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Authorities Axe Music Fest on Koh Samet

A photo from the Samed in Love Music Festival posted June 4, 2016. Photo: Samed in Love / Facebook

RAYONG — After residents in Ko Samet came out to oppose an annual music fest on the island, authorities said Wednesday they have canceled the event.

Samed in Love won’t return to the national park island for its eighth outing next month after officials ordered it canceled due to a previously unenforced law prohibiting disturbances in national parks. Although the festival has gone off annually, they cited the mourning period for King Bhumibol for why 2017 would be different.

Read: Samet Residents Complain Island Music Fest an Unwelcome Mess

“Samed In Love is definitely prohibited during the mourning period,” Prayoon Pongphan, head of the national park where the island is situated, said Wednesday afternoon, after meeting a day earlier with the top national parks official.

The organizers, who Prayoon said were present at the meeting to defend the festival, said they did their best to deal with waste management problems and promote tourism on the island. Moreover, they protested that tickets had already been sold and rooms reserved.

“They can submit a letter to the chief, but it was also their fault for announcing the festival date and selling tickets prior to the department’s approval,” Prayoon said.

An application for organizer Create Intelligence to hold the event was filed in April by Rayong Gov. Surasak Charoensirichok.

It’s uncertain whether the festival will be allowed to return after the mourning period, as Ko Samet is part of the Khao Laem Ya–Mu Ko Samet National Park. Pubs and bars have been forced to close at midnight since the 2014 coup in a crackdown on the island’s famed nightlife offerings.

Create Intelligence was not ready to throw in the beach towel, however. It said it would clarify the situation next week in a message posted Tuesday on the event’s Facebook page.

“There’s still no resolution to the issue,” said Netnaphad Pulsavad, senior assistant to the group’s managing director.

The team replied to several complaints on its page saying tickets would be refunded were the festival to be canceled.

The festival is set for June 3 at Silver Sands Beach on Ko Samet.

 

Related stories:

Samet Residents Complain Island Music Fest an Unwelcome Mess

Banana Boats, Parasails Banned From Samet Beaches

Business Owners Decry Koh Samet Nightlife Curfew

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US Firm in Iraq Ignores Smuggling, Sex Trafficking for F-16s

An undated photo shows an Iraqi bodyguard hired by Sallyport Global to protect VIPs. Photo: Associated Press

WASHINGTON — An American company that was paid nearly USD $700 million to secure an Iraqi base for F-16 fighter jets turned a blind eye to alcohol smuggling, theft, security violations, and allegations of sex trafficking  then terminated investigators who uncovered wrongdoing, an Associated Press investigation has found.

Documents and interviews with two former internal investigators and a half-dozen former or current Sallyport Global staff describe schemes at Iraq’s Balad Air Base that were major contract violations at best and, if proven, illegal.

The fired investigators, Robert Cole and Kristie King, said they uncovered evidence that Sallyport employees were involved in human trafficking for prostitution. Staff on base routinely flew smuggled alcohol onto the base in such high volumes that a plane once seesawed on the tarmac under the weight. Rogue militia stole enormous generators using flatbed trucks and a 60-foot crane, driving right past Sallyport security guards.

The trouble stretches to headquarters in Reston, Virginia, say the investigators and other ex-employees interviewed by AP. They say what they uncovered was not revealed to the U.S. government, which was footing the $686 million contracting bill, until early this year  after an auditor started asking questions.

The investigators were fired abruptly on March 12  just two months ago  and immediately flown out of Iraq. They say they had been looking into timesheet fraud allegations and were set to interview company managers, whom they considered suspects.

“I feel like they got us out so quickly because they feel like we knew too much,” King said in an interview. “When we finally got the idea that they were hiding all of the stuff from the U.S. government, it was mind-blowing.”

In a statement to the AP, Sallyport said it follows all contracting rules at the base, home to a squadron of F-16s that are indispensable to the operations of the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State group.

“Sallyport has a strong record of providing security and life support services in challenging war zones like Iraq and plays a major but unheralded role in the war against ISIS,” Chief Operating Officer Matt Stuckart wrote. “The company takes any suggestion of wrongdoing at Balad very seriously.”

In one allegation, informants told the investigators that “flight line” staff, who directed airplanes on the runways and handled cargo, were showing up drunk. At one point they passed around a bowl of gummy bears soaked in vodka.

Alcohol on base was restricted, but the booze was everywhere, smuggled in by plane, several former employees told The AP. According to investigative documents and witnesses, empty suitcases were loaded onto Baghdad-bound roundtrip flights. The bags returned packed with alcohol-filled plastic water bottles that skirted security  a significant risk in a war zone.

Stuckart said Sallyport stood by its security procedures and got “high marks” from the U.S. Air Force.

But Steve Anderson, who worked on flight logistics, says he was told by managers to sign off on manifests he knew had been falsified to hide alcohol and guns. The planes were so heavy that one tipped over nose-first while parked, “like a seesaw,” he recalled.

When he raised concerns, it was suggested he find a new job, said Anderson, whose position was soon eliminated.

Balad is controlled by the Iraqi government. Americans have been there off and on since 2003. The base was evacuated in June 2014, when IS began overrunning Iraqi territory.

When the Americans returned, Sallyport’s job was to keep Balad safe for the F-16s — and their Iraqi pilots. The contract required investigations into potential crimes and contract violations. That was the job of Cole and King.

On July 13, 2015, four F-16s landed at the base, the first of a planned 36 from the U.S. Trouble came within 24 hours, when a long skid mark appeared on the tarmac, stopping about 45 yards from a jet in the “no-go area.”

A truck driver had lost control of his vehicle, but never reported it.

Three months later, Cole reported the theft of an armored Toyota SUV assigned to VIPs. His chief suspect was a Sallyport bodyguard. The Toyota was recovered within days; Cole was called off the case.

A former senior manager defended that order, telling the AP that negotiations with the militias were sensitive and needed Iraqi cooperation. He said the chief suspect was banned from the base, but Cole later saw the man walking around freely.

Security breaches continued. On Nov. 15, 2016, just before 2 a.m., militia drove three flatbeds onto the base, one equipped with a crane. After lifting three enormous generators onto the trucks, the militia drove away unchallenged.

Cole’s reports noted lax protection for the F-16s. Despite requirements to report major security breaches, the U.S. government was not informed until early this year of the truck skidding near a jet or the armored-SUV theft, according to Cole and two other former Sallyport employees. Both spoke only on condition of anonymity because they did not want to jeopardize current jobs.

As Cole and King sought to get to the bottom of the alcohol smuggling, they stumbled across a prostitution ring in Baghdad whose customers included Sallyport employees, informants said. They learned that four Ethiopians who had previously worked as prostitutes at the hotel had moved to Balad and were doing the same while moonlighting as Sallyport housekeepers.

Before either investigation was completed, a Sallyport executive in Virginia shut them down, they say. Stuckart said the prostitution allegations were not substantiated.

“It is absurd to suggest that the company would shut down an inquiry into a matter of such gravity,” he said.

By then, Cole and King had begun their investigation into complaints that Sallyport managers were falsifying timesheets and people were getting paid without working.

The investigators say company lawyers ordered them to keep two sets of books, which they interpreted as an attempt to deceive auditors.

“One for the government to see and one for the government not to see,” King said.

Story: Desmond Butler, Lori Hinnant

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Tech Logos Removed From Royal Crematorium Garuda

Pitak Chalermlao’s garuda with an Apple logo on its right wing in an image posted Monday. Photo: Information Center for King Rama 9 / Facebook

BANGKOK — Logos of the world’s largest tech firms were removed Wednesday from a Garuda sculpture for use in the cremation of King Bhumibol in response to a surge of criticism.

Images of the standing figure – featuring familiar logos from Apple, Google and Facebook – were criticized as inappropriate for use in the Royal Crematorium as soon as they were posted online Monday evening by state media.

The post was flooded with comments criticizing use of the funeral pyre to promote corporate brands. It was shared more than 1,000 times before being deleted Wednesday afternoon.

The two-meter sculpture was created by Pitak Chalermlao, a sculptor with the government’s fine arts department.

The widely recognized tech brands had been sculpted into the garuda’s wings and buckle. They were intended to represent the rise of the internet during the reign of King Rama IX, and how he used it to solve the problems of his subjects, according to the original post.

Pitak said he was not allowed to give interviews and referred a reporter to an apology he posted on Facebook in which he also said the logos were being removed.

“Nobody might understand me today, but all I can say is that I had good intentions to telegraph from the East to the West and the world that we had a great king who they should learn about,” he wrote.

Chatri Prakitnonthakan, an associate architecture professor at Silpakorn University, said the public reaction was not surprising.

“The reason the garuda sculpture received negative comments is because it contains mundane logos which some view as inappropriate for use with a royal sculpture,” Chatri said. “Secondly, they think the logos are being used to promote products.”

The professor said the adoption of commercial imagery is not new in terms of contemporary art, as artists have routinely added a present context to their art. He cited the inclusion of political figures, spaceships or superhero characters in temple wall murals.

“I don’t think it tarnishes His Majesty’s honor or dignity as those logos are more than just brands, but they can symbolize social media,” he said.

Photos: Information Center for King Rama 9 and Pitak Chalermlao / Facebook.

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Sculptor Pitak Chalermlao poses with the now logo-free garuda in an image posted online Wednesday afternoon. Photo: Pitak Chalermlao / Facebook.

Related stories:

Royal Crematorium Rises Over Sanam Luang (Photos)

Artists Unveil Design for King Bhumibol’s Funeral Pyre

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Bangkok Instrumental Trio to Bear ‘Seedless Fruit’ at Thonglor Party

Photo: Spring.Fall.Sea / Facebook

BANGKOK — A local instrumental rock trio will launch their new album with a launch party and concert Friday night.

Releasing “The Seedless Fruit,” their third EP, Dylan, Marvin and Clive of Spring Fall Sea will celebrate with a line up of local acts at their release party in Thonglor.

The lineup includes indie rock heavyweights Count the Thief, hybrid rockers The Rocket Whale and the melodic-hardcore sound of Sinners Turned Saints.

Admission is 200 baht and includes one drink. The event starts at 8pm on Friday at Thong Lor Art Space. The studio-gallery is located on Soi Sukhumvit 55, a short walk via BTS Thong Lo exit No. 3.

Spring Fall Sea was founded in 2014 in Bangkok. They’ve played several of the capital’s underground music venues including The Overstay and Brownstone Studio as well as shows in the United States, Europe and Southeast Asia.

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Schwarzenegger Photobombs Thai Tourists at Eiffel Tower

Schwarzenegger photobombs a Thai tour group Tuesday in Paris. Photo: Y-G2006 / Pantip

PARIS — A group of Thai tourists were floored when the Terminator himself rolled up on a bicycle to block a group photo in front of the Eiffel Tower, according to a Pantip post posted Tuesday.

Arnold Schwarzenegger himself wheeled in front of a group of Thai tourists who were just about to smile for the camera Tuesday in front of the Eiffel Tower.

“Thank you to the tourists at the Eiffel Tower for letting me crash your photo!” Schwarzenegger wrote Tuesday on Instagram.

Pantip user Y-G2006 wrote that his tour group was about to say “cheese” for a group photo in front of the Eiffel Tower when “a farang rode his bike in front of our shot. I thought to myself, ‘Hey, what a badass!’”

He had no idea it was the ‘80s action star turned politician.

Only when Schwarzenegger biked away and the tour guide yelled, “Arnold!” did everyone in the group express their inner fanboy and fangirl.

The 69-year-old former governor of California was flanked by five or six bodyguards on bicycles and a motorcycle, he wrote.

Fantastic bike ride through Paris. I cannot say this enough: to truly appreciate a city, get on a bike. Thank you to the tourists at the Eiffel Tower for letting me crash your photo!

โพสต์ที่แชร์โดย Arnold Schwarzenegger (@schwarzenegger) เมื่อ

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Junta Critics Give Mixed Read of Trump Call to Prayuth

At top, then candidate Donald Trump listens to his mobile phone at a Feb. 18, 2016, campaign stop. Photo: Associated Press. Below, then army chief Prayuth Chan-ocha uses a phone in 2013. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — Critics of military rule in Thailand offered mixed reactions to Sunday’s phone call made by U.S. President Donald Trump to junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha.

Pro-democracy advocates were split on what the surprise phone call, one of several by Trump to authoritarian leaders to shore up support over North Korea, meant to the military regime’s legitimacy, and prospects for human rights in the kingdom.

“How long Prayuth can run the country and how well the democratic side can fight with the military regime is not up to the U.S. factor, but more dependent on struggles by political groups in Thailand,” said Puangthong R. Pawakapan, an associate professor of political science at Chulalongkorn University on Tuesday, playing down the call.

Read: Trump Invites Prayuth to White House

Puangthong conceded however that Thais fighting for democracy will feel more isolated as a result, as the U.S. government no longer appears to be their friend on that front.

Thammasat University lecturer of International Relations Pongkwan Sawasdipakdi shared similar sentiments, but added that the military regime’s attempts to make the most of the call reflects its deep insecurity and lack of legitimacy.

“It’s as if the regime is insecure and must depend on a foreign state to shore up its legitimacy. This means this government has low legitimacy so it needs something to confer [legitimacy] to it,” said Pongkwan.

In a brief readout of the call published Wednesday in state media, Prayuth’s government described the call as “an elevation of Thailand’s relations with the U.S. in all dimensions,” adding that Trump “lauded the work of the Thai government before discussing areas such as trade, relations and the Korean peninsula.”

“The call itself won’t change much. The call doesn’t mean the U.S. accepts Prayuth,” said the lecturer, who agreed the invitation to the White House had more to do with getting U.S. allies into common cause against threats posed by North Korea.

Sunday’s call came back-to-back with similar calls to Philipinne President Rodrigo Duterte and Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

The 2014 coup came at a tricky time for the former Obama administration, which had embarked upon a “strategic pivot” of engaging Asia. Barack Obama was officially cool toward Prayuth and his junta, but continued to engage the regime and invited Prayuth to a conference of Southeast Asian leaders in California.

For his part, Prayuth and his intermediaries dismissed U.S. criticisms, only to seek and publicize photo ops with Obama at the United Nations.

Puangthong said that while Trump’s call reflected the U.S. president’s disregard for Thailand’s human rights and democratic record under Prayuth, the contact was more about balancing U.S. power vis-a-vis China, as Southeast Asia has become a contested area between the two powers.

Parit Chiwark, a well-known student activist and soon to be freshman political science student at Thammasat University, thinks the call means the democracy movement and human rights community in Thailand must rely on themselves.

“I think, in the end, foreign powers think about their own interests. Because we fight for our national interests, we can’t expect much from foreign states,” Parit said.

And, he added, the United States probably wants closer ties with Thailand to stem growing Chinese influence in the kingdom.

Pipob Udomittipong, a prominent commentator on international affairs, thinks it’s a negative sign for democracy movements and human rights activists in Thailand, as such a call to the leader of the 2014 coup and present regime was never made by Trump’s predecessor.

“Thailand is being treated like Egypt, which is dictatorial, but the U.S. closes one eye because it’s a strategic partner,” said Pipob, noting that Thailand has drifted closer to China and Russia of late.

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Malaysian Family Sue Honda, Takata in US Over Air Bag Defect

A portrait of Nida Fatin Mat Asis, a Malaysian doctor who died after being allegedly struck by a defective air bag inflator shown here last November, next to news clippings in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Lim Huey Teng / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — A Malaysian man whose wife’s death is one of at least 16 blamed on air bag defects has sued Japanese automaker Honda and the Takata Corp. in a U.S. court, saying he wants the companies to disclose more about the dangers.

Nida Fatin Mat Asis, a 29-year-old doctor, died almost instantly after the Honda City she was driving hit a pole and skidded into a ditch in Malaysia’s eastern Sabah state on April 16 last year. An autopsy found shrapnel from a Takata air bag inflator in the base of her skull.

The lawsuit was filed by her husband in a U.S. District court in Michigan on Monday.

Her father, Mat Asis Mahnoon, said Wednesday the family decided to sue after Takata pleaded guilty to fraud in February and agreed to pay USD $1 billion in penalties for concealing the defect blamed for 11 deaths in the U.S. and five in Malaysia. More than 180 injuries have occurred worldwide and more than 100 million inflators have been recalled.

Plaintiffs alleged in dozens of lawsuits that Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Ford and BMW had independent knowledge that Takata’s air bags were unsafe before putting them in millions of vehicles. The auto companies have asserted that they were deceived by Takata and shouldn’t be held liable.

Mat Asis told the Associated Press that the family refused a settlement offer from Honda and Takata that was conditioned on them not speaking publicly.

The woman’s husband says her family wants to ensure the companies do more. “I refuse to let my wife die in vain. By telling her story, we hope Takata and Honda will do more, particularly in Malaysia, to notify everyone with impacted cars that they are potentially deadly,” Abdullah Shamshir Abdul Mokti said in a statement released by U.S. law firm Motley Rice LLC.

The couple did not know their car had a dangerously defective air bag and were never notified by Honda of a potential recall.

The law firm’s statement said a confidential settlement had been reached with the two companies over another Honda City crash in Malaysia. That crash killed Law Suk Leh and her unborn baby.

Story: Eileen Ng

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Farmers Give Away Unsold Pineapples, Blame Factories

Rang Sonkram gives away his pineapples Wednesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan to protest factories that refuse to purchase his produce.

PRACHUAP KHIRI KHAN — A group of farmers in the Thai south gave away 10 tons of pineapples Wednesday morning to protest factories for rejecting their produce.

Starting at 7:30am, a handful of orchard owners gave their fruit away for free to call attention to what they said were spurious reasons given by pineapple factories for not buying their fruit, accusing them of trying to drive down prices.

“I was discouraged when I went to sell my produce to factories, who said my pineapples were ugly or rotten and kicked me out without buying a single one,” said Rang Sonkram, 43, the farmer in charge of the giveaway. “I decided that giving them away for free would be more beneficial and would make me feel good and proud that people are eating them.”

Rang and his six pineapple farmer friends set up two truckloads of pineapples by Phet Kasem Road in the Kui Buri district of Prachuap Khiri Khan province to make a statement to the factories, which he refused to name.

“Before, factories would buy pineapples by the ton, and pay 12 to 13 baht per pineapple. Now, they’ll pay only 5 baht per pineapple, and only buy a couple hundred kilos or none at all. They’ll accuse me of selling low-quality produce and chase me out of the factory,” Rang said.

Factories would even try to bargain the price down to 2 baht or 3 baht per pineapple.

“Even selling for 5 baht, I won’t earn 1,000 baht to pay back the driver,” Rang said. “Some factories say they’re too raw while others say the same pineapples are too ripe.”

Drivers who stopped for free pineapples asked why they were being given away.

“I told them that I can’t sell the pineapples anyway, even if they’re delicious and good quality,” Rang said. Rang will give away any leftover pineapples from today’s giveaway to a cattle farmer friend to feed to his cows.

“I had plans to make a million baht this year from selling pineapples, but I don’t even think I will make 100,000 baht,” Rang said, adding that he will continue to give away the pineapples he can’t sell.

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A passer-by eats pineapples that farmers in Prachuap Khiri Khan province gave away Wednesday morning.
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Rang Sonkram and two of his fellow pineapple farmers display their fruit.
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Pineapple farmer Rang Sonkram holds up a sign saying ‘free pineapples’ Wednesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
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Pineapple farmers give pineapples to a driver Wednesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
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Oh Wonder-ful: London Alt-Pop Duo Coming to Bangkok

Photo: Oh Wonder / Facebook

Update: The band added its second show on July 31 at DND Club.

BANGKOK — London alt-pop indie duo Oh Wonder will come to Bangkok later this year, concert promoter Viji Corp. announced Wednesday morning.

Famous for “Without You,” “Livewire” and “All We Do,” Oh Wonder consists of Josephine Vander Gucht and Anthony West, who started the band in 2014.

Viji Corp. previously staged a concert by rock legends Gun N’ Roses in February, the organizer Viji Corp is bringing more gigs, this time with be performing in Bangkok for the first time, announced Wednesday morning by organizer Viji Corp.

Tickets will go on sale on May 31 at ThaiTicketMajor.com. The concert will take place at 8pm on Aug. 1 at DND Club on Ekkamai Soi 5/1 and can be reached from BTS Ekkamai.

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FCCT Cancels Event About Missing 1932 Plaque on Junta ‘Orders’

The former plaque, at left, and the new one which replaced it, at right.

BANGKOK — A discussion set for Wednesday evening about the disappearance of a plaque commemorating Thailand’s transition to democracy 85 years ago was ordered canceled on the authority of the military regime, according to the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand.

In an announcement posted online this morning, the club said it was contacted by police on the behalf of “relevant officials” who said the event, Memories of 1932: The Mystery of Thailand’s Missing Plaque, posed a threat to national security and “could be used by unscrupulous individuals to stir up disorder.”

Read: Activist Arrested Attempting to Petition Prayuth on Plaque

“The FCCT disagrees with this assessment,” read the unsigned statement. “However the FCCT has been given to understand that this cancellation is on the orders of the NCPO, and we have no choice but to comply.”

FCCT chairman Dominic Faulder could not immediately be reached for comment.

Wednesday is also World Press Freedom Day, and the downtown clubhouse announced it would instead mark the day with a panel of speakers to discuss the state of media freedom in the kingdom.

The plaque, a small brass peg that for decades sat in the Royal Plaza, was removed early last month and replaced with one bearing royalist inscriptions. No one has publicly taken responsibility for its removal, and the authorities have arrested or detained several people calling for an investigation of its disappearance.

Related stories:
Former Convict Risks Arrest to Petition Prayuth on Plaque
The Curse That Haunted Bangkok 150 Years – Until Now?
Not First Dance For Man Detained Over 1932 Revolution Plaque
City Hall Instructed to Remove 11 CCTVs Before 1932 Plaque Taken
Revolution Plaque: Latest Casualty of 1932 Revolution’s Endangered Legacy
Authorities Respond to Questions About Missing Plaque With Arrests, Silence

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