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Feel the Bass, Warehouse Grit at New Underground ‘Residence’

Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat

Residence De Canal is the kind of place Thonglor hipsters turn their noses up at and underground folks savor the good-ole-day vibes of illegal warehouse raves. It opened in February at an inconspicuous spot in a row of shophouses, with no neon signs to indicate its location. Just follow the booming bass sound to its source.

With clubs forced to close earlier, and underground venues such as Dark Bar shutting down, Bangkok’s club scene has fallen on tough times. Apichart “Tui” Chaikaew, the scene icon behind venues such as Cafe Democ, Club Culture, and now Residence de Canal, says it’s a case of “same shit, different year.”

“The Bangkok scene has always had its ups and downs, trust me. One minute everyone thinks it’s all over, but it’ll pick up again after a while,” the charismatic Tui says, laughing.

For 12 years, Tui’s famed venue Cafe Democ was the center of gravity for the capital’s underground beats scene.

mongkorn.bug .2017Opened in 1999, it offered something different from other clubs. While most venues would laugh at any DJ wanting to do a weekly drum ‘n’ bass or breakbeat party, Tui welcomed them with open arms. Cafe Democ was to Thai electronic music as was CBGB’s was to American punk.

Today’s nightlife struggles resemble those of just about a decade ago, when when the Thaksin regime imposed midnight closing times and threatened to shut down any entertainment venues outside of legal entertainment zones, two of which are red-light districts and the third being RCA.

By that time Tui had opened Club Astra, an RCA joint that contrasted from Democ’s local formula by focusing on A-list, international DJs.

Early closing times meant no bookings. And as a promoter, it was too risky booking international DJs.

It didn’t last long and closed in 2007.

“Of course, the closing times affected our ticket sales, but I shut the place down because I never liked RCA,” Tui remembers.

Redison de canal 1
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat

Inside Residence De Canal – yeah, it sits by a khlong – bare concrete walls are covered white primer, and wooden furniture is scattered around the edges of the room. The centerpiece is, rightfully, the DJ booth. Take all those things and sprinkle a layer of dust, and that’s the kind of underground je ne sais quoi found in Canal de Residence.

Planned to be part club, part hostel, Tui hopes the venue will once again serve as a hub for the scene in the same way Cafe Democ once did.

“I really want this place to be there for the locals” he says.

This weekend, Krit Morton and his crew take over Residence with Clubnacht, a 10-hour journey into house and techno. But don’t expect a gonzo late night. Tui says he’s always hated hosting after-parties, and with 1am closing times in effect, Krit and his crew are starting the session at 3pm. One for the die-hard fans and those seeking something different. Go show your support and let me know what you think.

Until next time, dub be good to you.

Hear Krit and nine of his co-conspirators play hour-long sets at Mela Clubnacht, starting at 3pm on Saturday. Tickets are 200 baht and can be booked in advance online. Residence de Canal is located at 463/72 Luk Luang Road near the Royal Dusit Golf Club in the Dusit district.

Redison de canal 3 e1496895917477
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thappawut Parinyapariwat

MELA Clubnacth

Underground atmosphere and feeling from Residence de Canal, Bangkok, the venue for our night at MELA Clubnacht.

โพสต์โดย MELA บน 3 มิถุนายน 2017

 

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Bodies Found in Search for Missing Myanmar Plane With 120 Aboard

A Shaanxi Y-8 of the Myanmar Air Force seen here in 2009 mid-flight. Photo: M Radzi Desa / Wikimedia Commons

YANGON — A navy ship found bodies and aircraft parts in the seas off Myanmar while searching Thursday morning for a military transport plane carrying 120 people, a spokesman said.

The Chinese-made Y-8 turboprop aircraft carrying 120 people disappeared Wednesday afternoon about a half-hour after leaving Myeik, also known as Mergui, for Yangon on a route that would have taken it over the Andaman Sea.

Nine naval ships, five army aircraft and three helicopters were searching for the plane, military officials have said.

Gen. Myat Min Oo said the ship found two life jackets, three bodies and a tire that was part of an aircraft wheel. The bodies were of a man, a woman and a child. The wreckage was found in the sea west of the town of Laung Lone.

The plane carried 106 passengers  mostly families of military personnel  and 14 crew members. It is not unusual for such flights to carry civilians to offset transportation costs for military families stationed in the somewhat remote south.

The spokesman said it was raining, but not heavily, at the time the plane disappeared.

An announcement posted on the Facebook page of the commander of the military, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, said contact was lost when the plane was believed to be about 32 kilometers (20 miles) to the west of Dawei, formerly known as Tavoy.

The military said Myanmar received the Y-8 plane in March last year, and since then it had logged 809 flying hours.

The area is about 440 miles (700 kilometers) north of the last primary radar contact with Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which vanished on a flight from Malaysia to Beijing on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board. That plane is believed to have flown far off course and crashed into a remote area of the southern Indian Ocean.

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Drunk Full Moonites Accused of Stealing Restaurant’s Wooden Elephant

Andrew Davidson, at right, points Tuesday on Koh Phangan to the wooden elephant he and John Johnson, second from left, allegedly stole the day before from a Koh Samui restaurant. Photo: Sasothon Somvhung / Facebook

KOH SAMUI — Two Full Moon Party-bound Americans were charged Wednesday with stealing a giant wooden elephant from the front of a restaurant while drunk.

The tourists, John Johnson and Andrew Davidson, 23 and 22 respectively, allegedly nicked the decorative elephant Monday before loading it onto a rented truck which they transported by ferry Tuesday from Koh Samui to Koh Phangan.

“They were drunk. At about 2am on Monday, they stole the elephant in front of Happy Chang Noi,” Lt. Col. Denduang Tongsrisuk said. Capt. Sakchai Charoenkhun said they loaded the elephant onto the truck before proceeding to pass out in their hotel room just 50 meters from the restaurant.

Denduang said Jefferson and Davidson said that when they woke up hungover Monday morning, they had forgotten where they had lifted the elephant from. They decided to catch the 6pm ferry to Koh Phangan for Friday’s Full Moon Party – and took the elephant with them.

Police and residents started searching for the missing pachyderm in earnest when Sasothon Somvhung, posted CCTV footage showing two foreigners caught in flagrante stealing the elephant, a staple of Happy Chang Noi for 15 years. Police pulled the truck’s license plate from the clip, and soon police on neighboring Koh Phangan tracked down and arrested Jefferson and Berkeley.

“We showed them the clip at the police station as proof. Their faces fell, and they admitted stealing it,” Denduang said with a chuckle. “They’re just some confused teenage farangs.”

Denduang said Johnson and Davidson were charged with theft, which is punishable by up to 6,000 baht and three years in jail.

CCTV footage posted by Happy Chang Noi restaurant owner Sasothon Somvhung showing two men steal his wooden elephant.

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Police safeguard the stolen elephant Tuesday night.
Davidson and Johnson handcuffed together Tuesday night at Koh Phangan Police Station.
Davidson and Johnson handcuffed together Tuesday night at Koh Phangan Police Station.

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Germany Group Demands Arrest of CIA Official Over Thailand Torture

U.S. Air Force personnel conduct a foreign object debris walk with the Royal Thai Air Force 601st Squadron on March 2 at Don Mueang Air Base. Various accounts have placed a "black site" operated by the CIA on the base, though Thai officials flatly deny any facility ever existed. Photo: Jessica Tait / US Air Force

BERLIN — A civil rights group is asking German authorities to issue an arrest warrant for the recently appointed deputy director of the CIA over claims she oversaw the torture of terrorism suspects 15 years ago.

The nonprofit European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights submitted a legal brief to German federal prosecutors Tuesday, alleging that Gina Haspel allowed the waterboarding of prisoners at a secret U.S. detention center in Thailand.

The prosecutor’s office confirmed Wednesday the complaint had been received and was being reviewed. Similar complaints against senior U.S. officials in the past haven’t resulted in arrest warrants.

Advocates describe waterboarding as a form of “enhanced interrogation.” Critics say it amounts to torture, because prisoners are made to feel they are drowning.

Haspel was the first female career CIA officer selected to be deputy director in February.

The submission by the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights  seen by The Associated Press  centers mainly on the case of Abu Zubaydah, a Saudi citizen and senior al-Qaeda member who was among scores of Islamic extremists detained worldwide in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Zubaydah signaled last month he would testify about conditions at the black site in Thailand before changing his mind.

Drawing on media report and congressional testimony, attorneys for the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights allege that Zubaydah was waterboarded 83 times in August 2002, while Haspel was in charge of a detention facility in Thailand known as Cat’s Eye base or Detention Site Green.

The submission identifies two CIA contractors, psychologists James Mitchell and Bruce Jessen, as the only people authorized to have contact with Zubaydah during that time and claims they were answerable to Haspel.

The American Civil Liberties Union is currently suing Mitchell and Jessen on behalf of three men who say they were tortured using techniques the psychologists designed. A U.S. Senate investigation in 2014 found their interrogation techniques produced no useful intelligence in the so-called war on terror, but some former intelligence officials say the techniques have produced valuable intelligence.

“For the purposes of determining criminal liability, what is most relevant is the fact that as head of the secret prison in Thailand, Gina Haspel followed each day of Abu Zubaydah’s torture from Aug. 4 to 23, 2002, and she alone had the responsibility to end this torture but failed to do so,” the submission to German prosecutors states. It also cites the case of Abd al Rahim al-Nashiri, the alleged mastermind of the USS Cole bombing in 2000, who was waterboarded at Cat’s Eye base in November 2002.

Both men are now held at the U.S. detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. In a separate legal proceeding, Europe’s top human rights court ruled in 2014 that Poland had violated the rights of Zubaydah and al-Nashiri by allowing the CIA to secretly imprison them on Polish soil from 2002-2003 and facilitate conditions under which they were tortured.

The ruling by the European Court of Human Rights marked the first time any court has passed judgment on the rendition program launched by U.S. President George W. Bush after 9/11.

Civil rights groups have tried to prosecute several senior U.S. officials implicated in the torture program, including former CIA director George Tenet, former U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, top CIA legal counsel John Rizzo and Geoffrey Miller, the former commander of the Guantanamo Bay detention center.

Tuesday’s submission naming Haspel is the first in Germany against a high-ranking official still in service with the CIA. The agency declined to comment on the German group’s legal efforts to have Haspel arrested.

A spokeswoman for Germany’s federal prosecutor’s office said a preliminary investigation into the torture allegations was opened in late 2014, following the partial release of the U.S. Senate report.

“We are grateful for all information that sheds light on the allegations,” Frauke Koehler told The Associated Press, adding that the latest evidence would be reviewed as a matter of course.

While German prosecutors can investigate serious crimes committed outside the country, there has to be a link of some kind to Germany  such as the victim or the suspect being in the country  for them to open a formal criminal probe.

The only case with a clear link to Germany that’s been prosecuted so far is that of Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen of Lebanese descent, who said he was tortured at a CIA-run prison in Afghanistan.

The group argues in the current suit that the renditions in question are part of the broader U.S. program with multiple links to Germany.

Munich prosecutors issued arrest warrants in 2007 for 13 CIA agents involved in the operation, but the German government has refused to seek their extradition.

Story: Frank Jordans

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More Soldiers Implicated in Mail-Order Weapons Ring: Police

Explosive ordnance disposal officers inspecting hand grenades found Friday inside a parcel at a Kerry Express shop in Bangkok’s Bang Khen district.

BANGKOK — Investigation of a weapons trafficking ring which has implicated more than a dozen military personnel has found at least 22 shipments sent by parcel, an army official announced Wednesday.

The shipments were sent to 22 locations in 15 provinces, Maj. Gen. Sutee Nenkanthee said. In many cases they were sent to members of the police or military.

Nineteen people – 12 army personnel and seven civilians – are being investigated for allegedly selling armaments online in an investigation following Friday’s discovery of four hand grenades in an unclaimed parcel at a Bangkok delivery service.

Thanakorn Boonkan, a 28-year-old sergeant with the 1st Engineer Battalion King’s Guard, is being held for questioning as the lead suspect in shipping the box of grenades shipped from Bangkok to Chonburi province. Another 18 people have also been detained for questioning about the weapons trade conducted via social media and online chat.

Thanakorn was seen in CCTV footage walking into the Kerry Express shop in the capital’s Bang Khen district on June 1 to send a parcel using the identity of Itsarapong Prombutr, another army sergeant. The ID card number left to register the package actually belonged to Thanakorn, and police have said Itsarapong was uninvolved.

This past Friday, four M67 fragmentation grenades were found at a courier service Kerry Express in Bangkok’s Bang Khen district after it was returned unclaimed from Chonburi province.

Despite tight gun laws, military-grade equipment are often sold on Thailand’s black market. From time to time, members of the police and military are arrested and accused of selling weapons.

The ruling junta has denied any link between the case to another involving an air force officer busted Monday with an SUV packed with weapons. Police arrested Master Sgt. Phakin Dechpong near the border with Cambodia, where they believe he was headed, after his SUV crashed and they found more than 30 AK-47s, dozens of grenades and thousands of bullets in his possession.

Related stories:

Air Force Gunrunner Not Linked to Mail Order Grenades, Junta Says

Carefully Wrapped Grenades Found in Chonburi-Bound Parcel

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1 Dead, 4 Injured as Suicide Bomber Attacks Khomeini Shrine

Iranians attend ceremonies on the 18th anniversary of the death of Iran's late leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in 2007 outside his shrine in Tehran, Iran. Photo: Hasan Sarbakhshian / Associated Press

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s state television news website says four “terrorists,” including a suicide bomber, have attacked the shrine of the late leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in the capital, Tehran, killing a security guard and wounding four people.

State television said one of the attackers was killed by security guards and that a woman was arrested following Wednesday’s attack.

Iranian media earlier reported a shooting inside the parliament building that wounded a security guard, without providing further details. It was not immediately clear if the attacks were related.

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8 Injured in Shooting Inside Iran’s Parliament

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani seen here in 2013 at the Marble Palace in Tehran, Iran. Meghdad Madadi / Wikimedia Commons

TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s state television says four attackers were involved in a parliament shooting that is still underway, and that eight people have been wounded.

The state TV report did not provide further details, or say whether the shooting was linked to another attack Wednesday on the shrine of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. There, four attackers, including a suicide bomber, killed a security guard and wounded four other people.

State TV said one of the attackers was killed by security guards and that a woman was arrested following the shrine attack.

This is a developing story and will be updated without notice.

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Green Line Construction Crane Topples on Phahonyothin Road

BANGKOK — A railroad crane toppled Wednesday on Phahonyothin Road, bringing traffic to a halt, police said. There were no reports of injuries.

A crane being used in the construction of the Green Line extension tipped over at about noon near the Royal Thai Air Force Academy on Phahonyothin Road, causing heavy traffic, according to Capt. Sompop Nateemungcharoen from Sai Mai Police Station.

It wasn’t the first such incident. In March, a giant metal beam being used for the construction of the same project fell on a car, narrowly missing a woman. One month later, a construction crane that was being used for the completion of the Red Line collapsed and killed three workers.

The new elevated train systems are being built by the Mass Rapid Transit Authority, or MRTA. A private firm called Italian-Thai Development is in charge of their construction.

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All-Woman Show Asks: Is Ignorance Bliss?

‘Blissfully Blind.’ Photo: Adidej Chaiwattanakul / Courtesy

BANGKOK — A Bangkok theatre troupe returns to the stage next month with an experimental performance and lighting installation.

For “Blissfully Blind,” B-Floor‘s Dujdao Vadhanapakorn brings her observations from how people deal with things, from small interpersonal conflicts to political issues, to a “body-based” performance with minimal dialogue to ask audiences if they’d rather be “blissfully blind or painfully aware?”

“Some people could even go as far as turning all lights off, telling themselves that what they have heard is fake and inexistent,” Dujdao said. “As a psychotherapist and artist, I feel it is indeed the state of blindness that a person inflicts upon themselves in order to sustain their own existence.”

The performance will see 14 shows by five female actors interacting with custom lighting elements designed by Zieght, the lighting design team for many concerts and festivals such as Wonderfruit and Mystic Valley.

BLIND
Dujdao Vadhanapakorn. Photo: Adidej Chaiwattanakul / Courtesy

Blissfully Blind opens at 7:30pm on July 13 and continues through July 30, except Tuesdays and Wednesdays, at Bangkok CityCity Gallery. Tickets are 700 baht and 450 baht for students.

The contemporary art space is on Soi Sathorn 1 Road, a few minutes walk from MRT Lumphini exit No. 2.

The lighting installation offers free admission 1pm through 5pm on weekends: July 15 & 16, July 22 & 23, July 29 & 30.

Dujdao is the nation’s only dance movement psychotherapist. She is a director with over a decade of theatre experience and has received three awards from the International Association of Theatre Critics, Thailand.

Related stories:

Not Here to Entertain You: B-Floor Confronts Thailand in Movement and Meaning

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Magic Mick: Feast on Aussie Beefcake in Bangkok

Australia’s Thunder From Down Under Live in Bangkok promotional poster. Photo: Wild Night / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Sweaty eight-packs and testosterone will sizzle on stage when an Aussie company of strip dancers comes to heat up Bangkok nights.

After its 15-year run in Las Vegas, Australia’s Thunder From Down Under will bring its rippling manflesh to Southeast Asia for the first time this August in Bangkok. Dancers will show off their chiseled bodies and sexually-charged dance moves for seven engagements.

Tickets go on sale June 27 at Ticketmelon.com. General admission to the standing-room only venue costs 2,500 baht, with VIP seating available for 7,500 baht and group packages available. A 10 percent discount is offered through July 18.

Guests must be 18 and up. Expect to glimpse some buns but – sorry – no full-frontal nudity. More information is available on at the troupe’s website and Facebook page.

The show runs Aug. 30 through Sept. 5. Sept. 4 will be “girls only,” while while gay fans will have the men all to themselves the night of Sept. 5.

It all takes place in Studio 8 at Moon Star Studio tucked away in Soi Lat Phrao 80 Yaek 21. The nearest rail stop is MRT Lat Phrao.

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