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Behold ‘Changchui,’ Fashionista’s ‘Careless’ Dream

Update: The venue will officially open on June 23.

BANGKOK — On a spacious 11 rai of land in western Bangkok sits a collection of fabulous half-finished structures and, at the center of it all, the silver fuselage of a Lockheed L-1011 TriStar.

The aircraft is a talisman anchoring the land, hopes and dreams of a man who put aside more sensible plans to build a communal hangout for all the city to enjoy.

He calls it “Changchui.” What sounds like the name of a secret Chinese neighborhood in fact roughly translates to “so careless.” Asked about the strange yet catchy name, Somchai “Lim” Songwattana said it’s what defines Thailand best – the laid-back, low-key characters who call it home.

“If I named this place ‘Chang Somboon Bab’ (So Perfect), do you think it would suit this country?” he said, answering a question with a question he then answered by describing the mess of street-stall choked sidewalks and ambivalence toward punctuality.

“Once I saw a worker place a window upside down, I wanted to knuckle his head. But when I looked again, it was even more beautiful than I thought,” he said.

Lim is the owner of Flynow, an established fashion brand. He owns the land and originally planned to erect his company’s offices there. At least until he blew up those plans in favor of building a hangout place with a little of everything.

Just as the sands are always whiter over the next dune for beach bums, the culturally literate and trend-sensitive urban ever search for the perfect market to match their values, satisfy their needs and telegraph their identity.

Lim’s vision is to leave a legacy that pushes all those buttons: a gallery, museum, theatre, cinema, concert hall, coworking space, cafes, restaurants, barbershop, bookstore and night market and more.

In other words: the Ultimate Hipster Destination Market.

Changchui

Although Lim has been in the fashion industry for decades, he grew up in a simple wooden house in a friendly neighborhood in Nakhon Sawan province. He developed a passion for aircraft after his grandparents gave him a model plane at a young age.

Now, at 57, he’s pouring his childhood into Changchui’s architectural features, along with his collections of everything from cupboards and movie displays to theater seating.

The wide-body, former Thai Sky Airlines jet was bought and relocated from Don Mueang Airport then painstakingly reassembled on site. He calls it Na-Oh – something to do with Noah’s Ark, he says – and will transform it into a museum (for his stuffed animals) and a restaurant that can squeeze in up to 80 customers.

How much is he spending to do it all? He wouldn’t say.

Since October he’s built more about 12 homes, all with old wood windows and doors and reclaimed corrugated metal, to house Changchui’s functions. Look closely and find things like a 60-year-old teak window, all selected from his treasures.

“I’m passionate about the past. That’s why I chose to use things from the past for the structures,” said Lim, who sports a scraggly goatee and taut top-knot.

Some of the structures are already reserved by some of his well-known partners: a theatre for contemporary dancer Pichet Klunchun, a cinema for Thida Plitpolkarnpim’s Documentary Club and a toy museum housing the personal collections of singer-songwriter Cheewin “Boyd” Kosiyabong. Another will serve as a gallery showcasing the works of photographer Nopadon Kaosam-ang.

Changchui

Other things to come will be a vintage men’s barber, a cafeteria-gallery, a inverse-greenhouse for growing exotic cold-weather plants and a restaurant, named after controversial “Insects in the Backyard,” which will serve insect-based food.

Lim has a lot planned. Looking across an empty space stretching a soi, he sees 100 or so stalls filling the space, selling street food, drinks, DIY crafts and whatnots.

And most of all, all the careless souls he hopes come bring it to life.

“If we think we’re careless, we have a chance to do better,” Lim said.

Changchui will officially open on June 23. It will be located near the Bang Bamru Railway Station on Sirindhorn Road in Bang Phlat district.

Somchai ‘Lim’ Songwattana on Tuesday at Changchui
Somchai ‘Lim’ Songwattana on Tuesday at Changchui

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Changchui

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‘Benz Racing’ Surrenders to Narcotics Cops

Akarakit ‘Benz’ Worarojcharoendet walks into the Narcotics Suppression Bureau in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A celebrity husband who vanished with his Lamborghini hours before police raided his property in search of links to a Laotian drug kingpin turned himself in Friday afternoon to the Narcotics Suppression Bureau.

Amid a crush of media, Akarakit Worarojcharoendet, aka “Benz Racing,” turned himself in at about 3:40pm, one day after his moto racing shop was raided by officers on suspicion his 20-million baht car was among hundreds bought with drug trafficking suspect Xaysana Keopimpha’s dirty money.

Read: Soap Star’s Husband Investigated for Laundering Drug Money

Xaysana was arrested late last month at Suvarnabhumi Airport and officers have been investigating his connections in the kingdom.

Akarakit said he went there to clarify his innocence and answer questions about how he came to possess the 20 million baht Lamborghini.

The car had been confiscated and searched Thursday night. Police said its license plates had been switched, as they did not match the tax registration sticker. Two of Akarakit’s big bikes were also impounded by police last night.

Police said they are also investigating other celebrities and people linked to Xaysana.

Related stories:

Soap Star’s Husband Investigated for Laundering Drug Money

 

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Man Shot, Wounded After Attacking Soldiers Outside Louvre

Police officers cordon off the area next to the Louvre museum in Paris Friday. Photo: Thibault Camus / AP.

PARIS — A knife-wielding man shouting “Allahu akbar” attacked French soldiers on patrol near the Louvre Museum Friday in what officials described as a suspected terror attack. The soldiers first tried to fight off the attacker and then opened fire, shooting him five times.

The attack at an entrance to a shopping mall that extends beneath the museum sowed panic and again highlighted the threat French officials say hangs over the country, which was hit repeatedly by extremist attacks in 2015 and 2016.

A police union official said the attacker was carrying two backpacks and had two machetes. He said the man launched himself at the soldiers when they told him that he could not bring his bags into the Carrousel du Louvre shopping mall underneath the world-famous museum where the “Mona Lisa” hangs.

“That’s when he got the knife out and that’s when he tried to stab the soldier,” said the official, Yves Lefebvre.

The four soldiers first tried to fight off the attacker before opening fire, said Benoit Brulon, a spokesman for the military force that patrols Paris and its major tourist attractions.

The French interior ministry said anti-terrorism prosecutors are investigating. There were no immediate details about the identity of the attacker. “Allahu akbar” is the Arabic phrase for “God is great.”

The patrols — numbering about 3,500 soldiers in the Paris area — were instituted following the January 2015 attacks on Paris’ satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and reinforced after Nov. 13 suicide bomb and gun attacks that left 130 people dead at the city’s Bataclan concert hall and other sites.

The attacker slightly injured one of the soldiers, in the scalp, officials said. Another soldier opened fire, gravely wounding the attacker.

“He is wounded in the stomach,” said police chief Michel Cadot. “He is conscious and he was moving.”

Checks of the man’s two backpacks found they didn’t contain any explosives, he said.

Cadot said a second person who was “acting suspiciously” also was arrested but appears not to have been linked to the attack.

Restaurant worker Sanae Hadraoui, 32, was waiting for breakfast at the Louvre’s restaurant complex when she heard the first gunshot, followed by another and then a couple more.

“I hear a shot. Then a second shot. Then maybe two more. I hear people screaming, “Evacuate! Evacuate!”

“They told us to evacuate. I told my colleagues at the McDonalds. We went downstairs and then took the emergency exit.”

Hadraoui, who has worked at the Louvre for seven years, said the evacuation was orderly. She was smoking a cigarette when her managers told her people were going back inside.

The museum in the center of Paris is one of the French capital’s biggest tourist attractions. Police sealed off entrances around where the attack took place and closed the area to vehicles, snarling traffic in a busy part of central Paris. Officers shooed away confused tourists.

Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet said about 1,000 people were inside the actual museum and were held inside in safe areas before the all-clear was given and they were allowed to move around as normal again.

Exterminator Olivier Majewski says he was just leaving his scooter in the parking lot beneath the Louvre when he saw a crush of people running and screaming “there’s been a terror attack.” The 53-year-old says he hid for about 15 minutes before gingerly making his way upstairs.

“They were panicked,” he said.

Story: John Leicester, Raphael Satter and Angela Charlton

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Top Cop Defies Order to Clarify Salary From Brewery

Bangkok police chief Sanit Mahathavorn warns motorists not to catch Pikachu or other Pokemon while driving on Aug. 21 in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Both the chief of Bangkok police and the nation’s largest beverage company failed to respond to a state watchdog’s demand they clarify their financial relationship.

Sanit Mahathavorn and ThaiBev were given a week to explain whether Sanit was still a paid adviser to the company, which produces alcohol under the Chang and SangSom brands. The deadline expired Thursday.

The secretary-general of the state ombudsman’s office, Raksagecha Chaechai, said Thursday that his organization would have to discuss its response, saying it could choose to renew its request to both parties.

“If it’s necessary for them to gather documents, they could ask to extend the deadline,” he said Thursday. “But if they neglected to respond, they might not know that’s a criminal offense.”

Read: Bangkok’s Top Cop Ordered To Clarify Salary From Brewery

Failing to comply with the ombudsman is a crime punishable by up to six months in jail and a 10,000 baht fine, Raksagecha said.

The request was made public on Jan. 25, but the seven day timer didn’t start until Jan. 26 when Sanit and ThaiBev received notification, Raksagecha said.

The request came after it was disclosed that Sanit, who was appointed chief of the metropolitan police in October, had been receiving 50,000 baht every month from ThaiBev since 2015. ThaiBev, one of the nation’s two major brewers, said he was employed as a consultant.

His total annual remuneration is 1,425,600 baht per month, according to financial disclosures filed with the National Anti-Corruption Commission, or NACC.

Members of the public were incensed at the apparent conflict of interest, but police representatives have steadfastly denied there is anything wrong with the arrangement.

Despite daily appearances in front of the media at police new conferences or crime “re-enactments,” Sanit has refused to discuss the issue. He could not be reached via his mobile number on Thursday and Friday. A staff member at the Metropolitan Police Bureau said he was out of the office Friday.

As for ThaiBev, a spokeswoman who identified herself only as Fon said Friday they had no information.

“The PR team doesn’t have any information on the issue,” she said. “Poo yai have been discussing it.”

The ombudsman’s office also asked the NACC to respond whether Sanit had disclosed his ThaiBev allowance to them. Raksagecha said it also has yet to respond.

Additional reporting Chayanit Itthipongmaetee

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Bangkok’s Top Cop Ordered To Clarify Salary From Brewery
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Unable to Meet Rules, Tigerair Ends Flights to Bali

Photo: Tigerair Taiwan

JAKARTA — Australia’s Tigerair said on Friday it has permanently ended all flights to the popular resort island of Bali after Indonesian authorities required “an alternative regulatory solution” for its operations.

Hundreds of passengers were stranded in early January when Tigerair Australia suddenly canceled its Bali flights, citing what it called new administrative requirements from Indonesia. No other airlines were affected.

The budget airline, which is majority-owned by Virgin Australia, said it would take six months to meet the Indonesian requirements and they would compromise its ability to provide low-cost airfares.

“As a result of this development, Tigerair Australia has made the difficult decision to withdraw from flying between Australia and Bali permanently, effective today,” it said in a statement.

The airline said its customers in Australia would be given full refunds and any travelers in Bali who had booked travel on the airline would be given accommodation and booked on Virgin Australia or other airlines.

It operated flights between the Australian cities of Perth, Adelaide and Melbourne to Denpasar in Bali, a resort island famous for its Hindu culture, white beaches and lush green interior.

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Joe Satriani to Bite Into ‘Shockwave Supernova’

BANGKOK — American rock guitarist Joe Satriani will come to Thailand for his first full solo show of his “Strange Beautiful Music” to leave audiences “Flying in a Blue Dream.”

A four-decade rock veteran, Satriani has toured with Jagger and Deep Purple, and to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his most famous album, “Surfing with the Alien,” he kicked off his 2017 tour in Asia with Thailand on his list.

The 60-year-old musician has released 15 albums since 1986, has been nominated for 15 Grammy Awards and become the biggest-selling instrumental rock guitarist of all time with sales of more than 10 million albums.

Tickets are 2,000 baht and can be purchased online.

The concert starts rocking at 8pm on Feb. 19 at Centerpoint Studio on Soi Sukhumvit 105, about five minutes by foot from BTS Bearing.

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Thailand Claims Progress in Combating Human Trafficking

A bilaterial meeting between Thai and Cambodian officials on the Development of Plan of Action according to the MOU on Cooperation for Eliminating Trafficking in Persons held in 2016 in Bangkok. Photo: Inmean / Wikimedia Commons

BANGKOK — Thailand’s military government says it made progress in fighting human trafficking in 2016, aiming for a favorable review from the U.S. State Department in its annual report on modern-day slavery.

The Foreign Ministry said Thursday that 268 people were convicted of human trafficking during the year, the highest number since the government began instituting tougher policies in 2014.

“No matter which government would like to inspect us, if they look at our efforts for the past three years, they should have a good feeling,” Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai said at a news conference.

Thailand has come under heavy scrutiny in recent years. In 2014, the U.S. demoted Thailand to “Tier 3” status, the lowest category indicating a failure to combat trafficking. A March 2015 report by The Associated Press and other investigations have showed continued slavery and labor abuses in Thailand’s fishing industry.

Officials said they have made efforts to enact new legislation, prosecute trafficking cases more stringently and provide more support for victims.

“Even though there are still a few remaining challenges and some work to do, we have made significant progress,” said Songsak Saicheua, a Foreign Ministry official overseeing relations with the Americas.

The ministry said 824 victims of human trafficking were identified in 2016, down from 982 in 2015. It said 333 cases of suspected trafficking were investigated, up from 317 in 2015. A total of 600 people were arrested and charged in the 333 cases, it said.

Of those cases, 244 involved sex trafficking and 43 were related to exploitation in the fishing industry, it said. The remainder involved other labor trafficking abuses.

The ministry said 268 people were convicted of human trafficking in 2016, up from 205 in 2015. It said penalties increased, with 36.5 percent sentenced to jail terms of more than 5 years, compared to 29.2 percent the previous year. Ten policemen were caught in two trafficking rings, it said.

Last June, the State Department upgraded Thailand to “Tier 2 Watch List,” signifying governments that do not fully meet minimum standards on human trafficking but are making major efforts to do so. The move provoked widespread criticism from rights groups, which said the country had not done enough to deter and prosecute trafficking.

But the groups now say the government is making stronger efforts to improve, though it’s unclear how effective they will be.

“Thailand is clearly trying to do a lot to deal with the human trafficking issue, and has outshone its neighbors in the efforts being made. No one doubts their energy,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch. “The issue is efficacy. Will the things they’re doing here protect vulnerable migrants from human trafficking?”

Thailand will submit a summary of its progress to the State Department for its annual Trafficking in Persons Report, which assesses the efforts of 188 countries. The report is expected to be released in June.

Story: Kaweewit Kaewjinda, Dake Kang

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Illegal Moto Pipes Seized From Amulet Guru’s Factory

Police and industrial standard officials at the illegal exhaust pipe factory in Chom Thong Thursday afternoon.

BANGKOK — An amulet guru was charged Friday with producing illegal exhaust pipes at a factory in western Bangkok.

Police, regulatory officials and soldiers raided the factory Thursday in the capital’s Chom Thong district after a month-long investigation into dek van (teen biker gangs) operating in the area.

Inside the factory on Soi Chan Phring, police seized 3,000 illegally produced exhaust pipes and production equipment and arrested 45-year-old Pawarit “Net Toongsong” Somtsong. Pawarit, 45, is a well-known amulet trader from Nakhon Si Thammarat province.

“We used the power of Article 44 to raid the factory, because it’s an issue related to the Thai Industrial Standards Institute. Using the article also allowed soldiers to help us in the raid,” Police Col. Chakrapetch Petchploynil said Friday.

The raid was the culmination into an order from top junta and police officials for officers to investigate teenage biker gangs, which are a widespread nuisance in the capital, Chakrapetch said. Authorities over the years have attempted to rein in the youth culture, which they associate with delinquency and criminality.

“We’ve been investigating dek van and skoi girls for months now, and we decided to cut them off at the source. What’s their source for getting their bikes modified? That’s how we traced the illegal exhaust pipes,” Chakrapetch said.

Police found no legal operating documents for the 800sqm factory. The factory could produce 70 to 80 exhaust pipes a day for a factory cost of 20 baht to 50 baht each.

“The pipes are illegal because they didn’t get permission from the Thai Industrial Standards Institute to produce them, and they aren’t up to standards,” Chakrapetch said.

Preliminary investigation revealed that Pawarit, who rents out amulets at Pantip Plaza, got into the illegal exhaust pipe game recently. Amulet gurus, found at lower-end malls and markets across Thailand, rent out “magical” amulets for the faithful for boosts in karma, luck, and so on.

Chakrapetch said Pawarit will be charged with producing nonstandard exhaust pipes and running an unauthorized factory. The maximum punishment is a fine of 10,000 baht.

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French Expand Fraud Probe Into Presidential Candidate Fillon

Francois Fillon seen here at the 6th World Water Forum in 2012 in Marseille, France. Photo: Rama / Wikimedia Commons

PARIS — Conservative candidate Francois Fillon, once the front-runner in France’s presidential race, is facing a political maelstrom after first his wife, then his children became targets in an embezzlement probe into paid  but allegedly fake  political jobs.

The decision Thursday by the national prosecutor’s office to expand its investigation into Penelope Fillon’s work as a parliamentary aide to her husband to include a son and a daughter added a whole new layer of worry for both Fillon and his party, which is watching its chances of regaining power dwindle.

French national financial prosecutors have been investigating Penelope Fillon’s work, seeking to determine whether there are grounds to suspect embezzlement and misappropriation of public funds. The Canard Enchaine weekly reported Wednesday that she made 830,000 euros (USD $900,000) over 15 years.

A person close to the investigation told The Associated Press on Thursday that prosecutors have extended the probe to also cover the couple’s daughter, Marie, and son, Charles. The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity, because they were barred from discussing the investigation publicly.

Allegations that Fillon’s family used his political connections for personal enrichment have been particularly damaging for the former prime minister’s image as an upstanding Catholic family man and country gentleman untainted by the long history of sleaze in French politics. The contrast stings because Fillon has promised to slash public sector jobs and make the French work harder and longer.

The hit to Fillon’s prospects of winning France’s two-round presidential election in April and May has thrown wide open the race that had been expected to be between him and far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen. With Fillon weakened and the unpopular Socialist President Francois Hollande having abandoned hopes of running for a second five-year term, Le Pen and independent maverick Emmanuel Macron are making hay ahead of the April 23 first-round vote.

A possible runoff vote between Le Pen and Macros on May 7 would augur a total upset of France’s political landscape, for it would not include the traditional right, represented by Fillon, nor the Socialist left, which fell into disarray under Hollande.

An angry Fillon addressed a rally Thursday night in Charleville-Mezieres, in northeast France, calling the allegations attacks on him and the right.

“I’m not a dupe. It’s not justice that they’re after  it’s to break me,” he said, insisting “there is nothing illegal.”

His eyes appeared teary as he called on the crowd to support him.

“My friends, I ask you to help me resist,” he said.

Earlier in the day, Fillon was heckled by a young man who yelled “Fillon, thief! Resign!” during a stop at a daycare center.

The Canard Enchaine reported that Fillon hired his children as parliamentary aides when he was a French senator from 2005-2007, and they earned 84,000 euros (USD $91,000) in total.

Fillon has confirmed he paid two of his children, “who were lawyers,” for “specific assignments” when he was a senator. However, Marie and Charles still were in law school when they worked for their father, French media say. According to Le Canard Enchaine, they drew paychecks not for assignments but for two full-time jobs.

Marie and Charles Fillon did not respond to emails or telephone messages from the AP.

French politicians are allowed to hire family members as aides as long as they actually do the jobs for which they are paid. Fillon also insists that Penelope’s work for him was genuine.

But France Television’s “Special Envoy” show on Thursday night dug up an interview of Penelope Fillon in 2007, just after her husband became prime minister, in which said she had accompanied him during his electoral campaign, slipped political leaflets under doors  but added “I’ve never been actually his assistant … I don’t deal with his communications.”

That appears to contradict the couple’s defense that she was legitimately employed.

Her lawyer, Pierre Cornut-Gentille, said Penelope’s words were being taken out of context. He insisted she was a woman of great discretion, always concerned “not to appear as if she exercised a public political role.”

Fillon and his wife were separately questioned by investigators for five hours Monday and her lawyer said Penelope Fillon gave investigators evidence that her work for her husband was genuine.

Senior conservatives rallied Thursday around Fillon, denouncing an “attempt to kill” his candidacy.

“They’re throwing to the wolves a man, his wife, his children, his colleagues, without waiting for their arguments or listening to their defense,” 17 conservatives, including former Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, said in a tribune in the Le Figaro newspaper.

Story: John Leicester, Elaine Ganley

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Finding Vivian Maier: Doc Night Uncovers Life of Secret Street Photog

This 1950s photo provided by the Estate of Vivian Maier and John Maloof Collection shows Maier in a self-portrait as she looks into a storefront wearing a hat in New York. New research about Maier shows the enigmatic Chicago nanny was obsessive about honing her skills as a photographer starting in 1950. Photo: Vivian Maier / Estate of Vivian Maier and John Maloof Collection via AP)

BANGKOK — See the work, life and death of a mysterious nanny-turned-street photographer who secretly took thousands of proto-selfies in the 1950s and 1960s.

Doc Club’s Thank You Night will celebrate the Documentary Club’s belated second birthday by screening the first movie it showed in 2014, “Finding Vivian Maier.” The 2013 documentary tells the story of an Illinois nanny who recorded her life over 100,000 negative photographs, mostly with a Rolleiflex camera.

The film documents Maier’s work, life and death through interviews with her acquaintances and her image collection discovered decades after by artist John Maloof. It won many awards and was nominated for an Academy Awards’ best documentary.

Along with the movie night will be street food stalls and craft beer bar. Bangkok-based street photographers Artyt Lerdrakmongkol and Rammy Narula will host a panel discussion after the screening.

Admission is free. The event starts at 6pm on Feb. 10 at The Jam Factory. The art space next to the Chao Phraya River can be reached by bus or taxi from BTS Krung Thonburi, or by a short walk from the Khlong San Pier.

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