27.2 C
Bangkok
Monday, June 29, 2026
Home Blog Page 2450

X-Ray Tech Jailed for Sexually Assaulting Patient

Kiattipoj Intaseth sits at a police station on Monday.

BANGKOK — A technician was fired from his job and behind bars Tuesday on suspicion of molesting a patient in a hospital X-Ray room.

Kiattipoj Intaseth was arrested and charged Monday for the assault, which took place at Muang Samut Paknam Hospital in southeast metro Bangkok. The 27-year-old suspect is now awaiting trial in prison, his bail denied by the court, according to a police officer in charge of the case.

“He’s now in custody,” said Lt. Col. Somyot Damchan, deputy chief of Samut Prakan police.

The victim told police Monday that she was admitted to the hospital at about 2am after a motorcycle accident left her dazed with a possible concussion. She was lying on a gurney and waiting for a brain scan when Kiattipoj, the X-ray tech, undressed and fondled her, according to the complaint.

The victim, whose identity is withheld as a possible victim of sexual assault, reportedly woke up and screamed for help, prompting Kiattipoj to flee. He was arrested later in the day after she filed her complaint.

Somyot said the hospital informed police Tuesday that it had expelled Kiattipoj.

Paraded before reporters today, Kiattipoj said he confessed to the charge, saying he was “confused” and exhausted from long hours of work.

He was charged with committing an indecent act on a person unable to resist. The charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail.

Advertisement

Chula Students Want #ChulassicPark-Era Uniform Rule to Go Extinct

Dinosaurs are students fleeing a school administrator-cum-T. Rex in a still image from a parody of a controversial dress code at Chulalongkorn University’s Faculty of Engineering. Image: Parimeth Wongsatayanon / Facebook
Students sign a petition at about noon on Wednesday at Chulalongkorn University. Photo: Thapakorn Keawlangka
Students sign a petition at about noon on Wednesday at Chulalongkorn University. Photo: Thapakorn Keawlangka

BANGKOK — Chulalongkorn University engineering students hit back Wednesday against a rule that uniforms must be worn at all times, even outside the classroom, at the peril of their academic standing.

Undergrads were collecting signatures today to overturn the rule a day after it went into effect, and by Wednesday afternoon the internet rallied to their cause with a top-trending hashtag: #Chulassicpark.

“We got 256 signatures today,” said Thapakorn Keawlangka, who set up a table to collect signatures petitioning against the enforced dress code. “I hope to get 300, even 500.”

“Starting Feb. 7, 2016, the Faculty of Engineering, Chulalongkorn University is ready to dress according to regulations. Breaking the rules will be punished by deducting marks for behavior and disqualification from scholarships and academic honors.” Photo: Thapakorn Keawlangka
“Starting Feb. 7, 2016, the Faculty of Engineering, Chulalongkorn University is ready to dress according to regulations. Breaking the rules will be punished by deducting marks for behavior and disqualification from scholarships and academic honors.” Photo: Thapakorn Keawlangka

Thapakorn, 21, said his classmates stepped onto campus Tuesday sans uniforms and had their student IDs confiscated by patrolling officials who threatened to disqualify them from academic honors.

Under the newly enforced rule dating back to 1984, students must wear their nisit, or undergraduate, uniforms on campus even if they are not attending class or it is a national holiday. If caught out of uniform – even in a Chula workshop smock – students will be punished.

“I would understand if it’s rules about what to wear in the classroom, but enforcing what to wear outside of it, then taking away our student IDs is not okay,” Thapakorn said. “ I don’t agree with uniforms or dress code rules. We have rights to our bodies.”

The kingdom’s oldest university, Chulalongkorn considers itself an elite institution, and its values lean conservative. Campaigns calling attention to its strict uniform policies are a constant year-round.

Thapakorn and his friends plan to submit their petition and a letter of complaint to the Faculty of Engineering’s dean on Tuesday.

Their campaign got a lot of attention online, with #Chulassicpark tweeted nearly 17,000 times by Wednesday afternoon, mostly by people calling out the university for pre-historic values.

“What the hell they think a university is? Some kind of dumb-ass soldier camp managed by a mentally challenged wannabe dictator? How … 1984 of them,” Facebook user Manaporn Lorpensri wrote.

Student activist Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal at a petition booth to oppose dress code rules Wednesday. Photo: Pakpoom Joe Thaweesitthichat / Facebook
Student activist Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal at a petition booth to oppose dress code rules Wednesday. Photo: Pakpoom Joe Thaweesitthichat / Facebook

 

Before long #Chulassicpark was taken to cinematic extreme, with Chula engineering workshop smocks edited into an iconic Jurassic Park scene by user Parimeth Wongsatayanon. In it, student-dinosaurs flee a T. Rex that is Student Affairs.

 


Riffing on a recent lakorn moment pinging through the zeitgeist, a character responds to the controversy to say, ‘You’re overthinking it.’

 


Twitter user @Thecuriousdan write: “If not wearing nisit uniforms destroys Chula’s reputation, then Chula’s reputation is weak to begin with, with nothing to show after a hundred fucking years.”


Related stories:

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

Advertisement

Malaysia Seizes Pig-Hair Brushes After Muslims Complain

Domestic trade enforcement officers check on the paint brushes that are believed to be made from pig bristles at a hardware store outside, Wednesday in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Daniel Chan / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian authorities have seized thousands of paint brushes suspected of containing pig bristles after consumers in this Muslim-majority nation demanded a crackdown, officials said Wednesday.

Pigs and dogs are considered unclean by many Muslims, who make up some 60 percent of Malaysia’s 30 million people. It is illegal in the country to sell products made from any part of a pig or a dog, unless the goods are labeled and kept separately.

Zarif Anwar, an enforcement official with the domestic trade and consumer ministry, said that since Tuesday, officials nationwide have been inspecting shops selling paint brushes for art and commercial use.

He said the brushes seized were not labeled and found to have a different texture from other brushes and frayed ends, signs that they could be made from pig bristles. In some cases, the brushes had a “halal” certification that had expired, he said. The halal tag is issued by an Islamic government body to certify products safe to be used by Muslims.

The seized brushes will be sent to a lab to be examined, Zarif said.

“We want to protect consumers and we want traders to be aware of the religious sensitivity involved. This is a big offense,” Zarif told The Associated Press.

He warned that traders who flout the rule face up to three years in jail, a fine of 100,000 ringgit (USD $22,522) or both.

Conservative attitudes have been on the rise in Malaysia. A wide range of products have been certified halal, from mineral water to a newly launched internet browser, to appeal to Muslims.

The Muslim Consumers Association of Malaysia called for stricter enforcement not just for paint brushes, but for other products as well. An official from the group, Nadzim Johan, said the association also received complaints that culinary brushes used in eateries may also contain pig bristles.

“The key issue here is about labeling,” he said. “We want Muslim consumers to be forewarned. It’s not fair to deceive them.”

Advertisement

Voice TV’s ‘Daily Dose’ Ordered Off Air for Discussion of Courts & Military

Nattakorn Devakula in a promotional image for Voice TV's 'The Daily Dose.'

BANGKOK — A news director at Voice TV said Wednesday it is discussing how to “tone down” a popular news analysis program after broadcast regulators ordered it suspended for seven days.

Prateep Kingsib, senior director of Voice TV news, said the station had no choice but to comply after a state broadcast regulatory committee voted 3-to-1 to suspend The Daily Dose program for one week on the grounds it “caused division in society and presented partial facts” in violation of the ruling junta’s order No. 97/2014.

The lone dissenting commissioner, Supinya Klangmarong, pointed out in a Tuesday night Tweet that the broadcast committee is “very quick and strong” to punish media for political content but slow to protect consumer rights from being trampled.

Prateep said he disagreed with the ban, which came in response to a Jan. 23 segment of the show discussing the roles of the judiciary and military.

The decree by the junta, which styles itself the National Council for Peace and Order, was passed after the May 2014 coup. It bans broadcast media from criticizing the junta, its officials and related people.

Prateep said the program merely presented facts, with host Nattakorn Devakula merely discussing the the judiciary and the military between 2006 and 2014 on his daily program.

“We are confident that our program was truthful. But we have to accept the decision. We have to adjust the program to reduce the risk,” Prateep said. “We’re discussing it.”

Host Nattakorn Devakula, whose father was a deputy prime minister of the present regime, said he’s not discouraged as it “comes with the territory” of living under military dictatorship.

“Censorship of this type is never fair, especially when the regulatory agency can make an anchor disappear for a week by a simple order,” Nattakorn said.

He noted the chilling effect of such censorship means he will “have to be more careful choosing my words” when he returns to the air, as his ultimate goal is “to stay employed” and “fight for the freedom to express in the long term.”

Voice TV is owned by the son of ousted and fugitive Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and has been censored by the authorities acting through the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission before.

In August the channel voluntarily pulled a pundit and host Nattakorn from the air to avoid censure. It didn’t work – two weeks later regulators ordered its Wake Up News program off the air for allegedly affecting state security and “the good morale of society.”

The suspension will go into effect when the station receives formal notification.

Related stories:

Voice TV Deepens Self-Censorship by Cutting Political Coverage

Voice TV Pressured to Pull Pundits For Rattling Junta

Advertisement

Thousands Sick, Schools Closed as Flu Epidemic Hits Thailand

Students wear facemasks during a flu season in a January 2015 file photo.

BANGKOK — If you’re reading this between tissues and sneezes, you’re not alone.

Thailand’s in the grips of a particularly virulent influenza season that has already afflicted nearly 5,000 people and forced some schools to close, an official from the Disease Control Department said Wednesday.

As of Wednesday morning, 4,800 people were reported sick to the department with the Type A flu that is surging worldwide. No fatalities have been reported so far, said disease control spokesman Vichan Pawan. The Public Health Ministry estimates up to 13,000 people will have fallen sick by the end of this month.

Vichan said the annual flu season would continue through March and return later in the year.

Three million doses of flu shots are also available for free, though they will be prioritized for pregnant women, children, elderly people and those with pre-existing medical conditions. Otherwise they can be obtained for a fee at most hospitals.

At least six primary schools were closed due to a high number of infected students, he added. They include Satit Chulalongkorn in downtown Bangkok, according to a report on Bangkok Business News.

Health Minister Piyasakol Sakolsatayadorn told Thai PBS on Monday that at least 13,000 people are expected to have contracted the flu by the end of February.

Vichan confirmed the current epidemic is caused by the Type A strain of influenza.

“This is not a new type,” he said.

Vichan added that number of people sickened with flu each year has risen steadily for years, largely due to denser population and increased migration.

He advised members of the public to cover their mouths and noses when they sneeze, wash their hands often and, most important of all, take days off work or school once flu symptoms start to show.

Advertisement

Free Tourist Visas Extended Through August

Siam Paragon execs launch a Chinese New Year event Feb. 9, 2016, to welcome Chinese tourists to the Bangkok shopping mall.

BANGKOK — Tourists from 21 countries can obtain free visas until the end of August, the interim cabinet decided Tuesday.

The cabinet extended the free visa program six months, three months longer than that requested by tourism minister Kobkarn Wattanavrangkul last month.

Government spokesman Sansern Keawkamnerd said the free tourist visa program reaped a 12 percent increase in arrivals since it was implemented in December. The loss of 1.06 million baht in visa fees was offset by an estimated 6.45 million baht in tourist spending, he said.

But Sansern said the program does cause losses and could not go on forever.

“Some parties have been saying that there have been more tourists, the government gets more VAT tax and the economy will improve,” Sansern said.

But the loss of visa fees and other overhead means the tourism industry should not rely on the government but do its part to draw more tourists.

The free tourist visa program, in place since the beginning of January, waives the 1,000 baht fee tourists pay to obtain visas abroad, and reduces the visa on arrival fee by half to 1,000 baht from 2,000 baht.

The attempt to stimulate tourism comes after officials said their September crackdown on so-called 0-baht Chinese tours and the October death of King Bhumibol resulted in flagging arrivals.

In January, arrivals of three million visitors were up over the previous year by nine percent, generating 160 million baht in revenue, according to the tourism ministry.

The 21 countries included in the visa incentive program are: Andorra, Bulgaria, Bhutan, China, Cyprus, Ethiopia, Fiji, India, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Maldives, Malta, Mauritius, Papua New Guinea, Romania, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan.

Related stories:

Cabinet to Weigh Extending Free Tourist Visa Program

Huanying! Tourists From China and 18 Nations Get Visa Discount

Official Optimism on Tourism Tempered by the Numbers

Advertisement

DeVos Marginally Wins Senate Vote, Becomes US Education Secretary

Vice President Mike Pence presiding over the Senate on Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Image: Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Charter school advocate Betsy DeVos won confirmation as education secretary Tuesday by the slimmest of margins, pushed to approval only by the historic tie-breaking vote of Vice President Mike Pence.

Two Republicans, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, joined Democrats in a marathon effort to derail the nomination of the wealthy Republican donor. The Senate historian said Pence’s vote was the first by a vice president to break a 50-50 tie on a Cabinet nomination.

Despite the win, DeVos emerged bruised from the highly divisive nomination fight. Opposed by half the Senate, she faced criticism, even ridicule for lack of experience and confusion during her confirmation hearing. At one point, she said some schools should have guns because of the threat of grizzly bears.

And there has been scathing opposition from teachers unions and civil rights activists over her support of charter schools and her conservative religious ideology.

President Donald Trump accused Democrats of seeking to torpedo education progress. In a tweet before the vote, he wrote, “Betsy DeVos is a reformer, and she is going to be a great Education Sec. for our kids!”

DeVos was sworn in hours after the Senate vote by Pence, who told the new Cabinet member: “I wasn’t just voting for you. Having seen your devotion to improving the quality of education for some of our most vulnerable children across the nation for so many years, I was also casting a vote for America’s children.”

“I can tell you, my vote for Betsy DeVos was the easiest vote I ever cast,” Pence said.

DeVos released a statement promising to be “a tireless advocate for all students.”

“Partnering with students, parents, educators, state and local leaders, Congress and all stakeholders, we will improve education options and outcomes across America,” she said.

She now takes the helm of a department charged with implementing laws affecting the nation’s public schools with no direct experience with traditional public schools. Her opponents noted that she has no experience running public schools, nor has she attended one or sent her children to one

She also will have to address several hot-button issues in higher education, such as rising tuition costs, growing student debt and the troubled for-profit colleges, many of which have closed down, leaving students with huge loans and without a good education or job prospects.

Close attention also will be paid to how DeVos deals with sexual assault and freedom of speech on campuses.

Ahead of Tuesday’s vote, emotions ran high as constituents jammed senators’ phone lines. Protesters gathered outside the Capitol, including one person in a grizzly bear costume to ridicule DeVos.

Democrats and labor unions vigorously fought the nomination, suggesting that DeVos would defund traditional public schools by diverting taxpayers’ money to charter and private institutions. They cited her financial interest in organizations pushing for charter schools, though she has said she will divest those interests.

Collins and Murkowski said they feared her focus on charter schools will undermine remote public schools in their states.

“President Trump’s swamp got a new billionaire today,” the Democratic National Committee said in a statement. “Millions of teachers, parents and students could not have made their opposition to Betsy DeVos’ confirmation any clearer  they do not want someone whose only education experience is dismantling public schools.”

DeVos supporters, however, saw her confirmation as an occasion to breathe new life into a troubled American school system and a chance to shift power from Washington to the local level.

“She has been a leader in the movement for public charter schools  the most successful reform of public education during the last 30 years,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, the chairman of the Education Committee. “And she has worked tirelessly to help low-income children have more choices of better schools.”

DeVos has her work cut out.

“She will have to make it a priority to reach out to educators and education policy makers to reassure them that she is committed to working to improve education for all students including the vast majority who attend and will continue to attend traditional public schools,” said Martin West, associate professor of education at Harvard University. “My view is that she is committed to doing that.”

In addition to DeVos, Republicans hope to confirm a series of other divisive nominees this week: Alabama Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions as attorney general, GOP Rep. Tom Price of Georgia as health secretary and financier Steven Mnuchin as treasury secretary.

Story: Maria Danilova

Advertisement

Angry Frenchman Fires Gun at Russian in Phuket. Both Arrested.

PHUKET — A retired French soldier is due for a court appearance in Phuket province for firing a handgun during a fistfight with a Russian tourist on Tuesday, police said.

Garard Pecherstorfer, 63, was charged with firearms-related offenses while the tourist, Sergey Antonov, was also charged with assault over what police said was a dispute over a rented car that escalated into violence. An officer in charge of the case ruled out any connections to the transnational crime Phuket is known for.

“There were no mafia involved in this,” Chaiwat Uikum, chief of Patong Police Station, said Wednesday. “This is a personal dispute and has nothing to do with mafia, I can guarantee you.”

According to the police officer, Antonov rented a car from a shop owned by Pecherstorfer’s Thai wife in January after entering Thailand on a tourist visa. He never paid. The Russian tourist later contacted the shop to extend the rental period and promised to pay, but the shop refused on the grounds the passport he deposited as a guarantee had already expired, Col. Chaiwat said.

Pecherstorfer and his wife confronted Antonov on Tuesday about the late payment, and according to Chaiwat, the Russian tourist ended up punching Pecherstorfer during a heated argument, which prompted the Frenchman to pull out a handgun and fire two shots. No one was hurt.

Upon seeing the gun, Antonov charged at Pecherstorfer, disarmed him and held him down until officers arrived, the police colonel said.

The two were then taken to Patong Police station and charged.

Chaiwat described Pecherstorfer as a former soldier in the French armed forces who has lived in Thailand for 14 years.

He said both suspects will have to appear in court soon but did not give any dates.

“We will be fair to both sides,” Chaiwat said.

Advertisement

UN Chief ‘Horrified’ at Alleged Abuses by Myanmar Forces

The then United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres speaks in 2015 during a news conference at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. Photo: Salvatore Di Nolfi / Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations says Secretary-General Antonio Guterres “was horrified” at the recent report on alleged sexual abuses by security forces in Myanmar against the Muslim Rohingya ethnic minority.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric gave the U.N. chief’s reaction Tuesday to the report by U.S.-based Human Rights Watch.

The rights group alleged that soldiers and Border Guard Police took part in rape, gang rape, invasive body searches and sexual assaults while conducting counter-insurgency operations in western Rakhine state from October through mid-December.

Human Rights Watch urged Myanmar’s government on Monday to back an independent international investigation.

The estimated 1 million Rohingya face official and social discrimination in Buddhist-majority Myanmar. Most are regarded as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. Many fled home during communal violence in 2012 and over 100,000 live in refugee camps.

Advertisement

Leicester Offers ‘Unwavering Support’ to Manager Ranieri

An undated image from video of Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri. Image: osservatorionline / Vimeo

LONDON  The on-field turmoil engulfing ailing English Premier League champion Leicester led to the club issuing a public show of support for manager Claudio Ranieri on Tuesday.

Leicester has imploded since winning the league so unexpectedly last May and is only a point above the relegation zone having lost 13 of its 24 games.

Just a month after Ranieri collected the FIFA coach of the year award, there has been mounting public discussion over Ranieri’s suitability to continue leading Leicester while it scraps to avoid dropping out of the league.

But the club issued a vote of confidence in Ranieri in a bid to draw a line under such doubt.

“In light of recent speculation, Leicester City Football Club would like to make absolutely clear its unwavering support for its first team manager, Claudio Ranieri,” the club said.

“While there is a collective appreciation from everyone at the club that recent form needs to improve, the unprecedented success achieved in recent seasons has been based firmly on stability, togetherness and determination to overcome even the greatest of challenges.”

Ranieri’s immediate priority is keeping Leicester in the FA Cup when it faces second-tier side Derby in a replay on Wednesday.

“The entire club is and will remain united behind its manager and behind its players, collectively and firmly focused on the challenges ahead,” Leicester’s statement concluded.

The backing was issued just before Ranieri faced reporters. The 65-year-old Italian said he did not ask for the public endorsement from the club, which is owned by Thai retail tycoon Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha.

“With this it finishes all the speculation,” Ranieri said. “For me, my job is always the same – focus on the next match. For me it’s important to try (to find) the right solution for my players, that’s it.”

Story: Rob Harris

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
27.2 ° C
27.2 °
27.2 °
82 %
3.9kmh
100 %
Mon
34 °
Tue
34 °
Wed
33 °
Thu
35 °
Fri
27 °