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Column of Bananas Worshipped for Lottery Luck (Photos)

Soontorn Saichue, crouching, and visitors make offerings to her lucky banana tree Thursday morning in Roi Et province.

ROI ET — A 77-year-old woman’s banana tree with an unusually ample supply of bananas has drawn worshippers hoping for some good luck.

Hours before winning national lottery numbers would be announced, people have gathered around a banana tree owned by Soontorn Saichue on Thursday morning in Roi Et province seeking better fortune.

“I’ll never cut it down,” Soontorn said. “It brings luck to my family. Since the banana tree started bearing fruit, my health has improved and I’ve never gotten sick. I feel as healthy as a young lady.”

Some offered the auspicious banana tree incense and flowers. Others wai-ed and prostrated, while others ran their hands over the nubs of the nascent bananas in search of numerological guidance.

Popular numbers gleaned from the tree included: 77 (Soontorn’s age), 33 (her house number) and 172 (the anticipated number of hands of bananas the tree will produce).

It’s no ordinary banana tree. The species of Set Tee Roi Whee Pun Loog, or Hundred Hands, Thousand Fruits Millionaire, banana tree has a two-meter bunch of bananas hanging from the stalk.

Soontorn said the lucky, two-year-old tree, bore hundreds of baby bananas just recently. She said neighbors who tried to plant offshoots of the lucky tree in their own yards failed.

Online, however, Thai netizens have responded with mixed reactions.

“Here they go again. Some experts should come out and say that it’s just typical of a species of banana tree,” Facebook User Aekkarin Muangthong wrote before giving in to his natural curiosity. “Anyway, what numbers did they get from the tree?”

Soontorn Saichue, 77, with her lucky banana tree Thursday morning in Roi Et.
Soontorn Saichue, 77, with her lucky banana tree Thursday morning in Roi Et.
People count the hands on Soontorn Saichue’s lucky banana tree Thursday morning in Roi Et.
People count the hands on Soontorn Saichue’s lucky banana tree Thursday morning in Roi Et.

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Actor Shia LaBeouf Arrested on Camera During NYC Livestream

Shia LaBeouf arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of "Man Down" at ArcLight Cinemas Hollywood Nov. 30, 2016. Photo: Chris Pizzello / AP.

NEW YORK — Actor Shia LaBeouf was arrested in New York City early Thursday after he got into an altercation with another man during a performance art project that has seen him chanting “He will not divide us” in front of a live camera since Donald Trump’s first day as president.

Police said LaBeouf pulled the scarf of a 25-year-old man outside the Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, scratching his face in the process. They said he also pushed the man, who refused medical attention.

The tussle happened on the seventh day of a livestream that LaBeouf and two collaborators intend to have running 24 hours a day for the next four years.

They have invited the public to repeat the phrase “He will not divide us,” into a camera mounted on an outdoor wall.

It was unclear whether the camera captured any of Thursday’s confrontation, but it did show the aftermath, including LaBeouf being handcuffed and led off by police.

In the moments before his arrest, he issued a plea into the camera.

“Hey, be nice. Everybody be nice down here, man. Just be nice! That’s the only requirement. Be nice!” he said. “That’s all I ask. Be nice. Pro this, pro that. Cool. But be nice.”

The camera went live the morning of the inauguration. LeBeouf has been a frequent presence. Most of the time he is surrounded by enthusiastic supporters, but the cameras have also shown him getting aggressive with fellow participants.

In one instance, he shoved a man who said “Hitler did nothing wrong.”

In another, he bumped chests with a man who began reciting a white supremacist slogan.

Videos posted on social media show LaBeouf returning to the site before sunrise to resume chanting.

He faces a misdemeanor assault charge and is due in court April 4.

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Aussie Open: Venus Williams Becomes Oldest Player to Reach Final

United States' Venus Williams celebrates after defeating compatriot Coco Vandeweghe during their semifinal Thursday at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia. Photo: Aaron Favila / Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia — Venus Williams held up her end of the deal for another all-sisters Australian Open final with a 6-7 (3), 6-2, 6-3 win over CoCo Vandeweghe, becoming the oldest player to reach the final here in the Open era.

The 36-year-old Williams is back in a Grand Slam final for the first time since Wimbledon in 2009 and her first here since 2003, when she lost to her younger sister, Serena.

She could get a chance to avenge that loss  22-time major winner Serena Williams was playing 34-year-old Mirjana Lucic-Baroni later Thursday for a spot in the final.

Williams tossed her racket after clinching the 2-hour, 26-minute semifinal on her fourth match point and put her hands up to her face, almost in disbelief, before crossing her arms over her heart. She then did a stylish pirouette on the court, smiling broadly, as the crowd gave her a standing ovation.

“Everyone has their moment in the sun,” Williams said. “Maybe mine has gone on a while. I’d like to keep that going. I’ve got nothing else to do so let’s keep it going.”

Williams last reached a Grand Slam final at Wimbledon in 2009, the longest gap between major finals for any player in the Open era.

She’s also the oldest player to reach a women’s major final since Martina Navratilova, then 37 and 258 days, at Wimbledon in 1994.

The 25-year-old Vandeweghe was playing in the last four at a major for the first time and was the only semifinalist younger than 34. She’d advanced with back-to-back wins over top-ranked Anglique Kerber and French Open champion Garbine Muguruza and took charge against Williams in the first-set tiebreaker.

But Williams, a seven-time major winner, rallied after dropping a set for the first time in the tournament, breaking Vandeweghe four times over the final two sets and putting pressure back on her fellow American.

“It means so much, mostly because she played so well. She played so unbelievable,” Williams said. “I had to play defense the whole time, if felt like.

“There was never a moment of relaxation ever so to be able to get to the final through a match like this, I’m just excited about American tennis, as well.”

Vandeweghe said earlier in the tournament she’d admired the Williams sisters as an up-and-coming player, and once asked for Venus’ autograph. Williams said one of the best things about her longevity in the game was having an influence on other players.

“Growing up, all I wanted was to have an opportunity to play these tournaments. But then you get here and then you have an opportunity to inspire other people,” she said. “It’s more than a cherry on top. It’s more than I dreamed of.”

Earlier, Bob and Mike Bryan earned a shot at a seventh Australian Open doubles title after a rain-interrupted 7-6 (7-1) 6-3 semifinal win Friday over Pablo Carreno Busta and Guillermo Garcia-Lopez.

Story: John Pye

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Bangkok Bus Blows Past Red Light, Smashes Car (Video)

BANGKOK — A bus driver was fined 500 baht Wednesday for running a red light and crashing into another car.

Authorities suspended Jirapat Pan-iet from driving for three days and ordered him to take driving lessons after a video posted online showed him speed through an intersection and plow his bus into the side of the car.

Dashcam footage captured Sunday night shows Jirapat accelerate his No. 27 minibus, which was headed to the Victory Monument, speed past a traffic light and collide with the car at the Nawamin-Happy Land junction in the eastern district of Bang Kapi.

After the video capturing the incident was posted online, the Bangkok Mass Transit Authority called Jirapat into question. The driver, who had no record of traffic violations, admitted fault.

“If he is found violating the law again, he will be punished harder,” said transit authority director Surachai Eamvachirasakul.

As much as the video drew criticism for the public bus driver, netizens also complained about the driver who filmed the incident for speeding up to also run the red light.

“This is a message to the owner of the clip. Please slow your car when you see the yellow light,” Facebook user Witchayut Dachasirasit wrote.

Another user said they should receive the same punishment.

“They should both have their licenses revoked, the minibus driver and the person who filmed the video,” wrote user Poonchai Thongsri. “Apparently they both intentionally ran a red light.”

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Police ID Briton, South African as Killers of ‘Web Designer’

A still image from a security camera police say shows Miles Turner in front and Abel Bonito on the back of a motorcycle on Tuesday.

CHONBURI — A court issued arrest warrants Wednesday for two foreigners accused of gunning down a British businessman in broad daylight earlier this week.

Briton Miles Dicken Turner and South African Abel Caldeira Bonito were named by police as the perpetrators responsible for the execution-style killing of Tony Kenway, 39, in Chonburi province on Tuesday. Although police would not confirm any motive on record, officers privately said they suspect it to be a case of an illicit business dispute that turned deadly.

“The warrants were issued this morning for the suspects. They are both foreigners,” Somprasong Yentuam, commander of Chonburi police, said by telephone.

Read: No Suspects Yet in Murder of British Businessman

He said police are still trying to track down the two suspects, and it is unclear whether they have left the country as alleged in some media reports.

According to police briefing documents seen by Khaosod English, 23-year-old Bonito was the gunman who fatally shot Kenway in his parked Porsche while the 27-year-old Turner served as the driver of a getaway motorcycle.

Police said their movements were captured by security cameras.

Despite police description of Kenway as a website designer, the Briton owned a slew of luxury assets suggesting other means: a mansion in Pattaya’s Jomtien neighborhood and a fleet of high-end vehicles including the Porsche he was sitting in when he was shot in the head.

Maj. Gen. Somprasong said police had no information Kenway was involved in any illegal enterprise.

“I have not seen any details about that,” Somprasong said. “I don’t know where all these online news get the info from.”

However, investigators privately told reporters Kenway and his accomplices ran a boiler room scam for years, fleecing millions of baht from victims. The British man later fell out with his partners, which led to the killing, the police sources said.

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Draft Order Shows Trump Intends to Stop Accepting Syrian Refugees

Jocelynn Lujan, 6, left, and her sister, Jennifer, 8, attend a news conference Wednesday in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Photo: Russell Contreras / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A draft executive order obtained by The Associated Press shows that President Donald Trump intends to stop accepting Syrian refugees and suspend the United States’ broader refugee program for 120 days.

The president also plans to suspend issuing visas for people from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria or Yemen for at least 30 days, according to the draft. All are predominantly Muslim countries.

Trump is expected to sign the order this week. It was not clear if the draft will be revised before then.

The actions would continue Trump’s rapid-fire attempts in his first week as president to move forward on signature issues of his campaign: cracking down on illegal immigration and blocking the entry of people from countries where terrorist organizations have a significant presence. On Wednesday, Trump issued orders aimed at moving ahead with a wall on the Mexican border and blocking federal funds from “sanctuary cities” that protect immigrants.

Trump’s draft shows that he will order Homeland Security and State Department officials, along with the director of national intelligence, to review what information the government needs to fully vet would-be visitors and come up with a list of countries that don’t provide it. The order says the government will give countries 60 days to start providing the information or citizens from those countries will be barred from traveling to the United States.

Exceptions would be made for diplomats, NATO visas or those people traveling to work at the United Nations.

During the campaign Trump, said vetting procedures were inadequate and suggested that terrorists could pose as Syrian refugees to infiltrate the United States.

During the Obama administration, vetting for Syrians routinely took years to complete and included in-person interviews overseas, where they provided biographical details about themselves, including their families, friendships, social or political activities, employment, phone numbers, email accounts and more. They also provided biometric information about themselves, including fingerprints and Syrians are subject to additional, classified controls that administration officials at the time declined to describe.

Word of the planned executive order prompted a fast-growing group of about 150 people outside the White House gates around dusk Wednesday. Protesters chanted, “this is what democracy looks like!” They waved banners with messages like, “refugees welcome” and “anti-Muslim=anti-American.”

While suspending visas for Syrians, Trump is directing the Pentagon and the State Department to “produce a plan” for safe zones in Syria and the surrounding area within 90 days, but includes no details.

Safe zones, proposed by both Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton during the campaign, were considered by the Obama administration years ago and ruled out because of the resources required to implement them. Those challenges have only grown since Russia’s military intervention, in which Moscow introduced advanced air defense systems into Syria.

That means U.S. personnel could potentially end up in direct military confrontation with the Russians or with Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces if the U.S. tried to prevent Assad’s warplanes from operating in the zones.

Trump has the authority to determine how many refugees are accepted annually and he can suspend the program at any time. Refugee processing was suspended in the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks, restarting months later.

During the last budget year, the U.S. accepted 84,995 refugees, including 12,587 people from Syria and President Barack Obama had set the refugee limit for this budget year at 110,000.

Trump, according to his yet-to-be-signed executive order, will cut that program by more half to 50,000. The order said while the program is suspended, the U.S. may admit people on a case-by-case basis “when in the national interest” and the government would continue to process refugee requests from people claiming religious persecution, “provided that the religion….is a minority religion in the individual’s country.” That suggests that would allow the admission of Christians from Muslim-majority countries.

Trump’s order also directs government officials to make a variety of changes to how visas are issued, including requiring that everyone applying for a non-immigrant visa be interviewed in person. Previously, waivers could be granted to skip the interview.

The order says its purpose is to make sure anyone allowed to enter the United States doesn’t “bear hostile attitudes toward our country and its founding principles.”

“We cannot, and should not, admit into our country those who do not support the U.S. Constitution, or those who place violent religious edicts over American law,” Trump said in the order. He added that the U.S. should bar foreigners who “engage in acts of bigotry and hatred,” citing honor killings or other violence against women and religious persecution.

There is no religious test to enter the United States and the Immigration Act of 1990 all but eliminated the government’s ability to exclude would-be immigrants on ideological grounds. But it does allow the government to block someone from the country if their “entry or proposed activities in the United States….would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences.”

Story: Alicia A. Caldwell, Vivian Salama

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Mexico’s President ‘Considering’ Scrapping US Trip

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump walks with Mexico's President Enrique Pena Nieto in August at the end of their joint statement at Los Pinos, the presidential official residence, in Mexico City. Photo: Dario Lopez-Mills / Associated Press

MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s president is “considering” canceling next week’s visit to Washington following President Donald Trump’s order to begin construction of a wall between the two countries, a senior official said.

In a nationally televised speech late Wednesday, President Enrique Pena Nieto condemned the U.S. decision and repeated that Mexico would not pay for the wall despite Trump’s avowals that it would.

“I regret and reject the decision of the U.S. to build the wall,” he said. “I have said time and again, Mexico will not pay for any wall.”

Pena Nieto did not directly mention whether he would make the trip to Washington on Jan. 31, but said he would await reports from the high-level team of Mexican officials currently meeting with Trump administration officials in Washington.

“Based on the final report from the Mexican officials who are in Washington right now … I will make decisions about what to do next,” he said.

After talking tough about the wall, he held out an olive branch, saying “Mexico re-affirms its friendship with the people of the United States, and its willingness to reach agreements with its government.”

The decision to possibly rethink the visit comes amid growing outrage in Mexico, and a sense among many that Pena Nieto has been too weak in the face of Trump’s tough policy stance.

The senior official, who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press the administration “is considering” scrapping Pena Nieto’s visit to the U.S. “That’s what I can tell you.”

It was not clear when a final decision may be made.

Trump’s order came the same day Mexico’s foreign relations and economy secretaries arrived in Washington, and its timing was seen by many in Mexico as a slap in the face.

Critics of Pena Nieto – whose approval ratings were just 12 percent in a recent survey, the lowest for any Mexican president in the polling era – have hammered him for his perceived weakness on Trump. Opposition politicians urged him Wednesday to call off the trip.

“The position is very clear,” said Ricardo Anaya Cortes, president of the conservative opposition National Action Party. “Either one cancels the meeting with Donald Trump, or one attends it to say publicly and with absolute firmness that Mexico rejects the wall and we will not pay a single cent for it.”

Trump has also promised to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Analyst Jorge Zepeda Patterson argued that Pena Nieto should keep the meeting as scheduled, saying Mexico should exhaust all possibilities for negotiating to minimize damage. He said Pena Nieto should try to reach an agreement that’s enough to let Trump claim victory and then move on to another foil.

“Trump is more interested in boasting of an immediate success than an ambitious result. He is interested in appearances,” Zepeda said.

The U.S. president has also promised to step up deportations. He launched his campaign with remarks calling immigrants crossing in illegally from Mexico criminals, drug dealers and “rapists.” Trump added that “some” were presumably good people, but the comments nonetheless deeply offended many Mexicans.

Pena Nieto was roundly criticized after inviting candidate Trump to Mexico City last August and disappointed many of his countrymen by not publicly confronting Trump on the wall.

On Tuesday, ahead of their trip to Washington, the economy and foreign relations secretaries suggested that Mexico could leave NAFTA if negotiations with Washington are unsatisfactory – though that would not be the first choice.

Already Mexico is feeling the effects of the new tone from Washington. The Mexican peso has sharply devalued since Trump was elected, and several high-profile business ventures have been canceled amid threats to impose a border tax on goods made in Mexico and exported to the United States.

Story: E. Eduardo Castillo

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District Official Dies Leading ‘Workout Wednesday’

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha exercises Wednesday at Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — The director of one of Bangkok’s central districts died Thursday morning after fainting during a soccer game he organized for the military regime’s Workout Wednesdays fitness policy.

Phra Nakhon Director Pramern Grairot fainted 20 minutes into a soccer game with other district officials at 2pm on Wednesday. He was taken to Vajira Hospital and died Thursday morning. He was 57.

“Pramern was a civil servant who did his duties to the fullest. Even with his important rank he worked till late without tiring,” Deputy Bangkok Gov. Jakkapan Piwngarm said this morning at City Hall. “Losing him is a great loss to city government, and we will never forget him.”

Civil servants in Pramern’s office said ever since Gen. Prayuth’s mandate for government workers to workout on Wednesdays started in November, Pramern had led them in exercises and sports such as soccer, badminton and aerobics without any apparent sign of illness.

Prayuth initiated the policy to improve the health and vitality of the bureaucracy. Critics have said it limits citizens’ access to services on hump day.

After Pramern was hospitalized, government spokesman Sansern Keawkamnerd said Gen. Prayuth had expressed his concern with a vase of flowers.

Bangkok Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang said this morning at Vajira Hospital that civil servants should get an annual health check, and that medical staff would advise on the best workout methods for Workout Wednesdays.

“Everyone should know their own health and the limits of how much they can exercise,” Aswin said. “Gen. Prayuth’s mandate of exercising to strengthen bodies doesn’t determine how much exercise should be done, because everyone should look at their own capabilities.”

Pramern was set to retire in 2020. Before working in Phra Nakhon district administration, he was a tourism developer in the Culture, Sport and Tourism Department of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration.

Pramern Grairot seen in an undated photo.
Pramern Grairot seen in an undated photo.

His fellow bureaucrats said Pramern was known for going out into the field and conversing with market hawkers for the purpose of relocating them.

This story was updated to reflect the cause of Pramern Grairot’s death.

Related stories:

Criticism Prompts Gov’t Rethink of Workout Wednesday

Prayuth Orders ‘Workout Wednesdays’ for Officials

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Tonight: Thai-Canadian Maetta Records Showcases Homegrown Techno Talent

Photo: Dittaphat Janprasert / Courtesy

Few artists from Thailand have made it big in the international scene. One of those is Flim, a techno DJ whose signature style of abstract, dissonant beat-making has earned him praise in the international techno community and brought him a long way from high school cover bands.

Notes from the Underground - Mongkorn 'DJ Dragon' TimkulSince the late ‘90s, when Dittaphat “Flim” Janprasert left his native Hat Yai and found work in Koh Samui’s legendary Gecko Bar where he honed his mixing skills under owner and label boss Gary Gecko, he’s gone on to make a name for himself as an in-demand talent in North America. He’s headlined venues such as Toronto’s System Sound Bar and the Piknic Electronik in Montreal.

The road that’s Flim, now 34, from Songkhla to Samui to Toronto returns to Bangkok on Thursday when he and label mates HDRX and Montonn Jira touch down at Ce La Vie to showcase their latest work.

Beforehand, I talked to Flim about that long road to success abroad and his label Maetta, which boasts 32 releases in its catalog.

He said a pivotal point in his career came after the millennium’s turn, when he moved to Toronto with his then-wife and started a family. Flim decided to permanently set up shop in Toronto and got work as a chef while DJing at weekend freetekno and squat parties.

“Let’s be honest at that time, DJing didn’t really pay the bills,” he says, laughing. “I just wanted to express myself in the arts, and I think music and cooking are the same thing.”
He reminisces fondly about the underground party scene of that time.

“We would break into abandoned warehouses and set up so that the cops would have a hard time spotting us,” he said. “We only got caught once.”

In 2010 Flim released his first record, “Killing It.” on esteemed techno label Mutate To Survive. The EP earned Flim praise from the likes of French techno pioneer The Hacker for its blending of minimal techno and tribal grooves. Following its success, he set up his own label. And in 2012 his label Maetta (“Empathy,” in Thai) was born. This year Flim aims to find fresh talent from Thailand to add to his label’s roster.

Photo: Dittaphat Janprasert / Courtesy
Photo: Dittaphat Janprasert / Courtesy

“I think to make it on an international level, Thai artists shouldn’t follow the rest of the world. We can do it ourselves, and we have a good scene, me and my label manager will be looking for producers here that can bang out a good track, so we are going to support that person to have regular releases with them on our label.”

The label has also organized a remix and mixtape competition. The winner of the remix will have her track released on Flim’s Maetta label and the mixtape winner would be able to study at SAE Institute’s Electronic Music Production program. The winner will be announced on March 9, 2017.

Maetta Label Night will take place at Ce La Vie and will feature Flim, HDRX, Montonn Jira. The event will also be supported by locals Etil and Kont3k5t supplying the visuals.

Doors open at 9pm for 400 baht entry, including one drink.

Until next time, Dub be good to you.

Photo: Andrija Dimitrijevic / Courtesy
Photo: Andrija Dimitrijevic / Courtesy

 

 

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Read My Lips: No Political Amnesty, Prayuth Says

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks to reporters Wednesday at Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha repeated on Tuesday that his goals for national reconciliation do not include amnesty to those facing legal action for previous cycles of political unrest.

His comments came after a senior member of the junta-appointed reform council advised the regime to work toward reconciliation by taking a cue from a landmark policy that ended a communist insurgency in the 1980s by offering amnesty to the rebels and their supporters. Prayuth said the idea is anachronistic.

“The cases of the present time are different,” Gen. Prayuth said. “And we are not divided on ideologies. Today, it is about how to move the country forward with the existing mechanisms.”

Read: Reconciliation Sounds Good, Thai Politicos Say, But What Does it Mean?

His deputy, Prawit Wongsuwan, gave the same response to the suggestion.

“We want to make people understand [each other] and coexist peacefully,” Gen. Prawit said. “But we will not issue laws that will save criminals from taking responsibility. We will not adopt the idea of ‘national development’ from back then. We won’t do that.”

Known as Order 66/23, the directive was issued in 1980 by the government of Prem Tinsulanonda in a bid to undermine the communist guerrillas by calling for economic and justice reforms. A key part of the policy was offering amnesty to insurgent fighters who agreed to lay down their arms and become “people who work for national development.”

Seri Suwanphanon, chairman of a committee on political affairs at the junta-appointed National Reform Steering Assembly, told reporters Monday that the government should learn from Order 66/23 in its quest for reconciliation.

Gen. Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, who served as Defense Minister under Order 66/23, greets former Communist fighters on Dec. 1, 2012, who gathered in Mukdahan province to mark the 30th anniversary of their surrender. Photo: Public Relations Department
Gen. Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, who served as Defense Minister under Order 66/23, greets former Communist fighters on Dec. 1, 2012, who gathered in Mukdahan province to mark the 30th anniversary of their surrender. Photo: Public Relations Department

Gen. Prayuth last week set up a committee to work toward reconciliation, but there’s no solid plan on how to achieve that so far.

Seri’s comment sparked speculation that he was suggesting a plan of amnesty for the reconciliation effort. Hundreds of people, including politicians, activists and ordinary civilians, from both Redshirt and Yellowshirt sides of the political rift, have been either convicted or charged with criminal offenses related to bouts of unrest that took place in the last decade.

Some political leaders have already declared they would oppose any plan for blanket pardons.

Speaking by telephone on Wednesday, Seri said he was merely proposing key features in Order 66/23 like justice and equality, and not amnesty.

“We [the committee] have already made clear we do not support amnesty,“ Seri said.

He also said his advice about learning from Order 66/23 is just that: advice, and the government is by no means required to heed it.

Related stories:

Reconciliation is Junta’s Desired Legacy, Activists Say

Junta Opens Public Relations Center for Reconciliation in Chiang Rai

US: Coup Will Not Lead To Reconciliation That Thailand Needs

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