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Blind Woman to Serve 1.5 Years in Prison for Defaming Monarchy

Campaigners demanding abolition of lese majeste law protest outside a court on Sept. 19, 2012. Image: Prachatai

YALA — A provincial court on Thursday sentenced a blind woman to one and a half years in prison for posting content which it found violated royal defamation laws.

Murhyatee Masoh, 23, an unemployed Thai-Malay Muslim from Yala province, was found guilty of violating Article 112 of the constitution in two separate Facebook posts in October 2016 through a voice-assisted application which reads text out loud. The woman, under arrest since November 2016, pleaded guilty.

“The court said they are sympathetic to her [because she’s blind] but said the law is the law,” assistant lawyer Kaosar Aleemama said Thursday afternoon by phone. She added that it was unclear as to who was the author of the defamatory content which Murhyatee lifted and subsequently posted.

The lawyer also said it was unclear as of press time whether Murhyatee would file an appeal. Violation of the lese majeste law carries a prison term of up to 15 years per offense.

Note: Some details have been omitted from this story due to fear of prosecution under the lese majeste law.

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Prawit Graces 2018 Calendars With Mysterious Bling Watches

Image: Piyarat Chongthep / Facebook

BANGKOK — Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha may be the junta leader, but as of Thursday, his deputy Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan may have surpassed his popularity – or infamy – in terms of appearing on calendars.

Prawit is being featured in at least three different 2018 calendars – three more than Prayuth – wearing a flurry of controversial and undeclared luxury watches which caused public outrage late last year when amateur watchdog CSI LA brought the matter to light.

Needless to say the calendars weren’t meant to flatter him.

Anti-junta activist Piyarat Chongthep said this was the best way to remember the 15 mysterious luxury watches on the deputy prime minister’s wrist. Exploiting the trend, he said he decided to place an order at a local printing house for 500 copies of 2018 calendars featuring Prawit and the various timepieces ranging from a Richard Mille and Patek Philippe to Audemars Piguet and Rolex.

Asked if he will sell them and if so at what price, Piyarat said Thursday on the phone that he would give them away as gifts to those who campaigned to oust the Yingluck Shinawatra administration and government officials.

For government officials, Piyarat said he wanted to give an example of how being government officials, one can be rich at an old age.

The calendar should be readied by next week, he said, adding that he’s also preparing another 500 copies with a different design.

Those unwilling to wait or those who do not fall into Piyarat’s gift group, can download a similar calendar from anonymous Facebook page CSI LA.

“It is currently popular. Those who haven’t got it can download and share it with friends,” the Facebook page wrote Wednesday. January 2018 starts low with a gold-and-steel Rolex Datejust on Gen. Prawit’s wrist, retailing for 413,000 baht.

By June, the online calendar features the infamous Richard Mille that triggered the scandal and retails at more than 3 million baht in Thailand.

While Prawit, as deputy premier, tendered a letter clarifying the provenance of the watches to the National Anti-Corruption Commission at the end of last year, the curiosity and scandal has not subsided as Prawit refuses to explain why these watches – four of which cost more than 3 million baht, were undeclared.

On Thursday afternoon, anti-junta activist Ekachai Hongkangwan was intercepted by security officers on Rajdamoen Avenue on his way to the defense ministry, where he allegedly wanted to present Prawit a cheap wristwatch as a gesture of mocking protest. Ekachai was safely taken back to his home in Bangkok’s Lat Phrao district.

He was not available for comment as of press time.

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Get German at Goethe Institute’s Free Outdoor Film Fest

‘Magical Mystery’

BANGKOK — Whether you’re in the mood for a family black comedy or want to reflect on the German refugee crisis, or catch up on an Oscar-nominated foreign film, the chance is here later this month.

Over two months during Bangkok’s winter chill, a cultural centre will screen ten German-language films outdoors.

Open Air Kino 2018 opens on Jan. 9 with two short film “Offside” (Abseits) and “Absent” followed by “Welcome to Germany” (Willkommen Bei Den Hartmanns), comedy drama that circles around a wealthy family in Munich who offer a home to a Nigerian asylum seeker.

Austrian director Adrian Goiginger pays homage to his mother through his film. “The Best of All Worlds” (Die Beste Aller Welten) showing on Feb. 6 is based on the true story of a drug addicted mother who tries to take care of her 7-year-old son.

Visit the scene of German clubs in the mid ‘90s through “Magical Mystery.” After the Berlin Wall comes down, an artist recovering from a mental breakdown joins his techno DJ friends on a road trip across Germany.

The event closes with 2016 Oscar nominee “Toni Erdmann.” The oddball dramedy is about a father attempting to connect with his estranged daughter by acting as her life coach.

Every film has Thai and English subtitles. The full schedule is available online. Admission is free. The event will take place at 7:30pm every Tuesday from until Feb. 27 at Goethe Institut.

The German culture center is located on Soi Sathorn 1. It can be reached by motorcycle taxi or a 10-minute walk from MRT Lumphini’s exit No. 2.

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Roads Claim Fewer Lives During Holidays

A car accident on Dec. 31 in Suphan Buri province.

BANGKOK — There was an overall drop in traffic death rates over the long holiday season this year in comparison to last year, with drunk driving and speeding still the principal causes for accidents on Thailand’s roads.

A total of 423 people died on the roads between Dec. 28 and Wednesday’s “Seven Dangerous Days,” a drop of 11.5 percent in comparison to last year, while accidents decreased by 2 percent, the Road Safety Directing Center said Thursday.

The center reported 4,005 injuries in 3,841 accidents, the greatest number of which – 139 – occurred in Udon Thani province, while the most deaths due to road sinisters were registered in Nakhon Ratchasima at 17 people.

Figures for 2018 dipped in comparison to last year – which was marked the highest year-end death toll in 10 years – but drunk driving and speeding remained the top causes for traffic accidents at 43.66 percent and 25.23 percent, respectively.

The “Seven Dangerous Days” mark the New Year holidays, when many people travel across the country, from Bangkok to their hometowns, road congestion is higher and drivers often take to the wheel under the influence.

Thailand is infamous for having the second highest road fatality rate in the world, behind only war-torn Libya, according to the World Health Organization, which it says costs the kingdom 3 to 5 percent of its GDP.

The “Seven Dangerous Days” in 2017 recorded 478 deaths and 4,128 injuries in 3,919 road accidents.

Related stories:

Road Deaths to Persist After Deadliest Holidays in Decade

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Critics See Prayuth’s Military Dissociation as Campaign Strategy

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha says ‘I love you’ in sign language last August at the Thailand Labour Management Excellence Awards event in Nonthaburi province.

BANGKOK — Critics on social media weighed in Thursday on a declaration by junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha claiming he was now a politician and no longer a soldier.

Interpretations to Prayuth’s comment on Wednesday fuelled increasing speculation on his alleged ambition to become an elected prime minister after general elections slated for November. Some believed it was an attempt to deflect criticism against the military junta while others praised him for being honest and willing to admit his status.

“I think it’s a first clear signal that Prayuth is willing to pick up the baton [post elections],” said pro-democracy activist Piyarat Chonthep, adding that this falls in line with attempts by some junta-supporters to set up a pro-military government. “It’s became clear when [Prayuth] said himself [that he’s now a politician]. In the end, Thai soldiers have always been politicians. They are politicians who manage the state from a state within a state.”

Another, pro-democracy activist Baramee Chaiyarat, concurred. He posted on Facebook Thursday that the declaration “shows [Prayuth’s] desire to continue in power.”

On the phone Thursday, Rangsiman Rome, a key member of Democracy Restoration Group made a similar interpretation.

“It reinforced our hypothesis that the junta wants to stay in power [after elections],” he said. Adding however that those who expect the junta to merely step in after the coup and clear up “bad” politicians would now likely be disappointed by Prayuth’s announcement that he’s a politician himself.

Not all reactions were negative. On Thursday, former foreign minister and senior Pheu Thai Party member Noppadon Pattama praised Prayuth, saying it was good that he accepted the reality that he’s now a politician. Noppadon said the Pheu Thai had always insisted that Prayuth is a politician and that it was good that he no longer resisted this reality.

A reality contested however, by pro-democracy activist Nuttaa Mahattana, who saw it as Prayuth’s attempt to misrepresent himself given that he still holds absolute power under Article 44 of the constitution.

“Mr. Prayuth should not misunderstand. Politicians are chosen and can be scrutinized by the people. If you use guns to seize power and cannot be scrutinized then it’s call #cheaters,” she wrote on Facebook Thursday.

Political analyst Chamnan Chanruang saw the move as more of a deflection tactic. Chamnan said Prayuth changed his tune, after repeatedly saying since the 2014 coup that he’s not a politician to deflect the growing pressure and criticism on the military.

The new fault line, said Chamnan Chanruang, is now said to be either pro or anti-military.

“But in principle, they are politicians,” he said, adding that some factions within the military may no longer see eye to eye with the military junta, formally known as the National Council for Peace and Order.

This coincided with what Thammasat University law lecturer Parinya Thewanaruemitkul said earlier this week, in that the new political fault line was no longer red versus yellow shirts, or Pheu Thai versus Democrat Party, but whether one is against or in favor of the military junta.

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Dusit Thani Bangkok Postpones Closure Until January 2019

Photo : Dusit Thani Bangkok Hotel

BANGKOK — An iconic five-star hotel in Bangkok postponed its date of closure until next January.

The Dusit Thani Bangkok will remain open until 2pm of Jan. 5, 2019, said hotel developers Dusit Thani Group. The hotel was formerly scheduled to operate through April 16 before being demolished in July.

The group said the postponed closing date will allow people more time to visit the hotel and for developers to plan the replacement project: a mixed-use complex consisting of a hotel, residences, office spaces and a shopping mall. The nearly 37-billion baht project is a partnership deal between the hotel group and Central Pattana.

Dusit Thani Bangkok opened in 1970 with 23 storeys, which once made it the tallest building in Thailand until the record was beaten by the 29-floor Chokchai Towers in 1978.

Related stories:

Bangkok’s Dusit Thani Hotel Gets Date With Wrecking Ball

Virtual Thailand: Check in to the Dusit Thani Hotel (VR)

Drawn-Out Goodbyes Made to Vanishing Bangkok

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Fares to Leap for Bangkok-Pattaya Motorway

The Bangkok-Chonburi Motorway.
The Bangkok-Chonburi Motorway.

BANGKOK — Traveling to Pattaya by motorway will be almost twice as expensive starting in April.

New fares for the Motorway 7 Bangkok-Chonburi were approved by the government Thursday, allowing them to nearly double, in order to upgrade the route with advanced technological measures aimed at reducing traffic.

Starting April 19, traveling from one end (Lad Krabang pay toll) to the other (Pattaya pay toll), will cost four-wheel vehicles up to 105 baht. The current toll is up to 60 baht, based on distance traveled.

The same increase also applies to other types of vehicles. Six wheelers have to pay up to 170 baht (currently 100 baht) and conveyances with more than six wheels up to 245 baht (currently 140 baht).

“With the increasing fares, people will not have to worry about safety,” said Nattaporn Jatusripitak, adviser in the Prime Minister’s Office. “The motorway will implement a closed system whereby cars from other tolls won’t interfere with the Chonburi-Pattaya route. The system will have CCTV cameras all the way, ensuring a better travel experience for motorists.”

The closed system will be launched along with the installation of the Intelligent Transportation System, according to the Land Transport Department, to help manage traffic, improve service quality and safety measures among highway motorists. The system will be piloted starting Jan. 5.

The new fares were met with anger by some motorists.

“What the heck. I’m going to work and I have to pay more? In the end it’s the people who have to bear the burden, what about the government? What do they do? Where are the funds?” wrote Tanachte Pornsawad in a Facebook comment.

“The motorway’s road is so rugged like the road up a hill. It’s like somewhere underdeveloped, and you still increase the fare? That’s too nasty,” wrote Facebook user Sorapong Kowongprasert.

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Ethiopia to Release Political Prisoners, Close Camp

Ethiopia's Communication Affairs Minister Getachew Reda speaks to media about the current unrest in the country in 2016 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Photo: Mulugeta Ayene / Association Press

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — In a surprise move, Ethiopia’s leader on Wednesday announced plans to drop charges against political prisoners and close a notorious prison camp in what he called an effort to “widen the democratic space for all.” This is the first time the government has acknowledged holding political prisoners.

Prime Minster Hailemariam Desalegn’s comments came after months of sometimes deadly anti-government protests, the most serious since the current government came to power in 1991. The demonstrations engulfed much of the restive Oromia and Amhara regions and spread into other parts of the East African country, leading to a months-long state of emergency that has since been lifted.

“Political prisoners that are facing prosecutions and are already under arrest will be released,” Hailemariam said. “And the notorious prison cell that was traditionally called Maekelawi will be closed down and turned into a museum.”

It was not immediately clear how many such prisoners were being held across the country, a close U.S. security ally, or when they would be released.

Ethiopians were quick to respond, even with social media sites currently blocked.

“I’m writing you this struggling with my tears,” wrote renowned blogger and former detainee Befeqadu Hailu. “All these pledges need to be implemented immediately.”

Tens of thousands of people were arrested, and reportedly hundreds were killed, during the protests demanding wider freedoms that began in late 2015 and disrupted one of Africa’s fastest growing economies.

As word spread Wednesday, Ethiopia’s government sought to downplay the prime minister’s announcement. A spokesman, Zadig Abraha, told The Associated Press that the country has no political prisoners and that “some members of political parties and other individuals that have been allegedly suspected of committing crimes and those convicted will be pardoned or their cases interrupted, based on an assessment that will be made.”

Rights groups and opposition groups in Ethiopia had been calling for the release of political prisoners, saying they were arrested on trumped-up charges and punished for their points of view. Ethiopia’s government has long been accused of arresting critical journalists and opposition leaders.

“Potentially big news,” Human Rights Watch researcher Felix Horne said on Twitter after the announcement, as some observers waited to see the government’s next move.

“In fact, there’s a clear difference between political prisoners and politicians in prison,” said Amha Mekonnen, a lawyer for well-known jailed politician Bekele Gerba. “But I believe those in detention are political prisoners. They were not arrested for stealing bed sheets but rather for allegedly crossing a red line while carrying out their political works.”

“Today’s announcement could signal the end of an era of bloody repression in Ethiopia,” Amnesty International researcher Fisseha Tekle said in a statement calling for prisoners’ immediate and unconditional release.

While the plans to close the Maekelawi camp are welcome, “the closure must not be used to whitewash the horrifying events that have taken place there,” Fisseha said. “For years, Maekelawi has essentially functioned as a torture chamber, used by the Ethiopian authorities to brutally interrogate anybody who dares to dissent including peaceful protesters, journalists and opposition figures.”

Story: Elias Meseret

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Foreign Fishermen Settle Human Trafficking Suit

A foreign fishing crew checks for damage on the Sea Queen IIA at Fisherman's Wharf in 2015 in San Francisco. Photo: Eric Risberg / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Two Indonesian fishermen who say they were enslaved on an American fishing boat have settled their lawsuit against the vessel’s owner seven years after escaping and receiving special U.S. visas as victims of human trafficking, their lawyers told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The attorneys said Sorihin, who uses just one name, and Abdul Fatah settled their lawsuit for an undisclosed sum against Thoai Van Nguyen, the California-based owner and captain of the Sea Queen II.

Nguyen denied all allegations of abuse but agreed to provide a detailed list of rights to anyone fishing on his boats.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. court in San Francisco, claimed the men were trafficked through the Hawaii longline fishing fleet and forced to work on the boat around Hawaii and off the shores of California.

Citing federal and international human trafficking laws, the suit sought an unspecified amount of money for fees they paid and compensation they were promised along with damages for mental anguish and pain.

The lawsuit was being prepared as a 2016 Associated Press investigation revealed the Hawaii fleet operates under a loophole in federal law that allows owners to use foreign laborers with no work visas or the ability to legally enter the United States.

The workers, mostly from impoverished Southeast Asian and Pacific nations, are required to hand over their passports and confined to boats while working in the U.S., even when docked in Honolulu or San Francisco.

Boat owner Jim Cook of the Hawaii Longline Association said Wednesday the settlement wont impact their fleet, made up of about 700 foreign fishermen on about 140 boats. He said they are separately preparing their own documents detailing rights which they will distribute to workers.

Honolulu attorney Lance Collins said it’s unlikely more lawsuits will follow – even if they wanted to sue, most of the fishermen in Hawaii can’t get a lawyer because they’re not allowed to leave the docks when they come to shore.

“Two poor fishermen from another country who were brave enough, or frightened enough, to run from their boat can’t be expected to enforce regulations for an entire multimillion industry,” said Collins.

A broader solution has been proposed in Washington, where Hawaii’s elected officials are backing legislation that would allow foreign fishermen to come onshore when they’re not fishing.

Hawaii’s foreign fishermen are generally paid a fraction of what other U.S. commercial fishing crews make, some receiving as little as 70 cents an hour while working up to 20 hours a day.

Conditions on the boats vary. While some vessels are clean and relatively safe, the AP found some crews living in squalor with sores from bed bugs. There also have been cases of active tuberculosis and low food supplies.

Ken Bass, Nguyen’s son-in-law who is acting as his attorney, said the dispute between Fatah, Sorihin and Nguyen began with the fishermen getting different contracts from an Indonesian employment firm in 2009.

He said Nguyen never had any direct dealings with the Indonesian firm but used a middleman in Hawaii who knew how to get workers from Indonesia. The contract Nguyen was given from the Hawaii-based recruiter was different than the paperwork given to Fatah and Sorihin, Bass said.

“So, they basically had different contracts but no one at the time knew that, so that’s immediately going to lead to misunderstanding,” Bass said. “If anybody was culpable, it was the broker in Indonesia.”

Lawyers for Fatah and Sorihin say it doesn’t matter if there were differences in the contracts.

“The trafficking claims do not rely on the contract provisions,” said Agnieska Fryszman, one of the attorneys. “The trafficking statute provides basic protections that apply regardless.”

After the men ran away from the Sea Queen, Bass said Nguyen was forced to pay hefty fines for letting the men escape and that U.S. customs agents threatened to suspend his ability to use foreign workers.

Under the settlement, Nguyen must give fliers to his foreign crew members, written in their native languages, outlining their rights and ways to get help. His crews must have at least 77 hours of rest a week, and access to their passports.

“This settlement should be a wakeup call to the commercial fishing industry,” Fryszman said. “There’s simply no excuse for turning a blind eye to human trafficking, and we look forward to continuing our efforts to hold others in the industry accountable.”

Sorihin, who has settled with his family in the San Francisco Bay Area, said in an email that the settlement has given him “a sense of peace.”

“I hope it will bring better treatment to seamen on the Sea Queen and in the fishing industry,” he said.

“I feel more certainty after the settlement,” Fatah said in an email. “I work in retail, and I want to start a new life in San Francisco and create a better future for my family. I hope the captain treats the seamen like what he agreed to.”

Story: Martha Mendoza, Caleb Jones

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Sub-equipped Ship Departs South Africa to Search for MH370

A girk walks past a wall of hope for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 at Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) in Sepang, outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 12 June 2014. Photo: European EPA/AHMAD YUSNI

JOHANNESBURG — A U.S.-based company has dispatched a ship into the Indian Ocean in hopes of quickly resuming the search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 if it soon secures a contract to do the job.

The search vessel named Seabed Constructor left the South African port of Durban on Tuesday as part of the Ocean Infinity company’s plan to look for debris in the southern Indian Ocean. The ship has unmanned submarines that can descend deep into the ocean.

Ocean Infinity was taking advantage of favorable weather to move the vessel toward “the vicinity of the possible search zone,” the company said in a statement.

“This is designed to save time should the contract award be forthcoming, as hoped,” it said. “We will confirm as and when the contract is awarded and the search can resume.”

The Malaysian government is negotiating with Ocean Infinity and will make an announcement next week, Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said on Wednesday.

The Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 disappeared soon into its flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014. The plane was carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew.

The governments of Malaysia, China and Australia called off the 1,046-day official search on Jan. 17 last year. The Australian Transport Safety Bureau’s final report on the search conceded that authorities were no closer to knowing the reasons for the plane’s disappearance, or its exact location.

Australia ran the original search on behalf of Malaysia because the airliner is thought to have crashed in the vast area of Australian search and rescue responsibility.

New Australian Transport Minister Barnaby Joyce told Australian Broadcasting Corp. on Thursday that the decision on whether to resume the search was Malaysia’s.

“I can understand how Malaysians are incredibly driven by finding the wreckage,” said Joyce, who became transport minister two weeks ago.

“I have, to be quite frank, some concerns as to whether it will be found,” he added.

Search conditions are best during the current southern hemisphere summer, before the colder months bring storm-force winds and mountainous seas.

Story: Christopher Torchia

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