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Downtown Roads Closed For Tonight’s Tourism Parade

BANGKOK — Check the traffic before leaving work today.

Rama I and Ratchadamri roads will be closed for four hours starting at 5pm on Wednesday to make way for a procession of more than 1,000 people promoting the Amazing Thailand Tourism Year.

On Rama I Road, lanes will be closed between Phaya Thai and Ratchadamri roads. The eastbound lanes by Siam Paragon will also be closed. The westbound lanes next to Siam Square will be open as usual.

The processions will run for 3.5 kilometers from Soi Chula 5 to Siam Paragon, CentralWorld and head to Ratchadamri Road before ending at Lumphini Park.

Floats from the six processions representing tourism in different regions will be on display in the park for viewing until Friday.

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Zimbabwe Army Has Mugabe, Wife in Custody, Controls Capital

A military tank is seen with armed soldiers on the road leading to President Robert Mugabe's office on Wednesday in Harare, Zimbabwe. Photo: Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi / Associated Press
HARARE, Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe’s army said Wednesday it has President Robert Mugabe and his wife in custody and is securing government offices and patrolling the capital’s streets following a night of unrest that included a military takeover of the state broadcaster.

The night’s action triggered speculation of a coup, but the military’s supporters praised it as a “bloodless correction.”

Armed soldiers in armored personnel carriers stationed themselves at key points in Harare, while Zimbabweans formed long lines at banks in order to draw the limited cash available, a routine chore in the country’s ongoing financial crisis. People looked at their phones to read about the army takeover and others went to work or to shops.

In an address to the nation after taking control of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation, an army spokesman said early Wednesday the military is targeting “criminals” around Mugabe, and sought to reassure the country that order will be restored.

It was not clear where Mugabe, 93, and his wife were Wednesday but it seems they are in the custody of the military. “Their security is guaranteed,” the army spokesman said.

“We wish to make it abundantly clear that this is not a military takeover,” the army statement said. “We are only targeting criminals around (Mugabe) who are committing crimes that are causing social and economic suffering in the country in order to bring them to justice.”

The spokesman added “as soon as we have accomplished our mission, we expect that the situation will return to normalcy.” The army spokesman called on churches to pray for the nation. He urged other security forces to “cooperate for the good of our country,” warning that “any provocation will be met with an appropriate response.”

The statement called on troops to return to barracks immediately, with all leave canceled.

Overnight, at least three explosions were heard in the capital, Harare, and military vehicles were seen in the streets.

The military actions appear to put the army in control of the country. Army commander Constantino Chiwenga had threatened on Monday to “step in” to calm political tensions. Mugabe’s ruling ZANU-PF party responded by accusing the general of “treasonable conduct.” But now Chiwenga appears to be in control.

The army has been praised by the nation’s war veterans for carrying out “a bloodless correction of gross abuse of power.” The military will return Zimbabwe to “genuine democracy” and make the country a “modern model nation,” said Chris Mutsvangwa, chairman of the war veterans’ association, told The Associated Press in Johannesburg.

Mutsvangwa and the war veterans are staunch allies of Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was fired from his post of vice president by Mugabe last week. Mnangagwa fled Zimbabwe last week but said he would return to lead the country.

The U.S. Embassy closed to the public Wednesday and encouraged citizens to shelter in place, citing “the ongoing political uncertainty through the night.” The British Embassy issued a similar warning, citing “reports of unusual military activity.”

For the first time, this southern African nation is seeing an open rift between the military and Mugabe, the world’s oldest head of state who has ruled since independence from white minority rule in 1980. The military has been a key pillar of his power.

Story: Farai Mutsaka

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US Scientists Try 1st Gene Editing in the Body

Brian Madeux, 44, sits and waits to receive the first human gene editing therapy for NPS, at the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital on Nov. 6 in Oakland, California. Photo: Eric Risberg / Associated Press

OAKLAND, California — Scientists for the first time have tried editing a gene inside the body in a bold attempt to permanently change a person’s DNA to try to cure a disease.

The experiment was done Monday in California on 44-year-old Brian Madeux. Through an IV, he received billions of copies of a corrective gene and a genetic tool to cut his DNA in a precise spot.

“It’s kind of humbling” to be the first to test this, said Madeux, who has a metabolic disease called Hunter syndrome. “I’m willing to take that risk. Hopefully it will help me and other people.”

Signs of whether it’s working may come in a month; tests will show for sure in three months.

If it’s successful, it could give a major boost to the fledgling field of gene therapy. Scientists have edited people’s genes before, altering cells in the lab that are then returned to patients. There also are gene therapies that don’t involve editing DNA.

But these methods can only be used for a few types of diseases. Some give results that may not last. Some others supply a new gene like a spare part, but can’t control where it inserts in the DNA, possibly causing a new problem like cancer.

This time, the gene tinkering is happening in a precise way inside the body. It’s like sending a mini surgeon along to place the new gene in exactly the right location.

“We cut your DNA, open it up, insert a gene, stitch it back up. Invisible mending,” said Dr. Sandy Macrae, president of Sangamo Therapeutics, the California company testing this for two metabolic diseases and hemophilia. “It becomes part of your DNA and is there for the rest of your life.”

That also means there’s no going back, no way to erase any mistakes the editing might cause.

“You’re really toying with Mother Nature” and the risks can’t be fully known, but the studies should move forward because these are incurable diseases, said one independent expert, Dr. Eric Topol of the Scripps Translational Science Institute in San Diego.

Protections are in place to help ensure safety, and animal tests were very encouraging, said Dr. Howard Kaufman, a Boston scientist on the National Institutes of Health panel that approved the studies.

He said gene editing’s promise is too great to ignore. “So far there’s been no evidence that this is going to be dangerous,” he said. “Now is not the time to get scared.”

 

Woe From Head to Toe

Fewer than 10,000 people worldwide have these metabolic diseases, partly because many die very young. Those with Madeux’s condition, Hunter syndrome, lack a gene that makes an enzyme that breaks down certain carbohydrates. These build up in cells and cause havoc throughout the body.

Patients may have frequent colds and ear infections, distorted facial features, hearing loss, heart problems, breathing trouble, skin and eye problems, bone and joint flaws, bowel issues and brain and thinking problems.

“Many are in wheelchairs … dependent on their parents until they die,” said Dr. Chester Whitley, a University of Minnesota genetics expert who plans to enroll patients in the studies.

Weekly IV doses of the missing enzyme can ease some symptoms, but cost USD $100,000 to USD $400,000 a year and don’t prevent brain damage.

Madeux, who now lives near Phoenix, is engaged to a nurse, Marcie Humphrey, who he met 15 years ago in a study that tested this enzyme therapy at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland, where the gene editing experiment took place.

He has had 26 operations for hernias, bunions, bones pinching his spinal column, and ear, eye and gall bladder problems.

“It seems like I had a surgery every other year of my life” and many procedures in between, he said. Last year he nearly died from a bronchitis and pneumonia attack. The disease had warped his airway, and “I was drowning in my secretions, I couldn’t cough it out.”

Madeux has a chef’s degree and was part owner of two restaurants in Utah, cooking for US ski teams and celebrities, but now can’t work in a kitchen or ride horses as he used to.

Gene editing won’t fix damage he’s already suffered, but he hopes it will stop the need for weekly enzyme treatments.

Initial studies will involve up to 30 adults to test safety, but the ultimate goal is to treat children very young, before much damage occurs.

 

How it Works

A gene-editing tool called CRISPR has gotten a lot of recent attention, but this study used a different one called zinc finger nucleases. They’re like molecular scissors that seek and cut a specific piece of DNA.

The therapy has three parts: The new gene and two zinc finger proteins. DNA instructions for each part are placed in a virus that’s been altered to not cause infection but to ferry them into cells. Billions of copies of these are given through a vein.

They travel to the liver, where cells use the instructions to make the zinc fingers and prepare the corrective gene. The fingers cut the DNA, allowing the new gene to slip in. The new gene then directs the cell to make the enzyme the patient lacked.

Only 1 percent of liver cells would have to be corrected to successfully treat the disease, said Madeux’s physician and study leader, Dr. Paul Harmatz at the Oakland hospital.

“How bulletproof is the technology? We’re just learning,” but safety tests have been very good, said Dr. Carl June, a University of Pennsylvania scientist who has done other gene therapy work but was not involved in this study.

 

What Could Go Wrong

Safety issues plagued some earlier gene therapies. One worry is that the virus might provoke an immune system attack. In 1999, 18-year-old Jesse Gelsinger died in a gene therapy study from that problem, but the new studies use a different virus that’s proved much safer in other experiments.

Another worry is that inserting a new gene might have unforeseen effects on other genes. That happened years ago, when researchers used gene therapy to cure some cases of the immune system disorder called “bubble boy” disease. Several patients later developed leukemia because the new gene inserted into a place in the native DNA where it unintentionally activated a cancer gene.

“When you stick a chunk of DNA in randomly, sometimes it works well, sometimes it does nothing and sometimes it causes harm,” said Hank Greely, a Stanford University bioethicist. “The advantage with gene editing is you can put the gene in where you want it.”

Finally, some fear that the virus could get into other places like the heart, or eggs and sperm where it could affect future generations. Doctors say built-in genetic safeguards prevent the therapy from working anywhere but the liver, like a seed that only germinates in certain conditions.

This experiment is not connected to other, more controversial work being debated to try to edit genes in human embryos to prevent diseases before birth  changes that would be passed down from generation to generation.

 

Making History

Madeux’s treatment was to have happened a week earlier, but a small glitch prevented it.

He and his fiancee returned to Arizona, but nearly didn’t make it back to Oakland in time for the second attempt because their Sunday flight was canceled and no others were available until Monday, after the treatment was to take place.

Scrambling, they finally got a flight to Monterey, California, and a car service took them just over 100 miles north to Oakland.

On Monday he had the three-hour infusion, surrounded by half a dozen doctors, nurses and others wearing head-to-toe protective garb to lower the risk of giving him any germs. His doctor, Harmatz, spent the night at the hospital to help ensure his patient stayed well.

“I’m nervous and excited,” Madeux said as he prepared to leave the hospital. “I’ve been waiting for this my whole life, something that can potentially cure me.”

Story: Marilynn Marchione

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Man Denies Raping Dead Girlfriend’s Young Daughter

Suspect Neung Tongbao, 39, seated in brown, Tuesday at the Pattaya City Police Station.

PATTAYA — A stepfather accused of raping his deceased girlfriend’s 5-year-old daughter maintained Wednesday that she was injured falling down stairs despite medical evidence to the contrary.

Neung Tongbao, 39 of Udon Thani, was arrested Tuesday after the girl’s kindergarten teacher noticed she was in pain during class and had taken her to the hospital. Doctors said the girl had been sexually abused, and the teacher went to the police.

“After comforting the child, she told her teacher that she had been repeatedly sexually abused at their apartment,” Lt. Col. Krissanat Thanasupphanat said Wednesday. “The teacher then reported the matter to police, who investigated the matter and arrested the stepfather.”

The teacher said that during Monday’s class, the child had a violent stomachache, so she took her to Bang Lamung Hospital for a checkup. Doctors found that the child’s genitals were injured from repeated sexual abuse.

Neung told police that he works as a motorcycle taxi driver and lived with the girls’ mother until she died of an unspecified illness several months ago. Neung continued living with the girl and denies sexually her. He said she fell down some stairs and sustained injuries.

Police did not buy Neung’s story due to the medical evidence. They said their investigation is continuing. Neung is in police custody and has been charged with sexually abusing a child under 13, a crime punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

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Review: ‘Murder on the Orient Express’ Is a Lavish Romp

Kenneth Branagh’s “Murder on the Orient Express” is a visual feast, bursting with movie stars, glamour and production value so high, you might just exit the theater experiencing some time-warp whiplash. Certainly no studio would make a straightforward, classical whodunit with a budget the size of a modest superhero pic (and no superheroes to speak of) nowadays, you think. What year is this anyway?

But against all odds and logic, here we have, in the waning days of 2017, a perfectly decent adaptation of Agatha Christie’s 1934 novel with the likes of Michelle Pfeiffer, Penelope Cruz, Johnny Depp, Judi Dench and Branagh himself lighting up the big screen and chewing the decadent scenery like old-fashioned stars.

Branagh plays the lead, Hercule Poirot, a dandy Belgian detective with a gloriously over-the-top mustache who can only see the world as it should be. Imperfections, he says, stand out, whether it’s two soft-boiled eggs that are of different sizes or, you know, the kind of incongruities that make it immediately obvious to him who has committed a crime. This is all laid out quite neatly in a lively opening sequence at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem where he theatrically solves a theft in front of a crowd of locals on the verge of rioting.

Chance brings him aboard the Orient Express, which should really have its own credit in the film, where he meets an odd group of strangers — a sultry widow (Pfeiffer), a secretive governess (Daisy Ridley), the doctor whom she pretends to not know (Leslie Odom Jr.), a gangster-like art dealer (Depp), his valet (Derek Jacobi) and his bookkeeper (Josh Gad), a princess (Dench) and her maid (Olivia Coleman), a religious zealot (Cruz), a volatile dancer (Sergei Polunin) and his sick wife (Lucy Boynton), a German professor (Willem Dafoe) and a count (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo). And then one of them dies — there’s at least a chance someone reading doesn’t yet know who — and everyone remaining becomes a suspect.

Got all that?

Don’t worry. It’s more than a little overwhelming to keep track of who’s who in this bunch and quite a few get the short shrift. But it’s still fun enough to see Depp hamming it up with a thick New York accent, Pfeiffer vamping around the train’s hallways and Branagh careening between giddy parody and self-seriousness as a man who delights in a well-constructed pastry and a good turn-of-phrase from Charles Dickens but can’t seem to comprehend moral ambiguity in the slightest.

Unfortunately, the movie loses its steam right when the intrigue is supposed to be taking over. The discovery process isn’t nearly as fun or engaging as it should be, and despite the energetic start, the film becomes a bit of a slog waiting for the big answer (for those who already know it, either from the source material, Sidney Lumet’s 1974 film or any of the other adaptations, this might be even more tedious).

Branagh certainly steals scenes as Poirot, but the director might have taken some more time to ensure that all of his characters were given as loving a treatment as his own, or the setting, which is truly quite splendid to behold and even makes up for some of the deficiencies of the storytelling.

As odd as it might sound, it is somewhat refreshing to sit in a theater and watch a grand scale production that’s not set in space or predetermined by the pages in a comic book. Then it goes and mucks it all up by leaving the door conspicuously open for a sequel.

“Murder on the Orient Express,” a 20th Century Fox release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for “for violence and thematic elements.” Running time: 114 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.

Story: Lindsey Bahr

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Enter Next Month’s 60 Second Film Fest, Win Cash

BANGKOK — It’s not the length that matters; it’s the quality. At least in this case.

To the delight of cinephiles – especially those in a hurry – the 60 Second Film Festival returns to the capital next month, and submissions are open to all people and genres. The only limitation? They must be under a minute.

Bigger and bolder, the event this time will be shown on multiple screens on both floors of a Silom Road events space.

Clips will be rated across seven different categories: documentaries, art/experimental films, music/fashion videos, romance/comedy, drama/crime, thriller/mystery, ghost/horror and science-fiction/fantasy.

The best film overall will win a 20,000 baht cash prize. Category prizes will be announced at a later date.

Entering films is free, but they must be submitted online by Nov. 24. Follow the link for instructions.

The 60 Second Film Festival begins at 7pm on Dec. 2 at Whiteline at Soi Silom 8. It is reachable by foot or taxi from BTS Chong Nonsi. Admission is free.

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Bangkok Police Block Talk on Vietnamese Rights

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha shakes hand with Vietnamese Nguyễn Xuân Phúc on Nov. 11 in Danang

BANGKOK — A discussion planned for Wednesday about the violation of human rights in Vietnam at a press club was ordered canceled by the authorities.

The panel, organized by a US-based advocacy group, was supposed to take place today at the Foreign Correspondent’s Club of Thailand, or FCCT. Local police reportedly told the organizers and the venue hosts that such an event could end up disturbing peace in the region.

“This was not an FCCT event, but its cancellation suggests that orderly discussion of important regional issues is still threatened,” club president Dominic Faulder said in a message. “Lumpini police told us that Thai authorities did not want to upset the ASEAN ‘condominium’ by giving outsiders a platform to disturb the neighbours.”

Boat People SOS, a nonprofit based in the US state of Virginia, was planning to discuss human rights under the Vietnamese government, a one-party regime bashed by numerous watchdogs for its frequent clampdowns on dissent.

At today’s now-cancelled event, the group also intended to launch a campaign calling for the release of 165 critics currently jailed by the Vietnamese government.

Lumphini station chief Thawatkiat Chindakuansanong could not be reached for comment as of press time.

Since the 2014 coup, the military regime routinely sought to block panel discussions on civil rights and political situations, citing national security concerns. The junta’s orders are often relayed through local police. A Human Rights Watch event to launch its report on Vietnam’s human rights violations was forcibly canceled in 2015.

Back in 2010, the civilian government of then-prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva also pressured the FCCT into canceling a panel on Vietnam by denying NGO workers due to speak at the event entry into the country.

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Bangkok Quickies: Where to Feast For Thanksgiving

Photo: Pexels

BANGKOK — It’s after work and too late to braise that fall-off-the-bone turkey or whisk some roux-thickened gravy. That’s okay. Just head out the door, put on a dining napkin and enjoy.

For the Americans – or those ready to join in the feeding frenzy– an array of capital city venues are prepping feasts for Thanksgiving this week with a long list of dishes. Here are some picks for those who don’t have the time or inclination to roast their own turkey.

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Bunker: This fine-dining restaurant and bar on Soi Sathorn 12 will offer three courses by chef Arnie Marcella starting at 1,500 baht. Meals will be available 1pm to 9pm on Nov. 23 at Bunker Sathorn.

Little Beast: Eat like it’s your last Thanksgiving. On both Nov. 23 and Nov. 24, this Franco-American restaurant on Soi Thonglor 13 will serve a long Thanksgiving menu including Brazilian gougeres, turkey roulade and pumpkin cheesecake ice cream pie for at least 1,800 baht per person.

BUTTERBALL

204 Bistro: Located in the Swissôtel Le Concorde, 204 Bistro will host A Bountiful Thanksgiving 6pm to 10:30pm, with traditional roasted turkey, honey-glazed roasted ham and all the trimmings starting at 1,290 baht. The price includes various desserts such as pumpkin pie, apple pie, blueberry cheesecake and cookies.

Cinema Winehouse: Turbaconducken (a chicken inside a duck inside a turkey, all wrapped in bacon) returns this year to this bar-restaurant-alt cinema on Soi Samsen 1. Pricing and more information will be available online at a later date.

The Londoner Brew Pub: The Brit pub between sois Pattanakarn 30 and 32 offers a 990-baht meal deal that includes turkey roulade with pistachio nut stuffing, turkey thigh and baked asparagus with smoked bacon wrap.

Bourbon Street Bangkok: For two days – Nov. 23 and Nov. 24 – the classic Cajun and Creole restaurant in the Ekkamai area will offer its Thanksgiving selection, with highlighted jambalaya, oyster soup, crab cake, Cajun deep-fried turkey and duck among others. The buffet is 999 baht for adults and 500 baht for children.

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Telephone Pub: A gay pub on Soi Silom 4 will join the American celebration with a buffet of turkey, ham, cheese and more for 895 baht.

The Sportsman Bar: One of the best places to watch sports on Thanksgiving Day. NFL, NBA, NHL games will be screened during Happy Thanksgiving Day with the bar offering a 99-baht Tiger beer pint and a 199-baht roast pork or beef special. Tomato soup and pumpkin pie will also go for 99 baht.

Bourbon Street
Photo: Bourbon Street Bangkok / Facebook

Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok: The luxury hotel’s Grand Thanksgiving will offer an unlimited international meal for 2,200 baht per head (1,100 baht for children). Dinner will run from 6pm to 10pm on Nov. 23 and will include roasted whole turkey, beef sirloin, rack of lamb with herbs and much more.

Marriott Cafe: This restaurant inside the five-star hotel JW Marriott Hotel Bangkok on Soi Sukhumvit 2 does not only serve traditional turkey, lamb and ham; but also dishes for seafood lovers ranging from oysters and river prawns to snow crab. The buffet is 2,400 baht per person and starts at 6pm on Nov. 23.

Goji Kitchen & Bar: Walk into the Bangkok Marriott Marquis Queen’s Park and dine on everything from Butterball turkey and fresh seafood to pumpkin and pecan pies for 1,278 baht per person. For the occasion, the venue’s mixologists will create special cocktails Rum Mule, Rum Fashioned and Feeling Thankful.

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Photo: Little Beast / Facebook

 

 

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Fact Check: Trump Tells Tale About Air Force One

President Donald Trump walks on the tarmac as he waves to the crowd upon his arrival in January at Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland. Photo: Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump told a fanciful little tale Tuesday about Air Force One being denied landing rights in the Philippines during a trip by his predecessor because bilateral relations were so bad. That didn’t happen.

Before boarding the plane in Manila to come home, Trump bragged to the press that he’s pushed relations with the Philippines to new heights.

“And as you know, we were having a lot of problems with the Philippines,” he said. “The relationship with the past administration was horrible, to use a nice word. I would say horrible is putting it mildly. You know what happened. Many of you were there, and you never got to land. The plane came close but it didn’t land.”

That prompted a lot of head-scratching.

President Barack Obama last visited the Philippines in November 2015, arriving in Manila after an overnight flight from Turkey. There were no problems with landing the plane. Obama used the visit to announce the United States was transferring two ships to the Philippine Navy.

Perhaps Trump was referring erroneously to Obama’s aborted meeting with President Rodrigo Duterte? In September 2016, Obama abruptly canceled a meeting with the new Philippines leader in Laos after Duterte called him an obscene name. Duterte was warning Obama not to speak with him about the brutality of his crackdown on the illegal drug trade.

Obama went ahead with his Laos trip, meeting other leaders.

It’s possible Trump was referring to something other than an Obama presidential trip. But if he was, he didn’t say.

Story: Josh Lederman, Carol Woodward

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Duterte Calls Trudeau’s Drug War Comments Insulting

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, center, shakes hands with Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc, left, and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte during a photo session of the ASEAN-Canada 40th Commemorative session Tuesday in Manila, Philippines. Photo: Adrian Wyld / Associated Press

MANILA — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said he was angered and insulted on Tuesday by Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s comments about the Philippine government’s war on drugs, which has earned widespread condemnation for leaving thousands of suspects dead.

Trudeau said he raised concerns about human rights abuses and extrajudicial killings in Duterte’s anti-drug campaign when he met Tuesday with the president ahead of Canada’s summit in the Philippines with the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Trudeau was the first leader of the 20 attending this week’s ASEAN summit and related meetings who has publicly said he brought up the touchy issue with the volatile Filipino leader.

“I also mentioned human rights, the rule of law and specifically extrajudicial killings as being an issue that Canada is concerned with,” Trudeau said at a news conference. “I impressed on him the need for respect for the rule of law, and as always offered Canada’s support and help as a friend to move forward on what is a real challenge.”

He said Duterte was receptive to his comments and their exchange was cordial and positive.

But Duterte later told reporters that he had refused to provide an explanation for the killings.

“I said I will not explain. It is a personal and official insult,” Duterte said. “It angers me when you are a foreigner, you do not know what exactly is happening in this country. You don’t even investigate.”

Duterte is highly sensitive to such criticism, and in the past called then U.S. President Barack Obama a “son of a bitch” after the State Department publicly expressed concern over the Philippine anti-drug campaign.

President Donald Trump, who also attended this week’s ASEAN summit, did not publicly take Duterte to task for the drug crackdown. Instead, Trump said he and Duterte “had a great relationship,” and avoided questions about whether he raised human rights concerns in a meeting with the Philippine leader.

The White House later said they discussed the Islamic State group, illegal drugs and trade during the 40-minute meeting. Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said human rights came up “briefly” in the context of the Philippines’ fight against illegal drugs. She did not say if Trump was critical of Duterte’s program.

Harry Roque, Duterte’s spokesman, said there was no mention of human rights or extralegal killings during the meeting with Trump, but there was a lengthy discussion of the Philippines’ war on drugs, with Duterte doing most of the explaining.

The two sides later issued a statement saying they “underscored that human rights and the dignity of human life are essential, and agreed to continue mainstreaming the human rights agenda in their national programs.”

Story: Teresa Cerojano

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