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‘Summer Hill’ is Coming to Phra Khanong

Photo: Boutique Corp. / Facebook

BANGKOK — Phra Khanong’s cosmopolitan transformation continues with the arrival this year of a seasonally inspired community mall.

Built on 5 rai (8,000sqm) a few steps from BTS Phra Khanong, Summer Hill will include more than 40 shops, cafes, restaurants, as well as a wellness center and coworking space. The three-story, mixed-use space valued at 250 million baht is expected open in the fourth quarter.

Summer Hill is the most recent project by Boutique Corp., the same developer behind Rain Hill on Soi Sukhumvit 47.

The company also plans to build a six-floor office building next door with 10,000sqm of commercial space for the project’s second phase. It’s hoped to be completed by the end of 2018.

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11 Killed After Gunman Attacks Church in Southeast Nigeria

Liberia President, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, left, Nigeria President Muhammadu Buhari, centre, and Senegal President Macky Sall, poses Monday for a photograph before a meeting in Abuja, Nigeria. Photo: Azeez Akunleyan / Associated Press

WARRI, Nigeria — Authorities in Nigeria say at least 11 people are dead and others were critically wounded when gunmen attacked a church in southeastern Nigeria.

Garba Umar, police commissioner of Anambra state, said a gunman attacked St. Philip Catholic Church early Sunday.

But one parishioner, Uche Nonoso, told The Associated Press there were in fact two gunmen and more than 15 killed at the church.

The Rev. Hygi Aghaulor, communications director for the Nnewi Diocese, said the community was praying for the wounded.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but the police say a manhunt has been launched. Authorities said they did not believe Boko Haram was behind the attack. The group has burned hundreds of churches over the past decade.

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30 Injured on Phuket Mountain as Bus Left Hanging by a Thread (Photos)

First responders rescue tourists from a precariously positioned bus Sunday night on a Phuket mountain.

PHUKET — Thirty people were injured when a bus left the road and nearly plunged down a steep mountain slope after colliding with other vehicles in Patong, local police said Monday.

The bus, which was carrying 25 tourists from China, collided Sunday night with a van, tuk-tuk and motorcycle on a curving stretch of road as it was coming down the mountain, according to police Lt. Col. Theerasak Boonsang of Patong police.

The bus slid halfway off the road but was stopped from falling down the mountain because by a large pipe. Theerasak dismissed reports that the bus had brake problems.

“It simply drove too fast,” he said.

The incident injured all 25 tourists on the bus, who were clients of Pacific Holiday Co. Ltd. and on their way back to the Phuket Graceland Resort & Spa.

A Thai motorcyclist, van driver, tuk-tuk driver and Japanese tourist riding in a tuk-tuk were also injured.

Only the bus driver remains hospitalized. Theerasak said the driver was in critical condition, so police were unable to read charges against him.

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Police Fine Celebs for Booze Pics, Play Down Wider Crackdown

Solo artist Pongsak Rattanaphong poses in an Instagram image subsequently censored by Manager newspaper.

BANGKOK — Three celebrities have been fined for advertising alcohol on social media, police said Monday.

For violating a notorious booze law that bans “encouraging” the consumption of alcohol – which authorities say covers photos on social media – the chief of Nonthaburi police said the three celebrities were fined 50,000 baht each on Saturday.

“We have already fined [them],” Col. Pannapat Dechchotepisit said. “And we are submitting documents for eight others.”

He declined to name any of the celebrities. They’ve been identified before as a number of entertainers including DJ Davide Dorico; vocalists Pongsak Rattanaphong and Hansa Juengwiwattanawong; and actors Cris Horwang, Sean Jindachot and Ratchanont Suprakob.

In July, police and alcohol regulators announced they would prosecute actors, singers and other celebs for violating the 2008 Alcohol Control Act. At the time, they named four suspects, but later said the number had risen to over 20.

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Actress Chris Horwang poses in an Instagram image subsequently censored by Manager newspaper.

All have been accused of appearing in photos posted to social media which appear to advertise alcohol, a charge that carries a maximum penalty of 500,000 baht.

According to an official English translation of Section 32 of the 2008 Alcohol Control Act, “No person shall advertise or display names or trademark of alcoholic beverage deemed to exaggerate their qualifications or induce people to drink such alcoholic beverage either directly or indirectly.”

The crackdown has sparked fear and ridicule on social media that private citizens who simply share pictures of themselves hanging out with friends at bars are liable to the half a million baht fine.

Last month, three “cheer beer ladies were charged with violating the law for mentioning a beer promotion in a Facebook Live video.

But Pannapat, the Nonthaburi station chief, said only those found guilty of willfully advertising alcohol for a commercial purpose will be targeted.

“There’s a committee that will determine whether there’s any intent,” the colonel said. “For example, if a reporter goes drinking and poses for a photo, but a Heineken logo on the chair happens to be in the photo, it doesn’t mean there’s intention to advertise the brand.”

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Weather Foils Recovery of Missing Thai Students in California

FRESNO, California — Weather conditions have delayed the recovery of a car believed to contain the bodies of two Thai students from a river canyon in central California, foreign ministry officials said Monday.

The bodies of Thiwadee Saengsuriyarit, 24, and Pakkapol Charatsongporn, 28, are believed to be in the rental car found 150 meters from the highway at the bottom of a ravine in the Kings River in Kings Canyon National Park, according to local authorities.

They went missing July 26, but the terrain and weather have stymied efforts to get to the car.

“The [search and rescue] team has been following weather conditions all day. The winds are so strong that the helicopter can’t fly down into the valley, and recovery will not be complete by Monday US time,” said Busadee Santipitaks of the Foreign Ministry.

The two University of South Florida students were on holiday and traveling in a rental car to visit the national park.

Read: 2 Thais Still Missing After Car Falls Off California Cliff

The California Highway Patrol and local authorities may next attempt recovery of the car on Wednesday, Busadee said.

Images posted by the Thai Consulate in Los Angeles show a smashed metal guardrail where Thiwadee and Pakkapol left the road.

Members of both victims’ families arrived Friday in California. They expressed disappointment with the delay. The families made merit for Thiwadee and Pakkapol at Wat Padhammachart in La Puente and the Hsi Lai Temple in Hacienda Heights. They then went together to retrace the route their children took in the last days of their life.

A California Highway Patrol officer shows a Thai consulate official the scene of the crash.

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The spot on Highway 180 where the car carrying the two University of South Florida students left the road and fell into a river canyon. Photo: Royal Thai Consulate-General Los Angeles
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Thiwadee and Pakkapol’s families make merit for their children Sunday in California. Photo: Matichon
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Tillerson Skips ASEAN Gala Attended by N Korean Envoy

North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho emerges from his bilateral meeting with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi, right, in the sidelines of the 50th ASEAN Foreign Ministers' Meeting and its Dialogue Partners Sunday in suburban Pasay city, south Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

MANILA — U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has skipped a dinner in the Philippines for foreign ministers that North Korea’s top diplomat attended.

According to Tillerson’s public schedule, he was due to attend the dinner at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations gathering in Manila.

Tillerson aide R.C. Hammond says that after a productive first day, Tillerson has taken time to prepare for prepare for Day 2.

Representing the United States at the dinner was Susan Thornton  acting assistant secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs.

Before Tillerson’s trip, the U.S. had said he had no plans to interact with North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho.

Ri was spotted at the gala smiling and toasting with the other foreign ministers.

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Ex-War Crimes Prosecutor Quits Panel Probing Syria Abuses

Carla del Ponte, Member of the Independent Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic, attends a press conference in March at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. Photo: Martial Trezzini / Associated Press

GENEVA — Former war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte says she is resigning from the U.N.’s independent Commission of Inquiry on Syria, decrying Security Council inaction to hold criminals accountable in the war-battered country where “everyone is bad.”

In comments published Sunday by the Swiss magazine Blick, Del Ponte expressed frustration about the commission and criticized President Bashar Assad’s government, the Syrian opposition and the international community overall.

“We have had absolutely no success,” she told Blick on the sidelines of the Locarno film festival Sunday. “For five years we’ve been running up against walls.”

Del Ponte, who gained fame as the prosecutor for the international war crimes tribunals that investigated atrocities in Rwanda and Yugoslavia, has repeatedly decried the Security Council’s refusal to appoint a similar court for Syria’s 6½-year-old civil war. Permanent member Russia, which can veto council actions, is a key backer of Assad’s government.

“I give up. The states in the Security Council don’t want justice,” Del Ponte said, adding that she planned to take part in the last meeting in September. “I can’t any longer be part of this commission which simply doesn’t do anything.”

Appointed in September 2012, Del Ponte was quoted by Blick as saying she now thinks she was put into the role “as an alibi.”

“I’ve written my letter of resignation already and will post it in the coming days,” she said.

She did not immediately respond to a text message from The Associated Press seeking comment.

In her comments to Blick, Del Ponte described Syria as a land without a future.

“Believe me, the terrible crimes committed in Syria I neither saw in Rwanda nor ex-Yugoslavia,” she said. “We thought the international community had learned from Rwanda. But no, it learned nothing.”

At first in Syria, “the opposition (members) were the good ones; the government were the bad ones,” she was quoted as saying.

But after six years, Del Ponte concluded: “In Syria, everyone is bad. The Assad government is committing terrible crimes against humanity and using chemical weapons. And the opposition, that is made up only of extremists and terrorists anymore.”

The commission issued a statement saying it was aware since mid-June of Del Ponte’s plans to leave and insisted that its work “must continue” to help bring perpetrators in Syria to justice.

Del Ponte’s resignation shrinks the commission to two members after Thai professor and former human rights investigator Vitit Muntarbhorn left last year to become the first-ever U.N. independent expert investigating violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation.

The commission was set up in August 2011 by the Human Rights Council to investigate crimes in Syria, no matter who committed them. Since then, it has compiled thousands of interviews and keeps a list of suspected war criminals under lock and key at the offices of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva.

But Del Ponte said that as long as the Security Council didn’t put in place a special tribunal for war crimes in Syria, all commission reports were pointless.

The issue of accountability for war crimes in Syria has largely taken a back seat to diplomatic efforts to end the war in recent months.

The commission’s relevance has also come into question after the U.N. General Assembly, acting in the face of the Security Council inaction, voted in December to set up an investigative body to help document and prepare legal cases to possibly prosecute the most serious violations in Syria’s war that is estimated to have left at least 400,000 dead.

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Myanmar Says No Crimes Against Humanity in Rakhine Violence

Myanmar Vice President Myint Swe, chairman of Maungdaw Investigation Commission, talks to journalists during a press conference of their final report on Rakhine state investigation Sunday at a government guest house. Photo: Thein Zaw / Associated Press

YANGON — The Myanmar government’s inquiry into violence in northern Rakhine state last year that forced tens of thousands of Muslim Rohingya to flee to Bangladesh and led to U.N. accusations of crimes against humanity by the army has concluded that no such crimes happened.

Speaking at the release of the Rakhine Investigative Commission’s final report, Vice President Myint Swe  a former general  told reporters Sunday that “there is no evidence of crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing as the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights claimed.”

He also denied charges that there had been gang rapes by the military as it swept through Rohingya villages in a security clearance operation. The army was reacting to deadly attacks against border police posts by a previously unknown insurgent group in October 2016 in the Maungdaw area of Rakhine.

The commission’s report did accept that some things might have happened that broke the law, attributing it to excessive action on the part of individual members of the security forces.

Rights groups have previously expressed their doubts over the commission’s work, saying it lacked outside experts, had poor research methodologies and lacked credibility because it was not independent.

The U.N. has mandated its own fact-finding mission to travel to the Maungdaw area to conduct its own inquiry, but the government has said its members will not be allowed to go.

Zaw Myint Pe, a senior member of the government commission, said the report released by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in early February, which included accusations of rights abuses by security forces, had failed to take into consideration violent acts committed by Muslim groups.

“The report does not contain forward-looking constructive recommendations but instead accuses Myanmar of committing genocide and ethnic cleansing by killing Muslims and it is terribly affecting our country’s image,” said Zaw Myint Pe.

The government has shut down northern Rakhine, where allegations of rights abuses are ongoing, to independent journalists, rights experts and humanitarian workers for almost nine months. The security forces launched an aggressive clearance operation in Rakhine in October 2016 after shadowy insurgents killed nine border guard police officers.

Story: Esther Htusan

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Venezuela Troops Quash Anti-Maduro Attack on Military Base

Soldiers stop a vehicle, whose passengers kneel on the ground outside the car, as they detain the two passengers who were circulating on the Paramacay military base Sunday in Valencia, Venezuela. Photo: Juan Carlos Hernandez / Associated Press

VALENCIA, Venezuela — Soldiers battled for three hours Sunday morning against a small band of anti-government fighters who snuck onto a Venezuelan army base, apparently intent on fomenting an uprising, President Nicolas Maduro said.

Troops killed two of the intruders, wounded another and captured seven, but 10 others got away, the embattled leader announced in his weekly broadcast on state television.

“We know where they are headed and all of our military and police force is deployed,” Maduro said. He said he would ask for “the maximum penalty for those who participated in this terrorist attack.”

The incident happened during the early morning hours at the Paramacay base in the central city of Valencia. Residents who live nearby said they heard repeated bursts of gunfire starting around 4:30 a.m.

A video showing more than a dozen men dressed in military fatigues, some carrying rifles, began circulating widely on social media around that time. In the recording, a man who identified himself as Capt. Juan Caguaripano said the men were members of the military who oppose Maduro’s socialist government and called on military units to declare themselves in open rebellion.

“This is not a coup d’etat,” the man said. “This is a civic and military action to re-establish the constitutional order.”

Twenty men entered the base, catching soldiers on night watch by surprise, Maduro said. The intruders managed to reach the base’s weapons depot before an alarm sounded, alerting troops to the incursion. He said 10 of the invaders then escaped, some carrying off arms, while those left behind exchanged gunfire with soldiers until about 8 a.m. before all were either killed or captured.

“Today we had to defeat terrorism with bullets,” Maduro said.

Residents who live nearby and saw the dissident group’s video online gathered around the military base chanting “Freedom!” Other protests also emerged spontaneously around Valencia into the afternoon.

Troops dispersed the protesters with tear gas and a man was fatally shot at a demonstration less than a mile from the base, said Haydee Franco, coordinating secretary of the opposition Progressive Advance party. More than 120 people have been reported killed in unrest that began in early April.

Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez characterized the attackers as a “paramilitary” expedition, saying the intruders were civilians dressed in uniforms. He did not identify any of the participants, but said they included a lieutenant who had abandoned his post. He said the man who recorded the video was a former officer dismissed three years ago after being charged with rebellion and betraying the homeland.

In 2014, Caguaripano released a 12-minute video denouncing Maduro during a previous wave of anti-government unrest. He later reportedly sought exile after a military tribunal ordered his arrest, appearing in an interview on CNN en Espanol to draw attention to what he said was discontent within military ranks.

He returned to Venezuela to lead Sunday’s uprising, said Giomar Flores, a mutinous naval officer now in Bogota, Colombia, who said he is a spokesman for the group.

Padrino Lopez alleged the attackers were recruited by “right-wing extremists” working with unspecified foreign governments. Maduro said the attack was “paid for by Miami and Colombia”  cities with large numbers of Venezuelans who oppose his government. Neither provided specific details on how they had come to that conclusion.

“Today’s terrorist attack is no more than a propaganda show,” Padrino Lopez said.

Venezuela’s latest bout of political unrest erupted in protest to a Supreme Court decision in late March ordering the opposition-controlled National Assembly dissolved. Although the order was quickly annulled, near-daily demonstrations snowballed into a general protest calling for a new presidential election.

Opposition leaders have urged the military, which historically has served as an arbiter of Venezuela’s political disputes, to break with Maduro over what his foes consider violations of the constitution.

But the president is believed to still have the military’s support. He and his predecessor, the late President Hugo Chavez, worked diligently to assure their allegiance.

Like Sunday’s uprising, most manifestations of dissent among troops have been small and isolated thus far.

“It’s still very hard to know to what extent there are significant divisions within the military,” Michael Shifter, president of the Washington-based Inter-American Dialogue, said recently.

The attack capped an already tense weekend during which a new constitutional assembly that will rule with nearly unlimited powers voted to remove chief prosecutor Luisa Ortega Diaz.

Ortega Diaz, a longtime government loyalist who has become one of Maduro’s most outspoken critics, reiterated her refusal to recognize that decision at a public appearance alongside opposition leaders Sunday.

“I am still Venezuela’s chief prosecutor,” she said to applause.

The assembly ordered her replaced by Ombudsman Tarek William Saab, who was recently sanctioned by Washington for failing to protect protesters from abuses in his role as the nation’s top human rights official.

In his Sunday address, Maduro defended the constitutional assembly’s right to remove Ortega Diaz, comparing it to U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to fire acting Attorney General Sally Yates after she publicly questioned his immigration order shortly after taking office in January.

He also announced that a new “truth commission” was being installed Sunday, setting up its offices in a historic building in Caracas that also houses the Ministry of Foreign Relations. The commission will have the right to require those it summons to testify and those who lie can be charged with perjury, the president said.

Maduro said the assembly is considering creating a law against “hate, intolerance and fascism” that would immediately punish those responsible for the current upheaval.

Maduro frequently refers to opposition leaders and protesters as “fascists.”

The president singled out Julio Borges, the leader of the opposition-controlled National Assembly, warning him, “Justice is coming for you and the terrorists you’ve helped advance.”

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7 Flicks on ASEAN Future Past to Show at Free Film Fest

‘Long Long Time Ago’

BANGKOK — History, war, culture and social issues drawn from Southeast Asia will be portrayed through selected films screening for free this month.

Seven acclaimed films from seven ASEAN nations will show over five days in the SAC ASEAN Film Festival.

The fest opens with the premiere of “Forever Yours,” a gay Vietnamese romantic drama about three men in rural love triangle.

See a typical Chinese family in pre-independence Singapore in the heartwarming film “Long Long Time Ago.” An elderly woman travels across Indonesia’s Central Java to find the tomb of her husband, who died in that nation’s war for independence, in the award-winning “Ziarah: Tales of the Otherwords.”

Celebrated Filipino director Brillante Mendoza’s most recent work “Ma’ Rosa” will also show. It is a dramatized look at poverty, drugs and police corruption in Manila. The film’s lead, Jaclyn Jose, was Cannes’ best actress of 2016.

A Cambodian architect-turned-director takes audiences to “Dream Land,” which frankly talks about the exploding metropolis of Phnom Penh through an ambitious young real estate agent.

Taking 10 years to produce, Malaysian crime drama “Jagat” explores an Indian-Malaysian community in the early ‘90s through a 12-year-old boy and his relationships with his family, a former drug addict and a local gangster.

The festival closes with “The Road to Mandalay.” The Burmese drama sees two illegal Burmese migrants flee their country’s civil war to Thailand.

Admission if free. Thai and English subtitles will be provided. See the full film schedule and make sure to reserve a seat online.

The festival runs Aug. 19 to Aug. 23 at the Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn Anthropology Centre across the river in Bangkok’s Taling Chan district on Soi Borommaratchachonnani 39.

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