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Two Civilian ‘Advisers’ Joined Controversial Hawaii Trip

An undated file photo of Prawit Wongsuwan and his entourage in Hawaii. Image: Matichon

BANGKOK — Two names stand out from a list made public Monday of who joined a deputy junta leader’s entourage on a taxpayer-funded trip to Hawaii last year.

Nearly four months after Khaosod English requested records of the trip, the Defense Ministry on Monday released a list of who accompanied Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan to Honolulu to attend an informal meeting with U.S. military officials, a trip which sparked controversy when word got out that 20.9 million baht was spent on airfare alone.

While the list of 40 mostly contains the names of army officers and one American military officer, two little-known civilians listed as “others” were also aboard the chartered flight with Prawit, a former army commander turned junta leader who also serves as Minister of Defense.

Suprang-orn Ratithanyakornkul is listed on the website of a flight attendant training school ajarnaum.com.
Suprang-orn Ratithanyakornkul is listed on the website of a flight attendant training school ajarnaum.com.

One was a woman named Suprang-orn Ratithanyakornkul, who was listed as an adviser to an assistant of Prawit. The only apparent reference online to Suprang-orn’s credentials appears on the website of Perfect Angels, a training school for would-be flight attendants.

There she is identified with a smiling photo as No. 32 and listed as having completed training in February 2014. The school claims to have successfully produced 3,889 aviation “angels” in eight years.

The training school failed to respond to inquiries as of press time Tuesday.

Another to fly as an adviser to the assistant of the Defense Minister was Pornperm Srisawat. In a news release on the website of CP Group, the kingdom’s largest corporate conglomerate, Pornperm is identified as one of the company president’s liaison to the government.

Pornperm Srisawat, in suit second from right, in an image from a CP news release.
Pornperm Srisawat, in suit second from right, in an image from a CP news release.

The CP E-Nenews release, published some time before February 2015, shows Pornperm standing with four top Air Force Officers, handing a 500,000 baht donation placard complete with the company’s logos for a “Air Force Bike for Dad” event scheduled for Feb. 1, 2015.

Attempts to contact CP to verify whether Pornperm was still employed when he joined the official trip to Hawaii as an adviser to the assistant of the Defense Minister were not successful as of Tuesday.

No further information, including contact information, could be found for either.

Asked what qualified the two, who appear to be a CP employee and flight attendant trainee to join the trip as advisers to Gen. Prawit’s team, the Defense Ministry’s spokeswoman had no answer.

In an undated photo, junta deputy chairman Prawit Wongsuwan shakes hand with then-U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter during a visit to Hawaii. Image: Matichon
In an undated photo, junta deputy chairman Prawit Wongsuwan shakes hand with then-U.S. Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter during a visit to Hawaii. Image: Matichon

Col. Jaithip Uraipanich said they had no details about the qualifications of Pornperm and Suprang-orn as advisers to the assistant of the Defense Minister.

“We don’t have details. Appointing advisers is up to the minister who made the appointment,” Jaithip said Tuesday.

The list released Monday mostly matched a leaked seat listing posted on social media soon after the scandal broke.

The two names included in the seat listing that were not found in the official documents released Monday: a TV news anchor linked to Prawit and top CP executive Pakhapon Ngamlak.

When the seat listing appeared online, Thai Airways asked police to track down and prosecute those responsible for posting it.

Related stories:

Hawaii Trip: Thai Airways Wants Internet Prosecuted Over Leaked Passenger List
Channel 5 Reporter Didn’t Go to Hawaii, Records Show
Reporter Linked to Junta General Not on 20M Baht Flight: Govt
Govt Defends 21M Baht Flight to Hawaii

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Pokemon Sales Power-Up Nintendo Q3 Profits

TOKYO — Japanese video game maker Nintendo Co. is reporting third quarter profit more than doubled from a year earlier on healthy sales of Pokemon game software.

Nintendo, which makes Super Mario games and will start selling the Switch console March 3, reported Tuesday a better-than-expected October-December profit of JPY64.7 billion (20 billion baht), up from JPY29.1 billion (9 billion baht) in the same period of 2015.

Kyoto-based Nintendo raised its full year profit forecast to JPY90 billion from an earlier JPY50 billion.

That would mark a more than five-fold increase from what it earned the previous fiscal year.

It kept its sales forecast unchanged at JPY470 billion. Nintendo’s quarterly sales slipped 21 percent to JPY174.3 billion.

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Downtown University Arts Bastion Says Goodbye – For Now

Farewell: The Art Center’s Acknowledgments 2016 exhibition.

BANGKOK — Artists and art aficionados were relieved to learn an important space for thought-provoking art will reopen after renovations are completed in two years, though there was skepticism about what the future would bring.

The Art Center at Chulalongkorn University, which has served as a launching pad for many talents, recently opened what was to be its final exhibition with artists of different generations, backgrounds and nationalities.

The atmosphere was different from the usual festive joy as the opening signaled an end to the 22-year-old space, at least in its current form.

As the title suggests, the latest exhibition which ends Feb. 18, is to be the last before the venue closes. Farewell was to be the last show before it closed forever, but administrators earlier said it would reopen in two years, possibly in a different form.

The gallery has been in the red for years, and the atmosphere was muted at the Thursday opening on the seventh floor of the university’s Academic Resources Office.

“It’s high time to stop and reconsider whether to reopen it in the same concept or completely change its direction,” said Amorn Petsom, acting director of Academic Resources said. “The two-year closure will be the time to ponder that.”

Read: Sad! Say ‘Farewell’ to Chulalongkorn’s The Art Center

Amorn said The Art Center has lost 2 million baht in the past six years. Its limited annual budget hasn’t covered the costs of supporting exhibiting artists.

“If we don’t adjust, there’s no way to survive,” Amorn said.

 

Oasis for Thought

Those closest to The Art Center say its 380 square meters have offered a rare, university-sponsored venue for artists who want to push boundaries on social issues and sensitive questions.

From left to right: The Art Center’s head Prapon Kumjim, first chief curator Apinan Poshyananda, Director of Chulalongkorn University’s Office of Academic Resources Amorn Petsom and Suebsang Sangwachirapiban, The Art Center’s manager
From left to right: The Art Center’s head Prapon Kumjim, first chief curator Apinan Poshyananda, Director of Chulalongkorn University’s Office of Academic Resources Amorn Petsom and Suebsang Sangwachirapiban, The Art Center’s manager

“Artists who produce works concerning sensitive issues are often rejected by many galleries,” gallery head Prapon Kumjim said.

While Chulalongkorn’s two other galleries are supported by the university’s Office of Art and Culture, The Art Center is operated by Academic Resources.

Though criticized for being hidden up on the seventh floor above the university library, The Art Center has launched several renowned artists since 1995 and is considered a progressive outpost on issues of society, culture and gender.

“Budgets are important but investing in art is also invaluable, more than what the university may think,” said Apinan Poshyananda, a Culture Ministry permanent secretary who was the center’s first chief curator.

Apinan said that the venue has hosted famous international artists such as Spanish painter Joan Miro, Yugoslavia-born performance artist Marina Abramovic and Japanese artist Yasumasa Morimura. More importantly, he said it’s also been a laboratory for emerging local talent to experiment and get experience.

“Having a solo exhibition here is a stepping stone in the art circle,” said Krit Ngamsom, a kinetic artist whose recent work “Time Machine” comprised photos of exhibitions being held at The Art Center inside a tank submarine.

 

Farewell for Now

Artist Krit Ngamsom
Artist Krit Ngamsom

Krit is among 50 Thai and international artists showing their work at Farewell, a sort of venue retrospective of artists showing their appreciation.

Despite never studying at the university, 33-year-old artist Krit was familiar with the center since he was a student as his professors exhibited there. Now, an arts professor himself, things have come full circle with his students attending what is now his third exhibition there.

“This is not a commercial art space, it’s educational and doesn’t deduct anything from artists,” he said. Though regret for its upcoming closure, he hopes the center remains the same when it reopens in two years.

Michael Shaowanasai, a provocative artist who has exhibited his works there several times, admitted he’s less optimistic.

Artist Michael Shaowanasai
Artist Michael Shaowanasai

“It’s good if the change means upgrading the center, but I’m not that positive about the government sector,” he said. “They already got visionary people working, but bureaucracy might make things worse.”

With a mission to promote knowledge and create opportunities for artists, the nonprofit alternative gallery welcomes about 500 visitors a month, mostly artists and students from other universities.

 

Photos from “Farewell Exhibition”
Photos from “Farewell Exhibition”
Photos from “Farewell Exhibition”
Apinan Poshyananda’s neon light “Farewell,” in which some of the texts are censored.
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Photos from “Farewell Exhibition”
Photos from “Farewell Exhibition”

 

Related stories:

Sad! Say ‘Farewell’ to Chulalongkorn’s The Art Center

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Official Apologizes for Painting Theft, Resigns

Suphat Saguandeekul speaks Nov. 26, 2010, at a convention hall in Bangkok. Image: Thai Home Builders Association

BANGKOK — A senior commerce official on Monday admitted to stealing paintings from a hotel in Japan and announced his resignation.

Speaking about the scandal for the first time since it erupted last week, Suphat Saguandeekul said in a statement released to the media he unreservedly apologized for bringing shame to his country through his actions. He said he was drunk at the time.

Suphat’s apology came a day after the Ministry of Commerce suspended him from duty and launched a formal investigation.

Read: Thai Official Who Stole Hotel Paintings Freed by Japanese

Suphat, who served as a deputy director for the Department of Intellectual Property, said he was out drinking with his Japanese colleagues late into early morning. He said he was extremely drunk when he “committed an act that I should not have.”

“I stress that I have no intention to find an excuse. Now that I have committed wrongdoing, I admit my guilt,” Suphat’s statement said. “I merely ask for an opportunity to explain what happened in that night.”

He said he took responsibility because growing up and studying in Japan had instilled him a sense of honor that requires holders of political office to resign if they do something wrong.

It is not immediately clear whether Suphat’s resignation would affect the investigation.

Commerce Minister Apiradi Tantraporn announced on Monday that Suphat was suspended from his position and transferred to an inactive post as punishment while the inquiry is ongoing.

Suphat was a deputy director in the Department of Intellectual Property. He returned to Thailand on Saturday after a settlement was reached and Japanese prosecutors dropped charges against him.

Apiradi also did not say what the penalty for Suphat would be if he’s found to be at fault. Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam said on Friday that Suphat could be found guilty of either a minor or serious offense.

Penalty for the former is a reduction of salary while the latter could mean expulsion without retirement benefits.

Officials said he was in Kyoto for a meeting with his Japanese counterparts to talk about patent rights. He was later arrested Jan. 24 and accused of stealing three paintings from the hallway of the hotel where he was staying, a crime captured on camera, according to Japanese media reports.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Suphat repented the crime and paid an unspecified amount of compensation to the hotel.

Related stories: 

Thai Commerce Official Arrested in Japan for Stealing Hotel Paintings

Memes Go Dank in Response to Hotel Painting Caper

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Wearable Waste: Recycled Fashion and More to Save the Sea

Photo: Apichet Madaew Atilattana / Facebook

BANGKOK — A schoolboy fashion icon will join an eco-fashion show which along with an art exhibition and other activities are aimed at protecting marine life from plastic pollution.

At Heart for the Ocean, wander through the Blue Ocean, an art installation made from plastic waste collected from households and local beaches, and meet the teen fashion phenomenon Apichet “Madaew” Atirattana, who will showcase his recycled plastic costumes for the Ocean Haute Couture fashion show.

Learn how to transform old tees into trendy tote bags at a workshop while acoustic-indie act Stoondio, The Voice Thailand’s heartthrob Nuttawut “Max” Jenmana and others will perform live with musical instruments made from recycled waste.

Panel discussions include Thitinant Sristhita, an author who’s dedicated herself to reducing plastic consumption for over a decade, eco-artist Prasopsuk “Pom” Lerdviriyapiti and activists from Greenpeace and Trash Hero, an eco-projects group focused on waste reduction with chapters throughout Southeast Asia.

The event, organized by Greenpeace, runs Feb. 14 through Feb. 19 on the first floor of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre.

Photo: Greenpeace Southeast Asia / Courtesy
Photo: Greenpeace Southeast Asia / Courtesy

Related stories:

Madaew and Friends to Throw Beauty ‘In Your Face’ at Alliance Francaise

 

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Record 32.6M Tourists Visited Thailand in 2016

Tourists partake in Songkran festivities in 2013 on Krabi. Photo: Madeleine Deaton / Flickr

BANGKOK — Thailand received a record 32.59 million foreign visitors last year, with revenue beating expectations and likely to exceed previous forecasts this year by growing 10 percent or more, officials said Monday.

Thailand is proving popular even as terror scares, including a series of bombings in resorts towns killing four people, and the death of King Bhumibol Adulyadej had hotels and tour guides across the country on edge. Tourism fared better than expected after a bloodless coup deposed Thailand’s elected government in 2014 as well.

The Tourism Authority of Thailand said Monday that the tourist industry earned 2.52 trillion baht (USD $71.4 billion) last year, up 11 percent from 2015.

It said the country’s tourism industry is projected to bring in 733 billion baht (USD $20.8 billion) in the first quarter of this year, up 8 percent from the first quarter of 2016. Officials said their estimates, covering foreign and domestic tourists combined, indicate tourism revenue for all of 2017 may surpass earlier forecasts of 2.77 trillion baht (USD $78.5 billion).

Thailand is the eleventh most-visited country in the world and boasted the sixth largest tourism industry by revenue in 2015, according to a U.N. report. Most travelers come from China, South Korea, and Japan, lured by Thailand’s year-round warm weather, as well as Western countries and Thailand’s neighbors in Southeast Asia.

Foreign tourists are by far the most lucrative for the economy. Foreign arrivals are projected to total 9.3 million in the first quarter of this year, accounting for 490 billion baht (USD $13.9 billion) in revenue. In the same period, some 32.5 million Thai travelers accounted for 240 billion baht (USD $6.8 billion).

“Thailand is still a popular destination,” Yuthasak Supasorn, governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand, said at a news conference. “We have a lot of different things to offer our foreign visitors.”

A steady economy and a growing number of travelers worldwide explain the boom, Yuthasak said.

“Stability and improvements in the economy mean more foreign tourist arrivals,” he said. “So there’s clearly demand, and it’s up to us to accommodate everyone who wants to come.”

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Police Dubious About Man’s ATM Abduction-by-Cop Story

Srawut Pungprasop, shows police the ATM he was using when he got robbed midnight Tuesday in Bang Khen.

BANGKOK — A man alleges he was abducted, assaulted and robbed of 80,000 baht by men wearing police vests early Tuesday morning northern Bangkok, a story that police are not fully buying.

Srawut Pungprasop, 18, said he was depositing money at a Kasikornbank ATM at about midnight in Thanommit Market in Bangkok’s Bang Khen district when two men threw him into a van with two other men who punched him, robbed him, and then tossed him out out.

Police however are skeptical of his account.

“The money depositing function at the ATM is open from 6am to 10pm. This conflicts with his testimony that he was robbed after 11pm. When the police arrived there past midnight, the ATM was clearly closed,” Capt. Anusorn Pratumtong of Khan Na Yao Police Station said Tuesday morning.

Anusorn said police were on the way to pull CCTV tapes to see if Srawut’s testimony held up, and would charge him with filing a false report if it did not.

According to Srawut, the four men were in their 30s, 170 centimeters tall and wearing t-shirts and jeans with black vests silk with “Police” printed on the back. Srawut said he was depositing 80,000 baht for his sister, who earned the money as a race car track pretty, or promotional model.

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6 Counts of Murder for Quebec Mosque Attack Suspect

Alexandre Bissonnette is escorted to a van Monday in Quebec City, after appearing in court for Sunday's deadly shooting at a mosque. Photo: Jacques Boissinot / Associated Press

QUEBEC CITY — A French Canadian known for far-right, nationalist views was charged Monday with six counts of first-degree murder and five counts of attempted murder over the shooting rampage at a Quebec City mosque that Canada’s prime minister called an act of terrorism against Muslims.

Suspect Alexandre Bissonnette made a brief court appearance and did not enter a plea in the attack that left six people dead during evening prayers Sunday. Wearing a white prisoner jump suit, his hands and feet shackled, he stared down at the floor and fidgeted, but did not speak.

The 27-year-old suspect, who has espoused support for the French far-right party of Marine Le Pen and had liked U.S. President Donald Trump on his Facebook page, was known to those who monitor extremist groups in Quebec, said François Deschamps, an official with a refugee advocacy group. “It’s with pain and anger that we learn the identity of terrorist Alexandre Bissonnette, unfortunately known to many activists in Quebec for taking nationalist, pro-Le Pen and anti-feminist positions at Laval University and on social media,” Deschamps wrote on the Facebook page of the group, Bienvenues aux Refugiés, or Welcome to Refugees.

An anthropology and political science major at Laval University in Quebec City, Bissonnette had also expressed support on his Facebook profile for “Génération Nationale,” a group whose manifesto includes the rejection of “multiculturalism.”

More than 50 people were at the Quebec Islamic Cultural Centre when the shooting erupted. In addition to the six dead, 19 people were wounded  all men. Of the five victims who remained hospitalized, two were in critical condition, authorities said. The dead ranged in age from 39 to 60.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard both characterized the attack as a terrorist act, which came amid heightened tensions worldwide over Trump’s travel ban on seven Muslim countries. Le Pen, leader of the National Front in France, is known for her anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant positions and has won the endorsement and admiration of white supremacists.

Canada is generally welcoming toward immigrants and all religions, but the French-speaking province of Quebec has had a long-simmering debate about race and religious accommodation. The previous separatist government of the province called for a ban on ostentatious religious symbols, such as the hijab, in public institutions.

Trudeau said in Parliament the victims were targeted simply because of their religion and spoke directly to the more than 1 million Muslims who live in Canada, saying, “We are with you.”

“Thirty-six million hearts are breaking with yours,” Trudeau said. “Know that we value you.”

The prime minister later attended a vigil outside the mosque.

The suspect was arrested in his car on a bridge near d’Orleans, where he called 911 to say he wanted to cooperate with police. Authorities, who initially named two suspects, said the other man taken into custody was a witness to the attack and was released earlier Monday. They said they did not believe there were other suspects but were investigating.

Police did not give a motive for the attack.

Trump called Trudeau to express condolences to the Canadian people and to offer any assistance that might be needed.

The White House pointed to the attack as an example of why Trump’s policies were needed. “We condemn this attack in the strongest possible terms. It’s a terrible reminder of why we must remain vigilant and why the president is taking steps to be pro-active, rather than reactive when it comes to our nation’s safety and security,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said.

The victims were businessmen, a university professor and others who had gathered for evening prayers, said Mohamed Labidi, the vice president of the mosque.

“‘It’s a very, very big tragedy for us,” Labidi said tearfully. “We have a sadness we cannot express.”

He said the victims were shot in the back. “Security at our mosque was our major, major concern,” he said. “But we were caught off guard.”

The shooting took place just before 8 p.m. Sunday. Witnesses described chaos as worshippers scrambled to find friends and loved ones, as police responding to the scene called for backup.

Couillard said he would “not go there” when asked if he blamed recent rhetoric in in the U.S. for the attack.

“Quebec is a good, generally loving society, but we have these devils as other societies have. We have to recognize that and fight them,” Couillard said at a news conference in Quebec City at which he and Muslim leaders held hands in a display of solidarity.

“The Muslim community was the target of this murderous attack,” Couillard said, adding that solidarity rallies would be held across Quebec later Monday.

The mosque has been a target of hate crimes in the past, including last summer when pig’s head was left on its doorstep during Ramadan, when Muslims fast from dawn to sunset. Practicing Muslims do not eat pork.

Quebec City Mayor Regis Labeaume, appearing shaken, said: “No person should have to pay with their life, for their race, their color, their sexual orientation or their religious beliefs.”

Worshipper Ali Hamadi said he left the mosque a few minutes before the shooting and a friend, Abdelkrim Hassen, was killed. He said Hassen, who worked in information technology for the government, had three daughters and a wife, whom he had to notify of the death.

Majdi Dridi of the Muslim Association of Canada said he knew two of the victims. One was a work colleague who was a father of three little girls, he said.

“I don’t know what to say, I just hope that his family and his children can have the patience to accept what happened,” Dridi said

Trudeau had earlier reacted to Trump’s visa ban for people from some Muslim-majority countries by tweeting Saturday: “To those fleeing persecution, terror & war, Canadians will welcome you, regardless of your faith. Diversity is our strength #WelcomeToCanada.”

Trudeau also posted a picture of himself greeting a Syrian child at Toronto’s airport in late 2015. Trudeau oversaw the arrival of more than 39,000 Syrian refugees soon after he was elected.

The mayor of Gatineau, Quebec, near Canada’s capital of Ottawa, said there would be an increased police presence at mosques around his city following the attack. The New York Police Department also said it was stepping up patrols at mosques and other houses of worship.

Story: Tracey Lindeman, Rob Gillies

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Trump Fires Attorney General Over Refugee Ban Defiance

Then-Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates speaks last July at the Justice Department in Washington. Photo: J. David Ake / Associated Press

WASHINGTON €” Defiant in the face of an international backlash, President Donald Trump pressed into his second week in office defending his sweeping immigration ban €” and then fired a Cabinet head who refused to enforce it.

Acting Attorney General Sally Yates earlier Monday ordered Justice Department lawyers to stop defending the executive order, which temporarily suspends the U.S. refugee program and bars all immigration for citizens of seven majority-Muslim countries for 90 days. By Monday night, she was out.

“The acting Attorney General, Sally Yates, has betrayed the Department of Justice by refusing to enforce a legal order designed to protect the citizens of the United States,” the White House press secretary’s office said in a statement.

Trump named Dana Boente, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, to serve in Yates’ place until Sen. Jeff Sessions, his permanent pick for the position, is confirmed by the Senate.

The Yates decision came as Trump pressed into his second week in office defending his sweeping immigration ban. Protests persisted at major airports, and concern mounted from U.S. diplomats and members of his own party.

Trump denied that his order was to blame for weekend chaos at the nation’s airports, instead pointing to computer glitches, demonstrations and even the “fake tears” of Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer.

The president publicly shifted his focus, signing an executive action aimed at cutting regulations for small businesses and teasing his plans to unveil his Supreme Court pick Tuesday night.

But the immigration ban remained at the forefront of his first fortnight in the White House — and officials were pondering more actions moving forward.

According to a draft document obtained by The Associated Press, Trump is considering an executive order that would target some immigrants for deportation if they become dependent on government assistance.

The draft order calls for the identification and removal “as expeditiously as possible” of any foreigner who takes certain kinds of public welfare benefits. Such immigrants have been barred from the U.S. for the better part of a century and they can already be deported. The proposed order appears to signal a Trump administration effort to crack down on such welfare cases.

Another draft order under consideration would make changes to several of the government’s foreign worker visa programs. The White House did not immediately respond to requests for comments on the draft orders.

Trump immigration order prompted predecessor Barack Obama to wade into politics for the first time since leaving office.

A spokesman for the former president said Monday that Obama “fundamentally disagrees” with discrimination that targets people based on their religion. Obama spokesman Kevin Lewis alluded to but did not specifically mention Trump’s order but added that Obama was “heartened” by the civil engagement being seen across the country.

Obama has said he will give Trump room to govern but will speak out if his successor violates basic U.S. values.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Trump’s order was “about the safety of America,” while the new president played down its impact, saying on Twitter that just 109 people were detained and held for questioning. White House officials have said that was during the first 24 hours after the ban.

But nearly 400 legal permanent residents were delayed upon their arrival back in the United States between the time the travel ban was signed and Sunday evening, according to a federal law enforcement official. All of those people were ultimately allowed back into the country.

The official said one other green card holder is now facing deportation after an extra background check done after the executive order was signed revealed a criminal conviction. Details of that person’s case were not immediately available.

The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to publicly disclose details of the travel ban’s implementation.

Trump’s order, which also halts all refugee admissions for 120 days, does not address homegrown extremists already in America. And the list of countries it applies to €” Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen doesn’t include Saudi Arabia, where most of the Sept. 11 hijackers were from.

Growing numbers of Republican lawmakers expressed concerns about Trump’s action. Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida and Tim Scott of South Carolina said in a joint statement that “the manner in which these measures were crafted and implemented have greatly contributed to the confusion, anxiety and uncertainty of the last few days.”

Washington state’s attorney general said he would sue Trump, making Washington the first state to announce a legal action against the administration. Democrat Bob Ferguson was one of 16 state attorneys general who released a statement Sunday calling Trump’s action “un-American and unlawful.”

A number of U.S. diplomats also prepared a memo criticizing the order. In a “dissent cable” being drafted for State Department leadership, the diplomats said the ban runs counter to American values and will fuel anti-American sentiment around the world.

The cable originated in the State Department’s Consular Affairs bureau, which handles visas.

Unfazed, Spicer retorted that if “career bureaucrats” have a problem with the order, “they should either get with the program or they can go.”

The president also mocked Schumer, the New York Democrat who grew emotional as he called the ban “un-American.” Said Trump: “I’m going to ask him who was his acting coach.”

Trump blamed an airline glitch for much of the disorder at the nation’s international airports that dominated the weekend’s news. Though a Delta systems outage Sunday night led to departure delays and cancellations of at least 150 flights, the chaos started the day before as protesters packed some of the country’s major airports.

Story: Alicia Caldwell, Catherine Lucey

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Ready for Takeoff: FAA Clears AirAsia X for Flights to US

KUALA LUMPUR — AirAsia X announced it has become the first Asian budget airline to win approval for direct flights to the United States.

The budget carrier’s plans to fly to American destinations, possibly as early as June, were given a green light Tuesday by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to fly to U.S. airports.

“This is a major milestone for AirAsia X. Our expansion up until now has concentrated on Asia, Australasia and the Middle East, and we are excited about our first foray into an entirely new market as we look beyond Asia Pacific,” CEO Datuk Kamarudin Meranun said in a statement.

AirAsia X plans to launch flights from Japan to Hawaii starting in June 2017, followed by routes to Las Vegas, Los Angeles and San Francisco, all leaving from Japan, according to the CAPA Centre for Aviation. The airline may also be mulling U.S.-bound flights from Malaysia.

There was no indication of any planned direct routes from Thailand.

The airline also said it would like to relaunch its service to London which it dropped in 2012.

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