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Mayweather Coming Back to Fight UFC Star McGregor Aug. 26

Conor McGregor stands on a scale during the weigh-in event for his fight against Eddie Alvarez in UFC 205 mixed martial arts last November at Madison Square Garden in New York. Photo: Julio Cortez / Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Floyd Mayweather Jr. will come out of retirement to meet UFC star Conor McGregor in an Aug. 26 boxing match that will feature two of the top-selling fighters in the world.

The two fighters both announced the fight Wednesday, after months of speculation about whether Mayweather would return at the age of 40 to face a mixed martial arts fighter who has never had a pro boxing fight.

Oddsmakers immediately made Mayweather a big 11-1 favorite in a fight that will take place in a boxing ring and be governed by boxing rules. It will take place at 154 pounds.

“It’s official,” Mayweather said on Instagram next to a video poster of both fighters.

“THE FIGHT IS ON,” McGregor tweeted several minutes earlier, posting a picture of himself next to one of Mayweather’s father, Floyd Sr.

Mayweather, who retired in September 2015 after winning all 49 of his pro fights, will face the Irish UFC superstar at the T-Mobile arena on the Las Vegas Strip. He had tweeted a picture of himself sparring in recent days to show he was already getting ready for the bout.

“This is really an unprecedented event,” said Stephen Espinoza, who heads Showtime Sports, which will handle the pay-per-view. “Really we haven’t seen anything in modern history that resembles it, it’s impossible to predict how many sales this will do.”

Espinoza said the fight came together quickly after McGregor and the UFC reached agreement last month on their end of the deal and Mayweather’s team pushed for the fight in recent days.

“All parties were motivated and reasonable and thrilled we could get everything done,” he said. “The sky’s the limit on this.”

Financial terms were not released, though Mayweather got the greater share of revenue when he fought Manny Pacquiao and is expected to have a similar percentage against McGregor.

Depending on pay-per-view sales, both fighters could earn huge purses, though probably not the USD $200 million or so Mayweather earned for Pacquiao.

“Everybody’s happy,” said Mayweather’s adviser, Leonard Ellerbe.

McGregor, the wildly popular UFC star, is 21-3 in UFC fights, and is coming off a win in November against Eddie Alvarez. Though he hasn’t boxed professionally, McGregor did box while growing up and is known for his striking expertise in UFC.

“The reason he’s such a superstar is this guy will fight anyone, anywhere and at any time,” UFC chief Dana White said about his fighter. “It’s the right fight at the right place at the right time.”

The two fighters are expected to do a press tour that should provide fireworks shortly before going into final training for the fight.

The cost of tickets and the price of the pay-per-view has not been decided, though the pay-per-view is expected to be at or near the USD $99.95 charged for Mayweather’s 2015 fight with Manny Pacquiao that drew a record 4.4 million pay-per-view buys.

Mayweather will come off a two-year retirement in a bout that McGregor has been pushing for nearly that long. It finally came together and Nevada boxing officials on Wednesday approved the date for a Mayweather Promotions bout.

Mayweather last fought in September 2015, beating Andre Berto and then announcing his retirement. His fight before that, a decision win over Pacquiao, was the richest in boxing history and reportedly made him more than USD $200 million.

Though oddsmakers make Mayweather a big favorite, the thought of the fight has excited many in the MMA world. It has also intrigued some in boxing, though most dismiss McGregor’s chances under boxing rules against one of the greatest defensive fighters in history.

Adding to McGregor’s challenge the fighters will be using 10-ounce boxing gloves instead of the smaller UFC gloves and he will not be allowed to use the leg kicks or takedowns that are used in mixed martial arts.

Even if the actual bout may not shape up as a great matchup, the run-up to the fight will. Both fighters are noted for their ability to sell their fights, and both have exchanged in trash talking and more to promote their bouts.

“As with every Mayweather and McGregor fight part of the appeal is the spectacle and outsize personalities who are participating in it,” Espinoza said.

The pay-per-view revenue for the event would likely gross tens of millions of dollars. It comes less than a month before Gennady Golovkin and Canelo Alvarez meet in a highly anticipated fight Sept. 16 that could rival it for pay-per-view buys.

Story: Tim Dahlberg

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Fiesta Deliciosa: Have a One-Night Mexican Stand at Whiteline

Faylicia Neenirat makes margaritas at Barrio Bonito in Bangkok’s Thonglor area.

BANGKOK — In Mexico City, Mariana Villalobos Torres ate her family’s cooking, such as rajas tamales, chicken mole and traditional guacamole. This wasn’t the typical guacamole found at the Tex-Mex style restaurants which have sprouted up in Bangkok.

Cooked into it were uniquely Mexican delicacies – maguey worms and red ant eggs.

A decade ago, Villalobos Torres opened a guesthouse on Koh Chang with a French partner where she began teaching herself how to cook those dishes from her childhood. She eventually opened a Mexican restaurant called Barrio Bonito (“Beautiful Neighborhood”) which last year expanded to Bangkok’s Thonglor area.

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Mariana Villalobos Torres. Photo: Whiteline / Courtesy

To keep it all authentic, Torres’ family back in Mexico sends her local spices and ingredients for her kitchens.

Down rosemary ginger margarita shots and dip some tortilla chips into her guacamole – insects and all – next month when Villalobos Torres brings her cooking to underground Silom venue Whiteline for a one-night fiesta offering a range of Mexican cuisine and culture.

Villalobos Torres and her crew will occupy the first floor of Whiteline to serve flights of handcrafted margaritas and special dishes. Apart from quesadillas, tacos and chalupas, foodies should expect to try rare-to-find plates such as chile relleno, tamales, chicken with mole sauce – and sauces made from dry chili and chocolate.

Vegetarian dishes will be served, as will Corona beer and Jose Cuervo tequila.

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For more insights into Mexican culture, stir equal parts fate, food and family drama in the award-winning film “Como Agua Para Chocolate (Like Water for Chocolate).” The movie is set in 1910 Mexico and follows Tita, who is forbidden by her mother from marrying Pedro and has to prepare food for his marriage to her sister.

Food is at the heart of the magic-realist romantic film, which was a hit when it was released and received a Golden Globe Award nomination for best foreign language film.

Head upstairs to the Safe Room for serious salsa sounds and Latin house courtesy of DJs Luis Calderon and Henry Knowles.

Admission is free. The Barrio Town – Pop-Up Mexican Cantina will run from 5pm until late on July 1.

Whiteline is located on Soi Silom 8 and can be reached from BTS Sala Daeng or Chong Nonsi.

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Barrio Bonito executive chef Mariana Villalobos Torres in the kitchen. Photo: Whiteline / Courtesy

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Whiteline: A White Hot Underground Space in Silom

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Gunman Fires on US Republican Congressmen, Wounds 1

Law enforcement officers investigate a shooting near a baseball field in Alexandria, Virginia on Wednesday. Photo: Alex Brandon / Associated Press

ALEXANDRIA, Virginia — A rifle-wielding attacker opened fire on Republican lawmakers at a congressional baseball practice Wednesday, wounding House GOP Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana and several others as congressmen and aides dove for cover. The assailant, prepared with “a lot of ammo,” fought a gun battle with police before he, too, was shot and later died.

Scalise dragged himself off the infield leaving a trail of blood as colleagues rushed to his assistance.

The shooter was identified as James T. Hodgkinson, a 66-year-old home inspector from Illinois who had several minor run-ins with the law in recent years and belonged to a Facebook group called “Terminate the Republican Party.”

Shortly after the shooting, Bernie Sanders, the former candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, said on the Senate floor that the shooter apparently was a volunteer for his campaign last year. Sanders said he denounced the violence “in the strongest possible terms.”

Capitol Police officers who were in Scalise’s security detail wounded the shooter, who was taken into custody. He later died of his injuries, President Donald Trump told the nation from the White House.

“Everyone on that field is a public servant,” Trump said. “Their sacrifice makes democracy possible.”

Scalise, 51, the No. 3 House Republican leader first elected to the House in 2008, was in stable condition and undergoing surgery. The popular and gregarious lawmaker is known for his love of baseball and handed out commemorative bats when he secured the No. 3 job of House whip several years ago.

Texas Rep. Roger Williams, who coaches the GOP team, said that one of his aides, Zack Barth, was shot, but “is doing well and is expected to make a full recovery.” Two Capitol Police officers were also injured but were expected to recover, along with a former congressional aide who was hospitalized.

Rep. Jeff Duncan of South Carolina said he had just left the practice and encountered the apparent gunman in the parking lot before the shooting. The man calmly asked which party’s lawmakers were practicing and Duncan told him they were the Republicans. The man thanked him.

The gunman had a rifle and “a lot of ammo,” said Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, who was at the practice.

The shocking event left the Capitol horrified and stunned. The House canceled proceedings for the day. Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi of California both spoke on the floor issuing calls for unity. “An attack on one of us is an attack on all of us,” Ryan said.

The shooting occurred at a popular park and baseball complex in Alexandria, Virginia, where Republican lawmakers and others were gathered for a morning practice about 7 a.m. They were in good spirits despite the heat and humidity as they prepared for the congressional baseball match that pits Republicans against Democrats. The popular annual face-off, which raises money for charity, is scheduled for Thursday evening at Nationals Park across the Potomac River in Washington, and will go forward as planned.

The team was taking batting practice when gunshots rang out and chaos erupted.

Scalise was fielding balls on second base when he was shot, according to lawmakers present, then dragged himself into the outfield to get away from the gunman.

Rep. Mo Brooks, an Alabama Republican, said his colleague “crawled into the outfield, leaving a trail of blood.”

“We started giving him the liquids, I put pressure on his wound in his hip,” Brooks said.

Texas Rep. Joe Barton, still in his baseball uniform, told reporters a shooter came out to the practice and opened fire, shooting at Rep. Trent Kelly, R-Miss., who plays third base.

“He shot at Steve Scalise, our second baseman. He hit Steve Scalise,” Barton said, “Scalise’s security detail and the Capitol Hill police immediately returned fire, and Alexandria Police also immediately came and began to return fire. They shot the shooter. The security detail saved a lot of lives because they attacked the shooter.”

Barton said the shooting lasted 5-10 minutes, and there were dozens or more of shots fired.

“It was scary,” Barton said.

Lawmakers took cover in the dugout. Barton said his son, Jack, got under an SUV.

Texas Rep. Mike Conaway, who was at the game, described what sounded like an explosion, then lawmakers scattering off the field as police roamed in search of the gunman and engaged him.

“The guy’s down to a handgun, he dropped his rifle, they shoot him, I go over there, they put him in handcuffs,” Conaway said, adding that if the shooter had “gotten inside the fence, where a bunch of guys were holed up in the dugout, it would have been like shooting fish in a barrel.”

FBI special agent in charge Tim Slater said it was “too early to say” whether it was an act of terrorism, or whether Scalise was targeted.

Speaker Ryan identified the wounded Capitol Police officers as David Bailey and Crystal Griner. Also wounded was former congressional aide Matt Mika, who now works for Tysons Food in its Washington office. Mika’s family said the lobbyist was shot multiple times and was in critical condition and in surgery.

After the gunfire stopped, Sen. Flake, of Arizona, said he ran onto the field and also tried to come to Scalise’s aide. After medical personnel arrived, he said he retrieved Scalise’s phone and made the first call to Scalise’s wife to notify her of the shooting. He said he did so to ensure that Mrs. Scalise would not find out about the shooting through the media.

Falisa Peoples was just leaving the YMCA next to the ball field when she saw the shooter open fire.

“He was just very calm. He was just walking and shooting,” she said of the man, whom she described as white and wearing a T-shirt and shorts. She said he was using a long gun and exchanging fire with law enforcement officers, one of whom yelled for her to get down.

Lawmakers were stunned in the aftermath of the event, which raised questions about the security of members of Congress. While the top lawmakers, including Scalise, have security details, others do not and regularly appear in public without protection. The last time a lawmaker was shot was when Democratic Rep. Gabby Giffords of Arizona was hit in the head and grievously injured while meeting with constituents at a supermarket parking lot in 2011.

Following the Giffords shooting, lawmakers have held fewer open town halls and have been advised to increase security at such events.

Story: Erica Werner, Chad Day

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Junta to Sidestep 5 Laws to Move Stalled Railway Project

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha inspects a model of the Airport Rail Link train on March 16 at Makkasan Station in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — When the junta  leader uses his absolute power next week to overcome legal obstacles to a high-speed rail line, it will skirt five laws on the books, including two it put in place since coming to power.

A spokesman said Tuesday the government’s use of its extralegal authority to get around the laws – something it vowed not to do four months ago – is necessary to keep its economic plan on track by hiring China to build a high-speed railway from Bangkok to Nakhon Ratchasima.

“The prime minister and cabinet believe if all parties know the reasons, they will be confident that using power under Article 44 won’t damage existing systems,” regime spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said. “But it will help resolve problems to steer the economy as specified by the roadmap.”

The tactic planned would allow them to violate laws pertaining to hiring practices, competitive bidding, cost estimates, contractor selection and land encroachment.

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Thai junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing, 9 November 2014

Read: Work on 1st Small Stretch of High-Speed Rail May Soon Begin

The two countries first agreed to co-invest in building the railway soon after the 2014 coup at a time when Bangkok was looking to build closer ties to Beijing. The plan ultimately calls for the route to run up to the border province of Nong Khai and connect to China.

In February, Sansern denied rumors the special power would be invoked to allow Chinese architects and engineers to build the railway without being licensed by Thailand as required under laws dating back decades.

At the time, Sansern said the 179 billion baht project would comport to Thai law and that suggestions otherwise were distortions from those with malicious intent.

The absolute power clause was written under Article 44 of the 2014 interim charter written by the junta after it seized power. It stated that junta chief Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha could issue any order he deemed necessary, and it would be considered legal.

Although a new constitution went into effect in April, it preserved Prayuth’s absolute power.

Article 265 of the new charter continues powers granted by the interim charter to the junta and junta chief until an elected government takes office. Article 279 also says any orders issued by the junta will remain in effect until negated by a future law, prime minister’s order or cabinet resolution.

Here are the five legal issues they hope to circumvent to allow the project to go forward.

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Minister Akhom Termpittayapaisit, at left, sits beside Wang Xiaotao, vice-chairman of the Chinese National Development and Reform Commission. Photo: Logisticnews / Facebook

1. Hiring

Practicing architecture and engineering can only be done by Thai nationals, and the law also requires they hold licenses from the Engineers and Architects Council to work.

Both requirements will be set aside by Prayuth’s order. Instead of sitting for licensing exams, Sansern said Chinese workers would be given licenses if they attend training on things like the local geography and resources of Thailand.

“To take a test for the license is not that difficult,” Sansern said Tuesday. “But China feels that their country has already built more than 200,000 kilometers of high speed railway. Thailand has never done so, but we are going to examine their engineers.”

2. Competitive Bidding

Citing its goal to combat corruption and increase transparency, the junta chief in February used his absolute power to appoint a body of experts to oversee government projects exceeding 5 billion baht.

That same month, the interim cabinet approved new procurement regulations. Projects over 5 billion baht that require advanced expertise or technology must be opened for international bidding, under the new rules.

The Bangkok-Nakhon Ratchasima high-speed line came from a deal struck between two government and never went to competitive bidding.

Sansern said the order expected next week would lift these obligations so the construction can begin soon thereafter.

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Thai officials welcome representatives from the Thai – Chinese Culture and Economy Association for a discussion on the Thai – Chinese rail project at Shangri-La Hotel in Bangkok, 2 June 2015.

3. Cost Estimates

To guarantee efficient bidding, the law requires that decision-makers have an estimated project cost to consider. Such estimates are important for evaluating whether a project is sensible. Journalists are still fighting to obtain that of the Rajabhakti Park monument built by the army, which blew up into a scandal for reportedly spending 1 billion baht.

China has not provided any such estimate. Sansern said that was due to differences in the two governments’ procurement systems.

“For the Thailand-China railway project, it will be impossible to get a cost estimate no matter how hard we negotiate,” he said.

Instead of going through the mandatory process for establishing a project’s cost, Sansern said they will just propose a reference price to the cabinet to endorse.

4. Contractor Selection

When the agreement was signed in December 2015, it was made on the basis of government-to-government trade. China promised to buy rice and rubber in exchange for being allowed to construct the railway that ultimately serves as a link in its One Belt, One Road policy to create a regional economic sphere.

Although the deal was made as a government-to-government arrangement, China wants to select a private company to be its general contractor, which is a problem Sansern said Article 44 could resolve.

5. Land Encroachment

Though officials hope to begin laying the first 3.5 kilometers of track in August, the route from Bangkok to Korat will stretch 252.5 kilometers.

Along the route, Sansern said the line might cross into protected areas such as land reserved for forest or agricultural use. Building in such areas is illegal, and doing so would make the regime guilty of the very land encroachment it has aggressively prosecuted.

Sansern said Article 44 would give them legal coverage to do so.

Related stories:

Prayuth Asked to Use Absolute Power to Let Chinese Build Railway

Work on 1st Small Stretch of High-Speed Rail May Soon Begin

Construction of Thai-China Railway to Begin ‘Before Year’s End’

Post-Coup Thailand Settles For Medium-Speed Train

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Thai Stocks Gain, Exception to Average Asian Low

Asian Stocks Fall After IMF Downgrades Economic Outlook
A man walks past an electronic stock board showing Japan's Nikkei 225 index at a securities firm in 2017 in Tokyo. Photo: Shuji Kajiyama / Associated Press

BEIJING — Asian stocks were lower Wednesday following Wall Street’s tech-driven rise as investors waited for word from the U.S. Federal Reserve on a possible interest rate hike.

Keeping Score: The Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.6 percent to 3,135.32 and Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 shed 0.1 percent to 19,917.51. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng declined 0.3 percent to 25,786.00 and Seoul’s Kospi was off 0.2 percent at 2,369.51. Sydney’s S&P-ASX 200 gained 0.8 percent to 5,818.90 and India’s Sensex was unchanged at 31,110.09. Benchmarks in New Zealand and Thailand rose while Singapore and Manila retreated.

Wall Street: U.S. stocks bounced back to record highs as investors put an end to a two-day drop for technology companies. Energy and consumer-focused companies also made outsize gains. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index picked up 0.5 percent to 2,440.35. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.4 percent to 21,328.47. The Nasdaq composite, which has a large concentration of technology companies, rose 0.7 percent to 6,220.37.

Fed Watch: The U.S. Federal Reserve ends a two-day policy meeting on Wednesday, and investors expect the central bank to raise interest rates for the third time since December. They also are watching for the Fed’s latest views on inflation and hints on how aggressive it will be in raising interest rates in the future.

Analysts’ Take: “Despite stubbornly low inflation, the Fed is widely anticipated to lift its interest rate tomorrow,” Ric Spooner of CMC Markets said in a report. “In a further sign that the Fed is leading a gradual global exit from monetary stimulus, Canada’s Central Bank Governor last night surprised markets with hawkish comments.”

China: Government data showed retail sales in May rose 10.7 percent from a year earlier, a small gain over the 10.3 percent rate for the first four months of the year. Factory output rose 6.5 percent over a year earlier, holding steady at April’s rate. Growth in investment in factories, real estate and other fixed assets decelerated to 8.6 percent over a year earlier in the first five months of 2017, down 0.3 percentage points from the rate in January-April.

Brexit: The European Union moved to tighten its oversight of a key financial market based in London, threatening tens of thousands of jobs in Britain once the country exits the bloc. Draft regulations published by the EU executive Commission would force any clearinghouse considered important to the EU financial system to accept direct oversight from the bloc and, if requested, relocate to inside the EU. One report suggests that losing the market could cost the country 83,000 jobs, mostly in London, one of the world’s top finance hubs.

Tech Bounce: U.S. tech stocks bounced back but still are below last week’s record-high prices. Facebook rose 1.5 percent to USD $150.68 while Microsoft gained 1.2 percent to USD $70.65. Hard drive maker Western Digital added 3.9 percent to USD $90.05. Even after their recent skid, technology companies have done much better than the rest of the market in 2017. Big tech companies like Apple and Alphabet have been responsible for a huge portion of the stock market’s gains this year.

Energy: Benchmark U.S. crude fell 46 cents to USD $46.00 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract gained 38 cents on Tuesday to USD $46.46 a barrel. Brent crude, used to price international oils, shed 42 cents to USD $48.30 in London. It gained 57 cents the previous session.

Currency: The dollar declined to 110.02 yen from Tuesday’s 110.04 yen. The euro gained to USD $1.1250 from USD $1.1205.

Story: Joe McDonald

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Macaque Shot in Face With Arrow Goes Home (Photos)

Rocket sits in a tree Monday, post-release into the wild. Photo: Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand / Facebook

BANGKOK — A macaque has been returned to his home and reunited with his family after being shot through the skull with an arrow, a wildlife activist said Wednesday.

“Rocket,” a 7-year-old male macaque shot through the face with a metal arrow last month, completed his recovery Monday and was returned to the wild in Bangkok’s southern district of Bang Khun Thian.

“He recognized his home,” said Edwin Wiek, founder of the Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand. “His family came to get him. Some even climbed up onto the car. He jumped around into water and climbed up into trees and even cuddled with some of his children. He’s doing well.”

Read: Miracle Macaque: Vets Pull Arrow From Monkey’s Skull (Photos)

Wiek said Rocket’s nearly four-week recovery went smoothly.

“He had a bit of an infection, but it was easily controlled with medication. He was strong, eating well, and wasn’t even angry when he was in the cage,” he said.

Despite sustaining a grievous injury, the macaque maintained a sunny disposition.

“Rocket’s demeanor was very friendly on the whole during the recovery,” Wiek said.

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Rocket runs out to freedom Monday. Photo: Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand / Facebook
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At left, Rocket as he was found in the street. At right, an X-ray of the arrow through his skull. Photo: Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand / Facebook
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Rocket tastes peanuts and freedom. Photo: Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand / Facebook
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Rocket, 7, peers out of a tree in Bang Khun Thian where he was freed Monday. Photo: Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand / Facebook

 

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Uber’s Rough Year Leads to CEO’s Leave of Absence

A still image from a 2015 UberMoto promotional video.

Uber has had a rough year, largely of it its own making. There have been lawsuits, allegations of sexual harassment and a profanity-laced outburst by its CEO that was caught on video.

On Tuesday, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick said he will take a leave of absence for an unspecified period to grieve for his mother  who died last month  and become a better leader.

Here’s a timeline of Uber’s troubles so far this year.

Jan. 28: After President Donald Trump releases his first executive order on immigration, New York taxi drivers protest by refusing to pick up passengers at Kennedy Airport for an hour. Some protesters say Uber tries to capitalize on the protest by picking up passengers anyway, prompting a Twitter protest urging people to delete Uber’s app from their smartphones.

Feb. 2: Uber CEO Travis Kalanick quits President Trump’s council of business leaders amid mounting pressure from employees and customers over the immigration order.

Feb. 19: A former Uber engineer, Susan Fowler, discloses sexual harassment and sexism claims in a blog post about her year at Uber. Fowler says her boss propositioned her and higher-ups ignored her complaints. Kalanick calls Fowler’s accusations “abhorrent” and hires former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate.

Feb. 23: Waymo, a self-driving car company spun off from Google, sues Uber. Waymo alleges that Anthony Levandowski  a former top manager for Google’s self-driving car project  stole pivotal technology from Google before leaving to run Uber’s self-driving car division.

Feb. 28: A video emerges of Kalanick arguing with an Uber driver. It includes yelling and profanity and ends with a combative Kalanick dismissing the agitated driver’s claims that sharp reductions in fares forced him into bankruptcy. In an email to employees, Kalanick admits he needs leadership help. “I must fundamentally change as a leader and grow up,” he says.

March 3: The New York Times reveals that Uber used a phony version of its app to thwart authorities in cities where it was operating illegally. Uber’s so-called Greyball software identified regulators who were posing as riders and blocked access to them. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating Uber’s use of the Greyball software.

March 19: Uber’s president, Jeff Jones, resigns less than a year after joining the company. He tells the tech blog Recode that his approach to leadership is at odds with what he experienced at Uber.

April 18: Sherif Marakby, a global vice president who leads Uber’s self-driving car program, leaves the company.

April 27: Levandowski announces he is stepping aside while Uber defends itself against the allegations from Waymo.

May 11: A federal judge in San Francisco rejects Uber’s request for arbitration and refers Waymo’s case to the U.S. Attorney’s office for a possible criminal investigation. Days later the judge bans Uber from using technology taken from Waymo, but doesn’t order Uber to halt its self-driving vehicle program, as Waymo requested. The case is set for trial in October.

May 26: Kalanick’s mother dies in a boating accident. His father is seriously injured.

May 30: Uber fires Levandowski.

May 31: Uber’s finance chief Gautam Gupta says he plans to leave the company in July.

June 6: Uber fires 20 people after a law firm, Perkins Coie, investigates complaints of harassment, bullying and retaliation. That investigation, which was separate from Holder’s, checked into 215 complaints; 57 are still under investigation.

June 11: Uber’s board meets with Holder and adopts a series of recommendations based on his report.

June 12: Emil Michael, Uber’s senior vice president for business and a close ally of Kalanick, leaves the company.

June 13: Kalanick tells Uber employees that he’s taking a leave for an unspecified period, but will be available for “the most strategic decisions.” Uber’s board releases Holder’s recommendations, which include removing some of Kalanick’s responsibilities and replacing Uber’s chairman and founder, Garrett Camp, with an independent chairman. Holder also recommends many cultural and policy changes, from establishing an effective complaint process to recruiting more diverse applicants to prohibiting alcohol and drug use during core work hours.

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English Singer Lucy Rose Returning to Bangkok

BANGKOK — Lucy Rose will return to the capital once again this September. This time the English folk-rock singer won’t just play music but also show a short doc about her tour.

With her fourth album “Something’s Changing” launch next month, the singer and songwriter choose to return to Bangkok less than a year after her first show here and will bring a full band, promoter Medium Rare announced Tuesday evening.

Rose’s piercing voice and melodious music will be heard in concert as well as in a short documentary following her debut tour in Latin America last year, which was partially planned and organized by her fans.

The 28-year-old singer from Surrey released her first album, “Like I Used To,” in 2012 and has released 13 singles including “Middle of the Bed,” “Scar” and “Our Eyes.”

Tickets are 750 baht and can be purchased online.

The Lucy Rose Bangkok Cinema Show concert will be held at 9pm on Sept. 22 at Heaven Bangkok on the 17th floor of Zen department store in CentralWorld. It’s a 10-minute walk from BTS Chidlom and BTS Siam, reachable from either via skywalk.

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Draws for Thailand, Japan; S Korea Lose at World Cup Qualifiers (Video)

Image: funfun TV / YouTube

SEOUL, South Korea — Japan and South Korea dropped points in 2018 World Cup qualification on Tuesday, in games that both teams were expected to win.

In Group B, Japan was held to a 1-1 draw by Iraq, while South Korea lost 3-2 away to Qatar in Group A.

Yuya Osaka scored a header early for Japan in the match in Tehran, where Iraq plays its home games for security reasons. But Mahdi Kamel equalized in the second half for Iraq, which has already been eliminated from qualifying.

Japan leads the group by one point ahead of Saudi Arabia and Australia with two games remaining.

Japan will host Australia in August and then play in Saudi Arabia in September.

Only the top two from the two six-team groups automatically qualify for the World Cup in Russia. The third-place finishers advance to the playoffs.

Also, Ali Mabkhout scored an injury-time goal to give the United Arab Emirates a 1-1 draw at Thailand.

Thailand, which is in last place in Group B, got its goal from Mongkol Kraisorn.

In Group A, South Korea has work to do to reach a ninth successive World Cup after losing in Doha.

Two goals from Hassan Al Haydos proved decisive for Qatar. He opened the scoring with a free-kick after 25 minutes and Akram Afif added a second six minutes after the restart.

Goals from Ki Sung-yeung and Hwang Hee-chan brought South Korea level with 20 minutes remaining, but Al Haydos scored Qatar’s winner in the 75th.

South Korea stays second in the group but is just a point above third-place Uzbekistan and travels to Tashkent for the final game in September.

Ahmad Al Saleh scored an injury-time equalizer from a free kick to give Syria a 2-2 draw with China.

The match was played in the neutral Malaysian city of Melaka.

Syria took the lead in the 12th minute when Mahmoud Al Mawas scored from the penalty spot. But China, led by 2006 World Cup-winning coach Marcello Lippi, scored its own penalty in the 68th when Gao Lin converted.

Xiao Zhi then put China temporarily ahead in the 75th.

Story: John Duerden

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Verizon Takes Over Yahoo in $4.5 Billion Deal

Yahoo president and CEO Marissa Mayer speaks during the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in a Jan. 7, 2014 photo. Photo: Julie Jacobson / Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Verizon has taken over Yahoo, completing a USD$4.5 billion (152.6 billion baht) deal that will usher in a new management team to attempt to wring more advertising revenue from one of the internet’s best-known brands.

Tuesday’s closure of the sale ends Yahoo’s 21-year history as a publicly traded company. It also ends the nearly five-year reign of Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, who isn’t joining Verizon. She will walk away from Yahoo with a compensation package currently worth about $125 million, including her severance pay and stock awards that will be fully vested with the deal’s completion.

Yahoo’s email and other digital services such as sports, finance and news will be run by Tim Armstrong, who has been running AOL since Verizon bought that company for $4.4 billion two years ago. Armstrong will now be CEO of a new Verizon subsidiary called Oath, which will consist of Yahoo and various AOL services.

About 2,000 Yahoo and AOL workers are expected to lose their jobs as Verizon trims expenses and eliminates overlapping positions.

“Now that the deal is closed, we are excited to set our focus on being the best company for consumer media, and the best partner to our advertising, content and publisher partners,” Armstrong said.

Verizon won’t be getting Yahoo’s prized stakes in two Asian internet companies, Alibaba Group and Yahoo Japan. Those will belong to a newly formed company called Altaba, which also will inherit Yahoo’s $8 billion in cash and any money that might have to be paid in various shareholder lawsuits filed against Yahoo leading up to the sale.

The suits include complaints tied to computer hacking attacks that stole personal information from more than 1 billion Yahoo user accounts in 2013 and 2014 but weren’t disclosed until last year. The fallout from the digital intrusions forced Yahoo to give Verizon a $350 million discount on the initial sale terms reached last July, causing the deal to be delayed by several months.

Altaba’s stock will begin trading next week under the ticker symbol “AABA.” Yahoo’s stock will trade through Friday.

Verizon is counting on the combination of Yahoo and AOL to build a strong third alternative in a rapidly growing digital advertising market that is currently dominated by Google and Facebook.

But Yahoo’s ad revenue has been falling for most of the last decade. The company lured Mayer away from Google in 2012 in hopes of reversing the decline, but she couldn’t pull it off despite investing billions in acquisitions aimed at making Yahoo a bigger player in the mobile advertising market.

By the end of last year, Yahoo’s annual revenue after subtracting ad commissions had shrunk to $3.5 billion, a 35 percent drop from its 2008 peak. By comparison, Google’s revenue last year totaled $73 billion, after subtracting ad commissions.

Despite the company’s struggles, Yahoo’s stock more than tripled while Mayer was CEO, creating more than USD$30 billion in shareholder wealth.

But most of those gains stemmed from Yahoo’s stake in Alibaba, a Chinese e-commerce company whose fortunes have soared while Yahoo faded. The Alibaba investment was engineered 12 years ago by Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang in what is now widely regarded as one of the savviest deals in internet history.

Yahoo’s stock performance is the main reason most shareholders haven’t complained too loudly about Mayer’s lavish compensation package.

Story: Michael Liedtke

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