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Woman Injured After Fainting Near BTS Mo Chit Track

A woman fainted Monday on the BTS Mo Chit platform. Photo: What’s Wrong With the BTS Today / Facebook
A woman fainted Monday on the BTS Mo Chit platform. Photo: What’s Wrong With the BTS Today / Facebook

BANGKOK — A woman fainted Monday on the BTS Mo Chit platform, causing a brief service disruption during the morning rush hour.

The woman sustained minor injuries when she fainted near the track at about 8:30am as the train was arriving, knocking herself against a carriage, according to the crowdsourced information page What’s Wrong With the BTS Today.

The post added that the platform had to be blocked off, leading to throngs of passengers waiting to enter the station.

The BTS later confirmed the incident on its official Twitter account. It said station staff immediately attended to the woman. She was taken to the hospital.

The incident prompted another wave of online demand from commuters, calling the operator to install platform barriers at every station to prevent fatal accidents.

Last month, a woman fainted and fell onto a BTS Ratchathewi track but was rescued in time and suffered only minor injuries. This followed two other such accidents in 2014.

In 2017, a pregnant woman died when she fell onto an Airport Rail Link track in Ban Thap Chang Station and was crushed by an incoming train.

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On Again? Mayweather Says He and Pacquiao Will Fight

Floyd Mayweather Jr., left, connects with a right to the head of Manny Pacquiao, from the Philippines, during their welterweight title fight in 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo: John Locher / Associated Press
Floyd Mayweather Jr., left, connects with a right to the head of Manny Pacquiao, from the Philippines, during their welterweight title fight in 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo: John Locher / Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Floyd Mayweather Jr. says he’s coming out of retirement again to fight Manny Pacquiao for a second time in December.

Mayweather posted a video on Instagram early Saturday that showed him and Pacquiao together, reportedly in Japan, jawing at each other over a possible second fight.

“I’m coming back to fight Manny Pacquiao this year,” Mayweather said. “Another nine-figure pay day on the way.”

Whether the fight actually happens remains to be seen. There are no promotional barriers between the two men, because Mayweather promotes himself and Pacquiao is a boxing free agent.

Oddsmakers at the Westgate Las Vegas Superbook immediately made Mayweather a 2-1 favorite.

Mayweather defeated Pacquiao in May 2015 in a massively hyped fight that was largely panned by most boxing fans. The bout delivered a record 4.6 million pay-per-view buys, and Pacquiao blamed an injured shoulder for landing only 81 punches in the fight.

Mayweather, who has won all 50 of his fights, last fought a year ago when he stopped Conor McGregor, the UFC star who was in his first professional boxing match. The 41-year-old Mayweather reportedly made more than USD$200 million for that fight, on top of a reported $300 million for his win over Pacquiao.

Pacquiao, the Filipino star who will be 40 in December, lost to unheralded Jeff Horn last year before rebounding with a win over Lucas Matthysse in Malaysia last month.

Representatives for the two fighters could not immediately be reached for comment.

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Bright Colors, Neons Light Up London Fashion Week (Photos)

Models wear creations by designer Alexa Chung during their Spring/Summer 2019 runway show at London Fashion Week in London, Friday, Sept. 15, 2018. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)

LONDON — Winter coats with sandals? Furry bags with long satin gowns? Anything goes as the fashion pack descends on London to take in the latest runway shows, where bright colors, clashing neons, a ’70s vibe and sports-chic vied for attention.

Veteran designer Jasper Conran, model-turned-designer Alexa Chung and House of Holland were among those showcasing their spring and summer designs at Day 2 of London Fashion Week on Saturday.

A look at some highlights after the gallery.

Jasper Conran

Conran, one of the founding designers of London Fashion Week, chose the Royal Academy of Arts as his show venue and fittingly offered up a collection of bold, saturated colors — and a surprising dose of women’s rights activism.

There were monochrome striped dresses, graphic prints, beautifully tailored bias-cut dresses and sporty outfits, all in clashing hues taken straight from the artist’s paint box: pea green, tangerine, butter yellow and fire engine red. Some outfits even featured paint splatters.

Some models wore the same bold shade from head to toe. One sported a bright pink jumpsuit, paired with forest green hair. Classic, elegant shapes ensured the overall look was tasteful, not garish.

Sharing the catwalk was a T-shirt dress with large, abstracted letters reading “Equality not Minority.” In his show notes, Conran cited sobering statistics about women’s pay and referenced the #MeToo movement, writing: “As a young boy I remember seeing my mother working hard lobbying to gain rights for women . it is clear that the battles fought for equality are still far from over.”

Actress Kristin Scott Thomas, who watched from the front row, said she loved the simplicity and sophisticated tailoring.

“The colors always amaze me. And that pink jumpsuit has my name on it!” she said.

Alexa Chung

Long a fashion week regular, model and TV presenter Alexa Chung made her debut as a designer at London Fashion Week.

Known for her quirky fashion sense, with her penchant for boyish styling, schoolgirl collars and penny loafers, Chung offered a look-book for fans keen to replicate her style.

Playing on a theme of “arrivals and departures,” guests were first treated to a theatrical show of models coming and going, half-glimpsed through openings in a wooden panel.

When the models finally emerged, they wore an array of lacy camisole slip dresses, capes accessorized with headscarves and dresses with postcard prints. There was something for everyone, from a sexy sequined party dress to an egg-blue PVC raincoat to dorky-cool cream dungarees and boiler suits.

Some of the silhouettes had a distinctly ’70s vibe. A cream, double-breasted suit featured high-waisted, slightly bootcut trousers. Brown suede coats and separates also recalled styles from that era.

House of Holland

Slogan T-shirts, loud clashing prints, exaggerated shapes: Designer Henry Holland isn’t known to shy away from over-the-top designs, and this season is no different. There’s neon — lots of it — as well as large logos, body-hugging lurex, sportswear, snakeskin, plus slinky crystal-encrusted dresses.

Titled “Pull in Emergency,” the show is themed around hectic city life, and Holland said the neon pops of color are meant to convey a sense of “panic and urgency.”

Violently clashing colors — bright blue and yellow, purple and orange — demand immediate attention, and sheer lurex tops are emblazoned with large logos or a slogan reading “Out of Order.” There’s humor, too. The first outfit says it all: A neon orange double-breasted blazer with matching shorts, worn with clumpy neon sandals and a sporty body harness holding a highlighter pen.

Model Winnie Harlow sported a baggy neon tracksuit with a matching sports bra. Other more wearable pieces include voluminous hooded tops, printed sports leggings, and purple snakeskin print shirts that can be toned down with jeans. Iridescent silk party dresses encrusted with tens of thousands of colorful Swarovski crystals balance off the tough, urban cool vibe with a feminine touch.

Story: Sylvia Hui

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Typhoon Mangkhut Storms Kingdom (Photos)

A Mae Hong Son police truck was swept away 400 meters by a flash flood on Sunday.
A Mae Hong Son police truck was swept away 400 meters by a flash flood on Sunday.

BANGKOK — Typhoon Mangkhut has started to impact many parts of Thailand as it lashes southern China and looms over Vietnam on Sunday.

The Thai national weather service today warned of torrential rain, flash floods and landslides in the north and northeast through Wednesday, while heavy rain is also expected in other areas across country. Some areas affected were flooded already.

Check out where the damage was felt below.

The storm pounded the northwestern province of Mae Hong Son province overnight. Flash floods and landslides damaged a number of bridges and roads, cutting off five communities.

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In Satun city, flash floods last night forced three schools to close temporarily, submerged a market and cut off many streets. Recent flooding in the province have affected more than 1,500 people in four districts, officials said Sunday.

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The typhoon’s effects also brought strong rain to Ratchaburi province, flooding many homes in the Ratchaburi city since Saturday. Some residents were evacuated to temporary shelters.

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Water levels up to 60-centimeter high have submerged almost 400 households in Phetchabun province after heavy rain last night. Some residents said their homes have been flooded the second time in recent months. A hospital was also affected.

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Mangkhut Lashes South China After Killing 28 in Philippines

A man and a girl walk against strong winds from Typhoon Mangkhut on a pier on Victoria Habour Hong Kong, Sunday, Sept. 16, 2018. Photo: Vincent Yu / Associated Press
A man and a girl walk against strong winds from Typhoon Mangkhut on a pier on Victoria Habour Hong Kong, Sunday, Sept. 16, 2018. Photo: Vincent Yu / Associated Press

HONG KONG — Hong Kong and southern China hunkered down under red alert Sunday as strong winds and heavy rain from Typhoon Mangkhut lashed the densely populated coast, a day after the biggest storm of the year left at least 28 dead from landslides and drownings in the northern Philippines.

Nearly half a million people had been evacuated from seven cities in Guangdong province, the gambling enclave of Macau closed down casinos for the first time and the Hong Kong Observatory warned people to stay away from the Victoria Harbour landmark, where storm surges battered the waterfront reinforced with sandbags. Mangkhut is due to make landfall in Guangdong later Sunday.

The national meteorological center said southern China “will face a severe test caused by wind and rain” and urged officials to prepare for possible disasters.

On Sunday morning, the typhoon packed sustained winds of 155 kilometers (96 miles) per hour and gusts of up to 190 kph (118 mph). The Hong Kong Observatory said although Mangkhut had weakened slightly, its extensive, intense rainbands were bringing heavy downfall and frequent squalls.

Hundreds of flights were canceled. All high-speed and some normal rail services in Guangdong and Hainan provinces were also halted Sunday, the China Railway Guangzhou Group Co. said.

In Fujian province and elsewhere, tens of thousands of fishing boats returned to port and construction work came to a stop.

Philippine National Police Director General Oscar Albayalde told The Associated Press that 20 people had died in the Cordillera mountain region, four in nearby Nueva Vizcaya province and another outside of the two regions. Three more deaths have been reported in northeastern Cagayan province, where the typhoon made landfall before dawn Saturday.

Among the fatalities were an infant and a 2-year-old child who died with their parents after the couple refused to immediately evacuate from their high-risk community in a Nueva Vizcaya mountain town, said Francis Tolentino, an adviser to Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.

“They can’t decide for themselves where to go,” he said of the children, expressing frustration that the tragedy was not prevented.

Tolentino, who was assigned by Duterte to help coordinate disaster response, said at least two other people were missing.

Mayor Mauricio Domogan said at least three people died and six others were missing in his mountain city of Baguio after strong winds and rain destroyed several houses and set off landslides, which also blocked roads to the popular vacation destination. It was not immediately clear whether the dead and missing had been included in the overall death toll.

About 87,000 people had evacuated from high-risk areas of the Philippines. Tolentino and other officials advised them not to return home until the lingering danger had passed.

In Cagayan’s capital, Tuguegarao, where the typhoon hit land, Associated Press journalists saw a severely damaged public market, its roof ripped apart and wooden stalls and tarpaulin canopies in disarray. Outside a popular shopping mall, debris was scattered everywhere and government workers cleared roads of fallen trees.

The Tuguegarao airport terminal also was damaged, its roof and glass windows shattered by strong winds.

The typhoon struck at the start of the rice and corn harvesting season in the northern breadbasket, prompting farmers to scramble to save what they could of their crops, Cagayan Gov. Manuel Mamba said.

In Hong Kong, Security Minister John Lee Ka-chiu urged residents to prepare for the worst.

“Because Mangkhut will bring winds and rains of extraordinary speeds, scope and severity, our preparation and response efforts will be greater than in the past,” Lee said. “Each department must have a sense of crisis, make a comprehensive assessment and plan, and prepare for the worst.”

Cathay Pacific said all of its flights would be canceled between 2:30 a.m. Sunday and 4 a.m. Monday. The city of Shenzhen also canceled all flights between Sunday and early Monday morning. Hainan Airlines canceled 234 flights in the cities of Haikou, Sanya, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Zhuhai scheduled this weekend.

For the first time in the history of Macau, next door to Hong Kong, casinos were ordered to close from 11 p.m. Saturday, the South China Morning Post reported. The gambling city suffered catastrophic flooding during Typhoon Hato last August that left 10 dead and led to accusations of corruption and incompetence at its meteorological office.

Story Vincent Yu

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Opinion: Thai Federation and the Limits of Free Expression

Black T-shirts with red-and-white emblem reportedly purchased by two women taken into custody. Image: Thai Lawyer for Human Rights.
Black T-shirts with red-and-white emblem reportedly purchased by two women taken into custody. Image: Thai Lawyer for Human Rights.

Re•tention: Pravit RojanaphrukThe crackdown on alleged Thai Federation supporters during the past week can claim one immediate success: raising the fringe group to public attention.

Ironically the move helped promote what was an underground group to many Thais who had never seen its flag or heard about the group until they saw photos online and in the media.

The arrests and detention of people for merely possessing or selling T-shirts bearing the obscure white and red insignia of the federation could be seen as a disproportionate response.

A 30-year-old mother of two by the name of Wannapha was detained seven days on a military base under the junta’s authority before being turned over to Crime Suppression Division police for possessing some of the shirts. She was granted bail Wednesday on a 200,000 baht bond after being charged with sedition. Rights lawyer Sorawut Wongsaranon says three others have also been arrested.

Read: ‘Republican Shirt’ Suspect Handed Over to Police

The Organization for a Thai Federation’s goal is believed to be secession of the northeast of Thailand for creation of a federal republic.

Part of a statement it posted on social media in retaliation to the arrests stated that: “Ultimately, the people of the Thai Federation do not have fear or waver in the face of the assault by evil soldiers who arrest those who possess the black T-shirts with the red and white flag.”

The military regime now wants to hunt down the leader, who writes under the nom de plume of “Uncle Sanam Luang” and is believed hiding somewhere in Laos.

We can debate whether the arrests are a gross overreaction on part of the military regime – there’s no credible intelligence they constitute a credible threat to the kingdom – but it can’t be denied that the move has succeeded in making the movement much more widely known.

Indeed, current and past constitutions refer to Thailand as an “indivisible kingdom” and there exists a legal basis to charge and try anyone expressing their wish to effectively balkanize Thailand.

But it’s not so much the ever-malleable laws that make such an idea unfathomable to many Thais, however. We have to also consider the deeply entrenched and dominant royalist ideology Thais have been taught from early childhood, both at home and school.

This deep ideology is what makes the issue so taboo for many. It’s interesting to note that even a number of major mainstream Thai-language newspapers chose not to report about the ongoing crackdown that featured prominently in English-language Thai publications. Is this also a form of self-censorship stemming from a feeling of unease about the issue and denial that there may be Thais who want see the nation a republic?

It is not just Thailand that is trapped in this deep ideological cage. In countries such as Malaysia, the cage is an illiberal interpretation of Islam that makes public displays of same-sex love a crime, as seen in last month’s sentencing of two women to six lashes of the cane by a Shariah High Court in Terengganu. In Malaysia, oral and anal sex are against the law of nature and civil law stipulates a prison term up to 20 years, along with caning and fines, for violators.

In Myanmar, the deep ideology is ethnic nationalism which seeks to bind frays in the national fabric by otherizing the Rohingya as the enemy.

Such beliefs are often unconscious, seemingly natural and insidious. They lock down what expression or acts can be permitted or considered acceptable. Like language, which is situated in cultural and historical contexts and shapes our perceptions and expression, ideology and religion cage us as well. Social hierarchy is built into the Thai language, for example, much more so than English. This makes Thai speakers more conscious of it when conversing in Thai.

On the Rohingya issue, Thai activists supporting democracy in Myanmar have repeatedly told me they were disappointed by many of the students crushed in the 1988 uprising, who have become prominent figures but now take anti-human rights stances when it comes to the Rohingya people due to their deeply entrenched ethno-nationalism.

Back in Thailand, people have been brought up and taught to love and revere the monarchy on a constant diet of positive-only information, to the point where these republican wannabes seem ungrateful and evil. It naturally leads not only to censorship and self-censorship, but vilifying those who hold different ideas about what Thailand ought to be.

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19-Year-Old Business Student Crowned Miss Thailand World

From left, Helena Busch, Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan and Praewwanit Ruangthong pose on stage Saturday night after Nicolene was named Miss Thailand World. Photo: Miss World - Thailand / Facebook
From left, Helena Busch, Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan and Praewwanit Ruangthong pose on stage Saturday night after Nicolene was named Miss Thailand World. Photo: Miss World - Thailand / Facebook

BANGKOK — Nineteen-year-old Nicolene Pichapa Limsnukan Saturday night was crowned Miss Thailand World.

Nicolene, a business student at the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce, won the annual pageant in Bangkok after she was eliminated from the stage in June at Miss Universe Thailand.

She will represent Thailand in December at the Miss World pageant in Sanya, China.

Praewwanit Ruangthong, 26, and Helena Busch, 22, were the runner-ups.

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Photo: Miss World – Thailand / Facebook
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Photo: Miss World – Thailand / Facebook

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Mahouts Charged After Young Elephant Dies From Fall, Electrocution

SAMUT PRAKAN — Down the road he was led, forced to sell food. Two mahouts were driving the 10-year-old elephant when he fell through a makeshift drainage cover. As the scared animal fell in, so did nearby electric wires, electrocuting the animal. He died an hour later.

On Saturday, the day after, police filed criminal charges of animal cruelty and illegal transport against the two mahouts.

A large rescue effort was mounted after all four of the elephant’s legs fell into the meter-wide drain. Rescue workers used a mobile crane to lift it out and contacted the provincial livestock office, which sent a vet team. When the elephant fell unconscious and stopped breathing, the vets performed CPR but couldn’t save it.

One of the two mahouts, 15-year-old Pansa Yanamkham, told police they had been renting the elephant for many months from its owner in Surin province.

Preliminary investigation suggested the electric cables were from a nearby restaurant.

Padej Laithong, director of the regional conservation department, said the elephant was microchipped, and the Samut Prakan livestock will perform a DNA test to confirm whether it matches registration data recorded for all legally owned elephants.

The elephant was returned to its owner in Surin for a funeral under supervision of the livestock department.

Police have filed four charges against both mahouts, including illegally transporting an animal and animal cruelty. The owner, whose name has not been released, also faces illegal transport charges.

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Florence and Mangkhut, Different Tales of Water and Wind

A farm house is surrounded by flooded fields from tropical storm Florence on Saturday in Hyde County, North Carolina. Photo: Steve Helber / Associated Press
A farm house is surrounded by flooded fields from tropical storm Florence on Saturday in Hyde County, North Carolina. Photo: Steve Helber / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Nature expresses its fury in sundry ways. Two deadly storms — Hurricane Florence and Typhoon Mangkhut — roared ashore on the same day, half a world apart, but the way they spread devastation was as different as water and wind.

Storms in the western Pacific generally hit with much higher winds and the people who live in their way are often poorer and more vulnerable, Princeton University hurricane and climate scientist Gabriel Vecchi said Saturday. That will likely determine the type of destruction.

Mangkhut made landfall Friday on the northeastern tip of Luzon island in the Philippines with top-of-the-scale Category 5 winds of 165 mph. Florence had weakened to a Category 1 storm with 90 mph winds by the time it arrived at North Carolina’s coast.

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Yet a day after landfall the faster-moving Mangkhut was back out over open water — weakened, but headed across the South China Sea toward China. Florence, meanwhile, was still plodding across South Carolina at a pace slower than a normal person walks. By Saturday morning, it had already dumped more than 76 centimeters of rain, a record for North Carolina.

Experts say Mangkhut may well end up being the deadlier storm. As of Saturday afternoon, the death count in the Philippines was a bit higher, although still far below that of other storms that have hit the disaster-prone island nation. And with Mangkhut now headed toward the densely populated southeast coast of China, it is likely to cause more death and destruction. But watery Florence’s insured loses total will eventually be higher, Ernst Rauch, head of climate research for the world’s largest reinsurer Munich Re, told German media.

That’s because of a combination of geography, climatic conditions and human factors.

The western Pacific has two-and-a-half times more storms that reach the minimum hurricane strength of 74 mph. It has three-and-a-half times more storms that reach major hurricane strength of 111 mph, and three times more accumulated energy out of those hurricanes, an index that measures not just strength and number of storms but how long they last, according to more than 65 years of storm data.

So far this year there have been 23 named storms in the western Pacific and 10 in the Atlantic, both regions more than 30 percent busier than average years. Hurricanes and typhoons are the same type of storm; both are tropical cyclones, but those that occur in the Pacific west of the International Date Line are called typhoons.

The water in the western Pacific is warmer, and warm water fuels storms. There are also only a few pieces of land to get in the way and weaken them, said University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian McNoldy.

“If we are ever going to have a Category 6 (a speculated-on level that’s above current measurement tools), the western Pacific is where it’s going to be,” said meteorologist Ryan Maue of weathermodels.com.

The Philippines tends to get hit nearly every year, the Carolinas far less frequently though with lots of close calls, Maue said. That shows another big difference in the storms. Mangkhut formed further south and stayed south — over warmer water. Florence was out of the tropics when it hit land.

Because of that, Florence was weakened by the dry air and upper level winds of the higher latitudes. Not so the more southerly Mangkhut, which Maue said, “essentially had a perfect environment to intensify to a Category 5 and stay there.”

“Mangkhut and Florence are certainly different animals,” said Colorado State University hurricane researcher Phil Klotzbach. Because Florence is moving so slowly, he said, it will dump more rain than Mangkhut, which is named for the Thai word for the mangosteen fruit.

Both storms have lasted a long time, especially Florence which formed all the way over near Africa 15 days before landfall, McNoldy said. Both storms cover a large area, but Mangkut still dwarfs Florence. Mangkhut’s tropical storm force winds stretched more than 325 miles from the center, while Florence’s spread about 195 miles, Klotzbach said.

Economics also play a role in a storm’s impact. As a developing country, the Philippines is much poorer than the southeastern United States, which means houses tend to be less sturdy and first responders less well equipped, among other factors. This is one reason why, when disaster does strike, the effects can be devastating. In 2013, one of the most powerful storms on record, Typhoon Haiyan, killed 7,300 people and displaced more than 5 million when it swept across the islands of the central Philippines.

Straddling the famous Pacific Ring of Fire, the Philippines is also bedeviled by volcanoes and earthquakes, and while there are considerable patches of poverty in North and South Carolina, it is not the same as the rural area where Mangkhut hit.

Munich Re’s Rauch said about 30 to 50 percent of storm damage is usually insured in the United States but often less than 10 percent in developing countries, meaning nine-tenths of the people hit will end up shouldering a bigger economic burden.

In the United States, “you can’t move houses, but people can move out of the way,” reflecting mounting damages from storms and often lower losses in life, Vecchi said.

As the world warms from the burning of fossil fuels, the globe will see both more extremely intense storms like Mangkhut and wetter storms like Florence, Vecchi said.

Story: Seth Borenstein

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Thai Police Move Against ‘Little Ghost’ Recruiters

Photo: Jeera722311 / Facebook

BANGKOK — Thai police promised to step up a crackdown on recruiting agents supplying illegal workers to South Korea, weeks after the Seoul government reportedly mulled an end to visa waivers for Thai travelers.

A woman was arrested Friday for allegedly operating an illegal international recruiting service on Facebook. The chief of metro police division 1 said the computer crime police force is now monitoring such illegal online recruiting, which has damaged the image of Thai tourists.

Read: Thailand’s ‘Little Ghosts’ in Korea Scorned at Home

Maj. Gen. Senit Samransamruatkit said Sutthakorn Sutthithanaorn, 34, operates a page called “South Korea Jobs by Jadezy” which for four months has been posting about jobs in South Korea, including work in agriculture, restaurants, massage and other work that turned out to be prostitution.

The page could not be found Saturday afternoon on Facebook.

Senit said Sutthakorn turned herself in and denied all allegations. He said the investigation found that she received up to 25,000 baht in commission per worker.

South Korean new agency Chosun Ilbo reported late last month that the Korean Justice Ministry was considering an end to visa exemptions to counter the influx of illegal workers, a move it said was objected to by its Foreign Ministry.

The Thai government later said the visa waiver would remain in effect. It however acknowledged the problem, saying that the number of illegal Thai workers in South Korea has spiked in recent months.

Working in South Korea has long been popular among Thai people due to better pay. It has fueled the recruiting business, easily found online by searching for the term adopted for such migrant workers, who are known as phee noi, or little ghosts.

Senit said the computer crime police force has launched an investigation targeting those responsible for the surge of undocumented workers by “misleading people that working in South Korea is easy and well-paid, and that they can overstay the visa waiver period without having to worry about the law.”

He added that more than 10 other similar pages are now under surveillance.

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