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Division? What Division? PCAD and Democrats Deny Schism

Democrat Party chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva, at right, and Suthep Thaugsuban share a news conference in an undated file photo.

BANGKOK — It’s a familiar recipe for political drama: leaked chatlogs, rumors of a party coup and disputes over who will be the next prime minister.

Recent weeks have seen spats between leading members of the People’s Committee for Absolute Democracy With the King as Head of State, or PCAD, a hardline royalist movement that helped bring about the May 2014 coup, and the Democrat Party, a longtime fixture of the political establishment.

A flurry of rumors that PCAD has become an insurgent wing aiming to topple party leadership and disagreement over who should lead the nation has some asking if the radical and the mainstream are parting ways. Leaders of both factions say no, asserting that despite some differences, they remain united as ever. One of them even pointed to a recent coffee klatch as proof of their cordial relations.

“Our intention was to talk and adjust our understanding,” PCAD spokesman Akanat Promphan said of Tuesday’s talk between eight PCAD leaders and Democrat chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva.

“I can confirm that the ideology of the Democrat Party and the will of the PCAD actually go together,” Akanat said by telephone Thursday. “Both the Democrat Party and PCAD insist on reforming the country … There is no need for division in our ideology.”

Democrat official Ongart Klampaiboon delivered a similar message to reporters Tuesday.

“There is no dispute. We have always met and talked to each other at the party [headquarters],” Ongart said. “Everyone at PCAD is like a blood relative to the party.”

The PCAD, who in English calls itself the People’s Democracy Reform Committee, or PDRC, is run by former Democrat MPs who left the party to lead street protests against then-Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in late 2013.

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Eight former Democrat Party members who left to join PCAD meet Tuesday with party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva.

The intraparty tension echoes similar fractures worldwide in which traditional conservatives have been overtaken by populist movements. The Democrat Party’s position in the established political order has been challenged by PCAD activists willing to set fire to long-standing assumptions, such as commitment to democratic principles.

At the coffee session – part of which was opened to the media – eight PCAD leaders said they were willing to work with the Democrat Party again, a remark categorized in headlines as the “Return of PCAD to the Democrat Party,” though Akanat said he doesn’t agree with that characterization.

“It’s not entirely correct that we ‘returned,’ because we never left the party. We merely left the executive posts, but we never left the party,” the spokesman said. “It’s just a coincidence, there was news of division between us, so we PCAD leaders decided to go talk to the party together.”

Crashing the Party?

PCAD-organized protests and a boycott when Yingluck called a snap election – later annulled by the courts – paved the way for the military to take over in May 2014 and Prayuth Chan-ocha to rise to power.

Although both the party and its illiberal faction are seen by supporters as champions of royalist, conservative causes, the PCAD is known for a more radical approach. Throughout the 2014 protest campaign, PCAD chairman Suthep Thaugsuban repeatedly called for an unelected prime minister to take charge, suspend representative rule, cancel elections and complete unspecified national “reforms” before returning power to the people.

Suthep got his wish after Gen. Prayuth staged a coup in May that year. Not content with Prayuth’s three years in power, Suthep called upon the general to continue his term after the next election is held.

That scenario was made possible in the new constitution, which requires political parties to submit three names they would nominate to serve as premier before elections are held. For the first time in decades, being an duly elected member of parliament will not be a requirement for the top executive position.

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Democrat Party chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva visits PCAD leader Suthep Thaugsuban at the PCAD rally in Bangkok’s Lumpini Park, 22 March 2014.

Suthep, a former deputy prime minister turned firebrand street agitator, fist announced his stance May 18 and repeated it again Tuesday in a statement posted online. He had previously urged Prayuth to stay on “five more years.”

“I believe that Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha will be a mediator and a brave man who will reform the country according to the wishes of the great mass of the people,” Suthep said, who has routinely cited the will of a “great mass” rather than majority of the public. “It will take just several years as a transition period for the country.”

Suthep’s backing of Prayuth likely created unease among top Democrats, who prefer party chairman Abhisit for the job. In leaked screenshots from a Saturday online chat session, deputy party leader Thepthai Senpong said he believes Democrats are not doing enough to hold Prayuth accountable.

“Some Dems are making society see that we are not on the same side as Prayuth,” Thepthai wrote to his friend Takerng Somsup, director of a TV channel affiliated with the party. “Yet some Dems are acting like Prayuth’s minions.”

In lieu of Suthep’s declaration for the junta strongman, several Democrat officials in recent days said their support for Abhisit hasn’t changed.

“Nothing is changed. It’s the same,” former Democrat MP Witthaya Kaewparadai told reporters on Monday.

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Anti-government protesters with the banner ‘Reform Before Election’ in Prachuap Khiri Khan province, 23 January 2014.

Adding to the political chatter came rumors, amplified by some newspaper columnists, that PCAD hardliners are plotting a coup inside the Democrat Party to sideline Abhisit and therefore Suthep’s wish a reality.

“This might not be only a ‘return’ but a game to ‘depose’ Abhisit Vejjajiva from his seat as the party leader,” read an unsigned editorial in Prachachat newspaper.

PCAD spokesman Akanat, who’s also Suthep’s son-in-law, said the rumors are baseless, as the movement’s leaders share the same ideology with the party.

Asked about Suthep’s support for Gen. Prayuth as the next premier, the spokesman said it’s his personal opinion and not a PCAD position. He said the group will support whoever Democrats propose to be prime minister, Abhisit or otherwise.

“Of course the Democrats will propose their own leader, but if they propose someone else, we will respect the party consensus,” Akanat said.

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Khaosod English Returns from Westeros With Your Answers

LONDON — When he’s not playing the surly Hound, Rory McCann enjoys chopping wood and dropping even more F-bombs.

Savagely cruel Ironborn uncle Euron Greyjoy (Pilou Asbaek) is a jocular guy with punchlines in his back pocket. He also gets along pretty well with his niece, Yara Greyjoy (Gemma Whelan), who off the set prefers vintage-style dresses to leathery armor.

“We both cleaned up nice, didn’t we. The Greyjoys had a bath,” Whelan said.

Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner)? Really tall. She talks Stark values and would like Sansa to get an interesting death scene. Littlefinger (Aidan Gillen) loves to film in the snow because it’s a good backdrop for his black-cloaked character.

It turns out that Game of Thrones’ only nice guy, Davos “Onion Knight” Seaworth, is in fact a really nice guy who sneaks stuff from the show’s set for his daughter to collect on her “Wall of Awesome.”

“I liberated some coins at the bank of Braavos a few seasons ago,” he said.

The crippled warg Bran Stark (Isaac Hempstead Wright) brushes aside fan theories about his character, and when he’s not leading the Unsullied, Grey Worm (Jacob Anderson) speaks terrible Valyrian.

“I wasn’t very good at languages in school,” said Jacob. “A lot of people asked me to speak to them in Valyrian and I’m like… ‘No, I remember nothing.”

As the hype machine gets cranking before the penultimate season of the runaway hit HBO show, Khaosod English sat down with nearly a dozen of the show’s marquee actors in the heart of the Old Smoke.

As we said before, the press visit was arranged through AIS, which is promoting the recent launch of HBO Go on its AIS Play service.

So as the resident superfan, I went off to London on a mission to get answers to your questions from the cast members themselves.

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Chayanit Itthipongmaetee recently at the Corinthai Hotel in London.

The interviews were conducted in pools – I was placed on Team Targaryen – with the actors mostly taking turns two at a time.

Some pairings were curious: The Hound and Samwell Tarly, Littlefinger and Bran Stark, Podrick and Grey Worm. Why?

Unfortunately for fans of the Red Woman Melisandre, Carice van Houten was a no-show. HBO staff said she was ill, though her Instagram feed showed she was stalking around the place somewhere.

Of course plot questions about Season 7 or beyond were off-limits. But from the joys of being Ironborn, Pod’s one weird trick and the Onion Knight’s sense of justice, we did get answers to many of the questions you posed. You can also listen to the actors answer your questions!

Those who aren’t caught up on the series should be warned: There be spoilers below.


‘What do you like about the Ironborn culture?’

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Gemma Whelan (Yara Greyjoy) and Pilou Asbaek (Euron Greyjoy)

Pilou Asbaek (Euron Greyjoy): The killing!
Gemma Whelan (Yara Greyjoy): The raping. Pillaging. Stealing.
Pilou: People die!
Gemma: Death. Blood and anger.
Pilou: And boats.
Gemma: And sunshine.
Pilou: I like that it’s a sea-strong nation. That reminds me of home. I like that. On a personal note, I like my costume for the next season.

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Gemma Whelan and Pilou Asbaek. Photos: Jonathan Ford / ©Home Box Office, Inc.

‘What do you think makes Podrick so popular with women, and will he get a chance to put it to use again in Season 7?’

PODRICK GREY WORM
Daniel Portman (Podrick Payne) and Jacob Anderson (Grey Worm)

Daniel Portman (Podrick Payne): Well, first things first, I like you disarming me there with a compliment. Thanks. Secondly, I’m not answering any question about Season 7. I don’t know, everyone seems to think that Pod’s got this (unintelligible) this thing that women … love. I’m not gonna tell you. I mean, there’s a chance. There’s always a chance. Where it’s a will, there’s a way, right
Jacob Anderson (Grey Worm)Where there is a willy …


‘What is your favorite episode?’

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John Bradley. Photo: Jonathan Ford / ©Home Box Office, Inc.

John Bradley (Samwell Tarly): My favorite episode is still Episode 9 of Season 1 with the Ned Stark beheading. It’s still my favorite, because that was the moment where we all, where the world said this show is different. There are certain rules and disciplines that apply in TV, where … no matter how confusing it gets, you have one character who says, ‘Take my hand, and I’ll lead you through all this, and I will be your guide and moral center.’ And you think you have that, you latch onto Ned Stark as the dependable character. He’s gonna make everything okay as long he’s there then you’ve got a touchstone, and you’ll be able to navigate your way through the series no matter how complicated it gets. And by Episode 9 he’s gone.
Rory McCann (The Hound): Bastards!
John: And he’s killed, and you think all bets are off now.


‘Will Sansa be satisfied with just reconquering Winterfell, or do you think she’s aiming for the Iron Throne itself this season?’


Sophie Turner (Sansa Stark): I think she has no plans to go and get the Iron Throne. I think she’s kinda done with that. I think she’s happy to be home. She wants to see her family again. I think that’s all she wants is for her family to come back to her. And for it to kind of go back to normal which it never will but … just to be stronger as a unit. But I think her hopes and dreams of becoming queen and sitting on the Iron Throne are long gone. Someone asked me earlier, ‘Do you think she’ll ever get married and have kids’ and I was like, does she really want that at this point I think she’s done with relationships. So yeah, I think she just wants her family by her side and to be respected and I think, hopefully, she’ll get that.

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Sophie Turner as Sansa Stark. Photo: Home Box Office, Inc.

‘Why didn’t Ser Davos kill the Red Woman?’

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Liam Cunningham. Photo: Jonathan Ford / Home Box Office, Inc.

Liam Cunningham (Davos Seaworth): Because Jon [Snow] wouldn’t let Davos kill’em. … I think Davos realized that it would just be a revenge. As we know that death penalty is fucking stupid, ignorant and self-serving it doesn’t bring anybody back. Society really shouldn’t have a death penalty because society shouldn’t behave like that. If you say it’s okay for society to kill people then it’s okay for people to kill people. Fucking makes sense to me. So I think in this particular situation, Jon kind of goes, ‘No we can’t do that.’ She saved his life, she’s done some good things but we can’t have a person that behaves like that around here, so … get them banished.

 


‘There’s a theory that Bran Stark is actually Bran the Builder, what do you think about that?’

Isaac Hempstead-Wright (Bran Stark): I’m not entirely convinced by that theory. The theory I’m subscribed to is that Bran in the future is kinda being in this sort of pre-determined, deterministic, no free-will paradox that older Bran, as the three-eyed raven, was coming into young Bran’s dreams to guide him to become the three-eyed raven, so that he could go back, and so-on-and-so-forth. Like that scene that Bran was about to shoot the raven, and Jojen said ‘You can’t shoot the raven because the raven is you.’ Well that’s true, that Bran has to follow this path of destiny in order for the world to be as it has to be. I think the Bran the Builder theory requires too much playing fast and loose with time. It’ll get a bit too confusing. It already doesn’t make sense, like the Hodor paradox. I still can’t get my head around it exactly how that works.

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Isaac Hempstead-Wright. Photo: Jonathan Ford /Home Box Office, Inc.

 

Season 7 trailer

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Lotto Lovers Look for Luck in ‘Magic’ Mango Tree

Residents offer incense sticks to a mango tree Thursday in Nakhon Phanom.

NAKHON PHANOM — Residents of the far northeastern province of Nakhon Phanom were giving offerings Thursday to a mango tree that has previously yielded winning lottery numbers.

One mango tree which has proved its luck to inhabitants of Nakhon Phanom in the far northeast of Thailand was allegedly yielding magical numbers, just in time for Thursday’s lottery announcement. Residents gathered at the farm of Toon Khunsri, 64 – such was the multitude that there was almost no place to park.

“In the last lottery round on May 16, everyone who came saw the number 53. Some people told me they got winnings between 35,000 baht and 100,000 baht,” Toon said. “Someone from Mukdahan province even won twice in a row, so they sent 20,000 baht to my bank account to build a roof over the offerings to the tree.”

Offerings to the mango tree have included pineapples, herbs, bananas, cakes, coconuts, Thai desserts, flowers and 14 Thai dresses.

According to residents, rubbing powder on this extra-lucky mango tree revealed lottery winning numbers in the past five lottery rounds.

On Thursday the numbers 954, 54, 25, 50, 57 and 59 were seen Thursday. 

Rooted in pre-Buddhist animism, beliefs remain widespread about the auspiciousness of particularly large or old trees, making them closely watched twice a month when the national lottery is held.

Toon said visitors also donated from 20 to 1,000 baht when visiting the tree. She has accumulated over 10,000 baht, which she will use to build a footpath into the farm.

Some netizens, however, dismiss it as superstitious gambling.

“You won five times, say you? Believe me, this round you’re going with the crowd and you’ll lose your money. I’ve seen it happen tons of times,” Facebook user Chanasit Prasopkitcharoen wrote.

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Offerings of fruit, flowers and Thai dresses for a lottery number-yielding tree Thursday in Nakhon Phanom.
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Residents respectfully sit next to and take photos of the tree.
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People rub baby powder on the tree trunk in hopes of seeing numbers.
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Offerings of cake, flowers and fruits are presented to the tree.
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3 Women Wanted in Grisly Murder Not Arrested in Myanmar

Lead suspect Preeyanuch “Preaw” Nonwangchai, at right, who police believe strangled and sawed another woman in half last week, and another suspect, Jidarat Phromkhun, in a photo posted May 26 to Facebook.

CHIANG RAI — Three suspects sought in the gruesome murder and dismemberment of a woman were not taken into custody in Myanmar as said by a police source Thursday morning.

Police are still looking for the three women sought in the May 23 murder of Warissara “Amm” Klinjui. Police in Chiang Rai province earlier said three women matching their descriptions were found in the the border town of Tachileik, Myanmar, this morning. Chiang Rai Maj. Gen. Yanyoong Vej-osot said at about noon they had learned from Myanmar authorities it wasn’t them and the women remained on the run.

Read: Dismembered Woman’s Final Words: ‘If I Survive, Then You Die’

The three suspects are wanted on suspicion of killing a 22-year-old woman in the northeastern province of Khon Kaen. It’s alleged they lured her into a car, strangled her to death and then sawed her body in half as part of a revenge plot. Her remains were found buried May 25 in two large buckets.

A top official with the Narcotics Control Board said today that the lead suspect, Preeyanuch “Preaw” Nonwangchai, had a record of drug-related crimes.

Sirinya Sidhichai said Preeyanuch worked for one of the biggest drug dealers in Tachileik and arranged sales back in Thailand to her friends. Preeyanuch was believed to have fled to Myanmar with the other two fugitive suspects, 28-year-old Apiwan Sattayabundit and Kawita Ratchada, 25.

A sole male member of the alleged murder club, 22-year-old Wasin Namphrom, told police that the four of them planned to assault Warissara because they believed she had given information to police that led to one of their boyfriends being arrested on drug-related charges.

Wasin’s girlfriend Jidarat Phromkhun is also in police custody. She has denied being present during the crime.

Preeyanuch’s sister told police she called her Monday night and confessed to killing Warissara only after her victim threatened her with death if they left her alive.

If arrested, the three would also face charges for overstay in Myanmar.

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A Worrisome Time for LGBT Activists Worldwide

Stuart Gaffney and John Lewis, plaintiffs in the 2008 Defense of Marriage Act case, celebrate while traveling along Market Street during the annual Gay Pride Parade in San Francisco on June 28, 2015. [AFP]

In the United States and many other parts of the world, this is a worrisome time for LGBT activists, as the pace of civil rights victories has grown uneven and reports of anti-LGBT violence and persecution surface relentlessly.

In the past two months, there have been large-scale detentions of gay men in Nigeria and Bangladesh, and chilling accounts of roundups and torture of scores of gays in Chechnya. In Indonesia, a major police raid on a gay sauna was followed two days later by the public caning of two gay men.

More than 70 countries continue to criminalize gays’ sexual activity.

Taiwan is now on track to become the first country in Asia to legalize same-sex marriage, due to a May 24 court ruling. Worldwide, gay and lesbian couples can marry in only 22 of the world’s nearly 200 countries. No nation in Eastern Europe is among them, and there is only one in Africa: South Africa.

Collectively, recent developments have changed the way some lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activists are viewing the annual Pride Month events coming up in June. It’s usually a time of celebration, but this year InterPride, which helps organize Pride events worldwide, says people should participate “to tell the world that they will not be silent in the face of oppression.”

A large-scale “Equality March” is planned for June 11 in Washington, D.C. Its organizers say anti-LGBT rhetoric and continuing discrimination warrant a mass mobilization.

“2017 is very different,” said InterPride’s president, Sue Doster. “After years of progress on many fronts, we now have fervent opponents of LGBTQ equality in control of every branch of the U.S. government.”

Activists in the U.S. rejoiced in 2015 over a Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. Yet most U.S. states still lack statewide laws banning discrimination against LGBT people, and majority Republicans in Congress show no interest in passing a Democratic-backed bill that would provide nationwide non-discrimination protections.

While still pushing for further gains, activists have expended much energy playing defense as state legislators, mostly Republicans, introduced scores of bills this year viewed at hostile to LGBT rights. Most of the measures failed, but some have been signed into law, including bills in South Dakota and Alabama protecting faith-based adoption organizations that refuse to place children with gay parents. A similar bill has reached the governor’s desk in Texas.

At the federal level, LGBT activists were dismayed when President Donald Trump’s administration revoked federal guidelines advising public school districts to let transgender students use the bathrooms and locker rooms of their choice. Several of Trump’s high-level appointees, as well as Vice President Mike Pence, are viewed by activists as long-term opponents of gay-rights advances.

“He’s taken our chief enemies and put them in charge of our government,” said Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign. “It’s a devastating reversal of our progress over the last decade.”

Under President Barack Obama, the U.S. government made LGBT rights an important part of its foreign policy. Griffin says the Trump administration is not sustaining this approach, to the alarm of activists abroad. “There is zero leadership on the global stage,” he said.

On his initial overseas trip as president, Trump stopped first in Saudi Arabia and made no public mention of human rights issues, including the kingdom’s policies criminalizing homosexual activity. “We are not here to lecture,” he said.

Activists complain that the Trump administration has said relatively little about the reported abuses of gays in Chechnya, in contrast to strong statements by Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain.

Among recent events that have alarmed LGBT and human rights activists:

– In Indonesia, animosity toward the LGBT community has been whipped up by anti-gay comments from cabinet ministers and other public figures. In the capital, Jakarta, police detained 141 men in a May 21 raid on a gay gym and sauna. On May 23, on orders from an Islamic Shariah court, two men received more than 80 lashes of the cane for having sex together; hundreds of onlookers jeered at them.

– In Bangladesh, authorities made 27 arrests in a May 19 raid on a group of gay men at a community center near the capital, Dhaka. Last year, a leading LGBT activist, Xulhaz Mannan, was hacked to death in Dhaka by suspected militants.

– In Nigeria, police arrested more than 50 young men celebrating a gay wedding in April. Nigerian law bans gay marriage; violators can be punished by up to 14 years in prison.

– In Moldova, President Igor Dodon spoke out against an LGBT parade organized in the capital city, and said he did not consider himself to be president of the Eastern European country’s gays.

– In El Salvador, multiple killings of transgender women drew the attention of the United Nations human rights office, which urged Salvadoran authorities to investigate.

Graeme Reid, director of Human Rights Watch’s LGBT Rights Program, says the setbacks for LGBT people interconnect with gains achieved on their behalf.

“That’s the paradox of this time in which we live,” he said. “The two are related: the progress and the mobilization of forces in opposition to that progress.”

In Romania, for example, lawmakers wary of the spread of same-sex marriage elsewhere are seeking to amend the constitution to explicitly state that marriage is a union between a man and woman. Slovenia recently began recognizing civil partnerships for same-sex couples after voters in a referendum overwhelmingly rejected a bill to legalize full-fledged same-sex marriage.

Phillip Ayoub, a professor of politics at Drexel University in Philadelphia, said LGBT people in eastern Europe have been concerned by the rise of populist and nationalist political movements in Poland, Hungary and elsewhere that depict LGBT activism as a threat to family values. Yet he noted that Hungary recognizes same-sex partnerships, and Poland recently had a transgender woman serving in Parliament.

Countries that have balked at embracing same-sex marriage include several widely viewed as welcoming to LGBT people.

Australia provides extensive protections and rights to LGBT people. But recent attempts to legalize same-sex marriage have been bogged down over whether there should be a national plebiscite on the issue or whether Parliament alone should decide.

Germany recognizes registered partnerships of same-sex couples, but has not moved to full-fledged marriage equality due to opposition from Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union. France is among 13 Western European nations that has legalized same-sex marriage, yet last October tens of thousands of people marched in Paris to oppose it.

In Mexico, same-sex marriage has been the focus of bitter debate and legal complications for several years. It’s been formally legalized in about a dozen states and cities, including Mexico City, but most of the 31 states have not taken that step.

The Philippines, one of the most LGBT-friendly nations in Asia, grants no legal recognition to same-sex couples. The speaker of the House, Pantaleon Alvarez, has yet to follow through with a promise to introduce a bill that would legalize civil unions.

Jessica Stern, executive director of the global LGBT-rights group OutRight Action International, said activists worldwide must keep pressing for expanded rights even when governments resist or delay.

“The answer isn’t to say we give up because we live in a time of backlash,” she said. “We have to work twice as hard.”

Story: David Crary

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‘He’s With Me’: Mourning Dad, American Wins at French Open (Video)

PARIS — Steve Johnson held everything in, all of it, until he simply could not any longer.

Still mourning the recent death of his father, a tennis coach who helped Johnson learn the game back home in California, the 25th-seeded American didn’t allow the jumble of feelings show outwardly. He didn’t permit them to affect his ability to smack a tennis ball, either, and managed to edge Borna Coric 6-2, 7-6 (8), 3-6, 7-6 (6) and reach the French Open’s third round.

For nearly 4 full hours Wednesday, Johnson stayed the course, over and over, even as the on-court particulars grew complicated. He managed to be OK even after his initial four match points slipped away. And even when he was docked a point by the chair umpire for what an incredulous Johnson considered an innocuous extra hit of the ball deep in the fourth set. And yet again when Coric twice was a single point from forcing a fifth set.

Only when, on his fifth chance to end things, Johnson delivered a clean forehand winner to seal the victory, did he let go, dropping onto to his knees near the baseline, his chest heaving, his eyes filling with tears.

“I have no idea what happened after I hit the forehand. I just kind of collapsed and, emotionally, it got the best of me,” said Johnson, who faces No. 6 Dominic Thiem next. “The other days, I was able to kind of get to the locker room and kind of compose myself a little bit. Today was just such an emotional match. A long match. Up and down. Just to get through it was something that I know I’ll be very proud of.”

At the other end of the court, Coric mangled his racket by rearing back and smashing it one, two, three, four times, then after a pause, once more for good measure.

Coric said afterward he knew about the personal difficulty his foe was dealing with.

“Super tough, definitely,” the 40th-ranked Croatian said. “And all the credit to him, that he was able to go through this period and also to play this good.”

After they shook hands, Johnson leaned his head on his arm atop the net, sobbing.

Steve Johnson Sr. passed away three weeks ago.

“I know it’s going to be emotional for quite some time. Who knows how long it’ll take? I just know he’s with me. He raised me to be a competitor and a fighter to the last point. And that’s what I try to do with my tennis,” said the 27-year-old Johnson, who won two NCAA singles titles and four team titles at Southern California. “I may not be the best tennis player. But there’s not going to be a day where I’m just going to let you win. I’m going to try and give it my best.”

There were other winners and losers, of course, on Day 4 of the French Open, but nothing quite so poignant.

The 12th-seeded Frenchman Jo-Wilfried Tsonga left meekly, eliminated 7-5, 6-4, 6-7 (6), 6-4 by 91st-ranked Renzo Olivo of Argentina after only one game Wednesday in a match suspended a night earlier because of darkness. It was 2008 Australian Open runner-up Tsonga’s first loss in the first round in Paris since his debut 12 years ago.

“Last week, I won my first-ever clay tournament,” Tsonga said, referring to an event in Lyon. “And today, I lost at the French Open. It’s the paradox of tennis.”

Ah, so philosophical.

No call for such reflection from those who advanced, including defending champion Novak Djokovic and nine-time champion Rafael Nadal among the men, and defending champion Garbine Muguruza, former No. 1s Venus Williams (whose pregnant sister Serena was in the stands) and Caroline Wozniacki among the women. There were a couple of surprises: No. 6 Dominika Cibulkova was beaten 6-4, 6-3 by 114th-ranked Ons Jabeur of Tunisia, while 18-year-old Californian CiCi Bellis defeated No. 18 Kiki Bertens of the Netherlands 6-3, 7-6 (5).

Two-time major champion Petra Kvitova, who needed surgery on her left hand after a knife attack at her home in December, bowed out in the second match of her comeback, a 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5) loss to American qualifier Bethanie Mattek-Sands.

“It’s weird. I mean, I’m disappointed, for sure. I came here to win the matches,” Kvitova said. “The fairytale ended. Now, in upcoming weeks, I think it will be business as usual.”

Story: Howard Fendrich

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Malaysia Airlines Jet Diverted in Australia Over Bomb Scare

In this May 27, 2015 photo, staff loads luggage to a Malaysia Airlines plane at Kuala Lumpur International Airport. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia  A Malaysia Airlines plane was forced to return to an Australian airport after a mentally-ill passenger threatened to detonate a bomb and attempted to enter the cockpit, police said on Thursday.

Flight MH128 was only a few minutes into a flight from Melbourne to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, late Wednesday when a 25-year-old Australian man attempted to enter the cockpit clutching an electronic device and created panic, Police Superintendent Tony Langdon and passengers said.

The man did not have a bomb and was restrained by passengers and crew. Police are not treating the incident as a terrorist act. There were no injuries.

“He was saying: ‘I’m going to the blow the f-ing plane up, I’m going to blow the plane up,'” passenger Andrew Leoncelli told Australian Broadcasting Corp. on Thursday

“He was agitated, is the best description -100 percent, he was agitated,” Leoncelli said.

“Two or three brave, young Aussies have taken him on and got him to the ground,” he added.

Police praised the courage of passengers and crew who tackled the man and tied him to a seat with belts.

“We believe that the actions of the passengers and crew were quite heroic,” Langdon told reporters.

“They managed to calm the situation, allow the aircraft to return safely and we can’t commend them highly enough,” he added.

The plane returned to the airport about 30 minutes after takeoff. Police carrying semi-automatic assault rifles and wearing body armor took the man off the plane. He had yet to be charged on Thursday.

“We do believe that he suffers from mental illnesses and the investigation is ongoing in relation to that,” Langdon said.

Police have not revealed what type of electronic device the man was carrying, but have said it was nothing unusual or dangerous.

Malaysia Airlines said in a statement the incident would be investigated by the airline and by airport authorities.

Story: Rod McGuirk

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7 Tons of African Pangolin Scales Seized in Hong Kong

A tree pangolin (Manis tricuspis) seen here in 2009 in central Democratic Republic of the Congo. Photo: Valerius Tygart / Wikimedia Commons

JOHANNESBURG — A conservation group says the seizure of seven tons of pangolin scales in Hong Kong this week indicates that the heavily poached creature “could soon vanish for good” if urgent steps are not taken to protect it.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare said Wednesday that the size of the seized shipment from Nigeria was 10 times bigger than a confiscation of pangolin scales in Malaysia three weeks earlier. In February, conservationists said almost three tons of scales were seized in Thailand.

IFAW wants China and other countries to take steps to curb the demand for pangolins, whose scales are used in traditional medicine in parts of Asia.

A U.N. wildlife conference last year approved a ban on trade in all eight species of Asian and African pangolins.

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Tweet That: #Covfefe Signals @RealDonaldTrump Is Back

President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office on Wednesday at the White House in Washington. Photo: Andrew Harnik / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Covfefe (cuv-fey-fey) noun: A sure sign that President Donald Trump has regained control of his Twitter account.

For more than a week, the tweets from @realDonaldTrump were, well, boring.

Throughout his first big foreign trip last week, Trump’s tweets had the vibe of a garden-variety politician: statements of solidarity with world leaders, retweets of his wife’s visits with students and sick children, video clips from arrival statements and formal ceremonies, photos of official dinners.

Yawn.

Well, Twitterverse, he’s back.

Trump Twitter Covfefe Cham
This screen grab shows a tweet from President Donald Trump which has social media trying to find a meaning in the mysterious term “covfefe.” Image: Associated Press

Starting with a wee-hours tweet that contained the mystifying nonword “covfefe,” Trump on Wednesday unleashed a string of tweets that showed the president was holding nothing back, on matters both trivial and consequential.

He lashed out at the government’s Russia investigation as a “Witch Hunt!”

He scolded celebrity Kathy Griffin for a video that showed what looked like Trump’s severed head: “My children, especially my 11-year-old son, Barron, are having a hard time with this. Sick!”

He stoked suspense about whether he’ll pull the U.S. out of an international climate change agreement: “I will be announcing my decision on the Paris Accord over the next few days. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!””I will be announcing my decision on the Paris Accord over the next few days. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

And he resumed his attacks on his 2016 presidential rival, tweeting, “Crooked Hillary Clinton now blames everybody but herself, refuses to say she was a terrible candidate.”

But the internet flipped out over this baffling post-midnight tweet (later deleted): “Despite the constant negative press covfefe”

With that, Trump’s twitter feed went silent for the next five and half hours.

Was it tweetus incompletus? Did the tweeter-in-chief fall asleep at the keyboard?

Former Obama White House videographer Arun Chaudhary tweeted this theory: “As a human with sleeping issues and a former WH staffer I can safely say Ambien is the source of #covfefe.”

And what was Trump trying to say, anyway?

Was it the start of a rant against “negative press coverage” that somehow went awry?

At 6:09 a.m., Trump’s twitter feed came alive again with this playful challenge: “Who can figure out the true meaning of “covfefe” ??? Enjoy!”

Team Twitter already had gone into overdrive trying to fill in the blanks, floating both silly and serious scenarios.

One user tweeted that New York’s hottest nightclub is #Covfefe. “It has everything: Russian entanglements, spray tans, creepy handshakes, surprise trade wars.”

Another suggested “covfefe” was becoming a popular name for babies in states that voted for Trump. Silicon Valley executive Andrew Crow went so far as to change his last name on Twitter to “Covfefe.” Jimmy Kimmel lamented that he’ll never write anything funnier than the term.

Conservative radio host Laura Ingraham had a pointed political theory: “It’s so bad–the collusion b/t the Dems & the press, the establ vs the ppl, that we needed a new word to describe it all. #Covfefe!”

Even Clinton weighed in. “It was a hidden message to the Russians,” she joked at a technology conference Wednesday in Los Angeles.

And later, she responded to Trump’s “Crooked Hillary” jab by tweeting, “People in covfefe houses shouldn’t throw covfefe.”

Republican strategist Liz Mair, by contrast, saw it as a way for the White House to create a distraction from negative stories about the president.

“The #covfefe stuff is funny, but everyone gets that this is one way Trump will detract from some really bad news for him last night, yes?” she tweeted.

Whatever the back story, there was no disputing that with “covfefe,” the presidential tweeter was back in full.

After all, Trump did once say he had “the best words.”

Story: Nancy Benac

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Internet Slams Social Media ‘Parenting Gurus’

Ittirit Chulalaksiriboon and Sarinee Chulalaksiriboon with their two sons. Facebook: Dad Mom and Kids

BANGKOK — Did your husband bring home a PlayStation 4? To prevent your 3-month-old baby from getting addicted to games, two doctors have this advice: Don’t have anymore children with him and save money for a divorce.

That’s one example of the parenting advice doctors Ittirit Chulalaksiriboon and Sarinee Chulalaksiriboon share on their Facebook advice page, “Dad Mom and Kids.”

After months of sparking outrage with controversial parenting advice, the advice-spooling couple announced Tuesday that they would take a break from handing out parenting advice on their page. 

Ittirit Chulalaksiriboon and Sarinee Chulalaksiriboon in one of many images they posted with their two sons. Facebook: Dad Mom and Kids
Ittirit Chulalaksiriboon and Sarinee Chulalaksiriboon in one of many images they posted with their two sons. Facebook: Dad Mom and Kids

“My wife and I apologize to everyone who felt we disrespected them or didn’t listen to their opinions, as well as the people we banned and deleted,” read the announcement.

They focused on objections raised to their regular game-shaming advice in the announcement.

“Dad Mom and Kids won’t post anymore about games, and to show our responsibility to society, we won’t post on the page for at least a month starting today,” it said.

Someone responding to messages sent to the page declined to answer questions Wednesday.

The page has offered its advice in long posts about parenting, married life and personal finance which usually include plugs for their parenting books. The posts also routinely include angry legal threats over comments that have been deleted and their uses blocked.

Ittirit is a family physician at Phramongkutklao Hospital, while Sarinee is a child psychiatrist at Central General Hospital. The husband-and-wife team’s advice page has won more than 100,000 followers since 2015.

While some fans revered them and swore by the doctors’ helpful life tips, they increasingly drew derision from those who said they were leveraging their professional authority to exploit their own children on social media and offer questionable parenting advice.

“I feel sorry for your children, who are viewed as ‘products’ for you to put on the market and return profit to you. Do you even love your children, or do you just love the profits they bring you?” user Teeraponi Pumchuang wrote.

The backlash began with their strident stance on entertainment: Absolutely no games should be allowed in the home. Gamer spouses should be immediately divorced.

That led many to more of the page’s tough-love advice: Teens shouldn’t date because they’ll fall behind. Parents should push their kids to become doctors at a young age. Even “uneducated and stupid” parents can follow their tips and raise academically successful children.

Aswin Nakpongpan, a Chiang Mai University psychiatry professor, said that though some of the advice might be useful for hyper-competitive children, it should be labeled as such and not be taken as a general approach to parenting.

“There are many ways to raise children successfully,” Aswin said, adding that its patronizing tone didn’t help.

A Change.org petition calling for the The Medical Council of Thailand to investigate the couple’s medical ethics had gained over 15,000 signatures by Wednesday.

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The two Chulalaksiriboon sons holding up a parenting book penned by their doctor parents. Facebook: Dad Mom and Kids

A parody comic by Kai Maew illustrating advice that went viral from the Dad Mom and Kids page about not having children with a PS4-buying husband.

Ittirit Chulalaksiriboon and Sarinee Chulalaksiriboon in a talk show appearance last year with their boys, 5 and 8.

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