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China Commissions New Aircraft Carrier As It Seeks to Extend Power

In this Oct. 8, 2025, satellite photo from Planet Labs PBC, the Chinese aircraft carriers Shandong and Fujian are seen at the Yulin Naval Base near Sanya, China. (Planet Labs PBC via AP)

BANGKOK (AP) — China has commissioned its latest aircraft carrier after extensive sea trials, state media reported Friday, adding a ship that experts say will help what is already the world’s largest navy expand its power farther beyond its own waters.

The official Xinhua news agency said the Fujian had been commissioned Wednesday at a naval base on southern China’s Hainan island in a ceremony attended by top leader Xi Jinping.

The Fujian is China’s third carrier and the first that it both designed and built itself. It is perhaps the most visible example so far of Xi’s massive military overhaul and expansion that aims to have a modernized force by 2035 and one that is “world class” by mid century — which most take to mean capable of going toe-to-toe with the United States.

With it, Beijing takes another step toward closing the gap with the U.S. Navy and its carrier fleet and network of bases that allow it to maintain a presence around the world.

“Carriers are key to Chinese leadership’s vision of China as a great power with a blue-water navy,” or one that can project power far from its coastal waters, said Greg Poling, director of the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

China wants to contest waters as far as Guam

For China’s navy, one goal is to dominate the near waters of the South China Sea, East China Sea and Yellow Sea around the so-called First Island Chain, which runs south through Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines. But deeper into the Pacific, it also wants to be able to contest control of the Second Island Chain, where the U.S. has important military facilities on Guam and elsewhere, Poling said.

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In this undated file photo released by Xinhua News Agency, crew members work on carrier-based aircraft from left, J-15T jet fighter, KJ-600 AWACS and J-35 stealth fighter jet on the flight deck of China’s third conventionally powered aircraft carrier, the Fujian as they conduct the electromagnetic catapult-assisted takeoff and arrested landing trainings on the aircraft carrier during a maiden sea trial. (Li Tang/Xinhua via AP, file)

“A carrier doesn’t really help you in the First Island Chain, but it’s key to that contest, if you want one, with the Americans in the wider Indo-Pacific,” Poling said.

China’s “increasingly capable military” and ability to “project power globally” is one of the reasons the Pentagon in its latest report to Congress continued to call it “the only competitor to the United States with the intent and, increasingly, the capacity to reshape the international order.”

At the same time, it is Beijing’s right to “transform its navy into a blue-water strategic navy commensurate with China’s national strength,” said Song Zhongping, a Hong Kong-based military affairs expert.

“China’s carriers cannot just operate near home, they must operate in the distant oceans and far seas to carry out various training and support missions,” Song said. “China is a great power and our overseas interests span the globe; we need to be globally present.”

The Fujian is a step in that direction.

One possibility that raises concerns in foreign capitals is a possible blockade or invasion of the democratically self-governed island of Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory and which leader Xi Jinping has not ruled out taking by force.

Though the island sits right off of China’s coast, if China had the ability to position an aircraft carrier group or groups around the Second Island Chain — between Taiwan and the U.S. Pacific Fleet headquarters in Hawaii — that could delay possible American military assistance in the event of a Chinese attack.

“They want those aircraft carriers to play a part in kind of extending the strategic perimeter farther out from China, and one of the important things that an aircraft carrier can do is extend the range of China’s domain awareness to keep an eye on activities in the air, on the sea, and below the sea,” said Brian Hart, deputy director of CSIS’s China Power Project

With the Fujian, China’s warplanes can deploy far from its shores

China’s first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning, was Soviet made and its second, the Shandong, was built in China but based on the Soviet model. Both use older-style ski-jump type systems to help planes take flight.

The Fujian skips past the steam catapult technology used on most American carriers to employ an electromagnetic launch system found only on the latest U.S. Navy Ford-class carriers.

The system causes less stress to the aircraft and the ship, allows for more precise control over speed and can launch a wider range of aircraft than the steam system. Compared to the ski-jump system, it gives China the ability to launch heavier aircraft, with full fuel loads, like the KJ-600 early warning and control plane, which it successfully tested during its sea trials.

Its latest J-35 stealth fighter and J-15T heavy fighter were also launched from the Fujian, giving the new carrier “full-deck operation capability” according to the Chinese navy.

The ability to carry its own reconnaissance aircraft means unlike its first two carriers, it won’t be operating blind when out of the range of land-based support, giving it the ability to operate its most advanced aircraft far afield including the Second Island Chain.

“The Fujian carrier is a big leapfrog for China in terms of the capabilities of its aircraft carriers compared to the first two,” Hart said .

China’s carriers aren’t nuclear powered, limiting their range

Still, Hart noted, China’s navy lags behind the U.S. in several significant ways.

Numerically it only has three carriers compared to the U.S. Navy’s 11, and while China’s carriers are all conventionally powered, the U.S.’s are all nuclear powered which means they can operate almost indefinitely without being refueled – dramatically increasing their range. The Ford-class carrier, of which only one is currently in service but more are being built, is also larger, can carry more aircraft on its flight deck, and has a third elevator that means it can move more aircraft from lower deck hangars in less time.

China also lags behind the U.S. in guided missile cruisers and destroyers, which are critical in providing air and submarine defense and support for larger naval groups, as well as nuclear-powered submarines.

The U.S. is also ahead in vertical launching system cells – basically the systems for holding and launching missiles from ships – which is a measure of how much firepower vessels can carry, though China is increasing that capacity, Hart said.

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FILE – In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, China’s third conventionally powered aircraft carrier, the Fujian, conducts a maiden sea trial on May 7, 2024. (Ding Ziyu/Xinhua via AP, File)

Beyond just equipment, China lacks the network of overseas bases that the U.S. has, which are critical for resupplying carriers and also providing alternative runways should aircraft not be able to return safely to the carrier.

China is working on expanding its foreign bases, however, and has a nuclear propulsion system for a carrier in development.

There’s also evidence that China is already building another carrier. Chinese shipyards have the capabilities to build more than one at once and have also been churning out other new vessels at a pace the U.S. can’t currently come close to matching.

“Really across the board, China’s closing the gap,” Hart said.

“They’re fielding and building more aircraft carriers, they’re fielding more nuclear-powered subs, they are fielding more, larger destroyers and other vessels that carry a larger number of missiles. So they’re really catching up.”

The Fujian is just one of China’s latest military assets

China has happily shown off its new military assets, releasing video of the KJ-600, J-35 and J-15T test flights from the Fujian.

A World War II Victory Day parade at the start of September showcased all three aircraft along with hypersonic glide vehicles — whose high-speed, maneuverability and other attributes make them more difficult to intercept than traditional ballistic missiles — aerial and underwater drones and electronic warfare systems.

Sophisticated new equipment does not necessarily translate to military readiness, however, said Singapore-based analyst Tang Meng Kit, who noted that China hasn’t fought a war since 1979 and that the carefully choreographed parade was good at “amplifying perceptions of strength.”

“It is possible that China’s capabilities are overstated, as real-world operational readiness lags behind its showcased arsenal,” he told the AP.

He also cautioned in a recent analysis for the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore that it would be a mistake to see China’s military modernization as simply geared toward a possible Taiwan invasion, which he said is only one part of a “larger mosaic.”

The parade “signaled China’s broader strategic intent, which is to deter major powers, pressure regional actors, expand its global influence, and reinforce its domestic legitimacy,” he said.

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American Man and His Son Die After Suffering Stings From a Swarm of Wasps in Laos

FILE - Farmers burn crop waste from a field outside the Laos UNESCO heritage site of Luang Prabang, Saturday, April 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Elaine Kurtenbach, File)

BANGKOK (AP) — An American man and his teenage son died last month after they were swarmed by wasps while ziplining at an adventure camp in Laos and stung many dozens of times, a hospital official said Thursday.

Dan Owen, the director of an international school in neighboring Vietnam, and his son Cooper were attacked by the insects on Oct. 15 at the Green Jungle Park, as they were descending from a tree at the end of the zip line.

The camp is located outside the city of Luang Prabang, a popular tourist site in the Southeast Asian nation that was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995.

The two were taken to a local clinic and then transported to Luang Prabang Provincial Hospital where they arrived in critical condition, said Jorvue Yianouchongteng, the emergency room physician who received them.

“The son was unconscious and passed away after half an hour, while the father was conscious and passed away about three hours later,” he told The Associated Press. “We tried our best to save them but we couldn’t.”

The doctor said both had suffered from severe anaphylactic shock after being stung more than 100 times across their bodies, but that exact cause of death had not been determined.

The Asian giant hornet, known as the “murder hornet” due to its aggressive behavior toward other insects, is found in Laos but so are several other species of wasps. It was not clear which type had stung the two.

The local clinic where the two were first treated refused to comment and the Green Jungle Park did not respond to a query from the AP. The Laos Foreign Ministry also did not respond to a request for comment.

The U.S. State Department said it could confirm the deaths of two U.S. citizens in Luang Prabang but would not comment further “out of respect for the privacy of the family and loved ones.”

In a Facebook post, Owen’s employer, Quality Schools International, praised him as “touching countless lives” during 18 years with the chain, which operates 35 schools around the world. It said he had worked at five of its schools and was director of the QSI International School of Haiphong in Vietnam at the time of his death.

“He was deeply loved across our community and will be profoundly missed,” the school said. “Our sincere condolences go our to the Owen family and all who knew and loved them.”

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Tourists Face Long Queues, Hours-Long Waits for Koh Lanta Ferry

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A combination photo showing a ferry departing for Koh Lanta in Krabi province (left above), while long lines of vehicles wait for hours to board amid heavy tourist traffic during the high season.

KRABI — Tourists traveling to Koh Lanta in Krabi province have complained through media outlets about having to endure long queues with traffic jams stretching several kilometers and waiting for several hours before receiving ferry services to cross to and from the island.

The complaints come as the area enters the high tourism season, with visitors expressing frustration that ferry services have not been adjusted to accommodate the increased demand. The situation is expected to worsen during December and January, when tourist volumes are projected to increase even further.

Travelers reported that both inbound and outbound ferry crossings are affected by the lengthy delays, with vehicle queues backing up for kilometers as tourists wait their turn to board the limited ferry services available.

 

 

The issue highlights a growing concern about infrastructure readiness as Thailand’s popular tourist destinations prepare for peak season, with visitors calling for authorities to increase ferry capacity and improve services to handle the surge in travelers visiting Koh Lanta during the busy tourism months ahead.

The issue highlights a growing concern about infrastructure readiness as Thailand’s popular tourist destinations prepare for peak season, with visitors calling for authorities to increase ferry capacity and improve services to handle the surge in travelers visiting Koh Lanta during the busy tourism months ahead.

Bridge Project to Provide Long-term Solution

Previously, during Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s visit to Krabi province on October 24, he stated that the current government would continue good policies from the previous government in developing Krabi.

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A construction plan for the new bridge connecting Koh Lanta in Krabi province, designed to boost tourism and investment.

He noted that the province has potential to become a health hub and medical tourism center, which the government is ready to support, adding that it could develop even more than Phuket since there is a minister based in the area.

The Prime Minister ordered Minister of Transport Pipat Ratchakitprakarn to expedite the construction of a bridge connecting Koh Lanta to stimulate tourism and investment. The second Koh Lanta bridge project, if it proceeds according to plan, will span over 2 kilometers with an investment of 1.8 billion baht.

Pile driving is scheduled to begin in 2026, with completion and opening expected in 2029. The bridge will provide convenient travel access and is expected to have a positive impact on Koh Lanta’s tourism industry.

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French Man Jumps into Chao Phraya River to Save Thai Woman

David, a 52-year-old French expatriate from Marseille, speaks to reporters after helping rescue a Thai woman from the Chao Phraya River in Chainat on November 5, 2025.

CHAINAT — A 52-year-old French man and a Thai delivery rider rescued a Thai woman from the fast-flowing Chao Phraya River in Chainat province, central Thailand, after she jumped into the dangerous waters.

CCTV footage captured the dramatic rescue on November 5, showing a woman in her 30s walking along Phrom Prasert Road in Mueang district, near the provincial natural resources office, before climbing over a fence and leaping into the river.

Witnesses shouted for help and called police, but strong currents from upstream made bystanders hesitant to jump in. Moments later, the French man — identified as David, 52, from Marseille — plunged into the water, followed by a young delivery rider who happened to be passing by.

 

The pair managed to pull the woman to safety. Relatives later took her to a hospital for treatment, officials said.

David told reporters he acted instinctively after hearing cries for help outside his home. “I saw the woman floating but she looked exhausted and was starting to sink, so I immediately jumped in,” he said.

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David, a 52-year-old French expatriate from Marseille, speaks to reporters on November 6, 2025 after helping rescue a Thai woman from the Chao Phraya River in Chainat. He raises two fingers to emphasize that he was not the only one who jumped in — a Thai delivery rider also helped in the rescue.

When asked why he was such a strong swimmer, David said he grew up in Marseille, a port city in southern France on the Mediterranean coast near the mouth of the Rhône River. He explained that his hometown is surrounded by water, similar to Chainat, and that many people from Marseille are skilled swimmers and excel at water sports such as water polo.

He emphasized that the rescue was a team effort. “Another Thai man jumped in with me, and others ran to grab a life buoy and threw it down to help,” he said.

Authorities praised the quick action and bravery of the rescuers, calling it a testament to the cooperation between local residents and foreigners in times of crisis.

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Thai King and Queen to Make a Historic State Visit to China Nov 13-17

His Majesty the King and Her Majesty the Queen, accompanied by Her Royal Highness Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana Rajakanya, receive in audience His Excellency Mr. Xi Jinping, President of the People's Republic of China, and his spouse at the Chakri Maha Prasat Throne Hall, Bangkok, on 18 November 2022. (Photo: Royal Palace Office)

BANGKOK – Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on November 6, 2025, that His Majesty King Maha Vajiralongkorn Phra Vajiraklaochaoyuhua and Her Majesty Queen Suthida Bajrasudhabimalalakshana will make a historic State Visit to the People’s Republic of China from November 13-17, 2025.

The visit comes at the invitation of Chinese President Xi Jinping and marks the 50th Anniversary of the Establishment of Thailand-China Diplomatic Relations. According to the ministry’s press release, this will be the first visit by a Thai monarch to the People’s Republic of China.

During the five-day State Visit, Their Majesties will participate in a series of official engagements beginning with an Official Welcome Ceremony at the Great Hall of the People, where they will meet with President Xi Jinping and his spouse.

The royal couple will also be received in audience by Premier Li Qiang of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China. A State Banquet will be hosted in their honor at the Great Hall of the People.

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His Majesty the King and Her Majesty the Queen, accompanied by Her Royal Highness Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana Rajakanya, receive in audience His Excellency Mr. Xi Jinping, President of the People’s Republic of China, and his spouse at the Chakri Maha Prasat Throne Hall, Bangkok, on 18 November 2022. (Photo: Royal Palace Office)

The itinerary includes visits to significant cultural and religious sites, with Their Majesties scheduled to pay homage to the Sacred Tooth Relic of the Buddha at Lingguang Temple in Beijing.

The King and Queen will also tour institutions showcasing China’s national development in science, technology, innovation, and education, including the Beijing Aerospace City, the Center for Educational Technology and Resource Development, and the Innovation Center of Humanoid Robotics in Beijing.

Before departing for Thailand, Their Majesties will visit a special exhibition at the Palace Museum in Beijing titled “Golden Friendship, Shared Brilliance: A Special Exhibition Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Thai-Chinese Diplomatic Relations.”

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A person takes a photo of the official logo that marks 2025 as “the Golden Jubilee for Thai-China Friendship”, on Nov 19, 2024, in Thailand. (YANG WANLI / CHINA DAILY)

The 50th anniversary of Thailand-China diplomatic relations in 2025 has been designated as the “Golden Year of Friendship” between the two nations. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that this historic State Visit reflects the deep-rooted friendship and mutual understanding shared between the two countries at all levels.

“The State Visit will further strengthen Thailand-China bilateral relations for years to come, bringing lasting benefits to the peoples of both countries,” the ministry said in its statement.

The announcement emphasizes the significance of the visit in reinforcing the existing friendship and cordial relations between Thailand and China as both nations celebrate half a century of diplomatic ties.

His Majesty the King and Her Majesty the Queen, previously received President Xi Jinping and his spouse in audience at the Chakri Maha Prasat Throne Hall in Bangkok on November 18, 2022, when Thailand hosted the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit.

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Thai King and Queen to Visit China for 50th Diplomatic Anniversary

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Fugitive Russian Arrested on Koh Samui After Fleeing Phuket Drug Ad

Thai Immigration police track and detain the Russian suspect on Koh Samui on November 6, 2025. He was wanted in Phuket for allegedly advertising narcotics via a dark market network, ending his short time as a fugitive.

KOH SAMUI — Thai Immigration police have arrested a Russian man who was wanted in Phuket for allegedly advertising online drug sales, a scheme that used QR codes on public stickers to direct tourists to an illegal narcotics network.

Semion (27), a Russian national, was apprehended on Koh Samui after fleeing an arrest warrant issued by the Phuket Provincial Court. Authorities had tracked him to a hotel on the island where he was staying after November 4.

The investigation was initiated after social media posts alerted police to stickers promoting an online drug network named “THAIHUB.” The stickers, which were allegedly posted on utility poles and in tourist areas of Phuket, featured a QR code and an image of a woman holding a bag of white powder, resembling cocaine, used to advertise the sale of various narcotics.

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Stickers and materials used to advertise the online drug network, featuring QR codes for direct sales, found in the suspect’s possession. (Hod Jang Facebook page)

The Arrest and Investigation

Immigration Police in Surat Thani, collaborating with Region 8 Provincial Police and anti-narcotics agents, located Semion at a hotel. Upon seeing the police, he reportedly fled out the back of the property but was quickly pursued and detained.

A search of his hotel room yielded a large number of the advertising stickers in a drawer. Authorities also recovered photographs on his mobile phone that showed him placing the stickers in public areas, which he allegedly used to report his work to an employer.

During questioning, Semion claimed he was recruited through a Telegram dark market chat group, popular within the Russian community. He alleged the group’s administrators sent him the advertising stickers via private courier for him to distribute.

 

Semion stated he was paid $1 (USDT) per sticker placed, with funds transferred directly to his cryptocurrency wallet. He claimed to have carried out the advertising work for three days, earning a total of $300 (USDT).

Arresting officers expressed skepticism regarding the suspect’s claims and plan to broaden the investigation into the full extent of the online drug trafficking network. Semion has been initially charged with advertising narcotics without permission and was handed over to investigators at Cherng Talay Police Station in Phuket for legal proceedings.

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Thai Bubble Tea ChaKaimuk Pursues Global Growth Amid Price War

Thai bubble tea franchiser ChaKaimuk.com is shifting its focus to aggressive international expansion, primarily across Southeast Asian Nations.

BANGKOK — Thai bubble tea franchiser ChaKaimuk.com is shifting its focus to aggressive international expansion, primarily across the Southeast Asian Nations, as an intense domestic price war erodes profitability in Thailand.

The company, which currently operates over 3,000 branches domestically, plans to add 1,000 new international branches over the next three to five years to sustain growth, according to Somchai Charoenthangeakwong, founder of parent company TEA Corporation Co., Ltd.

Intensifying Competition: Charoenthangeakwong expects competition in Thailand’s bubble tea market to peak in 2025. Franchise fees and beverage prices have reportedly fallen to a low of approximately 19 baht ($0.52) per cup, leading to a challenging environment for domestic expansion and an increase in investor hesitation.

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Somchai Charoenthangeakwong, founder of parent company TEA Corporation Co., Ltd.

ASEAN Focus: To counter the domestic saturation and price pressure, ChaKaimuk.com is pivoting to overseas markets where it sees growing demand from both potential franchise partners and ingredient distributors. The company currently has distributors in countries like Cambodia and franchise locations in Myanmar, Laos, and Indonesia.

Value and Adaptability: While expanding globally, the company is also implementing strategies to enhance value and attract investors. New services for franchisees include free shipping on ingredient orders and complimentary supplies like menu boards and aprons. For consumers, the company is maintaining stable drink prices while increasing per-cup value through more topping options.

Charoenthangeakwong emphasized the company’s history of rapid adaptation, citing its shift to online franchisee training, multi-channel ordering, and the introduction of low-sugar menus during the COVID-19 pandemic as examples of its key success factors.

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Thai students queuing up in a long line for their fix at the ChaKaimuk.com booth.

Infrastructure and Cost Management

The company is also addressing operational challenges and preparing for future growth:

Sourcing and Costs: ChaKaimuk.com plans to manage rising raw material costs, particularly for green tea, by diversifying sourcing and balancing overall expenses to maintain stable pricing for its products.

Factory Expansion: To support its planned domestic and international expansion, the company intends to invest in infrastructure, including new warehouses and an expansion of its factory in the Sukhaphiban 5 area over the next five years.

Menu Development: The company is accelerating its menu development cycle, moving away from quarterly releases to launch new products immediately as consumer trends emerge.

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It Wasn’t Just a Quarrel But Execise of Crude Authoritarian Culture at Miss Universe 2025 in Bangkok

​Nawat Itsaragrisil, Miss Universe Thailand Host Committee chairman, cried during a press interview following a barrage of drama and controversy surrounding the Miss Universe 2025 pageant on November 5, 2025. (KHAOSOD Photo/Chvalit Panyong)

​T he incident involving Thai organiser of the Miss Universe 2025 competition in Bangkok on Tuesday when Mr Nawat Itsaragrisil berated the Mexican beauty queen, Miss Universe Mexico 2025 Fatima Bosch, in front of all the contestants, calling for srcurity guards, demanding the room doors be closed, and threatening other beauty queens representative dozens of nations who stood up or walked out with disqualification from the competition, is an example of the vertical, authoritarian use of raw and crude power that many Thais have been made so familiar with since childhood, unfortunately.

 

​It demonstrates that authoritarian power is not confined solely to the spheres of military dictatorship or electoral politics; it is pervasive across almost every dimension of Thai society. The use of raw power and threats begins in many families, in many schools and educational institutions, in workplaces, in military camps, in the existence and application of the lèse majesté law, and beyond.

​The challenge of cultivating a culture of democracy and equality is an enormous one for Thai society. We must begin by adjusting our relationships with those whom society generally views as inferior—whether in terms of power, status, education, or class. Because as long as people habitually exercise this kind of raw, vertical power and see it as normal, instead of reporting to reasoning, respect and empathy, it will be difficult to expect Thai society to achieve equality and become truly democratic.

​P.S. The clip of Nawat using this raw power affects not only his own reputation but also the reputation of Thailand. If we view this positively, it serves as a wake-up call about the failure to transform Thai culture into one that respects human equality, different reasoning, and democracy.

​Power exercised from the top-down in a hierarchical, non-consultative, and often coercive manner, characteristic of authoritarian systems is unfortunately deep rooted in Thai culture still.

​The Thai lèse majesté law, one of the world’s strictest, which carries severe penalties for defaming, insulting, or threatening the monarchy is but the tip of an iceberg.

The exercise of raw, entrenched power in Thai society, extending beyond the realms of politics and was made apparent under the glare of spotlights and Facebook live streaming on Tuesday at inside a luxury hotel in Bangkok at one of the world’s most watched stage called Miss Universe Pageant.

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Taiwanese Suspect Led 5 Thai ‘Mule’ Accounts, Cyber Police Say

Cyber police detain Taiwanese suspect, along with five Thai nationals accused of operating bank “mule accounts” for an online gambling network, following coordinated raids in Bangkok and Chonburi on Nov. 5, 2025.

BANGKOK — Thailand’s Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau (CCIB) raided three locations linked to an online gambling network allegedly run by a Taiwanese suspect and five Thai accomplices, police said Thursday.

The operation, carried out on Nov. 5, targeted the website hrbx856, which authorities said had over 340,000 members and handled more than 100 million baht ($2.8 million) in monthly transactions. Police believe the site had been operating for over a year, offering illegal betting on lotteries, football, baccarat, and slot games.

Pol Lt. Gen. Surapol Prembutr, CCIB commissioner, said the network funneled money through a front company, The Luxury Store, registered in Bangkok’s Lat Phrao district under a Malaysian national. Although officially listed as an importer of luxury goods, the firm was allegedly used to launder gambling proceeds through multiple corporate and personal accounts.

Funds were first transferred to two companies managed by Taiwanese nationals before being passed to Thai “mule accounts” for cash withdrawals ranging from hundreds of thousands to millions of baht, he said.

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A Taiwanese man, identified by police as Su, 32, is questioned during a cyber police raid in Chonburi Province on Nov. 5, 2025.

Police obtained eight arrest warrants — one Malaysian, three Taiwanese, and four Thai suspects — and searched three sites in Bangkok and Chonburi province. The Malaysian suspect remains at large.

Investigators seized 700,000 baht ($21,500) in cash, 41 mobile phones, four computers, a laptop, 11 bank books, 10 ATM cards, and other electronic devices.

Among those arrested was Su, 32, a Taiwanese national accused of directing the Thai money mules from his residence in Chonburi. Five Thai suspects were also detained:

  • Chutamat, 33, arrested in Bangkok’s Sathorn district, accused of withdrawing cash.
  • Kasarin, 42, arrested in Samut Sakhon province, accused of opening mule accounts.
  • Wissanu, 21, of Chonburi; Mantanana, 23, of Loei; and Sunisa, 20, of Khon Kaen — all accused of operating mule accounts.

Chutamat and Kasarin face charges of organizing online gambling and money laundering, while the other four are charged with promoting or facilitating illegal gambling through electronic media.

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New York First Muslim, South Asian Mayor Tells Trump: City Ready to Fight

New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani speaks during a news conference in the Queens borough of New York, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Heather Khalifa)

NEW YORK (AP) — Zohran Mamdani wasted little time after becoming mayor-elect of New York City before addressing the man who threatened to not only defund the city — but also to arrest and deport him — if he won.

“Donald Trump, since I know you’re watching, I have four words for you: Turn the volume up,” Mamdani, a Democrat, told the Republican president from the stage of his Brooklyn victory party.

He issued a direct challenge to the president. “If anyone can show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump how to defeat him, it is the city that gave rise to him,” he said.

The proclamation was an illustration of how both men have seized on one another as politically advantageous foils as Mamdani has risen from obscure state lawmaker to national Democratic star and as Trump has cast today’s Democratic Party as radical and out of touch with everyday voters.

Mamdani, who was born in Uganda and became a naturalized American citizen after graduating from college, went on to cast himself as the embodiment of the resistance against the president, who has pursued an aggressive, anti-immigrant agenda during his second term.

“New York will remain a city of immigrants, a city built by immigrants, powered by immigrants and, as of tonight, led by an immigrant,” he said. “So hear me, President Trump, when I say this: To get to any of us, you will have to get through all of us.”

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New York City mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, center, speaks in front of the Unisphere alongside his transition team, from left, Elana Leopold, Melanie Hartzog, Maria Torres-Springer, Grace Bonilla, and Lina Khan, in the Queens borough of New York, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Heather Khalifa)

Trump, who has spent months insulting Mamdani and warning that the city would be ruined if he won, seemed to be watching.

“…AND SO IT BEGINS!” he posted on social media as Mamdani spoke.

Mamdani, a democratic socialist who campaigned on a slate of far-left progressive policies and a cheery optimism that stands in stark contrast to Trump’s darker and more hardline tactics, is expected to continue to face the president’s persistent political bashing — along with a federal government that may try to thwart his agenda. It remains unclear however exactly how Trump plans to respond and if the courts will stop him.

The 34-year-old, Ugandan-born Mamdani is set to be New York’s youngest mayor in more than a century — and the first Muslim one — when he takes office on Jan. 1.

At a boisterous victory rally late Tuesday, Mamdani addressed supporters with a speech inspired by Jawaharlal Nehru’s iconic “Tryst with Destiny” address, delivered on the eve of India’s independence in 1947.

“Standing before you, I think of the words of Jawaharlal Nehru: ‘A moment comes, but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends and when the soul of a nation long suppressed finds utterance.’ Tonight, we have stepped out from the old into the new,” Mamdani said.

The title track of 2004 Bollywood blockbuster “Dhoom” played as Mamdani concluded his speech, flanked by his parents and wife Rama Duwaji.

Mamdani’s mother, Mira Nair, is an award-winning Indian filmmaker whose credits include “Monsoon Wedding,” “The Namesake” and “Mississippi Masala” and whose work has been nominated for an Academy Award. His father, Mahmood Mamdani, is an anthropology professor at Columbia University.

‘Mayor Trump’

New York has remained relatively unscathed by Trump’s administration, as he has targeted cities including Los Angeles and Washington, dispatching the National Guard. The current mayor, Eric Adams, enjoyed an unusual alliance with the Republican president, whose administration dropped a federal corruption case against the mayor so he could better assist with the president’s immigration agenda.

But Trump for months has threatened to slash federal funding to the city and mount an outright takeover if Mamdani won — threats that became a cornerstone of Mamdani’s rivals’ campaigns against him.

Meanwhile, Trump and others in his party gleefully seized on Mamdani’s most controversial policy proposals and past statements, including those criticizing the city’s police department, trying to cast Mamdani as dangerous — and representative of the Democratic Party at large.

“The Democrat Party has surrendered to radical socialist Zohran Mamdani and the far-left mob who are now running the show,” said National Republican Congressional Committee spokesperson Mike Marinella in a statement Tuesday night. “They’ve proudly embraced defunding the police, abolishing ICE, taxing hard-working Americans to death, and replacing common sense with chaos. Every House Democrat is foolishly complicit in their party’s collapse, and voters will make them pay in 2026.”

Mamdani says he will try to ‘Trump-proof’ the city

In his first news conference as mayor-elect on Wednesday, Mamdani made it clear that the city’s most powerful former resident is one of the chief challenges he’ll face in his new job.

“New Yorkers are facing twin crises in this moment: an authoritarian administration and an affordability crisis,” he said. “And it will be my job to deliver on both.”

Mamdani spoke about “Trump-proofing” New York City, which he said involves “protecting those with the least from the consequences of a man with the most power in this country.”

But Mamdani said several times that he was willing to work with anyone, including Trump, if they can help New Yorkers. He said he has not heard from the White House or the president following his win.

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Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, right, and his wife Rama Duwaji react to supporters during an election night watch party, Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Echoes of Trump

Nearly a decade ago, Trump was the bold yet untested candidate who notched a remarkable political victory of his own after building a populist coalition, harnessing social media, commanding the media spotlight and promising a wave of change.

Those same qualities that propelled the Republican into the White House in 2016 have helped Mamdani rise to become the soon-to-be mayor of Trump’s hometown and the biggest city in the nation.

Mamdani on Wednesday offered an early glimpse into the way he’ll try to reflect those populist messages back against the president. He decried the high cost of groceries, something Trump raised as he campaigned for the White House last year, and said the president’s decision to stop administering federal food aid through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program is “literally making it harder to afford those same groceries whose price he was decrying not that long ago.”

But rather than see Mamdani as a Democratic analogue for his own path to power, Trump has cast him as a prime foil and a reason he may seek to punish or overpower the city.

Though most presidents don’t devote time to tangling with local elected officials, Trump is not most presidents, and New York City holds special significance for him.

The Queens-born former reality star made his fame in Manhattan, where he became a TV star from his gilded penthouse and later launched his improbable presidential campaign after descending his golden escalator.

Trump has kept a particular focus on the city, trying to block its congestion pricing program, cancel construction on new tunnels under the Hudson River and insisting during his comeback presidential campaign last year on holding a mega-rally at Madison Square Garden despite his unpopularity in the city.

As the city prepared to pick its next mayor, Trump got unusually involved. He attacked him on social media, falsely labeling Mamdani a communist and eventually endorsing Cuomo.

And in the fall, intermediaries for the Trump administration approached Adams to try to persuade him to abandon his reelection campaign in an attempt to block Mamdani’s path to victory.

On the eve of the election, Trump said he would likely cut federal city funding if Mamdani won, writing on social media that “it is highly unlikely that I will be contributing Federal Funds, other than the very minimum as required.”

The White House and Office of Management and Budget did not respond to a message Wednesday about federal funds for the city Trump may seek to withhold.

But he had already sought to punish the city this year as part of a broader pattern of asserting power against Democratic elected officials who’ve criticized him, including suspending funding for some infrastructure projects during the government shutdown and trying to slash grants aimed at addressing the costs of migrants.

The threats also resonated with some voters.

Amy Snyder, an art adviser who voted for Cuomo, said she feared Mamdani “would not be able to stand up to Trump.”

Ariel Kohane, a registered Republican who voted for Cuomo but has voted for Trump multiple times, said he expected the president would do everything in his power to prevent Mamdani from accomplishing his agenda — and hoped it would work.

“Trump will probably have to send in the National Guard and ICE agents, too,” Kohane said.

Wacef Chowdhury, a volunteer for the Mamdani campaign, said he fully anticipated Trump would attempt to punish the city in retaliation for the democratic socialist’s victory.

“We know he’s going to try, but we’re ready,” said Chowdhury, who works in finance. “We fought back the establishment, and we’re going to do the same to the president.”

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