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Most Expensive Movie, 1963’s ‘Cleopatra’ to Screen at Bangkok Cinema

“Cleopatra” (1963)

BANGKOK — The most expensive version of the Queen of the Nile is coming to a giant screen of a classic capital cinema house

Known for its colossal budget that almost killed 20th Century Fox, “Cleopatra” (1963) will show in the heart of the city for those who want a proper big-screen cinematic experience. The epic historical drama follows the romance between Cleopatra, her Roman mentor Julius Caesar and general Mark Anthony.

The film is widely regarded as the biggest Hollywood flop of all time for its monstrous overrun of USD$44 million (1.4 billion baht) – about USD$340 million these days – and behind-the-scenes drama during its production, including actor Elizabeth Taylor’s illness and affair with co-star Richard Burton.

All four hours of “Cleopatra” will screen at noon on Jan. 14 at Scala Theatre. Tickets are 100 baht and go on sale at Scala Theatre starting Jan. 1.

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‘Don’t Fear the NCPO,’ Junta Leader Tells Cock

Junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha caresses a chicken Monday in Phitsanulok.

PHITSANULOK — Going beyond his weekly televised Friday monologues, junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha has on occasion delivered messages to the public through an alternative medium: farm animals.

Months after sharing his inner thoughts with a frog and encouraging unity among a herd of cows, the 63-year-old retired general, who has been criss-crossing the nation to get face time with the masses, conveyed a message Monday to a cock.

“Do not be afraid of the NCPO. The NCPO is not strict,” Prayuth told the rooster at a stop in Phitsanulok province, where he was visiting as prime minister.

Read: Prayuth Tells Frog His Fairy Tale Dream on Isaan Goodwill Tour (Photos)

According to the Internet Law Reform Dialogue, or iLaw, as of September 2017, more than 1,300 people had either been detained without charge for what it euphemistically describes as “attitude adjustment” sessions or visited at home by soldiers since the May 2014 coup.

The animal that garnered Prayuth’s attention was a prize-winning fighting cock named Thep Prathanporn.

It was unclear whether the rooster understood the message.

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At Least 400 Rare Marine Animals Perished in 2017

Photo: Department of Marine and Coastal Resources

BANGKOK — Thailand’s life aquatic faces a murky future after a year that saw sensitive species injured by humans, beached ashore or choked on trash.

Marine officials said about 400 endangered marine animals died in Thai waters in 2017, with the population of dugongs running especially low in a year that also saw the Irrawaddy dolphin declared endangered.

“I can’t estimate whether more or fewer animals will die next year,” Weerapong Laovetchprasit, a government marine wildlife veterinarian in Rayong said Monday.

Read: 355 Threatened Marine Animals Killed in 2016

Although the number rose considerably from last year’s 355, marine officials at a Friday press conference Friday said that’s due to better reporting via social media, not necessarily an increase in animal deaths.

“About 400 rare marine animals died this year, mostly because they were beached, injured by fishing boats or ate trash,” said Jatuporn Burutpat, director of the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources.

Sea turtles, dugongs, dolphins and whales are all among marine animals considered rare.

The department’s developmental institute director Ukkrit Sataphumintr said that only 2,500 to 3,500 sea turtles are left in Thailand. There are important breeding grounds on Ko Khram in Chonburi, the Similan Islands and Mai Khao Beach on Phuket. He said the low numbers are a cause for concern but credited awareness campaigns for some progress.

“Campaigns for Thai people to conserve sea turtles only started working recently after 30 years of trying,” Ukkrit said. “Thai people only just stopped eating turtle eggs.”

Read: Irawaddy Dolphin Now ‘Endangered’ and We’re to Blame

There are about 2,000 dolphins and whales in Thailand comprised of more than 27 species. Ukkrit said the marine department has been following the movement of these mammals, especially those of Bryde’s whales, and identified more than 60 individuals.

Dugongs may be in the most dire straits, with only 200 to 250 left, mostly in the Andaman Sea around Koh Libong in Trang province.

Nantarika Chansue, a veterinarian at Chulalongkorn University, said passers-by who encounter beached animals should report them to the Department of Marine Resources’ research branches.

Nantarika’s efforts on behalf of marine animals came to public attention earlier this year when she operated on Piggy Bank, a giant sea turtle that died following surgery to remove 915 coins from its stomach.

In March, Piggy Bank became a symbol for sea turtles kept in captivity when the 25-year-old reptile died from surgery complications, capturing the news cycle for several days.

In December, the Irrawaddy dolphin and finless porpoise – freshwater mammals that have their last bastion in Thailand – were declared endangered by the IUCN Red list.

Any beached marine animals, dead or alive, should be reported to the Department of Marine Resources’s research branches in Rayong, Samut Sakhon, Chumphon, Songkhla or Phuket provinces for rescue or autopsy either via Facebook or calling the listed phone numbers.

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Contact information for the Department of Marine Resources’ research branches in Rayong, Samut Sakhon, Chumphon, Songkhla and Phuket, from top to bottom. Image: Thailand Marine Endangered Species Stranding Network / Facebook
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Photo: Department of Marine and Coastal Resources
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Photo: Department of Marine and Coastal Resources

Related stories:

Irawaddy Dolphin Now ‘Endangered’ and We’re to Blame

Vets Look to Rehabilitate ‘Paley,’ Sea Turtle Pale From Captivity

Rescue Effort Fails to Save Wounded Dugong

Turtle Watch: Coins Found Inside Two of Piggy Bank’s Friends (Photos)

Nation Mourns Piggy Bank, Takes Hard Look At Self

Piggy Bank, Giant Sea Turtle Who Ate Too Many Coins, 25

355 Threatened Marine Animals Killed in 2016

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Guatemala Says It Is Moving Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem

Supporters of Jamaat-e-Islami take part in an anti-American rally to condemn U.S. President Donald Trump for declaring Jerusalem as Israel's capital, in Peshawar, Pakistan, Friday, Dec. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)

GUATEMALA CITY — Guatemala’s president announced on Christmas Eve that the Central American country will move its embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, becoming the first nation to follow the lead of U.S. President Donald Trump in ordering the change.

Guatemala was one of nine nations that voted with the United States and Israel on Thursday when the U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a non-binding resolution denouncing Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

Trump didn’t set any timetable for moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and neither did Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales.

In a post on his official Facebook account Sunday, Morales said that after talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, he decided to instruct Guatemala’s foreign ministry to move the embassy.

Guatemala and Israel have long had close ties, especially in security matters and Israeli arms sales to Guatemala.

No other country has their embassy for Israel in Jerusalem, though the Czech Republic has said it is considering such a move.

Trump upended decades of U.S. policy with his Dec. 6 announcement that he was recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Though Trump said he was merely recognizing reality and not prejudging negotiations on the future borders of the city, Palestinians saw the move as siding with Israel on the most sensitive issue in the Israel-Palestinian conflict.

Israel claims all of Jerusalem as its capital, while the Palestinians claim the city’s eastern sector, which was captured by Israel in 1967 and is home to sensitive religious Jewish, Muslim and Christian sites. Many governments have long said that the fate of Jerusalem must be resolved through negotiations.

Trump’s announcement has set off weeks of clashes between Palestinian protesters and Israeli security forces that have left 12 Palestinians dead.

Netanyahu has predicted others would follow the U.S. led. He has made great efforts to reach out to Latin America in recent years as part of a campaign to counter longstanding support for the Palestinians at the United Nations.

The resolution passed by the General Assembly declared the U.S. action on Jerusalem “null and void.” The 128-9 vote was a victory for Palestinians, but fell short of the total they had predicted. Thirty-five nations abstained and 21 stayed away from the vote.

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Democrat Party Predicts Loss of 2 Million Members

Campaign posters on a Bangkok street in the run-up to the 2011 general election.
Campaign posters on a Bangkok street in the run-up to the 2011 general election.

BANGKOK — A top Democrat Party official predicted Monday that it stands to lose more than two-thirds of its 2.8 million members due to a junta order they reconstitute in the run-up to elections next year.

The party has threatened to petition the Constitution Court to void the order, issued Friday night, on the basis that it violates constitutional guarantees against legislation which violates the rule of law or places unnecessary burdens on civil liberties. Deputy party leader Nipit Intarasombat said it would be impossible to re-register all members within the time given, and that the party would lose more than 2 million members.

Nipit said key party members were contacting each other directly to discuss the issue, as they are forbidden from meeting under the junta’s three-year-old ban on political activities.

Read: Junta Enables Formation of New Political Parties

He said they would reach a decision Tuesday on what action to take.

Junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha’s order No. 53/2017 was issued Friday using his absolute power granted by the constitution until a new government takes power. It requires existing political parties to re-register their members and collect membership fees within 30 days starting April 1.

Logistically, Nipit said, it can’t be done.

“That’s not possible. I think the most we can do is to register hundreds of thousands. I think within that one month period, we will lose more than 2 million [party members].”

The other big party, Pheu Thai, is casting its own suspicions on Prayuth’s latest exercise of absolute power. Senior Pheu Thai member and former education minister Chaturon Chaisaeng on Sunday accused the junta of conspiring to enable Prayuth to return as prime minister after the election promised for November.

Chaturon said the order passed Friday would weaken established parties. Requiring members to re-register within 30 days is a means of destroying the party’s membership base “to reduce it to as few as possible,” Chaturon said.

3 Wild Cards For an ‘Elected Junta’ Explained

Chaturon added that the use of absolute order to override the constitution shows that the junta, formally known as the National Council for Peace and Order, places itself above the constitution.

Nipit expressed similar concerns, saying the constitution must be the highest law, above the junta leader’s claim to absolute power granted to himself after the junta tore up the last constitution in 2014.

“Which one should be more sacred? Which one should be higher?” Nipit said.

Meanwhile, a spokesman for the body of junta appointees that drafted the charter said Monday that politicians have the right to petition the Constitutional Court over the matter. However, Amorn Wanichwiwatana of the Constitution Drafting Committee said he believes the junta leader’s Friday order was meant to ensure elections could take place by November as Prayuth has promised.

“It was necessary [to use Article 44] to push the process forward,” Amorn said.

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Smashing Goal, Toon Bodyslam to Complete Quest Christmas Day

Artiwara “Toon” Kongmalai is greeted by schoolchildren Monday in Chiang Rai province

CHIANG RAI — Fifty-five days, 2,191 kilometers and 1 billion baht in donations later, Toon Bodyslam was on the verge of completing his epic charity run Monday.

The Bodyslam rock band frontman turned philanthropist was set to reach the Thai-Burmese border checkpoint in Chiang Rai province’s Mae Sai district – the most northern point of Thailand – by day’s end, according to organizers. Artiwara Kongmalai started his run in the south two months ago in a bid to raise money for 11 public hospitals.

And raise money he has: Toon blew past his original goal of 700 million baht days ago and has now pulled in over a billion baht from the public for financially struggling state hospitals around the country.

Read: Criticism of Prayuth Over Toon Bodyslam Draws Junta Wrath

By late Monday morning he was taking a break at the Ban Mae Kham School in Chiang Rai’s Mae Kham district. Earlier today he was welcomed by a group of hill tribe children at another school in the region.

It’s a chilly day in the north. Once the sun sets, Toon will be running in temperatures as low as 17C.

His run has become a national sensation, fueling blow-by-blow media reports on his progress as crowds line the roads to see him pass.

An opinion survey by the National Institute of Development Administration published on Saturday said 56 percent of respondents named Toon the “person of the year,” far surpassing the 16 percent who chose junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha.

After his run ends, Artiwara is set to return to the music stage. He’s scheduled to perform with his band at a New Year’s Eve party at the Mega Bangna shopping mall.

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Noma BKK is RCA’s New Cosmic Cafe

Photo: Noma BKK / Facebook

BANGKOK — Three years after live alternative music venue Cosmic Cafe closed its doors, a Bangkok music promoter is opening a new booze and tunes joint Saturday in the same location.

If the opening lineup is anything to go by, Noma BKK will be another home for original music. The name stands for Now Our Mother’s Angry, according to Kawee Soontornwan, one of the owners who is also behind concert promoter Medium Rare Live.

“The theme is that we’re hosting a party at our house when mother is gone,” Kawee said.

The opening party, Without Gigs I’m Nothing, will take place Saturday with live performances by In This Peace, Yellow Fang, Stylish Nonsense, DJ No.gif and more. Tickets at the door will be 200 baht, with prizes being raffled off to guests.

Cosmic Cafe, opened in 2006 by Prompon “Kong” Suvarnapradip, quickly became a celebrated home for Bangkok’s indie music scene before it closed in early 2014.

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No Sign Rohingya Will Be Allowed to Return Home

Rohingya Muslim woman, Rukaya Begum, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds her son Mahbubur Rehman, at left, and her daughter Rehana Bibi, on Oct. 22, 2017, after the government moved them to newly allocated refugee camp areas, near Kutupalong, Bangladesh. Photo: Dar Yasin / Associated Press
Rohingya Muslim woman, Rukaya Begum, who crossed over from Myanmar into Bangladesh, holds her son Mahbubur Rehman, at left, and her daughter Rehana Bibi, on Oct. 22, 2017, after the government moved them to newly allocated refugee camp areas, near Kutupalong, Bangladesh. Photo: Dar Yasin / Associated Press

BANGKOK — After facing international outrage and charges of ethnic cleansing, Myanmar made a pledge: Rohingya Muslims who fled the country by the hundreds of thousands would start their journey home within weeks.

With so many obstacles, however, and no real sign of good will, few believe that will happen.

The returns are supposed to be voluntary. But many members of the religious minority, now living in sprawling refugee camps in neighboring Bangladesh, are afraid to go back.

They don’t trust the nationalist-led government and feel widely hated by the general population. Meanwhile, the military — which violently ousted them — says the refugees shouldn’t expect to return in large numbers.

Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist nation of 60 million, was basking in international praise just a few years ago as it transitioned to democracy after a half-century of dictatorship. Since then, a campaign of killings, rape and arson attacks by security forces and Buddhist-aligned mobs have sent more than 850,000 of the country’s 1.3 million Rohingya fleeing.

Their home for generations, the northern tip of Rakhine state, is now virtually empty, prompting the United Nations, the United States and others to label it ethnic cleansing.

In an apparent effort to quiet criticism, Myanmar reached an agreement with Bangladesh last month saying refugees would start returning home before Jan. 23.

There is “no way” that will happen, says Chris Lewa, a leading expert on the Rohingya and the policies that have made them one of the world’s most persecuted minorities. The government, she notes, has done almost nothing to prepare.

While Myanmar said the Rohingya would be allowed to settle in their original homes, few of which remain standing, some officials have talked about putting them in “camps” in northern Rakhine.

Already, two barracks have been constructed next to a police post in the Rakhine state village of Taungpyo Letwe to receive returnees, the Ministry of Information says. The government has stockpiled material and started breaking ground for 41 modular houses.

The idea, the ministry said, is that returnees can stay there temporarily.

That scares Arif Ullah, a 34-year-old Rohingya living at the Balukali camp in Bangladesh. He worries it could lead to something more permanent like apartheid-style camps erected after violence broke out in Sittwe, the state capital, in 2012.

Five years later, those camps remain home to 120,000 people. International aid agencies are effectively banned and the Rohingya have little access to food, education or basic medical care. Mothers regularly die in childbirth. Babies and children have clear signs of malnutrition.

“We miss our home,” said Arif Ullah, married and a father of two. “But we are human beings.”

“If the Myanmar government is really willing to take us back and give us our rights, they could have built houses on the land where our houses were burned down,” he says. “But clearly they don’t want to do that. And we are not going back to just live in the camps.”

Anagha Neelakantan, Asia Director of the International Crisis Group, meanwhile, warned of potential security risks. She also does not believe large numbers of Rohingya will be returning from Bangladesh any time soon.

And the presence of so many traumatized, hopeless refugees in Bangladesh, she said, could be a recipe for further instability and possible cross-border attacks by Rohingya militants, known as ARSA.

Attacks by ARSA inside Rakhine state — first in October 2016 and then again in August — triggered the army’s heavy-handed, indiscriminate response.

Well-trained and funded in part by the Middle East, the militants’ agenda appears to be to localized. They want the Rohingya to enjoy the same rights as others in Myanmar. But if the situation does not improve, there are fears the militants could be exploited by transnational jihadists with their own aims.

Min Aung Hlaing, commander-in-chief of the armed forces, says the decision as to who returns and when should not be left to governments. It should be for residents inside Myanmar to decide.

“It is impossible to accept the number of persons proposed by Bangladesh,” he said last month in a statement. “Emphasis must be placed on wish of local Rakhine ethnic people who are real Myanmar citizens. Only when local Rakhine ethnic people accept it, will all the people satisfy it.”

Though many Rohingya have been living in Myanmar for generations, they are seen by most people in the country as “foreign invaders” from Bangladesh. They have been denied citizenship, effectively rendering them stateless.

In addition to saying the Muslim minority should be allowed to return freely, safely and in dignity, Myanmar’s agreement with Bangladesh says Rohingya will need to provide evidence of their residency — something many say they do not have.

While the agreement says that the U.N. High Commission for Refugees will play a role in the repatriations, Adrian Edwards, a spokesman in Geneva, said they have so far been excluded from initial discussions between Myanmar and Bangladesh.

Bangladesh wants them to be involved, sources say. Myanmar does not.

“After the widespread atrocities, safe and voluntary return of Rohingya will require international monitors on the ground in Burma (Myanmar),” says Bill Frelick, refugee rights director at Human Rights Watch. This, he says, means a central role for the UNHCR.

But how that can happen and when is just one of the many obstacles to a Rohingya return to Myanmar that many fear, many simply don’t want — and that, in the context of the months of violence that 2017 brought to so many people, is for the moment a political talking point and very little else.

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Florida Man Fights For Life After Chasing Thieving Monkey

Jeff 'Swede' Swedenhjelm in the beloved baseball cap stolen by a monkey on Bali. / Nwfdailynews.com
Jeff 'Swede' Swedenhjelm in the beloved baseball cap stolen by a monkey on Bali. / Nwfdailynews.com

DESTIN, Florida — A Florida man living in Bali is fighting for his life after he fell from a roof while chasing a monkey that had stolen his favorite Pittsburgh Steelers cap.

The Northwest Florida Daily News reported that Jeff “Swede” Swedenhjelm fell 10 meters on Monday.

Villagers took him to a local hospital, where he was diagnosed with severe damage to his spinal cord. He currently is paralyzed from the chest down.

Lyric Swedenhjelm, who lives in Destin, said the family is trying to get her father to a country with a spinal specialist. She said Swedenhjelm is in a medically induced coma and is on a ventilator.

The family has started a fundraising page on GoFundMe, which has already raised more than USD$36,000.

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1 Million Thai Teens Suffer From Depression: Official

Middle-school students at the Parliament Museum in a 2010 file photo. Photo: Office of the Prime Minister

BANGKOK — Thailand may be known as the “Land of Smiles” but an estimated 1 million teenagers suffer clinical depression, many of whom are going untreated, said the nation’s chief mental health official Boonruang Trairuangworawat on Friday.

Boonruang, director general of the Mental Health Department, said there’s a need to address problems among Thai teens aged 10 to 19 and widen their access to mental health facilities, as depression has led to violence, school dropouts and suicide.

While the estimated 1 million teenagers are believed to suffer from depression, 2 million more are at risk, Boonruang said. That would make for upward of 3 million among a population of 8 million teens.

Boonruang pointed out that youths develop different symptoms from adults when suffering from depression. This includes acts of violence, self-harm and emotional volatility, as well as substance abuse. Some become antisocial, a sign often mistaken by parents and teachers as mere unruly adolescents withdrawing from social life.

“At the same time, the particular trait of teenagers in not wanting to be identified as having problems may lead to refusing treatment. This is particularly so when facing parents who do not understand and reprimand [the teenager],” said the director general of the department.

Next year, the ministry will produce guidelines for medical professionals to be able to better handle the situation.

 

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