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Bombing at Market in Yala Kills 3, Injures 18

A scene of devastation at a market in Yala following Monday's bomb attack which kills three people

YALA — Police say three people have been killed and 18 injured by a bomb that exploded in a market in southern Thailand.

Police Lt. Eakapong Rattanachai said an attacker parked a motorcycle rigged with explosives near the market and bought goods there to blend in with the crowd Monday morning in Yala province.

Eakapong said the motorcycle bomb exploded when the attacker left the market area, killing three and injuring 18.

Yala is one of Thailand’s three southernmost provinces where Muslim militants have waged a yearslong insurgency.

The three provinces are the only ones with Muslim majorities in the predominantly Buddhist country.

More than 6,500 people have been killed in the violence since 2004.

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Greeks Rally Over Name Dispute With Neighbor Macedonia

Greek protesters wave flags and banners Sunday during a rally against the use of the term "Macedonia" for the northern neighbouring country's name, at the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki. Photo: Giannis Papanikos / Associated Press

THESSALONIKI, Greece — Tens of thousands of flag-waving Greeks gathered in the northern city of Thessaloniki on Sunday to demand that Macedonia change its name because it’s also the name of the Greek province of which Thessaloniki is the capital.

Greece and the Republic of Macedonia, which share a border, have been locked in the name dispute since Macedonia declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. Greeks feel deeply the use of the name Macedonia is a usurpation of their heritage and implies territorial claims on their province.

Macedonia is represented in international organizations as The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and is seated in the United Nations under the letter T, right after Thailand. Greece successfully vetoed Macedonia’s application to join NATO in 2008.

Sunday’s rally was staged in front of a statue of Alexander the Great, the most famous ruler of the ancient Greek Kingdom of Macedonia. No public official was among the five keynote speakers. The best-known speaker was Fragoulis Frangos, a retired general and former chief of the Greek Army Staff, who is said to harbor political ambitions.

Several local lawmakers attended, as did the local bishop, Metropolitan Anthimos of Thessalonica, whom many people consider the real leader of the nationalist hardliners opposing an accommodation between the countries.

Anthimos, in speaking about the citizens of Macedonia, used the term Skopje, the name of its capital, which is how most Greeks refer to them.

“Demonstrate, my brothers for Macedonia … Skopje will never be accepted with the name Macedonia by the people’s conscience,” Anthimos thundered from the pulpit during his sermon. “If we only shut (access) to the port (of Thessaloniki), they’re dead the following week.”

The rally didn’t reach the magnitude of one in 1992, when the name issue first flared up. It was prompted by recent efforts on both sides of the border to find an acceptable compromise. The defeat last year of Macedonia’s nationalist conservatives by the social democrats has improved the climate, and Macedonian prime minister Zoran Zaev accepted the invitation by Thessaloniki mayor Yannis Boutaris, an outspoken anti-nationalist, to spend New Year’s in the city.

But those who took part in the rally would have none of it.

“Today, the message is aimed primarily at Greek politicians,” said Giorgos Tatsios, president of the Greek Federation of Macedonian Cultural Associations. “Those who use the name of Macedonia and give it away with no scruples. We call on the government and, especially, the foreign ministry and (foreign minister Nikos) Kotzias to become the hero of Greek Macedonians and not hand over the name. If he does, he should know he is a traitor to the nation.”

Naturally, there were dissenters, but they didn’t show up, except for a few hundred anarchists, who had their own banner: “Against nationalism; the whole earth is our homeland.” Some of them clashed with passers-by, prompting police to intervene.

People presumed to be right-wing extremists set fire to a building occupied by some of the anarchist counter-demonstrators in the center of the city. The building suffered extensive damage, but none of its occupants was present when masked men set fire to it.

Leftist prime minister Alexis Tsipras has said, most recently in an interview published Sunday in newspaper Ethnos, that he wouldn’t mind a composite name that includes the word Macedonia. But his coalition partner, defense minister Panos Kammenos, leader of the Independent Greeks party, has taken a hardline stance, saying he wouldn’t accept the inclusion of the name Macedonia, suggesting the neighboring country call itself Vardarska.

Story: Costas Kantouris, Demetris Nellas

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Koh Yoong Coral Recovers 2 Years After Tourists Ban

Photo: Thon Thamrongnawasawat / Facebook

KRABI — A marine expert on Wednesday said coral reefs on Krabi province’s Yoong island saw a recovery, two years after the island was declared off limits to tourists.

Thon Thamrongnawasawat, a marine expert and conservationist posted Wednesday his Facebook that he is satisfied with the recovery of coral reefs on Koh Yoong, a small island near Ao Nang bay, two years after authorities closed it off to tourists.

The recovery has led Thon to ask the government declare more islands off limits for a period of time to allow for a recovery.

“While coral reefs elsewhere are crying, here they’re smiling,” wrote Thon, who visited the areas every two to three months for the past two years. He added that he wants to see 15 more islands being protected from tourists and every marine national park temporarily declare some areas off limits to allow for regeneration.

Thon posted photos and said that corals, such as colony corals are regenerating satisfactorily.

Vorapot Lomlim, head of Hat Noppharat Thara and Mu Koh Phi Phi National Park, said the adverse impact on the coral reefs in the areas was caused by not just tourists but a rise in sea temperatures.

Koh Yoong is a small island not far from Koh Phi Phi and is known for its shallow and crystal clear waters and deep-water coral reefs.

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Bidding for Lucky License Plates Fetches 7 Million Baht

Girls on Sunday display license plates held for auction in Sisaket province.

SISAKET — Authorities on Saturday raised millions of baht on the first day of bidding at an ongoing auction for auspicious vehicle license plate numbers and initials.

More than 7 million baht were raised Saturday as the trend for car owners to purchase license plates they consider auspicious continued in Sisaket province at a two-day auction held by the transport department.

The bidding at the province – regarded among the poorest in Thailand – produced a handsome reward as it entered its second day, with the most expensive license plate – “Kor Tor 9999” – fetching 850,000 baht. This is the fifth year the auction has taken place.

The number nine is considered auspicious in Thai because it’s pronounced “kao,” which can also mean to step forward. The letter “kor” was interpreted as representing “honor” in Thai, while “tor” was interpreted as representing advancement.

The transport department said part of the money raised would go to philanthropic causes, adding that over the past two years, 69 disabled people received assistance through tools bought with money raised in previous auctions worth a total of 3.2 million baht. Additionally, it said 12 million baht went to fund road safety campaigns in the province.

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Voranai: Farangs, Mind Your Own Business!

Chulalongkorn University professor Ruengwit Bunjongrat holds fourth-year student Supalak Damrongjit in a headlock on Aug. 4, 2017, at a university initiation ceremony held on campus. Photo: Netiwit Chotiphatchaisal

Voranai Vanijaka

A lot of people argue that the Thais are not ready or not equipped for democracy. There may be a grain of truth in this statement. However, I would retort that I learned how to swim by my father first throwing me into the pool.

Life is a trial by errors, learning is doing, no risks no returns, nothing ventured nothing gained – there are plenty of sayings that serve to remind us to not live a life full of excuses. Like the great philosopher Nike of Beaverton proclaimed so many years ago, “Just do it.” Nonetheless, there is still something to the first statement of this column. Let’s examine it.

On Aug. 4, 2017, pandemonium ensued during the freshmen induction ceremony at Chulalongkorn University where students were expected to prostrate on the ground. Led by the former student president Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal, a group of students refused to participate. The incident led to one professor putting a student into a headlock in trying to prevent him from leaving the ceremony. On social media, netizens expressed their furor over the students’ action. These students received academic penalties.

Fast-forward to this past week, 25 Western scholars and scientists, including seven Nobel laureates, issued a letter to Chulalongkorn. In the letter, they offered understanding on the importance of the Thai culture but also urged the university to recognize the importance of free speech and an educational institution’s obligation to foster an atmosphere of openness. If any content in the letter could be construed as negative, it may have been use of the term “embarrassment,” in the context that the entire incident was embarrassing for the university.

Read comments left about the related news article on Khaosod English’s Facebook and find social media reactions that explain the thinking of its largely Western or westernized readers. On Khaosod Thai’s Facebook, the social media comments illustrate a completely different mindset. While it may be true that public sentiments are shifting politically, that’s because we are tired of the junta leaders and want to move on with elections and democracy. But that’s about the junta-government. When it comes to culture and tradition, public sentiments have yet to shift from deep-seated conservatism.

One public reaction is the usual cliche we know so well: Farangs should mind their own business; farangs should not comment on Thailand; and of course, farangs can never understand Thailand. Another is in the realm of tragic comedy: Western schools have so much freedom that students are free to shoot them up on a regular basis.

But the attitude relevant to this article is this: Most comments are fine with freedom, and no one espouses hatred of freedom. But, these comments point, freedom must be confined by culture and restrained by tradition. Freedom must be restricted within the boundaries of socially accepted behavior, or the term we Thais like to use: appropriateness.

Who we are today is the consequence of our past. I’ve written many times on how the historical evolutions of Western vs. Thai society have produced different cultural mindsets. Freedom, culture and tradition are important everywhere. However, where a typical Westerner might put freedom as No. 1 on his list of social ideals, a typical Thai may put tradition on top. As such, in Thailand, whenever conflict arises between liberty / human rights vs. culture / tradition, in general the betting odds are on the latter.

This norm does not just dominate our history, it is also what we are taught in schools. From an early age, we are taught to subjugate ourselves to the authority of our elders, prostrate before tradition and bow to social norms. Therefore, it is simply the logical consequence that when young students refuse to prostate or when foreigners critique, we have reactionary impulses. We are fiercely protective of the things we have been taught to love and obey since we were young.

Now, if a society does not value rights, liberty and freedom above all things, then naturally democracy will struggle. The solution to this quandary is something people have talked about for decades, but nothing has ever been done: education. It’s a cycle difficult to get out of. Cultural mindsets are taught and nurtured, but how are we to foster the minds of the young to be different, when the teachers themselves adhere to old traditions, without exception?

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DJ Dragon Interviews Solar Soul Star Pyra

Photo: Courtesy

mongkorn.bug .2017

Peeralada Sukawat, or Pyra, has come a long way since her humble beginnings lending her voice in collabs with the likes of electro-funkmaster Gramaphone Children and Thai rap duo Jayrun & Akarin.

This month, 25-year-old Pyra takes the spotlight by dropping her latest single “White Lotus,” but not before I had a chance to interview her about her career.

She calls her latest work “Solar Soul.” Soundwise, it takes her music deeper into neo-soul territory, while lyrically she explores Taoist and Buddhist themes. Visually she ditches the cute girl image for sak yant hand tattoos and an Indian nose ring.

For the track, Pyra’s sensual vocals are laced over ambient soundscapes, while melancholic melodies and a deep af bassline rattles subwoofers under lyrics like:

“Caught up by delusion of a,
Self-created illusion,
That In the depths of this water,
You can’t breathe? Are you sure?”

The track was produced by Kitsch Kat label mates Gramaphone Children and producer Cyndi Seui.

The Bangkok-raised Pyra credits her strict Asian parents for pushing her academically as well as getting her started in extra-curricular, after-school music programs. This, she said, inspired her to write music.

At 9, she recorded her first collaboration with pop superstar Thongchai “Bird” Mcintyre and by 16 was learning music production.

Her first solo track, “Stray,” was released to critical acclaim in 2016, making its way to the No. 1 spot on Thailand’s Apple Music Hot Charts.

I had a chat with Pyra and talked to her about her new single “White Lotus” and the creative process of working with artists like Gramaphone Children and Cyndi Seui. Here’s our lightly edited exchange.

Mongkorn Timkul: Soundwise, White Lotus sounds a lot edgier than your past releases. Was this the kind of vibe you’ve always wanted to do?

Peeralada Sukawat: I’m quite dark and introverted as a person. If I was a color, I would be dark purple with a hint of red tint. If you trace back to my first single, it’s actually darker than “White Lotus.” That one is called “Stay” featuring Twopee Southside. Back then I was quite afraid to release such a deep and dark tune because I don’t think the crowd will comprehend it, but somehow I did after a year of finishing it.

MT: “White Lotus” is written in English. Do you feel more comfortable expressing yourself in English or Thai? You mentioned the track has a lot of Buddhist and Taoist references. What does the White Lotus represent? Something which came from mud can turn into something beautiful?
PS: I feel that I’m twice as comfortable at expressing myself in English. After all, I’ve grown up in an international school since first grade.

On the representation, Buddha compared humans to lotuses in 4 positions – the under-the-mud lotus, under-the-water lotus, boom lotus and the bloom lotus. And yes, as you mentioned, something from the mud can turn into something beautiful and vice-versa. The philosophy and teaching of Buddhism / Taoism is so beautiful and important, but these are the areas that people hardly mention today. The core principles of these religions are one of the best life guides you can find out there but what’s being practiced and told everyday is the business side of things, which I find very unpleasant.

MT: What will the rest of the album be like?

PS: The pillar for Pyra’s musical work will always be neo-soulful vocals built with a distinctive melodic style. If asked what’s my genre, I’ll say “Solar Soul.” We “solar artists” make music with a greater purpose to tackle social impact issues, to disrupt the ugly system and to leave the world a better place before we perish. I believe that’s the duty of someone with the ability to influence the masses. We should be able to contribute positively to the society. We give, we take. The secret is actually that the more you give, the more people will be willing to give back to you. So let’s all start by creating values to those around you.

MT: You’ve collaborated with many great producers and musicians. What was it like working with Jaree [Gramaphone Children] and Cyndi Seui for this release?

PS: I’d seen so much of their work in such different genres and styles, and deep in my mind I knew I wanted them to produce for me, but I didn’t really say it. Somehow I found my way into talking with the country manager of Believe Digital Group, my music distribution company, to convince Gramaphone Children for me.

I usually finish most of the tracks by myself alone at home in my bedroom studio then show it to the team and they work the magic to take my vision to the next level. They pick better sounds, design all these amazing soundscapes and advise me on my vocal design. For some other tracks, they throw and bounce me a guitar stem and let me create everything else around that.

MT: This is by far my favorite release from you. Artistically, do you think you’ve reached the point where you want to be, or can your fans expect a whole lot more in the future?

PS: I’d say song and image-wise, I’m very satisfied. It’s very close to what I’m aiming for. But I’m a big dreamer. I will always set higher goals for myself and my creations. I don’t know yet what I’m gonna create for my fourth EP, but I do have a slight idea for my third. But expect growth and maturity over time.

White Lotus drops on Jan. 26 and will be available on the Apple Store.

More information can be found on her website.

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Head of Popular Girl Band ‘Moranbong’ Enters S. Korea

North Korean Hyon Song Wol, head of North Korea's art troupe, arrives at the Seoul Train Station in Seoul. Photo: Han Jong-chan / Yonhap
North Korean Hyon Song Wol, head of North Korea's art troupe, arrives at the Seoul Train Station in Seoul. Photo: Han Jong-chan / Yonhap

SEOUL — The head of a hugely popular North Korean girl band crossed the heavily fortified border into South Korea on Sunday to check preparations for an art troupe she also leads during next month’s Winter Olympics.

Appearing live on South Korean television, Hyon Song Wol didn’t speak when she walked past a crowd of reporters, onlookers and a barrage of camera flashes before boarding an express train at Seoul’s railway station for the eastern city of Gangneung, where her art troupe is to perform during the Pyeongchang Olympics.

She is also the leader of Pyongyang’s all-female Moranbong Band, which was hand-picked by leader Kim Jong Un. She’s been the subject of intense South Korean media attention since she attended last week’s talks at the border that struck an agreement on the art troupe’s two performances — one in Seoul and the other in Gangneung, where some of the games will take place.

TV stations broadcast live footage of Hyon’s bus moving on Seoul’s roads before arriving at the railway station, where hundreds of police officers were mobilized to maintain order.

Photos showed a smiling Hyon shaking heads with a South Korean official upon arrival at the border. Later Sunday, wearing a fur scarf and with half her hair tied to the back, she looked more serious with an expressionless face.

Hyon’s arrival came hours after the International Olympic Committee allowed 22 North Korean athletes to take part in the Olympics in exceptional entries given to the North. Among the 22 are 12 women who will join South Korea’s female hockey team in the Koreas’ first-ever unified Olympic team. The other sports events the North Koreans will compete in are figure skating, short track speed skating, Alpine skiing and cross-country skiing.

The 22 North Korean athletes will also march together with South Korean players under a single “unification flag” depicting their peninsula during the opening ceremony in Pyeongchang. “Such an agreement would have seemed impossible only a few weeks ago,” IOC chief Thomas Bach said in Lausanne, Switzerland.

The current mood of reconciliation between the Koreas flared after Kim abruptly expressed his willingness to improve ties and send a delegation to the Olympics during his annual New Year’s address. Outside critics dismissed Kim’s overture as a tactic to use improved ties with Seoul to weaken U.S.-led international sanctions over North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests.

Hyon is travelling with six other North Koreans. Her delegation was earlier supposed to come to South Korea on Saturday, but North Korea canceled that plans on Friday night before it proposed coming on Sunday for a two-day trip.

Story: Hyung Jin-Kim

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Myanmar Soldiers Jailed for Killing Civilians in Rare Case

In this Sunday, Dec. 3, 2017, file photo, the moon rises behind the Uppatasanti Pagoda seen in Naypyitaw, Myanmar. The Dec. 3 full moon is the first of three consecutive supermoons. The two will occur on Jan. 1 and Jan. 31, 2018. Photo: Aung Shine Oo / AP

BANGKOK — A Myanmar military tribunal has sentenced six soldiers to 10 years in prison with hard labor for killing three civilians in war-torn Kachin state, officials said Saturday, in a move welcomed by rights groups.

The Kachin state police office said the tribunal handed down the sentence Friday after finding the soldiers guilty of killing three ethnic Kachin civilians in September. The prosecution came after an internal investigation by the military.

Min Zaw, a Kachin state police officer, said that during the hearing the six confessed that they were responsible for the killings.

Kachin state is home to an ethnic rebel army that has been fighting the Myanmar military for more than seven years. More than 100,000 people have fled the fighting and live in refugee camps.

Calls to the military information office rang unanswered Saturday.

The three civilians were among a group of five detained by soldiers last May while they were heading back to their refugee camp after gathering firewood near Hka Pra Yang village. Two of the men were released and returned to the camp, while the bodies of the other three were found in a shallow grave three days later.

Rights groups said the prosecution of the six soldiers was rare and the first step down a long road to ending military impunity. Still they raised concerns about the trial being held behind closed doors.

“There’s a good reason for the military to keep these trials behind closed doors. It makes it a lot easier to cover up widespread and systematic abuses,” said David Baulk, Myanmar human rights specialist for Fortify Rights.

Myanmar’s military has been accused of violating human rights with impunity for decades, including in its conflicts with rebel groups.

Most recently it has been accused of abuses during what it calls “clearance operations” against ethnic Rohingya Muslims in Rakhine state. More than 650,000 Rohingya have left Myanmar for Bangladesh, fleeing what the United Nations calls ethnic cleansing.

Myanmar’s military last week made a rare public admission of killing 10 Rohingya Muslims whose bodies were found in a mass grave in a village in northern Rakhine.

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US Marches for Women’s Rights Slam Trump, Encourage Voting

Actress Natalie Portman, at right, speaks as she is joined by Eva Longoria, back left, and Constance Wu at a Women's March against sexual violence and the policies of the Trump administration on Saturday in Los Angeles. Photo: Jae C. Hong / Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Demonstrators from Los Angeles to New York marched in support of female empowerment and denounced President Donald Trump’s views on immigration, abortion, LGBT rights and women’s rights on Saturday, the anniversary of his inauguration.

People marched in Casper, Wyoming, and Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and Houston. In Park City, Utah, where the annual Sundance Film Festival is in full swing, actress Jane Fonda and nationally known attorney Gloria Allred joined the women’s march.

In Morristown, New Jersey, that state’s new first lady told a crowd she was a victim of sexual violence while attending college.

Tammy Murphy, the wife of Democrat Phil Murphy, said the attack occurred while she was a sophomore at the University of Virginia. She said she was walking along a path when a man grabbed her and pulled her into some bushes. She said the man tried to take her clothes off and put a crab apple in her mouth to silence her but she bit his hand and fled half-dressed to a nearby fraternity house, where students called police.

In Los Angeles, Eva Longoria, Natalie Portman, Viola Davis, Alfre Woodard, Scarlett Johansson, Constance Wu, Adam Scott and Rob Reiner were among the celebrities who addressed a crowd of hundreds of thousands of demonstrators.

Longoria, who starred in TV’s “Desperate Housewives,” told marchers their presence matters, “especially when those in power seem to have turned their backs on reason and justice.”

Portman, an Academy Award winner, talked about feeling sexualized by the entertainment industry from the time her first film, “Leon: The Professional,” was released when she was 13 and suggested it’s time for “a revolution of desire.” In the 1994 film, Portman played a young girl taken in by a hit man after her family is killed.

Woodard urged everyone to register and vote, saying, “the 2018 midterms start now.” And Davis spoke with the passion of a preacher as she discussed the nation’s history of discrimination and her past as a sexual assault survivor.

The 2017 rally in Washington, D.C., and hundreds of similar marches created solidarity for those opposing Trump’s views, words and actions. Millions of people around the world marched during last year’s rallies, and many on Saturday talked about the news avalanche of politics and gender issues in the past year.

Critics of the weekend’s marches said the demonstrations were really a protest against Trump. More rallies were planned at other cities on Sunday.

Meanwhile, Trump on Saturday tweeted that it was a “perfect day” for women to march to celebrate the “economic success and wealth creation” that’s happened during his first year in office.

“Get out there now to celebrate the historic milestones and unprecedented economic success and wealth creation that has taken place over the last 12 months,” the Republican wrote. “Lowest female unemployment in 18 years!”

Trump’s main opponent in the 2016 presidential election, Democratic former U.S. first lady Hillary Clinton, said the Women’s March last year was “a beacon of hope and defiance.”

“In 2018, it is a testament to the power and resilience of women everywhere,” she tweeted, urging people to show that power at the voting booth this year.

Demonstrators on Saturday denounced Trump’s views with colorful signs and even saltier language.

Oklahoma City protesters chanted “We need a leader, not a creepy tweeter!” One woman donned a T-shirt with the likeness of social justice icon Woody Guthrie, who wrote “This Land Is Your Land.”

Members of the group Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women of Seattle burned sage and chanted in front of Seattle’s rainy march.

In Richmond, Virginia, the crowd burst into cheers when a woman ran down the middle of the street carrying a pink flag with the word “Resist.”

The march in Washington, D.C., on Saturday took on the feel of a political rally when U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, both Democrats, urged women to run for office and vote to oppose Trump and the Republicans’ agenda.

“We march, we run, we vote, we win,” Pelosi said, to applause.

People gathered from Montpelier to Milwaukee, from Shreveport to Seneca Falls.

“I think right now with the #MeToo movement, it’s even more important to stand for our rights,” said Karen Tordivo, who marched in Cleveland with her husband and 6-year-old daughter.

In Palm Beach, Florida, home to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, several hundred people gathered carrying anti-Trump signs before marching. A group of women wearing red cloaks and white hats like the characters in the book and TV show “The Handmaid’s Tale” marched in formation, their heads bowed.

Cathy Muldoon, a high school librarian from Dallas, Pennsylvania, took her two teenage daughters to the New York rally and said marching gives people hope. She said this year’s action is set against the backdrop of the Trump presidency, which “turned out to be as scary as we thought it would be.”

“I’ve not seen any checks and balances,” she said. “Everything is moving toward the right, and we have a president who seems to have no decency.”

Earlier Saturday, dozens of activists gathered in Rome to denounce violence against women and express support for the #MeToo movement. They were joined by Italian actress and director Asia Argento, who made headlines after alleging in 2017 she had been sexually assaulted by Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein in the 1990s.

Argento addressed the criticism she received once she spoke up about her abuse.

“Women are scared to speak, and because I was vilified by everything I said, I was called a prostitute for being raped,” she said at the rally.

Argento, who’s 42, was strongly criticized by many Italian media and Italian women for not speaking out earlier and was hounded on Twitter with accusations that she sought trouble.

Weinstein has apologized for causing “a lot of pain” with “the way I’ve behaved with colleagues in the past,” but he has denied “any allegations of non-consensual sex.”

Story: Sandy Cohen, Verena Dobnic, Tamara Lush

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Police Arrest Suspected Kingpin of Wildlife Trafficking

Thai customs officials display seized ivory in 2016 during a press conference in Bangkok. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Police have arrested a suspected kingpin of wildlife trafficking who allegedly fueled much of Asia’s illegal trade for over a decade.

Police say Boonchai Bach, a 40-year-old Thai man of Vietnamese descent, was arrested Friday in a northeastern border province in connection with the smuggling of 14 rhino horns worth more than USD$1 million from Africa into Thailand last month in a case that also implicated a Thai official and Chinese national.

He denies the charges against him.

Boonchai allegedly ran a large trafficking network on the Thai-Laos border that spread into Vietnam. According to the anti-trafficking group Freeland, he and his family played a key role in a syndicate that smuggled poached items including ivory, rhino horn, pangolins, tigers, lions and other rare and endangered species.

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