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Singer’s Illegal E-Payment App Fined 1.8M

Singer Rattapoom ‘Film’ Tokongsup in a promotional image for online service PayAll.

BANGKOK — A celebrity and officers of his company were fined almost 2 million baht for illegally operating an e-payment application on Wednesday.

In addition to the fine for his company PayAll Group, singer-actor Rattapoom “Film” Tokongsup was fined 300,000 baht by the Consumer Protection Board after the central bank reported he was operating the unlicensed service.

On Monday, the Bank of Thailand filed a complaint with the Consumer Protection Board accusing PayAll of violating sections 38 and 52 of the Direct Sales and Marketing Act. A subsequent investigation led to Rattapoom, who rose to fame early last decade as a solo singer, being called in for questioning Wednesday.

The four along with a fifth employee were each fined 300,000 baht, making for a total penalty of 1.8 million baht.

PayAll was registered in 2012 as Nana Corp. International. It changed its name in June to PayAll and registered as a cosmetics and dietary supplements business.

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PayAll was marketed similar to services such as Groupon as a clearinghouse for “proposals, coupons and privileges of merchant payment services, including utilities,” according to a blurb on Google Play. It also allowed customers to hold cash in an electronic wallet linked to their bank account.

Police Maj. Gen. Prasit Chalermwuttisak, Consumer Protection Board secretary, said the company can resume operation if it obtains legal status.

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Junta Chief Derails Railway Leadership

State Railway of Thailand Gov. Wutthichat Kalayanamit poses in May 2016 at the Bangkok Railway Station at Hua Lamphong.

BANGKOK — With a stroke of his pen, junta Chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha on Thursday removed the entire board of the State Railway of Thailand.

Saying the action was taken to improve the unpopular state enterprise’s performance, Prayuth used his self-granted absolute power under Article 44 to replace its board of directors and Gov. Wutthichat Kalayanamit.

The former governor, who was in the position for two years, was moved to an inactive post in the Prime Minister’s Office, a routine form of bureaucratic punishment.

Witthichat was replaced by Anon Luanboriboon, a deputy director general from the Highways Department.

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Review: In Uplifting ‘Hidden Figures,’ Three Women’s Rise

Janelle Monae, from left, Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer in a scene from "Hidden Figures." Photo: Hopper Stone / Twentieth Century Fox via AP

Theodore Melfi’s buoyant “Hidden Figures” is an old-fashioned feel-good movie with powerful contemporary relevance, spearheaded by a trio of unstoppable actresses playing black women who wouldn’t be stopped.

Set in 1961 Virginia, the fact-based “Hidden Figures,” adapted from Margot Lee Shetterly’s non-fiction book, is about three peripheral characters at NASA who made important contributions to the space race. Their workplace, at Langley, is segregated (with separate bathrooms and drinking fountains) and the offices are uniformly run by white males in suits.

But the talent and smarts of mathematician Katherine Johnson (Taraji P. Henson), budding engineer Mary Jackson (Janelle Monae) and computer supervisor Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer) are becoming impossible to ignore.

Read: Who Will Win? Watch Oscars Live Monday Morning at Private Bangkok Cinema

Metaphors are all around. While rockets lift off, the women of “Hidden Figures” strive for their own upward movement. Arithmetic surrounds them, but they’re continuously underestimated.

“That’s NASA for you. Fast with rocket ships, slow with advancement,” says Kirsten Dunst’s manager.

Johnson is pulled out of a pool of computers (human ones, though a room-sized IBM makes a late appearance) and brought into the all-white rocket center to check the trajectories and calculations of the scientists rushing to match Sputnik and lift John Glenn (Glen Powell) into space. Their leader is Al Harrison (a fine, scene-chewing Kevin Costner), who compassionately responds to Johnson’s rise.

But “Hidden Figures,” punctuated by bright original songs by Pharrell Williams (who also collaborated with Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch on the score), avoids many of the typical notes of a civil rights drama and keeps its focus on its three indomitable leads and their characters’ private lives. Nobody would mistake it for a deeply complicated examination of segregation and no one will wonder if Melfi’s film is going to end on a high note.

Instead, “Hidden Figures” is a straightforward, satisfying tale of triumph, full of warmth and crowd-pleasing scenes that its excellent cast lends spirit and verve to. Henson fierily delivers the film’s big, cathartic moment, one that will surely resonate for audiences familiar with her plight. In such scenes, “Hidden Figures” feels both of the ’60s and of now. These are figures that have often been hidden from movie screens, too.

But of the formidable threesome, it’s Monae who most stands out. Following her role in Barry Jenkins’ “Moonlight” (whose Mahershala Ali also appears here, captivatingly as a military officer and love interest), the R&B singer has made an altogether arresting big-screen debut this fall. Regal, powerful and tender, she just might be a full-on Movie Star. The real rocket of “Hidden Figures” is Monae.

“Hidden Figures,” a 20th Century Fox release, is rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America for “thematic elements and some language.” Running time: 126 minutes. Three stars out of four.

Story: Jake Coyle

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Dhammakaya Monks Confront Soldiers Trying to Enter Unfinished Hospital

Dhammakaya monks march to confront soldiers on Thursday.

PATHUM THANI — A monk-spokesman for Wat Dhammakaya on Thursday expressed shock at the sight of soldiers attempting to seize a hospital being built just north of the temple complex.

In an apparent escalation of the ongoing siege of the controversial temple in a bid to capture its fugitive spiritual leader, soldiers were for the first time deployed directly in the search, a shift from their supporting role of the past week.

“We were surprised and stunned when they broke into the gate at dawn,” Dantamano Bhikkhu wrote in English in reply to messages. “Surprised and frightened.”

Read: Another Deadline Collapses, DSI Reopens Negotiations With Dhammakaya

At about 7am a group of soldiers moved on the Boonraksa building north of the temple complex’s northern boundary wall. The building, still under construction, will serve as a hospital for Dhammakaya monks when it is finished.

Soldiers were also seen installing barbed wire to block entry to the building, which is close to one of the temple gates. A large crowd of monks and worshipers soon marched to confront the soldiers and demand that they leave the area.

Several hours later, the soldiers withdrew. The monks followed and blocked the gate to the area around the building with large cement pipes.

Dantamano said he was particularly surprised because the Department of Special Investigation, or DSI, had said soldiers wouldn’t be involved in the search effort.

“Very unexpected to see soldier moving in. DSI promised that soldier would only control the outer blockade,” he wrote.

Police spokesman Krissana Pattanacharoen said the soldiers were acting under DSI orders, which are to search any area former abbot Dhammachayo may be hiding.

“As the DSI said at their news conferences, whatever location looks suspicious must be cleared, so that we can answer questions from society,” Col. Krissana said.

He said police and soldiers operate alongside one another to fulfill orders from the DSI, which is leading the effort to prosecute 72-year-old Dhammachayo.

Since the ruling junta on Thursday declared the temple a restricted area, a combined force of DSI, soldiers and police have surrounded it to search and locate Dhammachayo, who has not been seen in public since he was charged in June.

Crowds of monks and worshipers were still blocking entrances to the temple by Thursday afternoon, defying orders to leave.

Dantamano, the monk-spokesman, said there are more than 30,000 people inside the temple.

“But supplies are reducing,” he said. “We are worried for the devotees. But they still remain firm on not allowing police and soldier in due to lack of trust.”

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Soldiers and monks face off Thursday close to Wat Dhammakaya in Pathum Thani province.
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Soldiers and monks face off Thursday close to Wat Dhammakaya in Pathum Thani province.
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Dhammakaya monks and followers block a gate to Boonraksa building on Thursday.

Related stories:

Inside Wat Dhammakaya, Defenders Say Morale and Mistrust Run High

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To Dispute Pattaya as ‘World’s Sex Capital,’ Police Raid Brothel

A bar scene in Pattaya on Wednesday

BANGKOK — Looking to dispute their city’s reputation as the world’s sex capital, Pattaya police went out Wednesday night and found a room full of prostitutes.

Despite the discovery of illegal sex workers on the second floor of a club, Pattaya’s police commander on Thursday dismissed a report in a British tabloid that approximately one in every five of its permanent residents is a commercial sex worker.

“We don’t have information about such a high number of prostitutes,” police Col. Apichai Krobphet said Thursday, referring to the prostitute population of 27,000 cited by the Mirror. “I don’t know where did they got that from.”

The Mirror story, published online Feb. 16, described the coastal enclave as a “modern-day Sodom and Gomorrah” but did not cite any sources for the figure. The report was picked up by many domestic news outlets and even scored a mention from Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.

Speaking to reporters Tuesday after his weekly cabinet meeting, Prayuth challenged them on why they believed what foreign media wrote. Still, Prayuth also said he ordered raids on the city’s plentiful brothels.

To show their efforts, police Wednesday raided a bar called Club 4, where an illegal, second-floor operation was selling sex to foreign tourists. Owner Chayanuch Laokliew, 36, was charged with pandering.

A fine of 2,000 baht was divided equally between the sex worker and the bar, with each paying half, the city’s deputy district chief said.

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Sex workers found as police raid a bar illegally providing prostitution in Pattaya Wednesday

Speaking to local reporters Wednesday, Pattaya’s police chief said he suspected the news was fed to the tabloid by disgruntled British business groups in the area. He provided no evidence to back the claim.

Contacted Thursday to clarify his claim, Apichart backtracked.

“They might have gotten the wrong information. It must come from a misunderstanding,” he said before claiming he had to go to a meeting and hanging up the phone.

Pattaya is a famous destination for sex tourists, but outside of its red light districts, the area enjoys a dual identity as a vacation spot for Thai families. Over the years, several campaigns have been launched to refashion the city’s reputation as a family-friendly locale.

Thailand has approximately 123,530 commercial sex workers, according to a 2014 UNAIDS report. Tourism Minister Kobkarn Wattanavrangkul last year vowed to bring an end to the sex industry, as she believed that was not what attracts tourists to the country.

In 2016, Pattaya broke its own record, arresting 15 suspected pimps and 2,185 suspected prostitutes, according to provincial police commander Somprasong Yenthuam.

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‘Piggy Bank’ Ate Too Many Coins. Now Chula Vets are Trying to Save Her.

Veterinarian Nantarika Chansue treats Piggy Bank the turtle Wednesday at Chulalongkorn University’s Faculty of Veterinary Science in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Coins thrown into a pond for good fortune turned out to be bad luck for a green sea turtle who ate them. But a reversal of fortunes for the crippled animal, which was crippled and near death, came Wednesday when a Chulalongkorn University vet operated to empty its belly of coins.

Nantarika Chansue, professor of veterinary science, pleaded with people to stop tossing coins into places animals may live in after she discovered the large lump of coins inside the 25-year-old green sea turtle they’ve taken to calling Ormsin, or Piggy Bank.

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Piggy Bank is lifted up for a CT scan of her belly Wednesday at Chulalongkorn University.

“It’s torture for animals after they eat the coins people throw into ponds. Instead of getting merit, you actually commit a sin due to your wrong belief,” Nantarika said. “Please change from throwing coins into the ponds to putting money into donation boxes.”

The turtle was brought into the Royal Thai Navy Sea Turtle Conservation Center in Chonburi province after residents found it in a body of water outside an abandoned building.

Kirin Sarapipatcharoen, conservation center vet, found an unusual lump on its normally flat belly. Suspecting it was a tumor or cyst, he sent it to the university for a CT scan.

At the university, Nantika took charge.

“When we first saw her, she was very still and was letting herself drown. Her left leg wasn’t moving because it was impeded by the lump of coins,” Nantika said. “The scan revealed a mass of coins 20cm wide, pressed into [the abdominal wall] near her stomach. We aren’t sure if they penetrated into her stomach yet. We also found fish bait inside.”201702221612084 20041019161308 e1487826400705

At the moment, Bank is being nourished with supplements so she can survive being anesthetized for surgery within the next two weeks. Her blood will also be tested for possible infection, which might require a blood transfusion.

“We all agreed that the surgery has to happen,” Nantika said. “If we leave it alone, she will die a slow, torturous death.”

Nantarika said temples and zoos should be vigilant about coin-throwing, because she’s personally found coins in more than 20 fish, crocodiles, hippos, turtles and rays.

Nantika’s post detailing the operation on Facebook has been shared more than 12,000 times.


Piggy Bank’s CT scan. Photo: Nantarika Chansue / Facebook

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A CT scan discovers that Piggy Bank struck it rich. The gray lump shows a mass of coins in her gut.
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Piggy Bank at the Sea Turtle Conservation Center.
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Who Will Win? Watch Oscars Live Monday Morning at Private Bangkok Cinema

Scenic artists move Oscar statues out of the sun on Wednesday in Los Angeles. The 89th Academy Awards will be held on Sunday. Photo: Chris Pizzello / Invision / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Will musical dream couple “La La Land” dominate, as expected? Or will Best Picture go to Canadian sci-fi “Arrival” or powerful drama “Moonlight?” Monday will see the annual movie awards nail-biter go down in Hollywood – and a private cinema off Sukhumvit Road.

A small bar-cinema down Soi Sukhumvit 22 will broadcast the show live the 89th Academy Awards from 8am to 11:30am on Monday morning.

Admission is free. Breakfast will be available. The Friese-Greene Club is located about a 10-minute walk from BTS Phrom Phong.

The 89th Academy Awards will take place Sunday evening (PST) at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. “La La Land” received 14 nominations including best actor, best actress, best director and best picture.

That ties a record shared only with 1950 drama “All About Eve” and Jack-and-Rose romance-disaster “Titanic” (1997).

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Trump Administration Lifts Transgender Bathroom Guidance

A new sticker is placed on the door at the ceremonial opening of a gender neutral bathroom last May at Nathan Hale High School in Seattle. Photo: Elaine Thompson / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Transgender students on Wednesday lost federal protections that allowed them to use school bathrooms and locker rooms matching their gender identities, as the Trump administration stepped into a long-simmering national debate.

The administration came down on the side of states’ rights, lifting Obama-era federal guidelines that had been characterized by Republicans as an example of overreach.

Without the Obama directive, it will be up to states and school districts to interpret federal anti-discrimination law and determine whether students should have access to restrooms in accordance with their expressed gender identity and not just their biological sex.

“This is an issue best solved at the state and local level,” Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said. “Schools, communities and families can find  and in many cases have found  solutions that protect all students.”

In a letter to the nation’s schools, the Justice and Education departments said the earlier guidance “has given rise to significant litigation regarding school restrooms and locker rooms.”

The agencies withdrew the guidance to “in order to further and more completely consider the legal issues involved.”

Anti-bullying safeguards would not be affected by the change, according to the letter. “All schools must ensure that all students, including LGBT students, are able to learn and thrive in a safe environment,” it said.

It was not clear what immediate impact the change would have on schools, as a federal judge in Texas put a temporary hold on the Obama guidance soon after it was issued  after 13 states sued.

Even without that hold, the guidance carried no force of law. But transgender rights advocates say it was useful and necessary to protect students from discrimination. Opponents argued it was federal overreach and violated the safety and privacy of other students.

The White House said “returning power to the states paves the way for an open and inclusive process to take place at the local level with input from parents, students, teachers and administrators.”

The reversal is a setback for transgender rights groups, which had been urging Trump to keep the guidelines in place. Advocates say federal law will still prohibit discrimination against students based on their gender or sexual orientation.

Still, they say lifting the Obama directive puts children in harm’s way.

“Reversing this guidance tells trans kids that it’s OK with the Trump administration and the Department of Education for them to be abused and harassed at school for being trans,” said American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten.

Activists protested the move Wednesday outside the White House. “Respect existence or expect resistance,” read one placard.

Conservatives hailed the change, saying the Obama directives were illegal and violated the rights of fixed-gender students, especially girls who did not feel safe changing clothes or using restrooms next to anatomical males.

“Our daughters should never be forced to share private, intimate spaces with male classmates, even if those young men are struggling with these issues,” said Vicki Wilson, a member of Students and Parents for Privacy. “It violates their right to privacy and harms their dignity.”

White House spokesman Sean Spicer denied media reports that DeVos, who has been criticized for her stance on LGBT issues, had opposed the change but was overruled by Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Spicer said any disagreement was merely over wording and timing.

“There is no daylight between anybody,” Spicer said, adding that DeVos was “100 percent” on board with the decision.

The Obama administration’s guidance was based on its determination that Title IX, the federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in education, also applies to gender identity.

The guidance did not sufficiently explain its interpretation of that law, Sessions said in a statement.

“Congress, state legislatures and local governments are in a position to adopt appropriate policies or laws addressing this issue,” he said.

Legal experts said the change in position could impact pending court cases involving the federal sex discrimination law, including a case to be heard by the Supreme Court in March involving Gavin Grimm, a transgender teen who was denied bathroom access in Virginia.

The justices could decide not to hear the case and direct lower courts to decide that issue.

In a phone interview with the AP, Grimm said of the Trump action: “It’s not positive. It has the possibility of hurting transgender students and transgender people. We’re going to keep fighting like we have been and keep fighting for the right thing.”

A patchwork of state laws could continue to emerge as a result of the change. Fifteen states have explicit protections for transgender students in their state laws, and many individual school districts in other states have adopted policies that cover such students on the basis of their gender identity, said Sarah Warbelow, legal director of the Human Rights Campaign. Just one state, North Carolina, has enacted a law restricting access to bathrooms in government-owned buildings to the sex that appears on a person’s birth certificate. Lawmakers in more than 10 states are considering similar legislation, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Story: Maria Danilova, Sadie Gurman

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Activists Fear for Fate of Cute Baby Cow in Video

Still image of newborn calf Pitcher Diego. Image: Yankee Farmer's Market / Facebook

CONCORD, New Hampshire — So much for sharing the good news about a newborn calf named Pitcher Diego.

A New Hampshire farm that posted a video of the Scottish Highland calf is coming under fire from animal rights supporters who don’t want the animal to be slaughtered.

The video, posted on Facebook, has gotten nearly 13 million views and sparked a heated debate about eating meat. Many of the comments against the video are from people angry because they think the calf will be slaughtered or had been ripped away from its mother.

The Concord Monitor reports Yankee Farmer’s Market in Warner posted the video of Pitcher Diego, who was born during a snowstorm. In it, the calf tied up with a red rope stares into the cameras as he is warmed by an off-screen hair dryer. He appears to quietly moo during the 21-second video.

Some people are trying to drive down the farm’s reviews using Facebook’s rating system. Several also have offered to adopt the calf.

“I’m not sure how you get that much negativity out of a picture of a baby cow,” said Farm owner Brian Farmer, who has 30 head of Scottish Highland cattle and 60 head of American buffalo.

Farmer said he was taken aback by the negative reaction, given his animals roam and graze freely in pastures and are raised without antibiotics or hormones. He says the calf has been returned to its mother, and its thick neck, strong body and gentle disposition make it a good candidate for breeding – rather than a trip to the butcher.

Farmer said Pitcher Diego will be registered as a breeding animal as part of the farm’s effort rebuild its herd of Scottish Highland cattle that have been raised on his other farm, Pitcher Mountain Farm in Stoddard, for five decades. The herd had dwindled from 80 to 12 but has since rebounded to 30 after Farmer took over the farm in 2013. The cattle spend the bulk of their time at three locations on 300 acres.

“We are trying to do it the right way and not mass producing animals. We are trying to give them the best life possible,” Farmer said. “When you raise them that way, they are healthy and happy. When you consume that product, it’s a healthy product.”

Story: Michael Casey

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4 Richest Indonesians Wealthier Than Poorest 100 Million

A 2011 photo showing Indonesian rupiahs. Photo: JasonParis / Flickr

JAKARTA  A report on inequality in Indonesia says its four richest men now have more wealth than 100 million of the country’s poorest people.

The report by Oxfam says Indonesia, with a population of more than 250 million, has the sixth-worst inequality in the world.

It blames “market fundamentalism” that has allowed the richest to capture most of the benefits of nearly two decades of strong economic growth and pervasive gender inequality.

The report says extreme poverty has declined sharply since 2000 but 93 million Indonesians still live on less than USD $3.10 a day, which is defined by the World Bank as the moderate poverty line.

Oxfam says social instability could increase if the government doesn’t tackle the gap between rich and poor.

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