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Reporters Without Borders Says 65 Journalists Killed in 2017

A correspondent working in Nairobi poses with a placard to protest at the imprisonment of three journalists from Al Jazeera's English-language channel in 2015 in Egypt. Photo: EPA / Dai Kurokawa

PARIS — A total of 65 journalists and media workers were killed in 2017, the lowest toll in 14 years, according to figures released on Tuesday by Reporters Without Borders.

The non-governmental organization said 60 percent of those killed were murdered. It added that 326 people working in media  including 202 professional journalists  are also being detained.

According to RSF, 26 people “were killed in the course of their work, the collateral victims of a deadly situation such as an air strike, an artillery bombardment, or a suicide bombing.”

It said the remaining 39 “were murdered, and deliberately targeted because their reporting threatened political, economic, or criminal interests.”

Overall, RSF said the decrease in deaths is due to journalists fleeing “countries such as Syria, Yemen and Libya that have become too dangerous.” But it also noted “a growing awareness of the need to protect journalists.”

RSF stressed that some countries which are not at war have become as dangerous for reporters as war zones, with 46 percent of deaths occurring in such places in 2017, as against 30 percent the previous year.

Syria was the deadliest country for journalists, with 12 killed, one more than in Mexico where many journalists have “either fled abroad or abandoned journalism.”

The overall downward trend did not apply to women, as 10 female reporters were killed this year, double the previous year’s total.

RSF said many of the female victims were “experienced and determined investigative reporters with an abrasive writing style.”

Behind Syria and Mexico, the deadliest countries for reporters were Afghanistan, where nine journalists were killed in 2017, and Iraq where eight perished. With four journalists gunned down, the Philippines was Asia’s deadliest country.

RSF said there was a drop of six percent in the number of journalists detained, with nearly half of them held in just five countries, China, Turkey, Syria, Iran and Vietnam.

RSF added that 54 journalists are currently being held hostage by groups such as Islamic State and the Houthis in Yemen.

“Almost three quarters of these hostages come from the ranks of local journalists, who are usually paid little and often have to take enormous risks,” RSF said. “The foreign journalists currently held hostage were all kidnapped in Syria but little is known about their present location.”

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Has the Watch Struck Four for Embattled Prawit?

File photo of Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan in a May 2016 photo. Photo: Defense Ministry / Lakmuangonline.com
File photo of Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan in a May 2016 photo. Photo: Defense Ministry / Lakmuangonline.com

BANGKOK — As if three undeclared wristwatches were not enough, deputy junta leader Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan was spotted wearing what appears to be a fourth pricey timepiece in a photo Tuesday as an anti-corruption agency awaits clarification on the first.

pwatchsmThe watch, discovered in a May 2016 photo on a Defense Ministry website, appeared to be a stainless steel Patek Philippe Annual Calendar Chronograph (model 5960/1A with flyback function). It originally went viral via the same Facebook page where two other images were discovered through crowd-sourcing.

The image was posted on CSI LA, a page which became a popular forum for discussing evidence after a 2014 double homicide on Koh Tao. The group has posted two other photos in recent days of Prawit wearing multi-million baht watches.

Read: Prawit Spotted Wearing 3rd Multi-Million Baht Watch

The photo indicates it was taken in May 2016 near the Government House. The timepiece sells at Bangkok’s Cortina Watch shop for 1.63 million baht.

To quell recent public criticism, junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha said this afternoon that he was wearing a Seiko watch that he waved before a crowd of people.

The National Anti-Corruption Commission has given Prawit until Jan. 8 to clarify why the assets are not listed among his mandatory asset declarations when he took office in the wake of the 2014 coup d’etat.

Read stories:
Prawit Spotted Wearing 3rd Multi-Million Baht Watch
Another Multi-Million Baht Watch Spotted on Prawit’s Wrist
Show and Don’t Tell: Gen. Prawit Won’t Explain His Bling Watch to Public
Deputy Junta Head Sports Spendy Haute Horology

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Scientists Adding AI to Robot Cats For Seniors

PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island — Imagine a cat that can keep a person company, doesn’t need a litter box and can remind an aging relative to take her medicine or help find her eyeglasses.

That’s the vision of toymaker Hasbro and scientists at Brown University, who have received a three-year, USD$1 million (32.8 million baht) grant from the National Science Foundation to find ways to add artificial intelligence to Hasbro’s “Joy for All” robotic cat.

The cat, which has been on the market for two years, is aimed at seniors and meant to act as a “companion.” It purrs and meows, and even appears to lick its paw and roll over to ask for a belly rub. The Brown-Hasbro project is aimed at developing additional capabilities for the cats to help older adults with simple tasks.

Researchers at Brown’s Humanity-Centered Robotics Initiative are working to determine which tasks make the most sense, and which can help older adults stay in their own homes longer, such as finding lost objects, or reminding the owner to call someone or go to a doctor’s appointment.

“It’s not going to iron and wash dishes,” said Bertram Malle, a professor of cognitive, linguistic and psychological sciences at Brown. “Nobody expects them to have a conversation. Nobody expects them to move around and fetch a newspaper. They’re really good at providing comfort.”

Malle said they don’t want to make overblown promises of what the cat can do, something he and his fellow researcher — computer science professor Michael Littman — said they’ve seen in other robots on the market. They hope to make a cat that would perform a small set of tasks very well.

They also want to keep it affordable, just a few hundred dollars. The current version costs USD$100 (32,800 baht).

They’ve given the project a name that gets at that idea: Affordable Robotic Intelligence for Elderly Support, or ARIES. The team includes researchers from Brown’s medical school, area hospitals and a designer at the University of Cincinnati.

It’s an idea that has appeal to Jeanne Elliott, whose 93-year-old mother, Mary Derr, lives with her in South Kingstown. Derr has mild dementia and the Joy for All cat Elliott purchased this year has become a true companion for Derr, keeping her company and soothing her while Elliott is at work. Derr treats it like a real cat, even though she knows it has batteries.

“Mom has a tendency to forget things,” she said, adding that a cat reminding her “we don’t have any appointments today, take your meds, be careful when you walk, things like that, be safe, reassuring things, to have that available during the day would be awesome.”

Diane Feeney Mahoney, a professor emerita at MGH Institute of Health Professions School of Nursing, who has studied technology for older people, said the project showed promise because of the team of researchers. She hopes they involve people from the Alzheimer’s community and that “we just don’t want to push technology for technology’s sake.”

She called the cat a tool that could make things easier for someone caring for a person with middle-stage dementia, or to be used in nursing homes where pets are not allowed.

The scientists are embarking on surveys, focus groups and interviews to get a sense of the landscape of everyday living for an older adult. They’re also trying to figure out how the souped-up robo-cats would do those tasks, and then how it would communicate that information. They don’t think they want a talking cat, Littman said.

“Cats don’t generally talk to you,” Littman said, and it might be upsetting if it did.

They’re looking at whether the cat could move its head in a certain way to get across the message it’s trying to communicate, for example.

In the end, they hope that by creating an interaction in which the human is needed, they could even help stem feelings of loneliness, depression and anxiety.

“The cat doesn’t do things on its own. It needs the human, and the human gets something back,” Malle said. “That interaction is a huge step up. Loneliness and uselessness feelings are hugely problematic.”

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Bangkok Stars to Rally For Rohingya Tonight

Photo: Hugo / Facebook

BANGKOK — Driven from their homes and subjected to what’s been described as systematic rape and murder, things have not improved for Myanmar’s Rohingya population in Bangladesh.

That’s where more than 600,000 Rohingya are seeking refuge. Despite alarms in the international community and aid efforts from NGOs, things have been getting worse in the Bangladesh camp.

In Thailand, empathy seems in short supply.

“Thais do not identify with the Rohingya,” said Ben Svasti Thomson, an honorary British consul living in Chiang Mai and director of the Mother Child Foundation. “I often say to people in Chiang Mai that the tragedy is happening on our doorstep, just 600 [kilometers] away, closer to us than Bangkok; it is too close to ignore.”

Tonight, Thomson is co-hosting a Rohingya Benefit Concert to raise funds for Rohingya living in the Kutupalong Refugee camp, which he visited last month to monitor how donations were being used and to identify areas needing funding.

Popular singers Hugo, Nga Caravan and Mai Siplor will perform at 7pm in The Small Theatre at Thammasat University’s Tha Prachan campus in the old quarter. Tickets are 200 baht, with all proceeds going to the Children on the Edge charity which will be used to buy urgent supplies, supply clean food and water, and create safe environments and makeshift schools. Tickets can be purchased at the door or reserved online. More information is available online.

It’s not the first Rohingya benefit in Bangkok. Earlier this month, bar/gallery WTF hosted Rage for the Rohingya to raise funds.

Photo: Andre Malerba / Courtesy
Photo: Andre Malerba / Courtesy

There, a mostly expat crowd gathered before wall-projected images of Rohingya suffering and mingled with some of the photographers who took them.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch, was on hand recounting frustrating stories of atrocities.

“They stabbed a knife in her side while raping the woman,” he said of one documented encounter.

More help is needed, Robertson said, especially for the remaining 40,000 children.

“They have lost their parents and will be trafficked into the sex trade,” he said.

Andre Malerbra, a photojournalist at the event, said it’s crucial to remind people of the tragedy by taking more photos of what’s happening.

“I don’t think people lacked empathy [about the Rohingya situation],” Malerbra said, “they have emotions when they see these photos, but they don’t really know what to do about it.”

Lauren DeCicca, another freelance photographer, described seeing a young girl weeping after her father collapsed and died trying to escape their home in northern Rakhine state on foot.

“They have a look of having too much of life on their face, they’ve faced more hardships than I ever had already,” DeCicca said.

rohingya

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Nest of Endangered Giant Softshell Turtle Found in Cambodia

An endangered Asian giant softshell turtle is seen near a nest of eggs on a sandbar in the Mekong river between Kratie and Stung Treng, northeastern Cambodia. Photo: Associated Press

PHNOM PENH  Conservationists have found a nest of the endangered Asian giant softshell turtle on a Mekong River sandbar in northeastern Cambodia, while 115 new species of various other animal and plant life have been discovered in the greater Mekong region.

The New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society said Tuesday that a nest of Asian giant softshell turtles was found on the Mekong between Kratie and Stung Treng provinces by conservationists from Cambodia’s fisheries administration, the WCS and local communities. It said it was the first spotting of such a nest so far this season.

It said the area is the only remaining location in Cambodia where the huge turtles still breed.

The Asian giant softshell turtle has been listed as globally endangered. It was thought to be extinct in the Cambodian portion of the Mekong River until conservationists rediscovered the turtles in 2007 along a 48-kilometer (30-mile) stretch of the river between Kratie and Stung Treng provinces.

The WCS said that since 2007, some 378 nests have been protected and 8,528 hatchlings released.

Meanwhile, the WWF issued a statement Tuesday saying that some 115 new species in the Greater Mekong region had been discovered by scientists.

It said that scientists from around the world conducted research in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, and discovered 11 species of amphibians, two fish, 11 reptiles, 88 plants and three mammals.

The discoveries include a beautifully colored frog found in the limestone karst mountains of Vietnam, according to the statement.

Story: Sopheng Cheang

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Family of Dead Cadet File Police Complaint

Sukanya Tanyakan, wearing cap, and Supicha Tankyakan, in black, walk to a police station in Nakhon Nayok province Tuesday afternoon.
Sukanya Tanyakan, wearing cap, and Supicha Tankyakan, in black, walk to a police station in Nakhon Nayok province Tuesday afternoon.

NAKHON NAYOK — The family of late cadet Pakapong Tanyakan was filing a complaint Tuesday afternoon in the province where he died at an elite military academy.

A day after refusing to meet with military representatives to discuss their son’s death, Pakapong’s parents and sister traveled to Nakhon Nayok province to file a complaint with police there.

They were still meeting with police as of 5.30pm and had not told reporters the details of their complaint.

Read: Army Invites Cadet’s Family for Talk

Already under pressure to remain silent by the military, the family said they wanted to keep the matter private.

“I want to keep information to only among us and police for now,” said Supicha Tanyakan, Pakapong’s sister.

Nakhon Nayok provincial police commander Wattana Yeejeen said Pakapong’s family had asked police to launch a criminal investigation into the events at the military academy that unfolded between Oct. 15 and 17, which they believe caused their son’s death.

“We will gather evidence and witness testimonies,” Maj. Gen. Wattana said Tuesday afternoon. “We will also interrogate doctors who inspected his body and medical experts.”

Wattana declined to say whether the family is convinced that Pakapong has died from abuse.

“I’d let the family talk about it themselves. Our job is to gather evidence,” he said.

Pakapong died in October at 19 from what the military described as “sudden heart failure” one day after returning to the Armed Forces Preparatory School from a break.

Pakapong’s family lashed out during the weekend after an internal army investigation ruled it blameless in Pakapong’s death. Investigators said he died of a heart condition and that abuse – which the family suspected – had not been a factor.

They said a broken rib found in the teen was caused when the cadet fell down eight flights of stairs.

The family first raised its suspicions last month after discovering Pakapong’s body had been returned to them with a number of vital organs missing, including his brain and heart.

The military blocked a civilian investigation and the results of an independent autopsy completed earlier this month were kept secret.

Related stories:

Army Invites Cadet’s Family for Talk
Family Cremates Cadet Son, Buries Autopsy Results
Organs Missing From Military Academy Cadet’s Body

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Thai Fans Despair Over Death of K-Pop Idol

Photo: Mmookrmdx / Twitter

BANGKOK — Despair, grief and thoughts of suicide swept Thailand online Tuesday following the apparent suicide South Korean pop singer Jonghyun in Seoul.

The death of SHINee lead singer Jonghyun met a strong reaction in Thailand where K-pop boy bands are venerated by legions of fans. #RipKimJonghyun was the top trending Thai tweet Tuesday morning.

“I thought Bangkok and Seoul were far away, but Bangkok and the sky are even farther. Sky, take care of him. He didn’t want to suffer on earth anymore,” tweeted @Chanles4 with a picture of the sky.

Some alarming messages led to worries of copycats.

One Thai Twitter user said her friend, a Jonghyun fan, had killed herself due to the news. The story was widely circulated on social media, especially the popular Drama-Addict Facebook page, but has since been made private and inaccessible. The original author has since acknowledged that the story was not true.

“Please don’t do it. I know you’re sad. I understand because I’m a fan too, but we have to help each other through this,” @W_wa_wan sent wrote to fellow fans. “We can cry together, and some day you’ll only have smiles when you think of your lead [singer].”

Jonghyun was found dead Monday evening in his Seoul apartment. He had lit coal briquettes in the room, a common method of suicide by carbon monoxide. He died at a nearby hospital.

“Were you not listening? Things you can overcome don’t scar you for life… The life of fame was never meant for me,” read a suicide note left at the scene, according to a translation by K-pop news site Koreaboo.

Jonghyun’s depression prompted Thai fans to open up with their own stories of depression.

“I almost killed myself because of depression. I had many problems at home, I had no friends and nothing to hold me down. I was alone,” Facebooker user Aii Aki wrote in the comments of a Drama-Addict post about Jonghyun. “But when I started liking Korean stars, it gave me the will to live. I had decided to kill myself, but one of my favorite artists kept me living.”

South Korea has one of the highest suicides rates in the world. Former president Roh Moohyun committed suicide in 2009 and Lotte Group vice chairman Lee Inwon killed himself in 2016. Actresses Lee Eunju and Choi Jinsil committed suicide in 2005 and 2008, respectively. Singer U;Nee killed herself in 2007.

Suicide rates are lower in Thailand, which was ranked 46th in per capita suicides of 183 countries by the World Health Organization for 2017. South Korea was No. 10.

Jonghyun rose to fame in 2008 singing for SHINee, a band known for pop earworms such as hits such as “Replay,” “Juliette,” “Ring Ding Dong,” “Lucifer” and “Sherlock.” He also launched a successful solo career in 2015.

Related stories:

Fans Mourn Death of K-Pop Star Jonghyun

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Rights Group Reports More Destruction of Rohingya Villages

A combination of satellite images provided Monday by the Human Rights Watch / Digital Globe show four villages in Maungdaw township, northern Rakhine state, Myanmar, on Nov. 6 (top) and Dec. 2 (bottom), 2017. Photo: Associated Press

BANGKOK — Satellite imagery shows that Rohingya villages in Myanmar continued to be destroyed even as Myanmar and Bangladesh signed an agreement last month to return refugees from the ethnic Muslim minority who had fled their country amid violence, Human Rights Watch said Monday.

The New York-based rights group said buildings were destroyed in 40 villages in northern Rakhine state in October and November, increasing the total to 354 villages that have been partially or completely destroyed since Aug. 25.

More than 630,000 Rohingya have fled from Myanmar into Bangladesh since Aug. 25, when Myanmar’s army began what it called “clearance operations” following an attack on police posts by a group of Rohingya insurgents. Refugees arriving in Bangladesh said their homes were set on fire by soldiers and Buddhist mobs, and some reported being shot at by security forces.

In late November, Myanmar and Bangladesh signed an agreement covering the return of Rohingya who fled across their mutual border to escape the violence in Rakhine.

“Satellite imagery confirms that dozens of buildings were burned the same week” the agreement was signed, Human Right Watch said in a statement.

“The Burmese army’s destruction of Rohingya villages within days of signing a refugee repatriation agreement with Bangladesh shows that commitments to safe returns were just a public relations stunt,” said Brad Adams, Human Rights Watch’s Asia director. “The satellite imagery shows what the Burmese army denies: that Rohingya villages continue to be destroyed. Burmese government pledges to ensure the safety of returning Rohingya cannot be taken seriously.”

Myanmar was formerly known as Burma.

Zaw Htay, Myanmar’s government spokesman, said, “I cannot give comment yet because I have not seen the statement on the satellite images yet.”

Sann Win, a border guard police officer in northern Rakhine, said by phone Monday that “there was no burning of any villagers’ homes in October and November.”

In September, Myanmar’s government said more than 6,800 homes had been destroyed in the wave of violence, with all but about 200 of them belonging to Rohingya villagers.

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‘The Last Jedi’ Is a Hit but How Much Did Audiences Like It?

Image: Star Wars / YouTube

NEW YORK — With glowing reviews from critics and USD$450.8 million (14.8 billion baht) of worldwide box office in the first three days of release of “The Last Jedi,” all would seem to be right in the “Star Wars” universe.

But some audience reaction metrics suggest not all Star Wars fans are so thrilled with Rian Johnson’s eighth episode in the franchise. While “The Last Jedi” sports a sterling 93 percent fresh Rotten Tomatoes score, the website’s users give it only a 56 percent score. A similar dichotomy is also found on the movie review aggregation website Metacritic, where the movie has a score of 86 out of 100 from critics but earned a woeful 4.9 out of 10 from users.

The role reversal between critics and fans has caused consternation throughout the Star Wars galaxy. Could “The Last Jedi” be a critical smash and a dud with audiences? Is “The Last Jedi” more “Attack of the Clones” than “The Empire Strikes Back”? What in the name of midi-chlorians is going on here?

For starters, the responses on Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic are to be taken with a Death Star-sized grain of salt. They’re supplied by users to the website who can, by creating numerous accounts, vote limitlessly, and need offer no proof of having actually seen the movie. Some believe a nefarious plot is at play, a theory backed up by the boasts of a few on social mediaSimilar ploys, after all, were used against the female-led “Ghostbusters.”

But why would anyone want to sabotage “The Last Jedi”? Well, there have been growing signs of rebellion against the galaxy far, far away. Some conservative moviegoers have taken issue with the current trilogy’s embrace of multiculturalism. Claiming an anti-Donald Trump agenda, some called for a boycott of last year’s spinoff “Rogue One.” Writer Chris Weitz noted the Empire “is a white supremacist (human) organization.”

Politics have always played a role in “Star Wars.” George Lucas has said he wrote it as a Nixon-era parable for the Vietnam War, about how democracies turn into dictatorships. But in carrying those themes forward to today, “The Last Jedi” has — like virtually everything else — been fed into America’s combustible politics. Even Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) has volleyed with Texas Senator Ted Cruz on Twitter over net neutrality.

“Similar to other movie sites, we’re currently experiencing a high volume of fan activity around ‘Star Wars: The Last Jedi,'” said Rotten Tomaotes spokesman Tiyson Reynolds. “We’re closely monitoring all user review activity to make sure it’s valid.”

But their low ratings don’t jive with other, more scientific data.

Like “The Force Awakens,” ”The Last Jedi” won an A CinemaScore, which polls audiences coming out of theaters. CinemaScore counted feedback as 89 percent positive. ComScore’s PostTrak audience survey recorded an average five-out-five star rating from moviegoers, with 80 percent saying they would definitely recommend the film.

And then there’s the mammoth box office. With $220 million in domestic ticket sales, “The Last Jedi” now ranks as the second highest grossing opening weekend of all time, after J.J. Abrams’ “The Force Awakens.” Disney’s distribution chief Dave Hollis estimates “The Last Jedi” will have legs through the holiday season similar or close to those of “The Force Awakens,” which ultimately grossed more than $2 billion worldwide. “The Last Jedi” is likely to eventually rank among the highest grossing films of all time, but it will depend on strong word-of-mouth and repeat viewings to sniff the realm of “The Force Awakens” or “Titanic.”

Yet regardless of any user scores, “The Last Jedi” has proved to be easily the most divisive “Star Wars” film. (Lucas’ second trilogy was too universally panned to be much argued over.)

Even many fans who generally applauded the film have taken issue with its comic flashes, a Princess Leia moment roundly compared to Mary Poppins, and of the film’s treatment of Hamill’s Skywalker. (Cantankerous and ornery, he spends most of the film on an isolated island.) And by shifting the parameters for how the Force works, some have said “The Last Jedi” is, as Variety claimed,“making stuff up as it goes along.”

For its part, Disney has sensed the tremors of backlash.

“Rian Johnson, the cast, Lucasfilm, they’ve delivered an experience that is totally ‘Star Wars’ but at the same time is filled with things that are unexpected and new,” said Hollis. “And in that unexpected and new, it’s going to have people really talking.”

Even the cast of “The Last Jedi” acknowledged they were surprised by the direction mapped out by Johnson, who wrote and directed. “What Rian came up with, I was stunned,” Hamill told The Associated Press earlier this year. Said Daisy Ridley of first reading the script: “I was going, ‘Uh, I’m not sure about this. It just took us all a second to be like, ‘OK, this is where the story is heading.”

But Johnson made “The Last Jedi” disruptive by design.

“Having been a Star Wars fan myself for the past 40 years, I know intimately how passionate they are about it and how everyone has stuff they love and hate in every single movie,” said Johnson. “That takes the pressure off a little bit just thinking, ‘Ok, there’s going to be stuff that everyone likes, there’s going to be stuff that people don’t like and it’s going to be a mixture.'”

Story: Jake Coyle

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Fans Mourn Death of K-Pop Star Jonghyun

SEOUL — Fans of K-pop star Jonghyun, the lead singer of SHINee, one of South Korea’s most popular bands, were on Tuesday mourning his apparent suicide at the age of 28.

Jonghyun, whose real name was Kim Jong Hyun, was found unconscious in a studio apartment in southern Seoul late Monday, South Korean media reported.

He was taken to a nearby hospital suffering from cardiac arrest but was later pronounced dead, the news agency Yonhap reported.

His sister had called emergency services after receiving a text message that indicated he was about to commit suicide including one which read, “Please let me go. Tell me I did well.”

He had reportedly been depressed and his final Instagram post on November 20 read “I pray for you not to be hurt.”

His fans posted messages of grief on his account after the news of his death broke.

“Your fans will never forget you. So talented, so kind, so handsome, so amazing, and so much more. Your music and SHINee’s will always be here,” wrote one.

Jonghyun first shot to fame in 2008 as SHINee’s lead singer, but he had since also found success as a solo singer and songwriter.

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