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Man Arrested for Allegedly Stealing Booze at Bangkok Malls

In this image obtained from undated CCTV footage, Chaiyasit Laotaew is seen at a Bangkok shopping mall.

BANGKOK — A man accused of stealing hundreds of thousands of baht of premium alcohol and an expensive watch was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of shoplifting the items from upscale shopping malls.

Chaiyasit Laotaew was arrested Wednesday night at Siam Paragon while he was allegedly trying to shoplift items from a liquor store, police said.

Col. Poptorn Jitman of Pathumwan police said Chaiyasit had stolen high-end liquor bottles – Hennessy Paradis and Ballantine 30 Year – at Siam Paragon on June 1. Both bottles cost nearly 115,000 baht.

Police said Chaiyasit had previously stolen expensive alcohol several times, most recently in May, when he stole a 60,000-baht bottle from CentralWorld and a 100,000-baht bottle from EmQuartier.

Poptorn said Chaiyasit stole a 1 million-baht Franck Muller watch last year from Siam Paragon before selling it to a foreigner for 50,000 baht.

Chaiyasit reportedly confessed to police that he had shoplifted the liquor bottles. He allegedly waited for staff to get distracted by other customers before snatching expensive bottles and escaping. The 44-year-old told police he sold the items to local stores and online.

Chaiyasit was charged with nighttime burglary, according to Poptorn of Pathumwan Police.

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Get Inspired by Those Overcoming Great Adversity at ‘DocTalks’

BANGKOK — The different plights and struggles of a former American footballer and Syrian refugees reflected in two acclaimed docs will screen and be discussed this month.

Two mid-June “DocTalks” are coming from the Doc Club with two interesting films to see and discuss the issues.

On Saturday, the 2016 hit documentary “Gleason” will show. After premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, it captures the last five years of Steve Gleason, former defensive back of the New Orleans Saints, as he suffers from chronic Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, or ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. The documentary shows how instead of giving up, Gleason stood up for himself and his wife and his son, living live as fully as possible and giving to others by building a foundation.

The film is in English with Thai subtitles and will show twice Saturday at 1pm and 3:15pm. A discussion in Thai on ALS disease in Thailand will follow at 5:30pm.

The second screening and with discussion will be livestreamed online at Doc Club D-Cinema. Tickets are 99 baht and can be purchased at the site.

“After Spring,” a 2016 documentary on Syrian refugees will show Thursday to follow on World Refugee Day, which is Tuesday. After raising funds via Kickstarter, the film crew went to Jordan’s Zaatari refugee camp to follow two displaced families in a place that was never designed to be permanent.

The film premiered at the 2016 Tribeca Film Fest and will show in Arabic and Korean with English and Thai subtitles.

Thursday’s discussions will cover two topics in Thai, with English translation. The morning session starts at 10am with a discussion on Thailand’s urban refugees, while the refugee struggle in Thailand will be the topic of a session beginning at 5pm.

Tickets for both events are 100 baht and can be reserved online. More information for “Gleason” and “After Spring” screenings can be found online.

The venue is on the fifth floor auditorium of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, which can be reached by skywalk from BTS National Stadium.

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Thai Diplomat Elected to UN Maritime Law Tribunal

Kriangsak Kittichaisaree. Photo: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs / Facebook

NEW YORK — Thailand’s ambassador to Russia was elected Wednesday to the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea.

Signatories to the UN maritime convention elected Kriangsak Kittichaisaree to be the first Thai representative in the United Nations judicial system after securing a place on the tribunal, which adjudicates cases involving international maritime law.

It was also the first time the tribunal appointed judges from South East Asia, as Kraingsak was chosen along with first Indian woman member.

The International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, or ITLOS, has been in force since 1994 and is comprised by 21 serving judges who uphold the enforcement of international law in all oceans.

Correction: This article previously said that the Indonesian and Lebanese candidates were elected from the Asia-Pacific Group. In fact, the candidates elected for the two seats of the Asia-Pacific group are solely from India and Thailand. 

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One Republic’s ‘Oh My My’ Tour Coming to Bangkok

Photo: One Republic / Facebook

BANGKOK — American pop rock group One Republic will come to perform in Bangkok on their Oh My My Tour, BEC-Tero Entertainment announced Thursday.

Best known for “Counting Stars,” “Secrets,” and “Apologize,” the five-piece outfit One Republic led by frontman Ryan Tedder will play a Bangkok show for the first time in September.

The Sept. 21 concert will take place at Impact Arena Muang Thong Thani. Tickets start at 2,000 baht and go on sale starting June 24 via ThaiTicketMajor.

One Republic was founded in 2002 in Colorado and gained fame from MySpace. They’ve won several music awards and landed numerous nominations such as Grammy, Billboard Music and World Music awards. They released their fourth studio album, “Oh My My,” in October.

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Promotional poster of One Republic Live in Bangkok. Photo: BEC-Tero Entertainment / Facebook

 

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Police Sent to Cover Up Teen Country Singer ‘Lumyai’

Lumyai Hai Thongkam, center, wears a denim jacket Tuesday at a concert in Surat Thani province at the behest of police dispatched to monitor her after Gen. Prayuth criticized her sexual dance moves and outfits. Read: Police Sent to Cover Up Teen Country Singer ‘Lumyai’

SURAT THANI — The owner of the record label representing a teen luk thung singer expressed his consternation Wednesday after soldiers were sent to cover up the artist and count the number of hip thrusts she performed following days of criticism by the prime minister.

Prachakchai Navarat, owner of Hai Thongkam Records, expressed dismay after uniformed officers in Surat Thani province were dispatched Tuesday to a concert by 18-year-old Lumyai Hai Thongkam to “check for appropriateness” and talk to her stage team about the singer’s costumes and dance moves.

“She’s wearing short jeans. That’s all the outfits we have. I didn’t think we would have to change into something that covers up too much. We already said we would adjust her costume.”

Read: Prayuth Criticizes Teen Singer’s Sexy Dancing, Blames Farangs

Lumyai’s management complied and gave her a jacket to wear.

Beginning last week and on several days since, junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha has criticized the up-and-coming star for her sexual dance moves and revealing costumes.

On Wednesday, when she was playing a show in Trang province, police again entered to monitor the show and count whether she twerked nine times or only three, as she had promised to. She also wore a denim jacket rather than her signature gold bikini.

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

Luk thung performances have long included racy performers who take the stage to perform sexually charged moves, but Prayuth has taken a particular interest in the girl’s performances. In recent days he has declared them inconsistent with Thai values and blamed foreign influences.

Lumyai herself took it in stride.

Prayuth, she said, is “a funny guy, so I’m not overthinking his comments.”

“It doesn’t affect my work. To my fans, I want to ask everyone to consume media responsibly. My work on stage is a performance. There might be some misunderstandings, but I believe that there’s two sides to every coin,” she added.

Label owner Prachakchai said Lumyai’s popularity while on tour is for her skills, not her costumes.

“At our concerts in Isaan, everyone had so much fun. There was an unprecedented turnout with more than 2,000 people at a concert. No one cared about her costume at all, they were having fun.”


Lumyai’s concert in Trang Wednesday night.

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Lumyai with fans after her concert in Trang Wednesday night.
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Original image: Soo Entertain / YouTube
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London Residents Demand Answers in Deadly High-Rise Blaze

Firefighters work at the scene after a deadly blaze at a high rise apartment block Wednesday in London. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press

LONDON — With smoke still swirling around the charred remains of Grenfell Tower in west London, residents and community leaders demanded to know Wednesday how a ferocious fire could have swept through the high-rise apartment block with such speed that it killed at least 12 people.

The anger was particularly strong since activists had warned just seven months ago that fire safety procedures were so lax that only a catastrophic blaze would bring the scrutiny needed to make the building safe.

 

What Happened?

Fire and police officials have not specified what went wrong, but extensive video footage shows the flames climbing the exterior of the building at a remarkable pace.

“I’ve never seen a fire like that in my life,” said Joe Ruane, the former deputy chief fire officer for U.S. Air Force bases in Britain. “I’ve never seen that in a residential block.”

The 24-story public housing complex is owned by the local government council in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea and was completed in the 1970s. It is managed by the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organization, which spent 10 million pounds ($12.8 million) refurbishing the building over the last two years.

The renovation project included installation of insulated exterior cladding, double-glazed windows and a communal heating system. Investigators need to look at what materials were used in the project and who approved their use, Ruane said. But he said the speed with which the fire spread suggests that more than one fire protection safeguard failed.

“It’s not just one thing,” Ruane said. “It’s multiple issues.”

 

What Was the Fire Procedure at the Building?

Some residents suggested that Grenfell Tower’s policies were to blame for the disaster.

A newsletter put out by the building’s tenant organization told tenants to follow a “stay put” policy and remain in their apartments during a fire unless the blaze was inside their apartment or in their hallway or until they were told to evacuate by officials.

This policy is in place “because Grenfell was designed according to rigorous fire-safety standards,” according to the 2014 newsletter about the renovation project. New front doors in each apartment could withstand a fire for up to 30 minutes, “which gives plenty of time for the fire brigade to arrive,” the newsletter said.

That policy, often followed in high-rise hotels, may be effective in lesser fires. In this case, however, the fire seemed to climb the exterior of the tower so quickly that it overwhelmed protective systems like fire doors. People who initially remained in place may have been unable to escape later because the hallways and fire escapes were filled with heavy smoke and flames.

The London Fire Brigade said crews were on the scene within six minutes of the first reports of the fire, but they were unable to reach people on higher floors to prevent fatalities.

 

Who is to Blame?

While investigations are underway to determine what went wrong, tenants said repeated complaints were ignored. Survivor Edward Daffarn said the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organization, or KCTMO, which manages the Grenfell Tower as well as other buildings in the area, is responsible because it ignored numerous warnings.

The management organization’s annual accounts for the year ending March 31, 2016, indicate that the company has been cited for fire-safety issues in the past.

Following an October 2015 arson fire at one of the buildings it manages, the 14-story Adair Tower, the London Fire Brigade issued an enforcement notice to install self-closing devices on the front doors of all 78 apartments and to improve fire safety in staircases used for escape, the organization said in the report.

The Fire Brigade issued a similar notice for another KCTMO-managed building, Hazelwood Tower. The upgrades were scheduled to be completed by 2016, the report said.

The Grenfell Tower disaster is uncomfortably similar to a fast-moving blaze at another London-area public housing project, Lakanal House, that killed six people, including three children, eight years ago. In that July 2009 fire, smoke and flames quickly engulfed the 14-story building. A coroner’s inquest found that a series of failures contributed to the loss of life and made a number of recommendations to help prevent future disasters.

Investigators probing the Grenfell Tower fire will have to look at which of those recommendations were implemented in the building and which were not, said Jim Fitzpatrick, a former firefighter who now serves in the House of Commons.

“These will be matters for the scientists and the engineers … to find out exactly how the fire started, why it spread so quickly and what could have been done to prevent it,” Fitzpatrick told Sky News.

A local community organization, the Grenfell Action Group, had warned about fire dangers at the building since 2013. In a series of blog posts, the group raised concerns about testing and maintenance of fire-fighting equipment and blocked emergency access to the site.

“All our warnings fell on deaf ears, and we predicted that a catastrophe like this was inevitable and just a matter of time,” the group said in a blog post Wednesday.

KCTMO said it is cooperating with investigators and that it was aware of tenant complaints. “We always take all concerns seriously and these will form part of our forthcoming investigations,” it said in a statement.

The Kensington and Chelsea Council promised a full investigation into Wednesday’s tragedy and a public accounting. The UK government also ordered checks at tower blocks that have had or are going through similar renovations as those at Grenfell Tower.

Story: Gregory Katz, Danica Kirka

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Hostages Held, 17 Killed in Attack at Somalia Restaurant

A wounded man is evacuated from the scene of a blast in a restaurant Wednesday in Mogadishu, Somalia. Photo: Associated Press

MOGADISHU, Somalia — Gunmen posing as military forces were holding an unknown number of hostages inside a popular restaurant in Somalia’s capital in an attack that began when a car bomb exploded at the gate, police and a witness said, while the extremist group al-Shabab claimed responsibility. At least 17 people, including foreigners, were dead, police and an ambulance driver said.

Two of the gunmen were shot dead and 10 hostages were rescued but five other attackers were thought to remain inside, cutting off electricity to complicate security forces’ efforts to end the siege, Capt. Mohamed Hussein said. He said heavy gunfire was heard.

An ambulance driver with the Amin Ambulance service, Khalif Dahir, said early Thursday they had carried 17 bodies and 26 wounded people. Police said the dead included a Syrian man. Most of the victims were young men who had been entering the Pizza House when the vehicle exploded, Hussein said.

The gunmen “were dressed in military uniforms. They forced those fleeing the site to go inside” the restaurant, witness Nur Yasin told The Associated Press.

Wednesday night’s blast largely destroyed the restaurant’s facade and sparked a fire. While al-Shabab claimed to have attacked the neighboring Posh Treats restaurant, which is frequented by the city’s elite and was damaged in the blast, security officials said the Pizza House was targeted instead.

Security forces rescued Asian, Ethiopian, Kenyan and other workers at Posh Treats as the attack continued, Hussein said.

The Somalia-based al-Shabab often targets high-profile areas of Mogadishu, including hotels, military checkpoints and areas near the presidential palace. It has vowed to step up attacks after the recently elected government launched a new military offensive against it.

Al-Shabab last year became the deadliest Islamic extremist group in Africa, with more than 4,200 people killed in 2016, according to the Washington-based Africa Center for Strategic Studies.

The extremist group also faces a new military push from the United States after President Donald Trump approved expanded operations, including airstrikes, against al-Shabab. On Sunday, the U.S. military in Africa said it carried out an airstrike in southern Somalia that killed eight Islamic extremists at a rebel command and logistics camp.

Somalia President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed confirmed that airstrike and said such attacks would disrupt the group’s ability to conduct new attacks.

With a new federal government established, pressure is growing on Somalia’s military to assume full responsibility for the country’s security. The 22,000-strong African Union multinational force, AMISOM, which has been supporting the fragile central government, plans to start withdrawing in 2018 and leave by the end of 2020.

Also Wednesday, the U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution extending the U.N. political mission in the Horn of Africa nation, which is trying to rebuild after more than two decades as a failed state, until March 31, 2018. The resolution recognized that “this is a critical moment for Somalia.”

Story: Abdi Guled

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Gunman Who Shot Congressman Had History of Anti-GOP Activity

This 1992 photo provided by the St. Clair County. Ill., Sheriff's Department shows James T. Hodgkinson. Photo: Associated Press

BELLEVILLE, Illinois — The gunman who shot a top GOP congressman and several other people Wednesday at a baseball practice outside the nation’s capital had a long history of lashing out at Republicans and recently frightened a neighbor by firing a rifle into a field behind his Illinois home.

James T. Hodgkinson, 66, wounded House Rep. Steve Scalise before he was fatally shot by police who had been guarding the House majority whip.

In the hours after the attack in Alexandria, Virginia, a picture began to emerge of a shooter with a mostly minor arrest record who worked as a home inspector and despised the Republican Party.

On Facebook, Hodgkinson was a member of a group called “Terminate the Republican Party,” a fact that seemed to take on chilling new meaning in light of an account from South Carolina Rep. Jeff Duncan. He said he was preparing to leave the baseball field when a man politely asked him whether it was a Democratic or Republican team before quietly walking off.

Until recently, Hodgkinson ran a home-inspection business out of his house in southern Illinois. His Facebook page shows that he was a fan of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who last year made an unsuccessful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Sanders acknowledged Wednesday that Hodgkinson had apparently been among many volunteers on his 2016 campaign.

Authorities believe Hodgkinson had been in the Alexandria area since March, living out of a cargo van and not working, FBI agent Tim Slater said.

An online search of newspapers shows that he frequently wrote letters to his local newspaper, the Belleville News-Democrat, which published nearly two dozen of them between 2010 and 2012. Many included complaints about the same theme: income inequality.

Hodgkinson, who spent most of his life in the community of 42,000 just across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, compared the economic conditions of the time to those that preceded the Great Depression and excoriated Congress for not increasing the number of tax brackets and adopting other tax-reform measures.

On May 14, 2010, he wrote: “I don’t envy the rich; I despise the way they have bought our politicians and twisted our laws to their benefit.”

Less than a year later, on March 4, 2011, he wrote that Congress should rewrite tax codes to ease the tax burdens of the middle class.

“Let’s get back to the good ol’ days, when our representatives had a backbone and a conscience,” he wrote.

Later that year, in October 2011, he applauded the Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York and Boston, writing that the demonstrators “are tired of our do-nothing Congress doing nothing while our country is going down the tubes.”

Hodgkinson had arrests in his background for a series of minor offenses and at least one more serious matter. Court records show that his legal trouble started in the 1990s with arrests for resisting police and drunken driving.

In April 2006, Hodgkinson was charged with misdemeanor battery after he stormed into a neighbor’s house in an attempt to force home a teenage girl who, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, was under guardianship of Hodgkinson and his wife.

Witnesses told deputies that Hodgkinson burst into the home and told his daughter “to get your stuff. It’s time to come home,” the report said. The daughter refused and locked herself in a bedroom before Hodgkinson again forced his way in and “became violent,” grabbing her by her hair and throwing her on the floor, according to the report.

The confrontation spilled outside as the daughter and a friend tried to flee in a car. Hodgkinson used a pocket knife to cut the friend’s seat belt and punched that woman in the face.

The teenager’s mother entered the fray, hitting her daughter, pulling her hair to get her out of the car and threatening to put her back into foster care, the report said.

After Hodgkinson retreated to his home, he was confronted by the boyfriend of the woman he punched. According to the report, Hodgkinson struck that man in the head with the wooden stock of a 12-gauge shotgun before firing off a round as that man fled.

A judge later returned the teen to the custody of Illinois welfare officials and awarded guardianship to the Hodgkinsons’ neighbor, the Post-Dispatch reported. Battery charges against Hodgkinson and his wife were later dismissed.

Three years earlier, Hodgkinson served as an independent contractor on a county weatherization program. He was banned from the program after he was apparently caught rummaging through someone’s desk in search of a check, according to Mark Kern, the St. Clair County board chairman.

Though no other legal problems are listed in St. Clair County, which includes Belleville, since 2011, Hodgkinson did come to the attention of local law enforcement as recently as late March.

That’s when Bill Schaumleffel recalled hearing shots being fired outside his house, which stands about 500 feet behind Hodgkinson’s home. When he went outside, he saw Hodgkinson shooting a rifle into a cornfield. He was squeezing off five or six rounds at a time and, according to the report, fired about 50 shots in all.

“I yelled, ‘Quit shooting toward the houses,'” Schaumleffel said.

When Hodgkinson refused to stop, Schaumleffel called the sheriff’s department.

St. Clair County Sheriff Rick Watson said Wednesday that Hodgkinson showed the deputy all required firearms licenses and documentation for the high-powered hunting rifle, which he said he was simply using for target practice.

The deputy cautioned Hodgkinson about shooting around homes, given that the rounds can travel up to a mile. No charges were filed.

“He said, ‘I understand,’ and said he needed to take the gun to a range to shoot it, Watson said. “There was nothing we could arrest him for, and there was no indication he was mentally ill or going to harm anyone.

“The only thing I was concerned about was that it was such a high-powered gun, and that somebody could possibly get hurt.”

Watson said the deputy on Wednesday recalled Hodgkinson being “very cordial.”

The incident happened March 24, according to sheriff’s officials. If the FBI is correct that Hodgkinson had been in Virginia since March, he must have left Illinois shortly after he was seen with the rifle at his home.

Over the last several weeks, Hodgkinson spent time at a YMCA near the site of the shooting, sitting with a computer in the lobby or at a table in an exercise area that overlooked the baseball field.

Stephen Brennwald, an attorney who said he saw the man every time he visited the facility recently, said he never recalled him talking to anyone.

“I would try to chat him up and say stuff, but he never looked back at me,” Brennwald said.

Brennwald thought it was odd that Hodgkinson was never exercising or wearing workout clothes. He thought about asking a staffer about the man but never did, he said.

“Looking back with 20/20 hindsight, I can see how the guy was troubled, but at the time I thought he was working,” Brennwald said.

The office of Republican Rep. Mike Bost, whose district includes Belleville, said it had a record of 10 contacts with Hodgkinson between June 2016 and last month. The contacts were made via phone calls and emails. Spokesman George O’Connor described them as “negative in nature on a variety of legislative issues, but not threatening.”

Bost in 2014 became the first Republican since World War II to hold southern Illinois’ 12th District seat.

Dale Walsh, 65, of Belleville, said he was a lifelong friend of Hodgkinson’s. He said Hodgkinson never talked politics with him, but he was a passionate person who occasionally got into fights.

“He was the type of person that if you challenged him, he wouldn’t back off.”

Story: Don Babwin, Jim Salter

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Mayweather Coming Back to Fight UFC Star McGregor Aug. 26

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Story: Tim Dahlberg

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

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

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

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

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

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Mariana Villalobos Torres. Photo: Whiteline / Courtesy

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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