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Rain to Reign in Bangkok Through Weekend

Flooded Charoen Nakhon Road on Friday. Photo: @YingChattharika / Twitter

BANGKOK — Residents plowed through shin-high waters Friday as rains flooded parts of the capital.

Much of Bangkok will see rain through today, while scattered showers and cloudy skies will prevail across the weekend as temperatures dip to lows of 23C and highs of 33C, the meteorological department said.

Residents in Bang Rak, Yan Nawa, Bangkok Noi, Phasi Charoen, Sathorn and Khlong San districts experienced the most severe Friday floods as the hashtag #rain trended on social media and users posted about their weather experiences.

“It won’t flood in Bangkok this weekend, but there’s just rain today,” Seree Supratid, the director of Rangsit University’s Climate Change & Disaster Center said by phone Friday.

The capital’s searing heat is expected to return Monday, with temperatures leaping back to highs of 36C.

The northern, central and Isaan region provinces will continue to see summer storms until Wednesday while scattered rains are set to predominate in the south.

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144 Arrested as Part of Operation ‘X-Ray Outlaw Foreigner’

Police arrest more than 140 foreigners on early Friday at the Train Night Market Ratchada.

BANGKOK — Nearly 150 foreigners were arrested early Friday morning when authorities raided a night market on Ratchadaphisek Road.

Huai Kwang Police and Tourist Police arrested 144 foreigners and charged them with various offenses at about 1am on Friday at the Train Night Market Ratchada, as part of what they called operation “X-Ray Outlaw Foreigner.”

Maj. Gen. Surachet Hakpal, Tourist Police Deputy Commissioner, said there were Nigerians, Cameroonians and Romanians among the arrested. They were charged with illegal entry and with overstaying their visas. Three of them tested positive for drugs.

Last month, 10 nationals from India and a number of African countries were arrested for various offenses at the Nana Hotel in Soi Sukhumvit 4, as part of an operation police called “Black Eagle.” On Feb. 28, police raided the red-light district in Soi Cowboy and arrested 75 foreigners.

Related stories:

75 Foreigners Arrested in Soi Cowboy Crackdown

Africans, Indians Arrested in Latest Raid on ‘Black People’ (Video)

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11 Nations Sign Pacific Trade Pact as Trump Plans US Tariffs

U.S. President Donald Trump, center, reacts as he does the "ASEAN-way handshake" with Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, left, and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on stage during the opening ceremony Nov. 13 at the ASEAN Summit at the Cultural Center of the Philippines. Photo: Andrew Harnik / Associated Press

SANTIAGO, Chile — Trade ministers from 11 Pacific Rim countries signed a sweeping free trade agreement Thursday to streamline trade and slash tariffs just hours before President Donald Trump announced his plans to impose new tariffs on aluminum and steel to protect U.S. producers.

Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Trans-Pacific Partnership last year, causing fears that it would not prosper without its most influential country. But the remaining 11 members pressed ahead, saying they were showing resolve against protectionism through global trade.

The ministers dropped key provisions that the Americans had required on protection of intellectual property, among others. The renegotiated pact signed in Chile’s capital was also renamed the Comprehensive and Progressive Trans-Pacific Partnership, or CPTPP.

“Despite the diverse and difficult challenges, the CPTPP is a historic achievement that creates free and fair 21st century rules in the Asia-Pacific region,” Japanese Economy Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said at a news conference after the signing of the deal.

The pact that covers 500 million people includes Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam, which together account for 13 percent of the global economy. Its success highlights the isolation of the U.S. under Trump’s protectionist rhetoric on trade and his “America first” philosophy.

“It leaves the U.S. at a disadvantage from both a trade and a broader strategic perspective,” said Joshua Meltzer, senior fellow in the global economy and development program at the Brookings Institution. “It is now a trade bloc that discriminates against the U.S.”

Meltzer said the United States’ ability to shape the rules of trade in the Asia-Pacific region “is very much diminished.”

The U.S., originally the biggest TPP economy, was one of the trade deal’s strongest supporters before Trump took office. Trump has said he prefers country-to-country deals and is seeking to renegotiate several major trade agreements, including the North American Free Trade Agreement that includes the U.S., Mexico and Canada.

This is “a strong sign against the protectionist pressures, and in favor of a world open to free trade, without unilateral sanctions and the threat of trade wars,” Chilean Foreign Minister Heraldo Munoz said.

The European Union said this week that it is ready to retaliate against Trump’s tariffs – of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum imports – with counter-measures against iconic U.S. products like Harley Davidson motorcycles, Levi’s jeans and bourbon.

The EU threat and Trump’s impending announcement on the tariffs were expected to escalate the risk of a trade war, in which nations try to punish each other by hiking taxes on traded goods. Experts say that tends to harm both exporting nations as well as importing countries’ consumers, who face higher costs.

The EU considers itself to be caught in the crossfire of a trade dispute, in which Trump has mainly singled out China for being unfair in its commercial deals.

The original TPP was conceived by the U.S. as a counterweight to China’s growing economic influence through a robust trading bloc that excluded the Asian giant. The thinking was that China would have an incentive to open its market and liberalize its policies in an effort to eventually qualify for TPP membership.

“Without the United States, it doesn’t serve that purpose,” said Edward Alden, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “It becomes a modest liberalization measure.”

China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, commented Thursday on the deal before it was signed.

“China did not participate in the CPTPP Agreement. However, China has always been a staunch supporter of trade liberalization and an important participant in Asia-Pacific regional cooperation and economic integration,” Wang Yi said at a news conference.

“Of course, we also hope that the various free trade arrangements in the Asia-Pacific region will be able to communicate and coordinate with each other and form a benign interaction, playing a constructive role in their respective fields in resisting trade protectionism and building an open world economy.”

Story: Eva Vergara, Juan Andres Henao

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‘Black Panther’ Star Speaks at UN Event

Lupita Nyong'o, Chadwick Boseman and Danai Gurira in a scene from Marvel Studios' "Black Panther." Matt Kennedy / Marvel Studios-Disney

UNITED NATIONS — “Black Panther” star Danai Gurira says the hit movie is showing the world that women and men “can work shoulder to shoulder” and their abilities “are equally valued in a society.”

Gurira spoke at an event marking International Women’s Day on Thursday at U.N. headquarters in New York.

She says the movie has made “a massive splash” because such a representation of powerful women is rarely seen.

The Zimbabwean-American actress and Tony Award-winning playwright says she was thankful to be handed the role of Okoye, who had nobility and put the needs of her country and people first.

She says she wants Okoye to remind the world “that those women already exist.”

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Samsung S9 Has Great Camera – Like Many Phones

The Bixby virtual assistant software of a Samsung Galaxy S9 Plus mobile phone translates a foreign language sign during a product preview in New York. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press
The Bixby virtual assistant software of a Samsung Galaxy S9 Plus mobile phone translates a foreign language sign during a product preview in New York. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Samsung says its new Galaxy S9 phone features a “reimagined” camera, and it is indeed pretty darned good. But you might not want to shell out USD$720 (22,500 baht) or more for one just yet unless your current phone is already close to death.

That’s because other high-end phone cameras — today, one of the major differentiators between phones — are also pretty darned good. If your phone is recent, it probably already has a decent camera. Technology has improved to the point that it’s really hard to tell the difference between them.

In many of our test shots, the S9 outperformed the best of its rivals — Apple’s iPhone X, Google’s Pixel 2 XL and Samsung’s own Galaxy Note 8. Photos had more detail and less distortion. But unless you magnify images for closer inspection, usually there’s little obvious difference beyond color variation, which comes down to personal preference. In a few cases, the S9 performed worse than all three.

The phone comes out March 16 with a U.S. starting price of $720 through Samsung and T-Mobile and nearly $800 through other major U.S. carriers. Here’s a look at what the S9 offers.

This combo shows photos of office buildings in the Hudson Yards section of Manhattan taken on Tuesday, March 6, 2018. Starting at the top left and going clockwise, the phones used are Samsung’s Galaxy S9, Apple’s iPhone X, Google’s Pixel 2 XL and Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8. Photo: Nick Jesdanun
This combo shows photos of
office buildings in the Hudson Yards
section of Manhattan taken on Tuesday,
March 6, 2018. Starting at the top
left and going clockwise, the phones
used are Samsung’s Galaxy S9, Apple’s iPhone X,
Google’s Pixel 2 XL and Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8.
Photo: Nick Jesdanun

See the Light

In a first for a major smartphone, the S9 camera has an adjustable aperture, or lens opening, to let in more or less light. Low-light shots are also improved with software tricks that automatically take 12 shots in quick succession and blend the best of each.

These changes produce small improvements in shots: The evening sky tends to be darker, with less distortion. A statue of Abraham Lincoln doesn’t look as grainy. Many S9 shots also have better contrast between dark and light areas.

But these differences are very subtle. What’s more likely to affect picture quality is the steadiness of your hands.

Freezing Motion

The most distinctive feature in Samsung’s new camera is super-slow-mo video. People appear frozen as they jump. Waterfalls seem at peace as drops trickle down. The feature offers a fresh perspective on that time-honored prank of having fake snakes pop out of a can — not so scary when the snakes float in thin air.

It’s a gimmick, but loads of fun.

The camera can process only a fifth of a second of video at a time — stretched into six seconds when viewing — so auto detection is key to capturing the right moment. It’s fun to see people jump up at this speed, but less so when the super-slow-mo part doesn’t kick in until they’re almost back on the ground. There’s a lot of trial and error involved.

And compared with still images and regular video, super-slow-mo video tends to be darker and blurrier, particularly with close-ups. The feature is at its best outdoors, when lighting is good and the subject in motion is far enough away.

Say What?

Samsung’s Bixby digital assistant taps the camera for instant translations. Just point the phone at a sign and see it in English (or your chosen language) with similar fonts and colors.

Bixby was more reliable at picking up text than a similar Google Lens feature on Pixel phones. But stop signs in Thai, Portuguese and French were translated as “first,” ”shield,” and “crazy.” Bixby got Indonesian right, though. And it can deal with long passages in posters and documents.

You Are What You Eat

Point the camera at food for nutritional information. It gave me close-enough calorie counts for a burger and onion rings, but a roast beef sandwich was misidentified as either a pastrami or a cubano sandwich, depending on the angle.

All counts are based on single servings, which isn’t as useful as Bixby telling me the mac and cheese I had was actually three servings, or triple the calories. Unreported calories don’t contribute to weight gain, right?

What Else

The larger S9 Plus model has a second lens with twice the magnification. Though I didn’t test this model, a similar feature in other phones is essential for producing better close-ups.

Both S9 models have a feature for turning selfies into personal emojis for sharing in messages. Some people will love this; I found no use for it. Next!

The new phone is easier to unlock by looking at it. Past Samsung phones scan your iris, but they don’t work reliably in bright sunlight. The S9 supplements that with facial recognition, which isn’t as secure. For that reason, Samsung won’t let banking and other sensitive apps use just the face, but it’s OK for unlocking the phone (you can disable it if you’re concerned). In any case, glasses can still be challenging, but there’s a fingerprint sensor on the back as a backup. It’s moved slightly to reduce smudges on the camera lens.

Beyond that, the phone’s design hasn’t changed much from last year’s S8. But that’s OK. No need to fix what isn’t broken. What matters is what the phone does — and shoots.

Story: Anick Jesdanun

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Internet Chips in to Help Name New Party

Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit. Photo: Bodintorn Juangroongruangkit / Facebook

BANGKOK — A progressive political party expected to join the next election hasn’t yet registered its name, but the internet is already pitching in, however seriously.

Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, 39, the billionaire automobile parts scion, has all but announced that he will lead the new party comprised of academics and pro-democracy activists – but he hasn’t mentioned a name. That’s prompted netizens on Twitter and Facebook to launch #HelpThanathornNameHisParty, with 22,600 tweets using the hashtag as of Thursday.

Read: Billionaire Foe of Thai Old Guard to Lead Progressive Party

Suggestions have included the Star Wars-inspired “New Hope Party,” the loquacious “The Power of the New Generation Who Are Sick and Tired of Seeing the Old Generation Destroy the Country, Without Being Able to Do Anything Party” and the presently topical “Black Panther Party.”

The proposed party, which is expected to register next week, is said to have already drawn young progressives into its fold such as Piyabutr Saengkanokkul, a Thammasat University law professor.

On Monday, the leader of the ruling junta dismissed reporters questions about whether new parties such as Thanatorn’s posed a challenge the junta, saying people can decide who to support.

Thanathorn’s family firm, Thai Summit Group, owns a large stake in Matichon Group, the parent company of Khaosod and Khaosod English. He sits on the company board and is expected to resign.

“Since Khun Thanathorn and Aj. [Piyabutr] are the new hope of the young, here’s a name I thought of as a young person. It’s cool and original, and if it’s not cool I’ll jump into the Mekong: ‘New Hope Party,’” tweeted @moouant.

“This is the cutest, funniest, most creative and most democratic hashtag in many months. (Citizens are participating and brainstorming a party name!)” tweeted @Bkksnow.

“Thanathorn’s party should convey the power of the new generation who are sick and tired of seeing the old generation destroy the country, without being able to do anything. Therefore I would like his party to be named, The Power of the New Generation Who Are Sick and Tired of Seeing the Old Generation Destroy the Country, Without Being Able to Do Anything Party,” @Cuteboyth tweeted.

“The Black Panther Party. Every time you say the name, the whole system is shaken up,” @Nidnight2000 tweeted.

Others were unimpressed with the enthusiasm shown by the young Twitter demographic for a politician.

The word for party, pak, is also a homonym for words that mean “these days” or “rest.”

“Give the junta a rest,” @Sps_sc tweeted.

“The watch is quiet these days,” @Yut_steelcity tweeted in reference to a scandal involving deputy junta leader Prawit Wongsuwan and dozens of undeclared luxury watches.

“We don’t talk much these days,” @Sickpsych_ tweeted, in an apparent romantic mood.

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Are We Funny Yet? 8 Bangkok Comics to Battle For Laughs

Photo: Mad About Comedy Bangkok / Facebook

BANGKOK — The third floor of a Nana area fish and chips restaurant will be given over to a scrum of ambitious burns, dirty jokes, attempted humor and hopefully some clever comebacks.

The time has come for the final round of The Magners Comedy Competition which will choose a winner from eight English-language stand-up comedians in Bangkok.

Finalists Steve Joslin, Juston St-Denis, Pule Mapacpac, Christy Inhulsen, Chris Raufeisen, Tamby Chan, Meg Anderson and Jackson Foshay will battle it out to decide who moves on to the regional finals in Vietnam.

Tickets purchased online are 250 baht and 400 baht at the door. All tickets include a bottle of cider. Happy-hour special drinks run all night.

The event starts at 8pm on March 15 at Snapper New Zealand on Soi Sukhumvit 8. It can be reached from BTS Nana.

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Srivara Won’t Be Replaced in Black Panther Case

Police Gen. Srivara Ransibrahmanaku bows in a deep 'wai' to Premchai Karnasuta on Friday.
Police Gen. Srivara Ransibrahmanaku bows in a deep 'wai' to Premchai Karnasuta on Friday.

BANGKOK — The junta No. 2 on Thursday rejected calls from online critics to have the top investigator in a high-profile poaching case replaced.

While the public has turned to social media to accuse Srivara Ransibrahmanakul of showing leniency toward the executive of a major development firm charged with killing a black panther in a protected forest, a deputy junta chairman described the police general as reliable and “straightforward.”

“Srivara works well. He has been working well in the past, and he’s a straightforward person,” Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan said. “Right now there’s no replacement plan.”

Premchai Karnasuta, president of Italian-Thai Development, is charged with 12 offenses for reportedly poaching wildlife in a protected forest on Feb. 5 and owning lands that encroach into a national park. In recent days police also charged him with possessing illegal firearms and imported ivory.

The killing sparked widespread anger, not only for the slain animal but also because police appeared to follow a timeworn pattern of slow-walking the case against Premchai as they have in other investigations of the wealthy and the powerful.

Their fury was mostly directed at Srivara, who on Friday was seen bowing deeply to wai Premchai in an overtly humble manner.

Srivara, who holds the rank of deputy police commissioner, also placed the ranger that arrested Premchai on Feb. 5 under investigation for possible malfeasance and ordered a low-ranking policeman be punished for filing a charge of animal cruelty against the billionaire.

By Thursday, “#WeDontWantSrivara” was among the top-trending hashtags on social media.

“Since the existing evidence can’t do anything, just replace him,” wrote one thread using the hashtag, which has been shared more than 46,000 times as of publication time. “It might be at the point where we must call for Srivara to be taken off the black panther case.”

On the same day, transparency activist Srisuwan Janya filed a petition calling for Srivara to be placed under disciplinary investigation for punishing the junior investigator.

But instead of calling for Srivara to be replaced, Srisuwan said he preferred to see the Department of Special Investigation take the lead in the subsequent investigation.

“I don’t want Srivara replaced. I want the team responsible for the case to be replaced, from police to DSI,” Srisuwan said in an interview, citing the complexity involved in pursuing the case. “I think they need the resources that DSI has.”

Premchai remains free on bail. He’s due to report to police for additional charges of ivory possession by March 14.

At a news conference today, Srivara said Premchai’s lawyer can postpone the meeting if he has reasonable cause. He also said he doesn’t know where Premchai is. When a reporter asked what police would do if Premchai leaves the country, Srivara replied: nothing.

“When he goes to places, he doesn’t tell me. I only told the Immigration Police to alert me if he goes abroad, but he’s not obliged to report to me,” Srivara told reporters. “Only the court has the authority to detain someone, not investigators.”

He added, “I cannot violate his rights, and the media cannot violate his rights either.”

Related stories:

Rangers: Premchai Ate the Leopard in a Soup

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Trans Lecturer Wins Thammasat Discrimination Suit

Photo: Kath Khangpiboon / Facebook

Update March 19: A Thammasat legal representative said the university will not appeal the ruling.

BANGKOK — International Women’s Day saw a former transgender lecturer prevail in her discrimination suit against the nation’s second oldest university.

The Administrative Court on Thursday ruled in favor of Kath Khangpiboon, co-founder of the Thai Transgender Alliance, after judges ruled that Thammasat University’s decision to fire her after several months constituted discrimination.

Ending a three-year case, the court ruled that the university must register Kath as a lecturer within 60 days. 

“I’m really happy today. What the court ruled is what I’ve been waiting to hear for three years,” Kath said after the verdict. “I hope that my case will inspire many LGBT people who are discriminated against in the workplace to speak up and demand justice.”

Kath was hired as a lecturer at the school’s Lampang province campus in mid-2014. Soon after she started teaching, the university cited a penis-shaped tube of lipstick she posted on Instagram as its cause to fire her in March 2015 for “behaving improperly and using inappropriate language on social media.”

Kath, 31, accused the university of discriminating against her gender identity and filed suit.

Kath, a prominent LGBT activist in Thailand and Southeast Asia, had previously completed undergraduate and graduate degrees in Social Administration at the university.

Related stories:
Thammasat Cites Risqué Lipstick for Rejecting Transgender Prof

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NLA Approves Election Laws For Senate and House

Then-army chief Prayuth Chan-ocha casts a ballot in the 2011 general election.

BANGKOK — A ban on campaign entertainment was reaffirmed and guarantees put in place for voters with disabilities Thursday in two bills approved by junta-appointed legislators.

Separate bills dictating how members will be elected to both houses were overwhelming endorsed by the National Legislative Assembly, with the former receiving 211 votes and seven abstentions. The law pertaining to the senate received 202 ayes and 1 nay with 13 abstaining.

The laws are essential to holding elections the junta most recently pushed back to February 2019 at the earliest.

Key points included rejecting a call to allow entertainment during election campaigns and ensuring that all senators will be selected for the first five-year term not by the public but from a pool of candidates nominated from certain groups and professions.

The law also mandates that anyone who fails to vote in an election without reasonable explanation shall be disqualified from holding national or local political office. Voters physically unable to cast a ballot can legally and confidentially appoint someone to do so on their behalf, under the law.

Those found providing entertainment as part of their campaign effort will face imprisonment for one to 10 years and a fine of 20,000 baht to 200,000 baht.

The law also extends voting hours to 5pm from 3pm. Polls will open at 8am.

The bill pertaining to the upper house specifies that, for the first four-year terms, candidates can be nominated by registered associations in 10 areas representing certain professions and groups such as people with disabilities, women, the elderly, farmers and real estate. Additionally, the organizations must be nonprofits legally registered for no less than three years.

The leader of the ruling junta will pick who serves on the senate for five years, clearing the way for them to serve two four-year terms in the upper house.

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