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Prayuth Unloads on Election of Student Critic to Council

Chulalongkorn University student Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal gestures in a Sept. 20, 2016 file photo on the university's Bangkok campus.

BANGKOK — Student activist Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal, a strident opponent of military rule, expected a fuss when he was elected student council president of Chulalongkorn University, a bastion of the conservative establishment.

After all, he is vehemently opposed to the ruling junta and became famous as a freshman last year for opposing the university’s ritual of crawling to and prostrating before the eponymous statue of King Chulalongkorn, or Rama V, whose son and successor founded the institution a century ago.

But he didn’t expect the leader of the junta himself to spare no time verbally attacking him. Without naming the 20-year-old political science student, Prayuth Chan-ocha made clear his opinion that Netiwit’s election was a “disgrace,” elevating what was a minor controversy into a full-blown political spectacle even the provocative Netiwit wasn’t expecting.

Read: Thorn in the Pillar: Freshman Makes Enemies Upsetting Tradition. Allies Too.

It was at Mahidol University’s Salaya Campus in Nakhon Prathom province on Friday, a day after Netiwit was elected, that Prayuth, who serves as prime minister, made his comments in a speech on higher education.

“[Students] must know how to think and coexist. I leave this with you, the president of the student council. Extreme thinking is not okay. … It’s a pity and I am concerned. It’s a disgrace to the institution.”

He added that people who are not happy with Thailand should live elsewhere. “Good history is our pride. Please preserve it,” he said.

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Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks Friday at Mahidol University.

His comments were interpreted by many, including Netiwit, as an attack on the newly elected Chulalongkorn student president.

Netiwit, who has more than 40,000 followers on Facebook, quickly fired back on that platform, saying it is Prayuth who is the disgrace.

“Who is a disgrace to the nation?… If you want to play politics then set up a political party. But he played outside the rules, staged a coup, seized power. Not only that, he continues to curb other people’s rights. To me and many younger generations, His Excellency the Prime Minister has been destroying the reputation of Thailand for the past three years.”

The post garnered 16,000 likes by Monday and was shared 2,700 times. It also launched a social media battle between pro- and anti-coup elements.

Asked why he thought Prayuth lashed out at him, Netiwit said Sunday that it’s the retired general’s compulsive behavior.

“On the level of personal psychology, deep down, Prayuth must feel that he has no legitimacy. So when he thinks of me, he doesn’t like it. That’s his psychological issue.”

Then there’s Netiwit’s observations on society’s expectations for its youth.

“The young are expected to obey and behave like him,” Netiwit said. “The young must docilely stick to the system, and this is what Prayuth likes. … The whole society is a reflection of Prayuth.”

As president, Netiwit said he would push forward with attempts to make crawling and prostrating to the statues optional. He proposes students be allowed to opt out entirely or stand and bow as he did as an incoming freshman when he argued that it was King Chulalongkorn who abolished groveling.

Current controversies aside, Netiwit said he plans to address the controversial issue of hard-handed and coercive freshman initiation rites. He said he will try to get all faculties to commit to not allow things beyond reasonable bounds, such as the various forms of physical and mental abuse which are often inflicted upon freshmen by their seniors.

“Students should have the right to partake or not partake in such rituals,” he said.

The son of a Thai-Chinese middle class family which runs a vegetarian eatery and grocery store in southern metro Bangkok, Netiwit said he has the cautious support of his parents.The political science student, who’s a protege of eminent social critic Sulak Sivaraksa, said those who oppose his position on the council may try to launch a censure debate to oust him. A third of the council could launch such a motion and propose a no-confidence vote. Netiwit said he will be prepared for it.

Netiwit said he wants to change the mindset of his peers who all politics are dirty or only reserved for those with power.

As for his many social media “fans” who used him as a proxy to rage against the junta in recent days, Netiwit said he knows Thailand is yearning for a hero, but believes it would be wrong to pin hope on him alone.

“If you think of me as a leader and placed all hope in me and do nothing, then that’s failure,” he said.

Related stories:

Joshua Wong Still Missing; Immigration Denies Knowledge of Activist’s Detention

Thorn in the Pillar: Freshman Makes Enemies Upsetting Tradition. Allies Too.

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Guy Assaults Women After Failing to Get Phone Number

A still image from security camera footage of a Saturday night altercation at a congee restaurant on Koh Samui.

BANGKOK — Failing to get the woman’s number led to a fight that cost a man 10,000 baht Sunday.

In a video which went viral Sunday, a man gets into a fight with two women at a congee restaurant on the southern resort island of Samui, allegedly because one of them wouldn’t give up her phone number.

 

In the footage, a man in a black cap, later identified as Thanachai Unsiri, talks to two women at a table when he strikes the table, causing a bowl of congee to fall onto one of the women.

She responds by throwing a glass of water at him. That’s when the three begin arguing and shoving. He kicks at the woman who threw water, threatens both with a basket of condiments, grabs the other woman by the neck and then throws another bowl of food and the condiments at the first woman’s head.

Police Lt. Tula Sawangrat of Bophut Police Station said Sunday that the incident took place the night before. The woman, who he did not name, later filed a police complaint. She told police the man was angry that she would not give her number to him.

She alleged that he claimed to be the son of police inspector with a famous surname, saying to her, “Do you know whose son I am?”

He was later identified as Thanachai and was brought to the police station Sunday night. Thanachai said he did not want the woman’s number but volunteered to get it for some other guys who were too shy.

“I already have a girlfriend. I did not want her number,” he said.

He admitted to the media he engaged in a fight because he got angry after the woman berated him.

“I don’t know why she was upset. When I got back to my table, she cursed my parents, so I became enraged,” Thanachai said.

He denied claiming to have an important police father or an influential family name.

“I am just a tourist,” he told police.

Thanachai agreed to settle with the woman by paying her 10,000 baht. He was also charged with assault and fined by the police.

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Feast on Euro Films in Three Cities This Month

BANGKOK — Several critically acclaimed European films will show at two festivals this month in Bangkok, Chiang Mai and Khon Kaen.

Juho Kuosmanen’s Finnish drama “The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Maki,” which won Cannes’ Un Certain Regard last year will headline the European Union Film Festival along with 11 genres films from E.U. countries, followed by German selections to show at Bangkok’s Goethe-Institut.

The E.U. festival showcases two French features: “Nocturama” (2016) that tells the story of teenagers planning a Paris bomb attack and 2015 rom-com “Two Friends.” Two German dramas are also on the list: “Tour de Force” (2014) which follows the last bike trip of a group of best friends and “Herbert,” a 2016 chronicle of a former East German boxing champion’s suffering.

Several documentaries will also show, such as 2015 Swedish doc “Nice People” about a Somali team’s journey to become champions on the ice. Another is “Spain in a Day,” a collection of crowdsourced clips from everyday life, and that nation’s companion to Ridley Scott’s 2011 film “Life in a Day.”

All films come with English and Thai subtitles.

Tickets are 120 baht for Bangkok screenings and 80 baht in Chiang Mai and Khon Kaen. They can be purchased online starting May 9. A screening schedule is available online.

The films will show May 19 to 28 at SF World Cinema and CentralWorld in Bangkok. After that, the festival will run June 3 to 11 at the Maya Shopping Center in Chiang Mai and then June 17 and 18 at SF Cinema in Central Plaza Khon Kaen.

 

At the Goethe-Institut, Bangkok audiences can catch a fest focused solely, of course, on German flicks at German Film Week.

See nine acclaimed films such as the 2016 comedy-drama “Toni Erdmann,” which won five European Film Awards, 2017 thriller “Berlin Syndrome” and black-and-white biopic “Fritz Lang” about the pioneering German auteur.

Tickets are 120 baht and 150 baht for special seats. They can be reserved at the cinema or online. A schedule is also available.

All films are in German with English and Thai subtitles.

German Film Week will be held May 23 to 28 at Paragon Cineplex.

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Police Say Investigation of ‘Thai Sky Adventures’ Still Active

An October 2016 file photo of the airfield used by Thai Sky Adventures in Chonburi province.

CHONBURI — Police on Monday said they’re investigating a British-owned skydiving firm in Chonburi province for possible negligence following the death of one of its clients last week, though the owner of the business disputes this.

A 69-year-old British pensioner died during a skydiving session with Thai Sky Adventures on Thursday. While the owner of the firm maintains the man died of a heart attack, the local police chief said no conclusion has been reached.

Read: Foreign Man Dies at Pattaya’s ‘Thai Sky Adventures’

“Right now we are still waiting for doctors to establish the cause of death,” Chanapat Navaluk, chief of Nong Kham police, said by telephone. “The witness, the person who was skydiving with him, the witness said he lost consciousness and fell into the reservoir.”

Col. Chanapat identified the deceased as James Anthony McConnell, a Scottish retiree who had lived in Chonburi’s Sattahip district with his Thai wife for many years.

He added that police are investigating the incident and have summoned the operator of Thai Sky Adventures for questioning.

“We want to find out whether it’s a case of negligence or not,” Chanapat said. “Because the man was over 60. How did they let him take the jump?”

Reached for comment, company owner Harry Harrison said “police have already completed their investigation.” Harrison also said that what happened was regrettable but unavoidable.

“People have heart attacks every day. People have heart attacks behind the wheel in the car, while they are walking on the street, while they’re in bed,” Harrison said. “This particular gentleman had a heart attack while he was doing something he loved. What extra precaution could we possibly take?”

While Col. Chanapat said police have ordered the company to ground its planes while the investigation is ongoing, Harrison said Thai Sky Adventures is open as usual. He said the company is properly licensed by the authorities.

Thai Sky Adventures’ air strip in the Si Racha district of Chonburi province is located adjacent to a large reservoir.

The company has had several incidents in recent years. In October, a Russian skydiving instructor working for the company fell to his death. In 2015, it grabbed headlines worldwide when video emerged of its plane diving toward a pair of tandem skydivers, clipping their parachute and narrowly avoiding calamity a few months earlier.

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Indonesia Footie Follows China in Big-Name Recruitment

Michael Essien seen here in 2013 with his former club Real Madrid in a match against Galatasaray in Madrid, Spain. Photo: Ultraslansi / Wikimedia Commons

China may have the most star-studded league in Asia but Indonesia is another sleeping giant that is starting to import some internationally famous players in a bid to raise standards at home and profile overseas.

Former English Premier League stars Michael Essien, Didier Zokora, Carlton Cole and Peter Odemwingie are closer to the end of their careers than the imports in China but their arrival could make a difference.

After years of corruption scandals, political infighting, crowd violence and international bans, the players are helping Indonesian soccer make positive overseas headlines for the first time in years.

“Their arrival is a good thing because they can help the Indonesia football league profile overseas,” Jacksen Tiago, former head coach of the Indonesia national team and now in charge of league side PS Barito Putera, told Associated Press. “We have more coverage from international media and more quality players will be looking for a chance to come over here in future.”

That has an effect at home too, said the Brazilian. “Now television, papers and fans are more excited about football and people are really happy with those big names around the country. They feel really proud to have international players here and local players can learn from them.”

Like China, Indonesia has long been regarded as one of the world’s great underachievers given its undoubted passion for the sport and league games that regularly attract more than 20,000 fans.

The national team appeared at the 1938 World Cup as Dutch East Indies but has made little impact since. A FIFA ban, imposed in May 2015 after governmental interference in the running of the game, was seen as necessary by some after years of mismanagement and scandals in the local game.

The ban was lifted in May 2016 and in December, Indonesia reached the final of the AFF Suzuki Cup, Southeast Asia’s regional tournament, equaling its best ever showing.

Alfred Riedl was the national team coach at the time and retired after the final. “There has always been talent in Indonesia and we showed that,” he said. “Indonesian football could be very soon the number one in Southeast Asia but the clubs and the federation need to be future-oriented.”

There are challenges for the foreign stars coming to Indonesia according to the Austrian.

“The facilities such as dressing rooms, training fields and stadiums are still poor so if you are coming from Chelsea to Indonesian football there is a big difference.”

Jacksen is sure that, assuming the imports settle, they will enjoy their time in the passionate soccer nation.

“The football atmosphere is Indonesia is just amazing and the foreign players will enjoy the atmosphere inside the stadium and it will help them adapt to the culture here. Fans make us really enjoy our work, because they really appreciate people with quality here.”

The biggest star is Essien, formerly of Chelsea and Real Madrid, who signed for Persib Bandung in March along with former England international striker Carlton Cole.

Essien scored his second goal of the season on Sunday to put Persib top of the standings. Odemwingie has scored three in four appearances for Madura United.

Riedl, who had three spells in charge of the national team, has doubts whether the imports will have a lasting impact and would prefer more money to be invested in youth development.

“It may be more exciting for the fans and the media,” he said. “But I don’t think that bringing former big players to Indonesia will help. I am not sure that they are coming to serve Indonesian football. They take big money, for Indonesia at least, and leave whenever they want.”

Jacksen, who has coached eight clubs in Indonesia, is confident however that money spent on star players will encourage improvements elsewhere. “It will make clubs invest more in their facilities for training sessions. The quality of referees will improve sooner or later, we coaches must improve our coaching knowledge to handle players like those big names and the facilities to training will be better.”

The Brazilian acknowledges however that it will all take time.

“There is still complaining about referees, aggressive football and riots between fans,” he said, but added: “The federation is trying to solve the problems and bring more coverage and money to the game. They are trying to make the league more professional in every aspect.”

Story: John Duerden

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Vietnam Politburo Member Removed Over ‘Serious Mistakes’

U.S. President Barack Obama, left, stands next to his Vietnamese President Tran Dai Quang under a statue of late Vietnamese revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh during a signing ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Hanoi, Vietnam Monday, May 23, 2016. Photo: Kham / Associated Press

HANOI — A senior Vietnamese Communist Party official has been removed from the powerful Politburo for committing “very serious mistakes and violations” when he was head of the country’s oil and gas monopoly PetroVietnam.

The Central Committee voted in majority to impose the disciplinary measures against Dinh La Thang, according to a statement posted on the party’s website late Sunday.

Thang, 56, was chairman of the board of PetroVietnam from 2005 until he was appointed transport minister in 2011. While leading PetroVietnam between 2009 and 2011, Thang committed serious violations in his leadership, command and staff works, “sparking annoyance among officials, party members and people,” the party statement said.

His removal signaled the intensification of the party’s fight against corruption among Communist Party functionaries, which have undermined its reputation and caused serious economic problems for the country, said Le Hong Hiep, research fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, in an email.

Economist Le Danh Doanh, former head of a government economic think tank, said the party’s efforts to fight corruption and restore trust should go along with institutional reforms for power oversight.

His removal was a rare punishment against a Politburo member. Discipline against other Politburo members in past cases has ranged from a reprimand to being stripped of party membership.

The party’s inspection committee said in April that Thang had permitted an investment in the private Ocean Bank that exceeded regulations, causing “very serious losses to PetroVietnam.” He also was found responsible for a lack of oversight over four major projects, resulting in their suspension and financial losses.

Hiep, the research fellow, said Thang is close to former Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, so his removal could be seen as a move to purge Dung’s cronies.

His removal would also facilitate the investigation into his wrongdoing at PetroVietnam as well as possible problems at the Ministry of Transport. He was known during his tenure there for sacking ministry officials for wrongdoing.

Thang had been elected to the 19-member Politburo early last year. He remains a member of the 180-member Party Central Committee, but his position as party chief of Ho Chi Minh City is likely to end, since it requires a Politburo membership.

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Watchdog Says Vietnamese Officials Bribed by Log Smugglers

A large portrait of Ho Chi Minh hangs in display Nov. 11 in front of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union headquarters in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

BANGKOK — An environmental watchdog organization is accusing Vietnamese government and military officials of taking payoffs to ignore smuggling of expensive lumber from neighboring Cambodia.

A report issued Monday by the U.K.-based Environmental Investigation Agency charges that millions of dollars in bribes have been paid by Vietnamese timber traders to both Vietnamese and Cambodian officials. It said the Vietnamese officials are paid off in exchange for granting import quotas for the timber and Cambodians are paid to open up logging areas and smuggling routes.

Cambodia has banned log exports and since early 2016 has closed its border with Vietnam to timber as well. However, Vietnam has official quotas for such imports, which are also taxed.

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Macron Wins French Elections

From left to right, Conservative presidential candidate Francois Fillon, Independent centrist presidential candidate for the presidential election Emmanuel Macron, Far-left presidential candidate for the presidential election Jean-Luc Melenchon, Far-right presidential candidate for the presidential election Marine Le Pen and Socialist candidate for the presidential election Benoit Hamon pose for a group photo on Monday prior to a television debate at French TV station TF1 in Aubervilliers, outside Paris, France, Monday, March 20, 2017. Photo: Patrick Kovarik / Associated Press

PARIS — Ripping up France’s political map, French voters elected independent centrist Emmanuel Macron as the country’s youngest president Sunday, delivering a resounding victory to the unabashedly pro-European former investment banker and dashing the populist dream of far-right rival Marine Le Pen.

Macron, who had never run for office before, celebrated with thousands of jubilant, flag-waving supporters outside the Louvre Museum in Paris on Sunday night.

The European anthem “Ode to Joy” played as he strode out to address the swelling crowd.

“France has won!” he said. “Everyone said it was impossible. But they do not know France!”

Marine Le Pen, his far-right opponent in the runoff, quickly called the 39-year-old Macron to concede after voters rejected her “French-first” nationalism by a large margin. Le Pen’s performance punctured her hopes that the populist wave which swept Donald Trump into the White House and led Britain to vote to leave the EU would also carry her to France’s presidential Elysee Palace.

Macron told the Louvre crowd that the Le Pen vote was one of “anger, disarray.”

“I will do everything in the five years to come so there is no more reason to vote for the extremes,” he said.

Earlier, in a solemn televised victory speech, Macron vowed to heal the social divisions exposed by France’s acrimonious election campaign.

“I know the divisions in our nation that led some to extreme votes. I respect them,” he declared, unsmiling. “I know the anger, the anxiety, the doubts that a large number of you also expressed. It is my responsibility to hear them.”

The result wasn’t close: With about 90 percent of votes counted, Macron had 64 percent support. Le Pen had 36 percent – about double what Jean-Marie Le Pen, her father and co-founder of their National Front party, achieved at the same stage in the 2002 presidential election.

Macron’s victory strengthens France’s place as a central pillar of the European Union, and marked the third time in six months – following elections in Austria and the Netherlands – that European voters shot down far-right populists who wanted to restore borders across Europe. The election of a French president who champions European unity could also strengthen the EU’s hand in its complex divorce proceedings with Britain.

Parisians lined the streets outside Macron’s campaign headquarters to see his motorcade whisk him away to the Louvre party. His wife, Brigitte, joined him on stage after his address.

Macron said he understood that some voters backed him reluctantly, simply to keep out Le Pen and her National Front party, which has a long history of anti-Semitism and racism.

“I know that this is not a blank check,” he said. “I know about our disagreements. I will respect them.”

After the most closely watched and unpredictable French presidential campaign in recent memory, many voters rejected the runoff choices altogether – casting blank or spoiled ballots in record numbers Sunday. Police sprayed tear gas and detained dozens of protesters holding running demonstrations through eastern Paris after the election results came out.

Congratulatory messages poured in from abroad. Trump tweeted congratulations on what he called Macron’s “big win” and said he looked forward to working with the new French leader. Macron has said he wants continued intelligence-sharing with the United States and cooperation at the United Nations and hopes to persuade Trump not to pull the U.S. out of a global accord fighting climate change.

Germany’s foreign minister, Sigmar Gabriel, laced his welcome for Macron with a warning to the French, saying: “If he fails, in five years Mrs. Le Pen will be president and the European project will go to the dogs.”

Macron becomes not only France’s youngest-ever president but also one of its most unlikely. Until now, modern France had been governed either by the Socialists or the conservatives, but both of their candidates were eliminated before the runoff.

“France has sent an incredible message to itself, to Europe and the world,” said Macron ally Francois Bayrou, tipped among his possible choices for prime minister.

Unknown to voters before his turbulent 2014-16 tenure as France’s pro-business economy minister, Macron took a giant gamble by quitting Socialist President Francois Hollande’s government to run as an independent. His startup political movement – optimistically named “En Marche! (In Motion)” – caught fire in just one year, harnessing voters’ hunger for new faces and new ideas.

“I’m so happy, it feels so good! I lived the election of Donald Trump in New York, and now finally, after Brexit, after Trump, populism has been beaten in France,” Macron supporter Pierre-Yves Colinet said at the Louvre party. “Today, I’m proud to be French.”

Despite her loss, Le Pen’s advancement to the presidential runoff for the first time marked a breakthrough for the 48-year-old and underscored a growing acceptance of her anti-immigration, France-first nationalism.

Le Pen immediately turned her focus to France’s upcoming legislative election in June, where Macron will need a working majority to govern effectively. Le Pen said her “historic and massive” score turned her party into “the leading opposition force against the new president’s plans.”

“I call on all patriots to join us,” Le Pen said. “France will need you more than ever in the months ahead.”

Her supporters at a National Front election night gathering in Paris put on a brave face.

“Now we enter combat,” said Didier Roxel, a National Front legislative candidate.

Le Pen said she won 11 million votes, which would be her party’s highest-ever electoral score.

Macron and Le Pen offered polar-opposite visions: Le Pen’s closed borders against Macron’s open ones; his commitment to free trade ran against her proposals to protect the French from global economic competition and immigration. Her desire to free France from the EU and the shared euro currency contrasted with his argument that both are essential for the future of Europe’s third-largest economy.

Macron also got lucky in the campaign. One of his most dangerous opponents, conservative former Prime Minister Francois Fillon, was vilified after allegations that his family benefited from cushy taxpayer-funded jobs for years. Fillon is facing charges in the case.

On the left, the Socialist Party imploded, its candidate abandoned by voters who wanted to punish Hollande, France’s most unpopular president since World War II. Hollande himself decided not to run again.

Macron takes charge of a nation that, when Britain leaves the EU in 2019, will become the EU’s only member with nuclear weapons and a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council.

But the vote also showed that France’s 67 million people are deeply divided, riven by anxieties about terrorism and chronic unemployment, worried about the cultural and economic impact of immigration and fearful of France’s ability to compete against giants like China and Google.

Macron has promised a France that would stand up to Russian President Vladimir Putin but that also would seek to work with Putin on fighting the Islamic State group, whose extremists have claimed multiple attacks in France since 2015.

France has been in a state of emergency since then and 50,000 security forces were out to safeguarded Sunday’s vote.

Story: John Leicester,  Sylvie Corbet

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Man Lies to Police about Stolen Money After Treating Lover to Evade Wife

UDON THANI — A man was charged with filing a false police report Friday for trying to fool his wife into thinking he had been robbed after using the money to treat his secret lover.

Teerapong, 33, whose family name was withheld by police, called the 191 emergency hotline to report he had been robbed Friday in Udon Thani province.

Teerapong then proceeded to the Udon Thani city police station and filed a complaint. According to the man, six young men on three motorbikes came after him and forced him to stop his motorbike. The man said he was allegedly hit on the head with a glass bottle before the men made away with 17,300 baht in cash, his mobile phone, Buddhist amulets and his identity card.

Police found something was amiss upon examining his head and finding no trace of bruises or injuries.

After further interrogation, Teerapong confessed to having made the story up because he had used his hard-earned money to fete his secret lover but was fearful his wife would have beat him if she found out.

“The suspect was more fearful of his wife than police,” said police Col. Chawit Srichan, deputy head of Udon Thani Police. “We would like to plead people not to file false complaints.”

Chawit added that out of 900 to 1,000 calls each day in Udon Thani, police only an average of 15 are true complaints.

If found guilty, Teerapong faces up to three years in prison and a maximum fine of 6,000 baht under Article 173 of the Criminal Code.

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Khaosod English Goes to Westeros (With Your Questions)

Top: Khaosod English reporter Chayanit ‘Milk’ Itthipongmaetee

Why doesn’t Sansa Stark toss Littlefinger and his schemes from the nearest tower? How much freaking chicken can The Hound actually eat?

These are the questions which burn in the minds of Throners – the type which Khaosod English reporter Chayanit “Milk” Itthipongmaetee will take next week when she heads west to Westeros (aka London) for face time with 11 of the show’s fan favorites. Yes, Milk will sit down with characters many fanfolk know by nickname, including The Onion Knight (Liam Cunningham), The Red Woman (Carice Van Houten), Littlefinger (Aiden Gillen) and The Hound (Rory McCann).

milkthrones.body1Khaosod English doesn’t do expense-paid junkets by policy, and when HBO and AIS reached out to promote their new partnership, we knew it would risk our reputation for principled political coverage of the Seven Kingdoms.

So to put readers’ interests above our super-fan reporter’s rabid desire to go, we are asking you to give her the questions you want asked.

Please use the amazing form below to enter your question(s) and choose the actors (or characters) you want them put to. Deadline is Friday. We will choose the most interesting, funny or otherwise superlative entries.

So leave some questions. Milk will ask them. We’ll let you know how they answered.

Game of Thrones’ seventh season is set to premiere in Thailand on July 17.

This thing scrolls, FYI! (If amazing form does not display properly, find it here.

Related stories:

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