Mali naps near a glass wall in the water at the edge of her enclosure, giving her human admirers an opportunity for a photo close-up. They could watch Malayan sun bears, the smallest bear species and native to Southeast Asia’s tropical forests, attempt to catch bananas thrown by handlers.

Visitors could also soak up Thai history. Dusit Zoo originally was a botanical garden for the royals who lived in a nearby palace. The gardens were converted to a public park after Thailand became a constitutional monarchy in 1932 and then became the Dusit Zoo in March 1938. During World War II, an air raid shelter was built there.

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In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018 photo a child poses for a picture standing next to female hippopotamus named Mali at the Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. Mali has given birth to 14 offspring and is the oldest hippo in Thailand. During the hot summer days, she naps most the time in her enclosure from which she is separated from visitors by tempered see-through glass.(AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 photo, a man poses for a photo at the entrance to an old air-raid shelter, at the Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. Air raid shelters were built in public spaces during the World War II. After the war was ended, most the shelters were removed but the air-raid shelter located at Dusit zoo was renovated and kept for public viewing. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018 photo a seal swims close to an aquarium glass as visitors gather for a closer look following a Seal show at the Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. After in operation for 80 years, Dusit zoo will be closed permanently from September 30, 2018. Its more than 1,000 animals are to be sent to other zoos around the country till a new facility being constructed north of the capital in Pathum Thani province. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2018 photo, a bird flies over a sculpture of a deer fixed atop the boundary fence of Dusit Zoo as the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall looms over in the background in Bangkok, Thailand. Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls. The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, Sept. 30, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs.(AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2018 photo, a Thai family of four take a picture of their waving hands at an exit gate of Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. After in operation for 80 years, Dusit zoo will be closed permanently from Sept. 30, 2018. The zoo originally was a botanical garden for the royals residing in a nearby palace. The gardens were converted to a public park after Thailand became a constitutional monarchy in 1932 and then became the Dusit Zoo in March 1938. During World War II, an air raid shelter was built there.(AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018 photo, a Thai university student laughs as she poses for a picture at an ATM, with a facade in the shape of an elephant at Dusit Zoo Bangkok, Thailand. Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls. The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, Sept. 30, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 photo, a Malayan Sun bear unsuccessfully tries to catch a banana tossed by a zoo-keeper at the Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls. The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, Sept. 30, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018 photo spectators applaud as a seal performs during a show at Dusit Zoo in Bangkok, Thailand. Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls. The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, Sept. 30, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018 photo, visitors paddle boats in a lake at Dusit Zoo, as the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall in Bangkok, Thailand, looms over them in the background. Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls. The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, Sept. 30, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Wednesday, Aug 15, 2018 photo, a White Bengal tiger stretches as it yawns at Dusit Zoo in Bangkok. Bangkok’s 80-year-old Dusit Zoo has the kind of old-fashioned charm that creates family memories in a global capital chock-a-block with shiny shopping malls. The zoo itself will soon be just a memory. The entry gates shut for the last time Sunday, Sept. 30, and more than 1,200 animals will be moved around the country until a more spacious facility is built in Bangkok’s northern suburbs. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2018 photo, schoolchildren from Thailand’s southern province of Pattani province are greeted by visiting Kenyan performers at Dusit Zoo Bangkok, Thailand. Dusit Zoo, housed in what was once part of a royal estate belonging to the Thai monarch will relocate to a new location in a land granted by King Vajiralongkorn, Thai government announced. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)
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Indonesian Earthquake, Tsunami Left At Least 18 Dead

People survey a building partially damaged by earthquake in Poso, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, Saturdayใ Photo: Yoanes Litha / Associated Press

JAKARTA — An Indonesian official says the earthquake and tsunami that hit central Sulawesi left many victims, as rescuers raced to the region.

Disaster officials haven’t released an official death toll but reports from three hospitals seen Saturday by The Associated Press listed 18 dead.

Dawn revealed a devastated coastline in central Sulawesi where the tsunami triggered by a magnitude 7.5 earthquake Friday smashed into two cities and several settlements.

Disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said in a television interview there are “many victims.”

In Palu, the capital of Central Sulawesi province, a large bridge spanning a coastal river had collapsed and the city was strewn with debris.

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Facebook Says 50M User Accounts Affected by Security Breach

Facebook logo is displayed on an iPad in Philadelphia. Photo: Matt Rourke / Associated Press
Facebook logo is displayed on an iPad in Philadelphia. Photo: Matt Rourke / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Facebook reported a major security breach in which 50 million user accounts were accessed by unknown attackers.

The attackers gained the ability to “seize control” of those accounts, Facebook said, by stealing digital keys the company uses to keep people logged in. Facebook has logged out owners of the 50 million affected accounts — plus another 40 million who were vulnerable to the attack. Users don’t need to change their Facebook passwords, it said.

Facebook said it doesn’t know who was behind the attacks or where they’re based. In a call with reporters on Friday, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that attackers would have had the ability to view private messages or post on someone’s account, but there’s no sign that they did.

“We do not yet know if any of the accounts were actually misused,” Zuckerberg said.

Facebook shares fell $4.38, or 2.6 percent, to close at $164.46 on Friday.

The hack is the latest setback for Facebook during a tumultuous year of security problems and privacy issues . So far, though, none of that has significantly shaken the confidence of the company’s 2 billion global users.

The latest attack involved bugs in Facebook’s “View As” feature, which lets people see how their profiles appear to others. The attackers used that vulnerability to steal the digital keys, known as “access tokens,” from the accounts of people whose profiles were plugged into the “View As” feature — and then moved along from one user’s Facebook friend to another. Possession of those tokens would allow attackers to control those accounts.

One of the bugs was more than a year old and affected how the “View As” feature interacted with Facebook’s video uploading feature for posting “happy birthday” messages, said Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of product management. But it wasn’t until mid-September that Facebook noticed an uptick in unusual activity, and not until this week that it learned of the attack, Rosen said.

“We haven’t yet been able to determine if there was specific targeting” of particular accounts, Rosen said in a call with reporters. “It does seem broad. And we don’t yet know who was behind these attacks and where they might be based.”

Neither passwords nor credit card data was stolen, Rosen said. He said the company has alerted the FBI and regulators in the United States and Europe.

Jake Williams, a security expert at Rendition Infosec, said he is concerned that the hack could have affected third party applications.

Williams noted that the company’s “Facebook Login” feature lets users log into other apps and websites with their Facebook credentials. “These access tokens that were stolen show when a user is logged into Facebook and that may be enough to access a user’s account on a third party site,” he said.

Facebook confirmed late Friday that third party apps, including its own Instagram app, could have been affected.

“The vulnerability was on Facebook, but these access tokens enabled someone to use the account as if they were the account-holder themselves,” Rosen said.

News broke early this year that a data analytics firm once employed by the Trump campaign, Cambridge Analytica, had improperly gained access to personal data from millions of user profiles. Then a congressional investigation found that agents from Russia and other countries have been posting fake political ads since at least 2016. In April, Zuckerberg appeared at a congressional hearing focused on Facebook’s privacy practices.

The Facebook bug is reminiscent of a much larger attack on Yahoo in which attackers compromised 3 billion accounts — enough for half of the world’s entire population. In the case of Yahoo, information stolen included names, email addresses, phone numbers, birthdates and security questions and answers. It was among a series of Yahoo hacks over several years.

U.S. prosecutors later blamed Russian agents for using the information they stole from Yahoo to spy on Russian journalists, U.S. and Russian government officials and employees of financial services and other private businesses.

In Facebook’s case, it may be too early to know how sophisticated the attackers were and if they were connected to a nation state, said Thomas Rid, a professor at the Johns Hopkins University. Rid said it could also be spammers or criminals.

“Nothing we’ve seen here is so sophisticated that it requires a state actor,” Rid said. “Fifty million random Facebook accounts are not interesting for any intelligence agency.”

Ed Mierzwinski, the senior director of consumer advocacy group U.S. PIRG, said the breach was “very troubling.”

“It’s yet another warning that Congress must not enact any national data security or data breach legislation that weakens current state privacy laws, pre-empts the rights of states to pass new laws that protect their consumers better, or denies their attorneys general rights to investigate violations of or enforce those laws,” he said in a statement.

Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter said “the most important point is that we found out from them,” meaning Facebook, as opposed to a third party.

“As a user, I want Facebook to proactively protect my data and let me know when it’s compromised,” he said.

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Journalists Slam Pending Bangladesh Digital Security Law

Photo: Associated Press

DHAKA — Journalists and human rights groups are demanding major amendments to a bill recently passed in Bangladesh’s Parliament, saying it will further choke constitutionally protected freedom of speech.

A powerful body of editors of leading newspapers and TV stations has officially protested the bill, called the Digital Security Act, and plans to form a human chain to protest Saturday in front of the national press club in Dhaka.

“We are moving toward a bad time. This law will hurt the media, democracy and freedom of expression,” said Khandakar Muniruzzaman, acting editor of the Bengali-language daily Sangbad and among those planning to participate in the protest Saturday.

Senior editors, journalist groups and human rights groups in and outside Bangladesh are echoing these concerns, demanding that lawmakers clarify sections of the bill they say could be wielded arbitrarily against government critics before the president signs it.

In Bangladesh, the president customarily signs anything passed by Parliament. He can send it back to Parliament, but if members think no changes are needed, it will go back to him for a signature. If the president does not sign it in six months, it automatically becomes law.

The bill would replace a previous information communication technology law, which was also criticized by journalists and human rights groups for its alleged use to crack down on dissent. Many editors and reporters have been sued for defamation under the law.

Observers say the bill is part of a broader campaign to silence critics in Bangladesh, and reflects a worrying trend in fledgling Asian democracies.

Journalists in Nepal are combating a similar law, part of an expansive rewriting of that country’s civil and criminal codes meant to define the parameters of Nepal’s new constitution.

Laws like the one recently passed in Nepal and the one pending in Bangladesh, where democracy was restored in 1990 after the military dictator was ousted, could make it more difficult for journalists to expose corruption.

Bangladesh’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who political opponents decry as an autocrat, defended the bill in Parliament last week, saying that it was meant to protect the country from propaganda.

“Journalism is surely not for increasing conflict, or for tarnishing the image of the country,” she said.

Bangladeshi journalists are taking particular umbrage with a section of the bill that authorizes up to 14 years in prison for gathering, sending or preserving classified information of any government using a computer or other digital device. The journalists say publishing such information is a way to hold officials accountable. The section evokes the sentiment of a British colonial-era law about protecting official secrets.

The bill would also authorize prison sentences of up to three years for publishing information that is “aggressive or frightening” and up to 10 years for posting information that “ruins communal harmony or creates instability or disorder or disturbs or is about to disturb the law and order situation.”

Government officials have listed incidents in recent years in which false social media posts about people disrespecting the Quran have incited violence.

Critics of the bill say existing criminal laws adequately address these concerns.

Fears of the broad reach of the bill extend beyond journalists.

Human Rights Watch said the law would be ripe for abuse, in part because it would empower police to search or arrest suspects without a court order.

“Bangladesh authorities have failed to address serious human rights violations, and when criticized, chosen to target the messenger,” spokeswoman Meenakshi Ganguly told The Associated Press.

“Bangladeshi journalists, already under pressure, will now worry about doing their job in exposing government failures,” she said.

Some critics say introducing such a law a few months before general elections, which are expected in December, could also target opposition activists and candidates.

Bangladesh’s main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, or BNP, has said the bill is intended to silence its members. Party leader former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, an archrival of Hasina, is currently in jail for corruption. Her supporters say her jailing is politically motivated, an allegation authorities have denied.

An election-time government is expected to be formed in mid-October that Hasina is supposed to head in line with the constitution, but the opposition says an election under Hasina could be rigged. The opposition wants a non-partisan caretaker government to oversee the elections.

The opposition says their activists are facing thousands of politically-motivated criminal charges, but police say they are following the law, without regard to suspects’ political affiliations.

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That Time Thailand Tried Moving Angkor Wat to Bangkok

Image: vivanTY.c / Flickr

BANGKOK — Thailand is often accused by Cambodians of stealing their cultural heritage, from Khon to the Preah Vihear temple. But all these disputes pale in comparison to Thailand’s attempted theft of Angkor Wat.

Speaking at a Thursday panel, Khmer expert and historian Santi Pakdeekham recounted the bizarre and ambitious project that has been mostly forgotten today, which, had it succeeded, would have relocated parts of the nearly millennium-old temple – the world’s largest religious structure – next to where CentralWorld now stands in Bangkok.

The plot to steal Angkor Wat was hatched by King Rama IV in 1859, a year before French explorer Henri Mouhout’s journey to the massive temple that brought it to the world attention.

“His royal wish was to have the temple dismantled,” said Santi, who teaches at Sri Nakarinwiroj University.

In an order passed by the monarch, Siamese troops were to travel to Angkor and disassemble parts of the site so they can be rebuilt at Wat Pathum, which now sits between two major shopping mall complexes in Bangkok’s Siam area.

Another imitation Angkor Wat was also to be reassembled in Phetchaburi province, where the king had a palace built on a mountain.

Explaining the king’s motive, Santi said Khmer culture was deeply intertwined with Thailand’s monarchy, which recognizes itself as descended from the once-powerful Khmer Empire. In one instance, King Narai insisted to Portuguese emissaries that his dynasty could be traced back to the rulers of Angkor.

“[The monarchs] see themselves as coming from there and have since tried to return to conquer the land of their ancestors and claim suzerainty,” Santi said at Matichon Academy.

Incidentally, Santi noted, the province where Angkor is located is known as Siemreap, meaning “the defeat of Siam,” a result of Siamese king Chairachathirat’s failed campaign to re-conquer Angkor in the 16th century.

Sadly for King Rama IV – and luckily for Cambodia – his plan to dismantle Angkor Wat fell apart.

The expedition was ambushed by what was described in royal chronicle as “300 Khmer goons” on the way to Angkor which killed the group leader, Phra Suphanphisarn, and one of his sons, Santi said.

Upset by the failure, Rama IV tried to launch another expedition, only to be dissuaded by his advisors that the task was very difficult and those structures were meant to be there.

As a consolation and show of Thai power over Cambodia, a miniature Angkor Wat was built inside the Emerald Buddha Temple in Bangkok. Rama IV didn’t get to see it, however; he died a year before it was completed in in 1868.

Any claims Thailand had over Angkor ended when French forces invaded and seized Cambodia as its protectorate just before the turn of the 20th century.

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Chiang Mai Zoo Celebrates Panda Mama’s Birthday

CHIANG MAI — Thai and Japanese fans turned out to sing Happy Birthday to panda Lin Hui, who celebrated turning 17 with a buffet of colorful shaved ice topped with bamboo, apples, carrots, grapes, watermelon, pumpkin and sweet potatoes.

Lin Hui celebrated birthday along with her caretakers and fans at the Chiang Mai Zoo, where its director announced they will attempt to get her pregnant during the next breeding season running January to May.

“She’s still strong, but in terms of human years she’s around 45,” said Wuttichai Muangman, Chiang Mai Zoo director. “Still, she has a chance of getting pregnant and giving birth to a new member of the family, to create happiness for Thais and boost Chiang Mai tourism.”

Akimi Tanaka travelled from Japan to give Lin Hui a fruit basket.

“I love everything to do with pandas. It’s hard to explain, but they are so cute and amazing. That’s why I travel all over the world, including to the panda family in Thailand,” Tanaka said.

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Lin Hui’s caretakers hid more snacks in a gift box decorated with a panda pattern and red bow that was hung over her exhibit in an effort to get her to sniff out the goodies inside.

Chuang Chuang, Lin Hui’s mate, got treats but not a wrapped present. He and Lin Hui went straight for snacking on the apples and carrots.

Lin Hui was gifted by China in 2003 as a diplomatic show of friendship. Born Sept. 28, 2001, at the Giant Panda Breeding Research Base in Chengdu to parents Pan Pan and Tang Tang, Lin Hui gave birth to Lin Ping on May 27, 2009, through artificial insemination. Lin Ping was sent to China in 2013 to find a mate.

Coverage of Lin Hui and Lin Ping’s pregnancies and health are occasional subjects of national fascination. In the late noughties, panda fever reached an all-time high, with a 24/7 cable channel tracking their every move and elephants painted to resemble them.

Lin Hui is multicultural. Her Thai name is Thewi and her regional Lanna name is Kam-oei.

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Malaysia, Cambodia Offer 2 Asian Narratives of Change at UN

In this combination of two photos showing Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, left, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on Aug. 1, 2018, and Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad in Putrajaya, Malaysia, on Aug. 13, 2018. Photo: Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — Two veteran Southeast Asian leaders appearing at the United Nations on Friday present a microcosm of a dynamic region enjoying rapid economic growth but struggling to fan away egregious human rights problems that follow it like a bad smell.

On the one hand is Malaysia’s Mahathir Mohamad, who at the grand old age of 93 has shed his authoritarian past, ousted a rival accused of massive corruption through democratic change, and re-entered the international stage with vigor.

On the other is Cambodia’s Hun Sen, who has ruled his nation with a combination of political guile and brute force for three decades, and comes to New York having won all the seats in an election after outlawing his main political opposition.

It was ever thus with the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, an unwieldy mix of democracies and autocracies where politics struggles to keep pace with social change.

It’s a grouping that carefully balances its relations between the United States and China but typically has few answers to international criticism over gross rights violations in its midst as it abstains from interfering in the affairs of its member states.

This year, ASEAN is shadowed by accusations of genocide perpetrated by the military in Myanmar against Rohingya Muslims. It’s a rare instance in which the Western world and majority-Islamic nations have been united in outrage.

That has spoiled what had been one of the region’s democratic transition success stories. Just two years ago, Myanmar’s Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate and former political prisoner, received a hero’s welcome when, after a historic election victory, she became the first civilian leader of her nation in five decades to address the General Assembly. This year she is notably absent and has sent a government minister in her place.

But two other familiar Southeast Asian icons are here – and their respective journeys are a telling reflection of the competing forces in their region — the popular desire for more democratic accountability and the resistance of entrenched leaders to change in political structures that they have dominated for decades.

Mahathir is returning to the U.N. after a gap of 15 years. It’s the culmination of a comeback remarkable for more than just the Malaysian prime minister’s age.

Angered by a graft scandal at the state investment fund, Mahathir emerged from political retirement and joined the opposition he had persecuted during his first, 22-year stint as leader. In the process he toppled a former protégé and the party at whose helm Mahathir oversaw the rapid development of his young country in the 1980s and 1990s while concentrating power under his increasingly authoritarian rule.

Where once he was an archetype of “Asian values” — a paternalistic view of government that prioritized economic progress over individual rights — now he’s showcasing Malaysia as a mature democracy that upholds the primacy of the rule of law.

The still-sprightly Mahathir is promising to hand over the reins of power within two years to Anwar Ibrahim, who had challenged Mahathir’s rule two decades previously and was subsequently convicted and imprisoned for years on charges of sodomy that were widely regarded as politically motivated.

Contrast Malaysia’s political renaissance with Cambodia’s descent into autocracy under Hun Sen.

He’s been in power for half of his 66 years and extended his rule last month after his party’s walkover election win. The government-influenced courts had dissolved the only credible opposition party last year, and Hun Sen says he intends to stay in office for 10 more years.

On the eve of Hun Sen’s appearance before General Assembly, a U.N. special rapporteur told the world body’s Human Rights Council that the elections had consigned Cambodia’s democracy to history for the next five years. Hun Sen’s party won every single parliamentary seat prompting rapporteur Rhona Smith to conclude: “The country is therefore de facto a single party state.”

With the possible exception of the 1997 coup that Hun Sen launched against a co-premier that brought fighting to the streets of Phnom Penh, that marks a nadir in Cambodia’s politics since its democracy was established on the back of internationally-endorsed peace accords in 1991 and massive United Nations support.

Members of the outlawed opposition party are set to protest outside U.N. Headquarters when Hun Sen speaks Friday.

While the setbacks to human rights and democracy in Cambodia and Myanmar have drawn stiff criticism from the West, and from activists inside Southeast Asia itself, the wider trend lines suggest that authoritarianism is on the upswing in the region.

Democracy has been eroded in the Philippines by the strongman tendencies of its popularly elected leader Rodrigo Duterte; Thailand has been under military rule since 2014, and elections next year are unlikely to end the army’s sway over politics. The opposition in Singapore has never had a sniff of power, and Vietnam and Laos have been under one-party rule since 1975. Only in Malaysia and the region’s largest nation, Indonesia, does democracy appear entrenched or in the ascendant.

U.S. engagement with ASEAN, which was pushed hard by the Obama administration, has slipped under President Donald Trump. That’s less a result of the region’s democratic backsliding than Washington’s withdrawal from Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade deal and diminished diplomatic bandwidth, as the under-staffed State Department focuses on pressing concerns like North Korea and Iran.

But both U.S. and China still view ASEAN as strategically important. It lies at a crossroads of sea lanes crucial for global trade, and with its growing markets is a crucible of investment opportunities. Southeast Asia has generally prospered over the past five decades and it remains one of the fastest-growing regions of the world, with GDP rising on average by more than 5 percent.

That will likely continue. What remains uncertain is whether Southeast Asia’s politics keep pace with the trend toward openness and connectivity among its 600 million people, or whether it resists those changes.

That’s to say, will it follow the transformative example of Mahathir, or the defensive crouch of Hun Sen?

Story: Matthew Pennington

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Arr! Anti-Junta Party Barred From Meeting Because Pirate

Sombat Boonngamanong and his team at Friday event.

BANGKOK — Officials on Friday kicked out a group of pro-democracy politicians and election hopefuls from an elections conference, citing their inappropriate outfits.

Sombat Boonngamanong and his team, who showed up wearing in pirate hats and repairman costumes, had to spend the rest of the meeting outside the ballroom where 84 registered parties and 59 political groups were briefed on voting process by the Election Commission. Sombat protested his expulsion.

“I wasn’t causing any unrest,” Sombat told reporters at Centara Convention Center in northern Bangkok. “If I’m impolite, how is it impolite? Can someone explain to me in practical way?”

Explaining his choice of costumes, Sombat said his team want to “repair” the country after four years of military rule. The commission said today’s event was suits or dress shirts.

He added, “From now on, when I meet the EC, I may dress up in a tuxedo.”

Known for eye-catching publicity stunts and flash mobs, Sombat is one of the activists opposed to military rule seeking to contest in the next election, now slated for February.

But while others, like the Commoners and Future Forward parties, were registered without any problem, election registrars refused to approve Sombat’s party name – the Grean Party, which roughly translates to Trolling Party – citing inappropriate language.

Sombat, who was arrested in June 2014 for organizing anti-junta resistance, said he has submitted a new name he hopes election officials will endorse.

At the conference, Pheu Thai Party sec-gen Phumtham Wechayachai told reporters he hopes the junta will lift its ban on campaigning soon.

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