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Lese Majeste Conviction Rate Higher Since Coup, UN Says

Sirawith Serithiwat, whose mother was charged with lese majeste over a single word in an online chat, leads a protest May 7, 2016, for fair treatment of those who face similar charges in front of a police station in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — The UN high commissioner for human rights called Tuesday on the military government to stop trying civilians for lese majeste in military courts.

Coming four days after a tribunal handed down the longest known sentence in such a case, the statement was issued by a spokesman of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. It also said the chances of being cleared of the crime have fallen greatly, as the number of cases has surged.

“Between 2011 and 2013, 119 people were investigated for insulting the monarchy. Over the last three years, between 2014 and 2016, that figure has more than doubled to at least 285,” read the statement signed by spokesman Rupert Colville from Geneva.

Read: Man Gets 35-Year Lese Majeste Sentence for Facebook Page

The UN rights body said it was “deeply troubled” by the increase in prosecutions and severity in sentencing, noting that the rate of conviction since the coup increased to 90 percent from a 76 percent rate between 2011 and 2013.

A spokesman for the ruling junta said there was a good reason for the higher rate. Many more cases in the past three years have involved online offenses for which more concrete evidence could be found to support conviction.

“This is most likely a result of computer evidence, that can always be retrieved,” Col. Winthai Suvaree said Tuesday afternoon. “That’s why not many witnesses have been needed.”

The rights organization also called for the law to be amended. Winthai said amending the law has nothing to do with the military government. As for the call to transfer pending cases to civilian courts of justice, Winthai was non-committal but said he would look into it.

On Friday, 35-year-old Wichai Thepwong was sentenced to a 35-year prison term by the Bangkok Military Court for 10 Facebook messages deemed offensive to the monarchy. It was the longest sentence of its kind.

In August 2015, military courts sentenced two people in one day to a combined 58 years in prison for allegedly insulting the monarchy over Facebook. The 30-year sentence given to a Kanchanaburi man set a new record at the time. A woman in northern Thailand received 28 years in jail.

Correction: due to an editing error, the post-coup conviction rate was misstated as 24 percent. It is in fact 90 percent. An original version of this article also said the statement was released by UN High Commissioner for Refugees. It was in fact released by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights

Related stories:

Man Gets 35-Year Lese Majeste Sentence for Facebook Page

Record Sentences Today For Facebook Lese Majeste Offenses

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Totally Kafka: Artists Interpret Writer at Traveling Fest

‘Red Peter’ performance taken from September show at Bangkok CityCity gallery. Photo: Sareena Sattapon

BANGKOK — Exhibitions, installations and performances in various disciplines interpreting the works of German-language writer Franz Kafka are coming to Bangkok and Chiang Mai in November.

The Unfolding Kafka Festival, a multidisciplinary and cross-cultural collaboration, will return a second year for a three-week run in Bangkok and two days in Chiang Mai.

Festival founder Jitti Chompee wants people to appreciate works from dynamic, contemporary international artists never seen before in Southeast Asia and to educate young enthusiasts with free lectures and workshops.

Read: Kafka’s Chimp Apes as Human in ‘Red Peter’

Artists such as Yoko Seyama, who will show a kinetic light installation, Israeli Roni Chadash’s dance that explores femininity through her amorphous body and Hiroaki Umeda’s spectacle of light and body.

Jitti will stage his contemporary dance performance “Red Peter,” which last showed in September.

The festival is supported by Goethe-Institut Thailand, Japan Foundation, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and the French Embassy.

Jitti said it needs more resources to go forward, and he has turned to crowdfunding to make the upcoming event possible and secure its return for 2019.

Contributions can be made via Asiola until July 15. As of Tuesday noon, the campaign had reached 67,700 baht of its 500,000 baht goal.

Festival passes are available for 1,650 baht (500 baht for students) while supplies last and can be booked by email. Single-event tickets range from 50 baht to 800 baht can be booked by email or purchased at the event.

Detailed information on the program and schedule is available online.

In Bangkok, the festival will be held three weeks from Nov. 3 to 22 at Goethe-Institut Thailand and Bangkok CityCity Gallery in Soi Sathon 1, the Rose Hotel Bangkok on Surawong Road and Sodsai Pantoomkomol Center for Dramatic Arts at Chulalongkorn University.

The Chiang Mai edition will be held Nov. 24 and 25 at the Maiiam Contemporary Art Museum.

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Prayuth Criticizes Teen Singer’s Sexy Dancing, Blames Farangs

Original image: Soo Entertain / YouTube

BANGKOK — The owner of a record label representing teen luk thung singer Lumyai Hai Thongkam, said criticism of her dancing by the prime minister shows he is out of touch.

Prachakchai Navarat, owner of Hai Thongkam Records said the sexual dance moves criticized recently by Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha as inappropriate and not Thai, were not new in any sense.

“I want to ask, is Lumyai really destroying society? This kind of thing has been happening way before she was famous, in lum sing, coyote, Korean and American dancing,” Prachakchai said. “Please don’t think of this as something inappropriate.”

Prachakchai did say the 18-year-old singer would from henceforth perform only three of the nine “twerks” in her signature “Nine Floors” move the junta leader found objectionable. The move involves Lumyai assuming a bridge pose on the ground and twerking upward nine times while making Thai dance hand motions.

The freaky moves fracas erupted after Prayuth raised Lumyai’s dancing three times in sessions at the Government House: Friday, Monday and again today.

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Supansa Wetkama, aka Lumyai Hai Thongkam, an 18-year-old luk thung singer, dances in her signature gold outfit.

“I understand that in a business sense, you have to find new things to sell. But you also have to look at whether it’s appropriate. Shouldn’t we retain Thainess? And to those who say that this kind of dancing has been around for long, don’t you want to improve society at all?” he said. “Just because farangs are doing it doesn’t mean we have to.”

“The way she dances, she’s about to show all her genitals already. I don’t want to talk about it, people will say I’m crazy. But I want everyone to help solve this problem,” said Prayuth when he first brought up Lumyai.

It’s not the first time the 63-year-old retired general has been concerned about displays of female sexuality. He famously said attractive foreign women who wore bikinis in Thailand risked rape in 2014 after a British man and woman were murdered on Koh Tao. Last year, he compared young women to “unwrapped candy.”

On Monday, Prayuth escalated his complaints, saying the media should “warn society” against viewing similar sexually charged video clips.

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Supansa Wetkama, aka Lumyai Hai Thongkam, an 18-year-old luk thung singer.

Almost lost in the debate was Lumyai herself. On Sunday, she said she was distressed at hearing the criticism.

“Sometimes I wear a jean jacket to dance, and the organizer will say that I don’t look like Lumyai if I cover up too much. I have to dress sexy, or people will forget me,” she said. “I’m ready to improve myself, but I want you to see that it’s also about work too.”

Her manager, Thanassorn Phutinan, said Saturday that toning Lumyai down to PG levels just wasn’t economically feasible.

“We don’t mean to have her dress to revealingly, but sometimes the organizer who hired us will threaten to pay only half if she doesn’t change clothes,” Thanassorn said. He said people want to see the Lumyai they’re familiar with, in either a glittering gold bikini or hot pants.

Reactions otherwise split down the usual cultural warfare fronts.

Former Khon Kaen Senator Rabeabrat Phongpanich, who heads the Society to Create Happy and Warm Families and famously criticized promotional models known as pretties in 2012, described it as cultural “trash.”

“The studio makes songs explicitly about sex in order to reap benefits. It’s not something that an upcountry girl can just make herself do. Every side should stop creating trash in society.”

Lumyai in her gold bikini outfit singing “Phu Sao Kha Lor” at a concert in Sisaket concert.

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Supansa Wetkama, 18-year-old ‘luk thung’ singer who performs as ‘Lumyai.’

Another country singer who rocketed to stardom and infamy in 2011 for her sexually suggestive “Kan Hoo” (“Itchy Ear”) performances, offered her support.

“Most mor lam singers have to dress like this anyway, but we only get criticized when we get famous.” said Nongphanee “Jah Rsiam” Mahadthai. “If you wanna know how we got famous, just look at what Thai people are interested in. They would say I have to dress sexy whenever I was on stage to sing ‘Kan Hoo.’”

Lumyai, whose real name is Supansa Wetkama, grew up poor. She immigrated with her family from Roi Et to Bangkok, where she helped her grandma sell candy as a child. She started singing at nine when she was in fourth grade. She got into the Salaya Performing Arts school after sixth grade and started working as a luk thung singer to support her family before she was discovered by Prachakchai.

Her most famous song, “Phu Sao Kha Lor,” (“Party Girl”) was released in November and was watched more than 200 million times in three months, rocketing her to luk thung stardom. She’s recognizable for her “Nine Floors” Bridge pose, glittering bikini outfits and braces.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BVJr9ZFBF_i/?taken-by=lamyaihaitong

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Pattaya Nightclub Gutted by Fire, Welders Charged

PATTAYA — Three welders were charged with recklessness Tuesday for a raging fire which destroyed a popular gay club.

Three unidentified welders who had been hired to weld stairs were inside the club when a fire broke out at about 5pm on Monday and engulfed the building, according to Pattaya police chief Col. Apichai Krobpetch. It took firemen almost two hours to put out the flames.

Two employees suffered minor injuries and first-degree burns. Police did not identify the exact cause of the fire.

Read: 2 Hospitalized After Fire Breaks Out in Pattaya Nightclub

The roof collapsed and the one-story building has been declared a total loss. Damages are estimated in the millions of baht. It is unclear whether the venue would be rebuilt and reopened to the public, said someone responding to messages left for the club.

“The damage is about 10 to 20 million baht,” he said, refusing to identify himself and only giving his name as “Knight.” “We will have to discuss matters about the renovation or reopening with each other and our lawyer.”

Muze opened in March 2016.

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Related stories:

2 Hospitalized After Fire Breaks Out in Pattaya Nightclub

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5 Killed in Visa Run Van Crash Near Border

Emergency responders examine a van wrecked in a collision in June 2017 in Sa Kaeo province that killed five.
Emergency responders examine a van wrecked in a collision in June 2017 in Sa Kaeo province that killed five.

SA KAEO — Three Thais and two foreigners died when a van and pickup collided Tuesday morning in the border province of Sa Kaeo.

Police said the van was carrying a group of foreign workers to an immigration post at the Thai-Cambodian border to extend their visas. The cause of the accident was not immediately clear, as the van driver was among the dead, said Korathawat Kanatat, deputy chief of Khao Chakan Police Station.

“The van approached a bend, and it was coming in fast,” Lt. Col. Korathawat said. “For some reason that we don’t know, it crashed into the center divider and went on across the lane to slam into a pickup truck.”

The impact killed two people in the truck and three in the van. The van passengers were citizens of Vietnam and Laos, Korathawat added.

Although police officers at the scene described the passengers as being workers in Thailand, the lieutenant colonel would not confirm this beyond saying all of them were carrying tourist visas.

Fatal accidents involving interprovincial vans are frequent. After a series of high-profile incidents, such as another van and pickup truck collision in January, the military government announced a plan to replace the vans with minibuses that are more suitable for long distance travel.

The replacement deadline was initially set for July, but transport authorities later postponed it, citing different reasons.

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San Francisco Marks 50 Years Since Legendary Summer of Love

Jimi Hendrix performs at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967 in Monterey, California. Photo: Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — They came for the music, the mind-bending drugs, to resist the Vietnam War and 1960s American orthodoxy, or simply to escape summer boredom. And they left an enduring legacy.

This season marks the 50th anniversary of that legendary “Summer of Love,” when throngs of American youth descended on San Francisco to join a cultural revolution.

Thinking back on 1967, Bob Weir of the Grateful Dead recalls a creative explosion that sprouted from fissures in American society. That summer marked a pivot point in rock-and-roll history, he says, but it was about much more than the music.

“There was a spirit in the air,” said Weir, who dropped out of high school and then helped form the Grateful Dead in 1965. “We figured that if enough of us got together and put our hearts and minds to it, we could make anything happen.”

San Francisco, now a hub of technology and unrecognizable from its grittier, more freewheeling former self, is taking the anniversary seriously. Hoping for another invasion of visitors  this time with tourist dollars  the city is celebrating with museum exhibits, music and film festivals, Summer of Love-inspired dance parties and lecture panels. Hotels are offering discount packages that include “psychedelic cocktails,” ”Love Bus” tours, tie-dyed tote bags and bubble wands.

The city’s travel bureau, which is coordinating the effort, calls it an “exhilarating celebration of the most iconic cultural event in San Francisco history.”

One thing the anniversary makes clear is that what happened here in the 1960s could never happen in San Francisco today, simply because struggling artists can’t afford the city anymore. In the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, which was ground zero for the counterculture, two-bedroom apartments now rent for USD $5,000 a month. San Francisco remains a magnet for young people, but even those earning six-figure Silicon Valley salaries complain about the cost of living.

In the mid-1960s, rent in Haight-Ashbury was extremely cheap, Weir, now 69, told The Associated Press.

“That attracted artists and bohemians in general because the bohemian community tended to move in where they could afford it,” he said.

During those years, the Grateful Dead shared a spacious Victorian on Ashbury Street. Janis Joplin lived down the street. Across from her was Joe McDonald, of the psychedelic rock band Country Joe and the Fish.

Jefferson Airplane eventually bought a house a few blocks away on Fulton Street, where they hosted legendary, wild parties.

“The music is what everyone seems to remember, but it was a lot more than that,” said David Freiberg, 75, a singer and bassist for Quicksilver Messenger Service who later joined Jefferson Airplane. “It was artists, poets, musicians, all the beautiful shops of clothes and hippie food stores. It was a whole community.”

The bands dropped by each other’s houses and played music nearby, often in free outdoor concerts at Golden Gate Park and its eastward extension known as the Panhandle. Their exciting new breed of folk, jazz and blues-inspired electrical music became known as the San Francisco Sound. Several of its most influential local acts  the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother and the Holding Company, which launched Joplin’s career  shot to fame during the summer’s three-day Monterey Pop Festival.

“Every fantasy about the summer of ’67 that was ever created  peace, joy, love, nonviolence, wear flowers in your hair and fantastic music  was real at Monterey. It was bliss,” said Dennis McNally, the Grateful Dead’s longtime publicist and official biographer who has curated an exhibit at the California Historical Society that runs through Sept. 10.

The exhibit, “On the Road to the Summer of Love,” explains how that epic summer came about and why San Francisco was its inevitable home. McNally uncovered 100 photographs, some never seen publicly, that trace San Francisco’s contrarian roots to the Beat poets of the 1950s, followed by civil rights demonstrations and the Free Speech Movement at the University of California, Berkeley in the early 1960s.

The national media paid little attention to San Francisco’s psychedelic community until January 1967, when poets and bands joined forces for the “Human Be-In,” a Golden Gate Park gathering that unexpectedly drew about 50,000 people, McNally said. It was there that psychologist and LSD-advocate Timothy Leary stood on stage and delivered his famous mantra: “Turn on. Tune In. Drop out.”

“After the media got hold, it just exploded,” McNally said. “Suddenly, a flood descends on Haight Street. Every bored high school kid  and that’s all of them  is saying, ‘How do I get to San Francisco?'”

An exhaustive exhibit at San Francisco’s de Young museum, “The Summer of Love Experience,” offers a feel-good trip back in time. There’s a psychedelic light show, a 1960s soundtrack and galleries with iconic concert posters, classic photographs and hippie chic fashions worn by Joplin, Jerry Garcia and others. It runs through Aug. 20.

But that summer’s invasion carried a dark cloud. Tens of thousands of youths looking for free love and drugs flooded into San Francisco, living in the streets, begging for food. Parents journeyed to the city in search of their young runaways. An epidemic of toxic psychedelics and harder drugs hit the streets.

“Every loose nut and bolt in America rattled out here to San Francisco, and it got pretty messy,” Weir said.

The longtimers saw it as the end of an era, but one that shaped history.

“We created a mindset that became intrinsic to the fabric of America today,” said Country Joe McDonald, now 75. “Every single thing we did was adapted, folded into America — gender attitudes, ecological attitudes, the invention of rock and roll.”

Half a century later, McDonald, who lives in Berkeley, feels the rumblings of history repeating itself.

UC Berkeley is again at the center of a free speech debate, albeit of a different nature. Discontent with the U.S. government and President Donald Trump has stirred the largest protests he’s seen since the Vietnam War. In the women’s marches across America, he felt echoes of the Summer of Love.

“I think there’s a similarity,” McDonald said, drawing a parallel to the massive anti-Trump turnout marked by nonviolence, playful pink protest hats, creative signs and a determination to change the country’s political course. “Both were about saying goodbye to the past and hello to the future.”

Story: Jocelyn Gecker

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Another Accident Lands Italian-Thai in Hot Water For Safety Lapses

A beam from an elevated rail line construction site burst through the windshield of Thanakrit Thanomkiat’s car in a photo he posted to Facebook. Photo: Pop PastelSecret / Facebook

BANGKOK — When a metal beam fell from a rail construction site Monday and speared a passing car’s windshield, nearly skewering the driver, it wasn’t the first such incident to plague construction of the Dark Red Line. Nor was it the second or fourth.

Monday’s incident was the seventh known accident to occur since work began four years ago. And while no one died this time – others have been fatal – it turned public attention again to Italian-Thai Development Co. Ltd., the firm responsible for the project.

Thanakrit Thanomkiat, 35, said he was driving his Nissan yesterday morning on Vibhavadi Rangsit Road toward Kamphaeng Phet 6 Road when the long, cemented-coated steel beam fell from the overhead construction site of the SRT Dark-Red Line’s Bang Khen Station.

Thanakrit went to file a complaint and posted a photo to social media. He was uninjured, but the roof and windshield of his car were badly damaged.

A project engineer with the State Railway of Thailand or SRT, who granted Italian-Thai the 21 billion baht construction contract, blamed contractor carelessness.

Jare Rungthanee said it failed to enclose all of the specified area and the pole fell through an unprotected space.

Italian-Thai was summoned Tuesday to meet with SRT officials before the rail agency considers punitive measures.

Pichit Akrathit, the deputy transport minister, said the contractor must also pay compensation and a fine. He said the SRT would be summoned before the ministry to explain why accidents at their construction site were so frequent.

Pichit said they were reviewing the contract with Italian-Thai under public pressure to scrap the deal with the company, which has a serious record of accidents.

In the past four years, eight people have been killed as a result of the seven accidents involving the project.

Construction was ordered to halt after three workers were crushed to death by large steel beams on April 28. In January 2015, seven people were hurt when scaffolding fell at a project in front of the IT Square shopping mall in the Lak Si district. A Burmese worker was killed by falling concrete blocks in October 2015 on Kamphaeng Phet 6 Road in front of Wat Don Mueang.

The first phase of Dark-Red Line construction commenced in 2013. It will run from Bang Sue to Rangsit. The inaugural run of the Dark-Red Line is set for 2020.

Thanakrit, the car owner, said he is due to talk to Italian-Thai representatives today about compensation.

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Prayuth May Shop for Answers to His ‘4 Questions’ in Malls

Members of the public line up at a government center Monday to submit their answers to junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha’s four questions in Chai Nat province

BANGKOK — A government official on Tuesday proposed opening locations for the public to answer questions posed by junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha about Thailand’s political future after the first day met a lukewarm response.

Only 395 people submitted answers Monday to Gen. Prayuth’s controversial four questions at 51 designated locations in the capital – each district office and a government complaint center near the government house, where 14 people showed up to offer responses. Just over 7,000 people responded nationwide.

The low turnout rate led Interior Minister Gen. Anupong Paochinda, who is in charge of collecting responses, to suggest adding sites in shopping malls popular with Bangkokians of means.

If the mall owners cooperated, Anupong said it could be expanded beyond Bangkok. He is also considering using the internet but said responses must be verified with ID numbers.

Throughout the kingdom, 1,007 centers have been assigned to collect answers to Prayuth’s questions.

Prayuth posed the four questions on May 26 during his weekly televised address.

Among them was:

“Elections are important for a democracy. But they are not the sole determinant of the country’s future and other matters, such as whether a country has a strategy or undergoes reforms, is this true or false?”

The questions were criticized for being loaded attempts to win responses to justify the regime’s continued stay in power.

Korakot Sangyepan, a 24-year-old member of the Democracy Restoration Group, said last week there was no guarantee the outcome would be fair or reliable. She said it seemed an attempt to measure the junta’s popularity.

Around the country, 7,012 people responded on Monday. The Interior Ministry will summarize and report the results every 10 days.

The most responses came in the northeastern province of Kalasin, where 662 people registered their opinions. The lowest was in the southern province of Phang Nga. Only six responses were filed there. The content of those responses has not been made public yet.

The Interior Ministry is in no rush, according to Prayoon Rattasenee, a deputy permanent secretary. Prayoon said perhaps the questions may not yet have percolated widely enough. The ministry is also considering accepting responses through mail and email, but said it would have to look into the details first.

Former PCAP leader Suthep Thaugsuban made his response public on Facebook on Monday, saying that if elections would lead to a government lacking in good governance, there should be no elections.

Prayuth also asked:

“Do you think the next election will lead to a government that practices good governance?

“If not, what should we do?

“Do you think that politicians who’ve shown inappropriate behavior should have the opportunity to seek office again? If they gain office again and new problems arise, who should fix them and with what means?”

Update: This story has been updated with updated numbers of submitted responses from Monday.

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Former NBA Star Dennis Rodman to Return to N Korea

Image: Secular Talk / YouTube

BEIJING — North Korea is expecting another visit by former NBA bad boy Dennis Rodman.

He’s made several visits to the country, but has been roundly criticized for insensitive comments and for regaling leader Kim Jong Un with “Happy Birthday” in 2014. On the same trip, he suggested an American missionary was at fault for his own imprisonment in North Korea, remarks for which he later apologized.

A foreign ministry official who spoke to the AP in Pyongyang confirmed Rodman was expected to arrive Tuesday but could not provide details. He spoke on condition of anonymity because the ministry had not issued a formal statement.

It would be Rodman’s first visit to the country since President Donald Trump took office.

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Asian Stocks up as Investors Shrug off Tech Rout, Eye Fed

Trader Kevin Walsh, right, works in 2017 on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press
Trader Kevin Walsh, right, works in 2017 on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photo: Richard Drew / Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — Asian stock markets were higher on Tuesday as investors brushed off a second day of big losses on Wall Street tech stocks a day before the Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates.

Keeping Score: Japan’s Nikkei 225 was flat at 19,913.55 and South Korea’s Kospi rose 0.5 percent to 2,370.16. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng advanced 0.5 percent to 25,835.49, while the Shanghai Composite Index was up 0.4 percent to 3,151.25. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 jumped 1.1 percent to 5,727.30. Stocks in Taiwan, Singapore and Indonesia were higher, but in the Philippines, the benchmark index fell.

Analysts’ Take: “The theme remained centered on the sell-off for tech stocks at the start of the week, though Asian markets could find some relief,” said Jingyi Pan, a market strategist at IG in Singapore. “While the extent to which this decline may sustain remains uncertain at the current moment, the move has not triggered a more widespread decline.”

Fed Watch: The Federal Reserve will meet Tuesday and Wednesday, and investors expect the central bank to raise interest rates for the third time since December. Super-low unemployment, gains in factory output and other economic data pointing to a recovery in the U.S. economy have led investors to believe that the Fed will lift rates.

Wall Street: U.S. stocks fell again on Monday as tech stocks recorded sharp losses for a second straight day. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index dipped 0.1 percent to 2,429.39. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 0.2 percent to 21,235.67, and the Nasdaq composite dropped 0.5 percent to 6,175.46.

Oil: Benchmark U.S. crude added 18 cents to USD $46.26 per barrel on electronic trading in New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract added 25 cents to close at USD $46.08 a barrel on Monday. Brent crude, used to price international oils, added 19 cents to USD $48.48 per barrel in London. It closed up 14 cents at USD $48.29 a barrel in the previous session.

Currencies: The dollar gained to 109.97 yen from 109.95, while the euro weakened to USD $1.119 from USD $1.120. The British pound slid further to USD $1.2654, down 0.1 percent.

Story: Youkyung Lee

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