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Thailand to Welcome July With Showers, Hot Weather

Farmers sow their fields twice with rice seeds because of the heavy rain Wednesday in Surin province.

BANGKOK — Thailand will welcome July and the second half of the year with rain showers across the kingdom.

Similar to the past seven days, the country will see another half-week of rain, the Thai Meteorological Department said Monday. Bangkok will see a 40 percent chance of rain today, increasing to 60 percent Tuesday through Saturday. Temperatures in the capital are set to range from 24C to 37C throughout the week.

The weeklong rains will hit the northern and eastern parts of the country, Isaan region and Andaman coastal provinces especially hard, with a 70 percent chance of precipitation. Residents should exercise caution at the risk of heavy rains and flash floods.

The July rains are due to the southwestern monsoons and a low pressure system moving over northern Vietnam and Southern China.

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Kingdom to See Half-Week of Rain Ahead

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Aid Helicopter Crash Kills 8 After Indonesian Volcano Erupts

A Eurocopter AS365 Dauphin from the Chilean naval force similar to the model which crashed Sunday in Indonesia. Photo: Oscar.barrantes.cardenas / Wikimedia Commons

JAKARTA — A rescue helicopter crashed while heading to help evacuate residents near an active volcano on Indonesia’s main island, killing all eight people on board, officials said Monday.

The helicopter crashed about three minutes before arriving at Dieng Plateau, the popular tourist area where the volcanic eruption Sunday injured at least 10 people. The aircraft reportedly hit a cliff on Butak Mountain in the Temanggung district of Central Java province.

All eight people on board were killed, said Maj. Gen. Heronimus Guru, deputy operations chief of the National Search and Rescue Agency. He told The Associated Press, “We are now at the Bhayangkara Hospital in Semarang,” the Central Java provincial capital where the victims’ bodies were taken.

Brig. Gen. Ivan Tito, director of operation and training at the search agency, told TVOne station in a live interview from Temanggung, that the victims were four navy officers and four rescuers. He also said the Indonesian-made Dauphin AS365 helicopter was airworthy.

The Sileri Crater at Dieng Plateau spewed cold lava, mud and ash as high as 50 meters (164 feet) into the sky when it erupted Sunday morning, said National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.

The sudden eruption occurred while about 17 visitors were around the crater. Ten people were injured and were treated at a hospital.

Soldiers and police officers were dispatched and local residents and visitors were asked to evacuate in case of further eruptions, Nugroho said. The crater appeared to be quieter Monday morning, and all visitors to the plateau have been evacuated.

Sileri is the most active and dangerous among some 10 craters at Dieng Plateau. Its most recent eruption was in 2009, when it unleashed volcanic materials up to 200 meters (656 feet) high and triggered the creation of three new craters.

Dieng Plateau, located in the Central Java district of Banjarnegara, is a popular tourist attraction because of its cool climate and ninth-century Hindu temples. It sits about 2,000 meters (6,600 feet) above sea level.

Some 142 people were reportedly asphyxiated in 1979 when the volcano spewed gases.

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10 Injured as Volcano Erupts on Indonesia’s Java Island

Mount Sinabung spews volcanic ash into the air, as seen from Berastagi, North Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Binsar Bakkara / Associated Press

JAKARTA — A volcano on Indonesia’s main island of Java has erupted, injuring 10 people.

National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho says the eruption of Sileri Crater at Dieng Plateau spewed cold lava, mud and ash as high as 50 meters (164 feet).

He says the sudden eruption occurred at about 11:30 a.m. Sunday, when there were about 17 visitors around the crater. Ten people were injured and were being treated at hospital.

The Dieng Plateau in the Central Java province district of Banjarnegara is a popular tourist attraction because of its cool climate and ninth-century Hindu temples, located at an altitude of about 2,000 meters (6,600 feet) above sea level.

Some 142 people were reportedly asphyxiated in 1979 when the volcano spewed gases.

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Trump’s White House All But Ignoring Spanish Speakers

A graphic examines the grammatical errors of the White House Spanish Twitter account. Photo: Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Trump White House no habla español. Well, un poquito.

After a succession of administrations that embraced Spanish-language content, President Donald Trump’s White House is all but ignoring Spanish speakers even though he has a robust online presence in English.

His administration has yet to offer a Spanish White House website. It has eliminated the position of director of Hispanic media outreach. And its Spanish-language Twitter account is heavy with English text and features sloppy translations.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer said in January that the administration had its “IT folks working overtime” to roll out a new Spanish language site after WhiteHouse.gov/espanol went dark in the hours after Trump took office.

“Trust me, it’s going to take a little bit more time, but we’re working piece by piece to get that done,” Spicer said at the time. More than five months later, the site still urges readers to “STAY TUNED.”

The White House’s Spanish twitter account, @LaCasaBlanca, is also far less active in the Trump era.

The account has tweeted just 41 times since Trump’s inauguration; more than one-third of those posts came on the day of his address to a joint session of Congress on Feb. 28. Of the 41 tweets, about half were written in English. The Spanish tweets are sprinkled with typos — 11 in all. While most mistakes are minor flubs such as missing accents, those accents often change the meaning of words significantly. For instance, they turn “medical” into “medicate” or “is” into “this.”

Notably, one of the first agencies to expand Spanish-language content during the Trump era has been U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The agency better known as ICE is responsible for carrying out deportations. Last month, it announced that it was expanding the Spanish section of its website and started a new Spanish twitter feed, @ICEespanol.

The White House director of media affairs, Helen Aguirre Ferre, said she expects a Spanishwebsite to launch later this year. She noted the Obama administration took nine months to launch its version, adding that “the priority remains to improve the English language website.”

She said there was no plan to hire a press officer solely dedicated to Spanish-language media at this time. She said she and another staffer in the communications operation are bilingual and conduct interviews in Spanish. Spanish-language media are also invited to participate in press briefings, background briefings and other events, along with their English-language colleagues, she said.

Former President George W. Bush began the tradition of a Spanish-language website. The Obama administration followed suit.

Luis Miranda, director of Hispanic media at the White House during the Obama administration, said the Obama-era Spanish-language website was not just a translation of the English site, but included information geared to Latinos on topics such as immigration, health issues, banking and veterans affairs.

“For us it was important that all of our constituents across the board were getting as much information as possible about what we were doing,” he said.

Still, the Obama White House received some criticism for using Spanglish in its initial website on his health overhaul.

Activists see the lack of Spanish content as part of a larger pattern by Trump and the administration.

“I believe they have written off the Latino vote as, ‘I’m never going to get it, so why should I even bother?'” said Luis A. Miranda Jr., a Democratic strategist who has worked for Democrat Hillary Clinton as well as Republican Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York. (The two Mirandas are not related.)

During his campaign, Trump turned off many Latinos with his harsh anti-immigration rhetoric. He criticized rival Jeb Bush for answering a reporter’s question in Spanish, saying the former Florida governor “should really set the example by speaking English while in the United States.”

“We have a country, where, to assimilate, you have to speak English. And I think that where he was, and the way it came out didn’t sound right to me,” Trump said during one Republican primary debate.

Trump still won about 28 percent of the Latino vote, similar to Mitt Romney in 2012, according to exit polls.

Roberto Izurieta, director of Latin American Projects at George Washington University, said that since Trump began his campaign, his rhetoric has been “very aggressive and very anti-Hispanic.”

“The president decided on Day One to stay with his electoral base. It means he will keep his divisive rhetoric and stay with his base, which is anti-immigrant,” he said.

Javier Palomarez, president of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, was a vocal critic of Trump during the campaign. But he said he has been pleasantly surprised by the administration’s other Hispanic outreach efforts.

While Spanish-language communication is “important in terms of optics,” he said, “at the end of the day, where the rubber meets the road for us and what matters to us is what kind of policy are you enacting, are you engaged with us.”

He said his members’ conversations with the White House have been “constant, consistent and ongoing,” with numerous in-person meetings with White House and Cabinet officials, including Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, and weekly phone calls with Jennifer Korn, deputy director for the White House Office of Public Liaison.

“They have been more than willing to talk to us and engage us,” he said. “This is the same level or more access that we had with the Obama administration.”

Story: Jill Colvin, Luis Alonso Lugo

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AirAsia Bus Crashes Into Nok Air Jet at Don Mueang

Nok Air bus was hit by AirAsia shuttle bus Friday night

BANGKOK — An airport shuttle bus crashed into a parked airplane Friday night, an incident which the airline said may affect flight schedules. There were no reports of injuries.

Nok Air issued a statement Saturday saying an AirAsia shuttle bus had hit one of its stationary jets with tail No. HS-DBK at apron No. 35 of Don Mueang International Airport. The crash left no injuries but authorities said the incident may affect flight schedules.

Photos taken after the crash show visible damages to the frontal left part of the aircraft. The plane was empty, undergoing preparations for a scheduled morning flight, which was suspended after the incident.

Authorities said the airplane would be grounded from service while it undergoes inspection for further damage. They said passengers might be affected from rescheduled or delayed flights in certain routes. The airline did not specify what routes would be affected or when normal operations would resume.

AirAsia said in a statement that the incident had been an accident and that the airline was working closely with the airport and involved organizations for further investigation.

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Nok Air bus was hit by AirAsia shuttle bus Friday night
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Nok Air bus was hit by AirAsia shuttle bus Friday night
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Ministry Blocks Thai Esports Athletes From Asian Indoor Games

Photo: Thai Esport / Facebook

BANGKOK — Thai sport authorities have drawn aggro from competitive gamers for declaring they are not a real sport and denying them participation in the fifth Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, or AIMAG.

While ministries that only perceive gaming as a social ill may have been responsible for the decision, pro gamers were left frustrated by two reasons cited by the Sports Authority of Thailand to bar their participation: Esports is still a demonstration sport, and the Thai E-Sports Association is not yet a nationally registered organization.

“Esports is still a demonstration sport, so it won’t cause much damage whether we send the team to join the tournament or not,” deputy governor Natthawut Reungwet said Thursday. “The Thai E-Sports Association still has plenty of time.”

Cyberathletes have seized on the decision to rail against an ossified bureaucracy out of touch with the digital world for preventing them from attending the event backed by the Olympic Council of Asia.

“Because we let these hidebound people sit in management, this is the answer we get,” Facebook user Tum Duangthai wrote. “The world has developed for millions of years. These fucking guys just think there was nothing like this in their age. They just can’t keep up with reality.”

“To simplify in short… ‘Go compete and make yourself famous, then the Sports Authority of Thailand will go after you to exploit your fame,’” Facebook user Sitthipol Kositpanthawong wrote.

Games such as Defense of the Ancients, or Dota, and League of Legends are widely known among Thais, and Thai esports have begun to come into their own, with more professionally organized events and larger purses at stake.

Still, the government says it does not yet recognize it as a sport.

The esports association president said Friday that to turn down the invitation to the event, sponsored by the Olympic Council of Asia, is a lost opportunity for Thai gamers, as they could gain experience in the early era of esports.

The Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games feature competitions in traditional sports as well as esports. They are held every four years. National Olympic committees were to select teams by July 20 to participate, including for the esports competitions in Dota 2, Starcraft 2 and Hearthstone, according to the official site of the Ashbagat 2017 games.

“If we wait until we are ready, it will be too late,” Santi Lothong said Friday. “This is a chance for Thai players to be training at the same time with players around the world.”

He said the council gave each country a quota of 11 players and paid for their trips.

As he waited for authorities to decide, Santi had already prepared to recruit national players – and more than 200 gamers applied for the coveted spots.

Instead, he had to cancel the whole thing.

The esports association is currently registered with the Provincial Administration Department.

In order to put forward players to represent the kingdom, it must gain full status as a sport association under the rules of the Sports Authority.

Natthawut said the association already submitted its application, but the process wouldn’t conclude in time to send players to join the Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games in September in Turkmenistan.

The association president said he made the original request almost a year ago. He has also been campaigning for esports to be officially recognized in Thailand.

Contrary to what gamers believed – that the move was obstructed by the sports authority – Santi said that greater pressure came from other ministries involved in the process.

Though the deal got the green light from the Ministry of Tourism and Sport, recognizing esports also involves other ministries; culture, education, public health and social development and human security.

Santi admitted it was a tough job to get the support of agencies, such as public health and culture, which often assign blame gaming for all manner of social ills.

“I’ve also given presentations to the lawmakers two times,” he said. “They asked me, ‘But how would you solve the problem of kids addicted to games?”

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Obama Pushes Tolerance, Respect in Childhood Home Jakarta

Former U.S. President Barack Obama gestures as he delivers his speech during the 4th Congress of the Indonesian Diaspora Network on Saturday in Jakarta, Indonesia, Saturday. Photo: Achmad Ibrahim / Associated Press

JAKARTA — Following another week of dust-ups between the media and President Donald Trump, his predecessor shared a bit of wisdom from the other side of the world about tolerance and taking the daily news cycle in stride.

“I wasn’t worried about what was in the newspapers today,” former President Barack Obama said Saturday during a nostalgic visit to Indonesia’s capital, his childhood home. “What I was worried about was, ‘What are they going to write about me 20 years from now when I look back?'”

Obama has largely stayed away from U.S. politics and the Trump administration, but he did tout one of his accomplishments while in office.

“In Paris, we came together around the most ambitious agreement in history about climate change, an agreement that even with the temporary absence of American leadership, can still give our children a fighting chance,” he said.

Trump shocked many countries last month by announcing he was pulling out of the accord. He has also had a difficult relationship with members of the press and was recently condemned by Democrats and Republicans for a tweet that attacked a female MSNBC host.

Obama stressed the importance of stepping away from news sites where only like-minded views are shared, and warned about social media giving rise to resentment of minorities and bad treatment of people.

The former president was greeted by a crowd of thousands, including leaders, students and businesspeople, in Jakarta, where he opened the Fourth Congress of Indonesian Diaspora. He is wildly popular in Indonesia, where many view him as an adopted son. A statue of the boy still remembered as “Barry” stands outside his old elementary school.

He reminisced about moving to Jakarta in 1967 when he was just 6 years old, shouting, “Indonesia bagian dari diri saya!” or “Indonesia is part of me!”

Obama said he had been gorging on the local food since arriving.

“If the rainy season came, the floods were coming and we had to clean out the floors in our house and then chase the chickens because they had gone someplace else,” he said to roaring laughter. “Today, Jakarta is a thriving center of commerce marked by highways and high-rises. So much has changed, so much progress has been made.”

Obama lived in the country with his mother, an anthropologist, and his Indonesian stepfather. The couple split up after having his half-sister, and Obama moved back to Hawaii when he was 10 to live with his grandparents. But he said he has never forgotten the years he spent in Indonesia.

“My time here made me cherish respect for people’s differences,” he said, noting how he and his family had just visited two of the most treasured ancient temples — Borobudur, a Buddhist complex, and the Hindu compound of Prambanan — in the world’s most populous Muslim country.

Obama’s speech came on the final leg of his 10-day vacation in Indonesia. In addition to visiting the temples in the city of Yogyakarta on the island of Java, he and his wife, Michelle, and daughters, Sasha and Malia, also went rafting and toured the resort island of Bali. On Friday, he met Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo at the grand Bogor Palace in West Java, just outside Jakarta.

The Indonesian visit marked Obama’s first trip to Asia since leaving office. He urged the country to be a light of democracy and to never stop embracing differences. Indonesia has faced a rise in Islamic radicalism and anti-gay attacks, and was recently condemned by rights groups for jailing Jakarta’s former governor, an ethnic Chinese Christian, for blasphemy.

“The spirit of this country has to be one of tolerance. It’s enshrined in Indonesia’s constitution, it’s symbolized by mosques and temples and churches beside each other,” Obama said. “That spirit is one of the defining things about Indonesia. It is one of the most important characteristics to set as an example for other Muslim countries around the world.”

Story: Margie Mason

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Hundreds of Thousands Rally for LGBTI Rights in Madrid

MADRID — Hundreds of thousands of people marched Saturday in a global gay pride demonstration in Madrid under tight security, and a parade of 52 floats took the festivities through the Spanish capital and into the night.

The rally was led by all of Spain’s major political parties, both left and right, who carried a large banner that read “For LGBTI Rights All Over the World.” Behind them came a slow-moving mass of people decked out in rainbow flags and colorful outfits, dancing to music under the southern European sun.

The march included several groups from other countries, including the United States and Britain, as well as groups ranging from rural lesbians to gay and lesbian police officers.

“For all the people in countries who are suffering persecution, we have to celebrate and make visible our pride,” Jesus Generelo, the head of the Spanish federation of LGBT people, told a large crowd from an outdoor stage after the march.

Four activists read a manifesto that urged the European Union to help export LGBTI rights around the world, with particular emphasis on Chechnya, Russia, and other countries that discriminate, criminalize or torture gay people. It also demanded that the World Health Organization stop categorizing transgender identity as a mental illness.

The massive outdoor gathering was the highlight of the 10-day World Pride 2017 festival, which concludes on Sunday. The multi-national event was held in London in 2012, Toronto in 2014, and it will next be in New York in 2019.

While Spanish police said they had no indications of any planned attacks by extremist groups, authorities reduced the traffic flow in Madrid on Saturday, banned heavy trucks and deployed 3,500 police in the city center.

Spain has become one of the most progressive countries for gay rights. It was ahead of most countries in legalizing same-sex marriages and adoptions in 2005. Parliament is planning a new law to ensure that all government offices remove barriers to ensure LGBTI equality.

Story: Joseph Wilson

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See Selfies Scripting History at Photo Exhibit

Photo: Peera Vorapreechapanich/ Courtesy.

BANGKOK — With the advent of the selfie came the power for everyone to write history from their own perspective. An emerging Thai photographer captured people in this iconic pose at a political gathering which led the country to where it is today.

It’s no longer an era where only those with proper cameras can write history, as anyone with a smartphone can now be a part of it, simply by taking selfies in any event.

“Technology has changed and now everyone can write history from their own perspective,” said photographer Peera Vorapreechapanich on the phone. “Mobile phones have given people equal power to record their own account of history and pin in on their timelines.”

Twenty-six photos will be on display showing protesters engaged in political gatherings that the 29-year-old photographer spent 6 months capturing, during the time the People’s Democratic Reform Committee demanded then-Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra be removed from power in between 2013 and 2014.

Peera said the protests coincided with the popularity of the word “selfie” – designated international Word of the Year by Oxford Dictionary in 2013.

He recounted seeing a man taking selfies amidst an intense situation and another taking selfies before the backdrop of a burnt car on Ratchadamnoen road for more than 30 minutes.

“It’s good to notice how people write their story with political protests in the background so that we can learn how people interact with each situation,” said Peera.

All photos are in monochrome, as the photographer wanted to keep them thematically uniform for visitors to focus on the situations, rather than the colors of each photo.

“Check-In” exhibition will launch at 7pm on Saturday and run through Aug. 19 at Soy Sauce Factory. It’s on Soi Charoen Krung 24, a 15-minute walk from MRT Hua Lamphong exit No. 1.

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Photo: Peera Vorapreechapanich/ Courtesy.
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Photo: Peera Vorapreechapanich/ Courtesy.

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Cops Raid 5 Party Rafts With 186 Minors Aboard in Kanchanaburi

Authorities examine disco raft filled with juveniles in Kanchanaburi Friday night

KANCHANABURI — Police on Friday night raided five disco rafts along Kwai Noi River and found all of those aboard were minors.

After residents complained of loud noises and disturbances to the Damrongdhama Center of the interior ministry about juveniles partying on disco rafts along Kwai Noi River, authorities raided them to find all 186 of them were below 20.

Barred from entering pubs and clubs in Kanchanaburi, teens have resorted to party and drink alcohol on disco rafts.

“It’s dangerous for juveniles to party in a raft alone without adults and it’s our duty to investigate,” Police Col. Tossaporn Pathumya of Amphoe Muang station said on the phone Saturday afternoon.

He said officials had previously discussed the issue with all raft operators three times. He said that while many were willing to cooperate, others ignored the warning just to make profit.

While pubs and bars forbid entry to minors, there’s no official regulation to limit the age of those who wish to rent rafts.

Tossaporn said that there are more than 100 rafts in Kanchanaburi, some of which are sleeping rafts and other disco raft. He said normally, youths are accompanied by parents.

“There’s no adult or security guard on the raft. Who’s going to help them if there’s a fight or something bad happens on board?” Tossaporn added.

After the raid, the minors were taken to Amphoe Muang police station to record their personal information with officials from the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security and wait for their families to take them home as required by the Child Protection Act, he said.

Tossaporn said raft operators and those in business will be asked to attend a panel with authorities to find a solution to the issue.

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