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Former President George H. W. Bush Well Enough to Leave Hospital

In this photo provided by Office of George H.W. Bush on Monday, former President George H.W. Bush and his wife Barbara pose for a photo at Houston Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas. Photo: Associated Press

HOUSTON — Former President George H.W. Bush is still suffering from pneumonia, but is well enough to leave the intensive care unit at a Houston hospital, doctors said Monday. His wife, Barbara, has been discharged from the same facility after completing treatment for bronchitis.

The 92-year-old former president was struggling to breathe when he was admitted to the Houston Methodist Hospital Jan. 14. Last week, he was breathing with the aid of a ventilator in the ICU, but doctors removed the breathing tube on Friday and by Monday were talking about the possibility that he could return home soon.

Dr. Amy Mynderse said at a news conference that the former president is “sitting up, watching TV and is waiting anxiously for his favorite oyster stew for lunch.”

“He’s on minimal oxygen, joking and laughing with the nurses and doctors,” she said.

Dr. Clint Doerr said Bush was still coughing “a fair amount” but that if he continues to improve, he could be discharged from the hospital by Friday or over the weekend.

“He’s excited to get home and he’s feeling well,” Mynderse said, describing Bush as “not your average 92-year-old.”

Mynderse said when she told Bush he was being released from intensive care, he asked her: “Can I just go home?”

Meanwhile, former first lady Barbara Bush, 91, who was admitted to the facility for treatment of bronchitis on Wednesday, is “back to her normal self,” Mynderse said. Mrs. Bush was told she could return home Sunday, but she opted to stay one more night to fully recover and remain close to her husband, according to family spokesman Jim McGrath.

The couple’s 72-year marriage is the longest of any presidential couple in U.S. history, and the doctors said they have been a great support to each other.

“They truly do have just such an amazing love for each other and that really came across here,” Mynderse said, adding that Barbara Bush spent much her hospital stay by her husband’s side.

“Part of why she ended up, I think, in the hospital was because even though she was ill, she was trying to be by his bedside all the time.”

Doerr said: “They’re essentially therapy for each other. They help and are compliant in terms of when one of them doesn’t want to take a breathing treatment, the other says, ‘Get on that.’ It helps our cause.”

Bush, who served as president from 1989 to 1993, has a form of Parkinson’s disease and uses a motorized scooter or a wheelchair for mobility. He was hospitalized in 2015 in Maine after falling at his summer home and breaking a bone in his neck. He was also hospitalized in Houston the previous December for about a week for shortness of breath. He spent Christmas 2012 in intensive care for a bronchitis-related cough and other issues.

The former president and his wife appear to have touched the medical staff with their humility.

Mynderse told reporters that when she informed the former president she would be speaking at a news conference Monday, he replied: “About what?”

“I said, ‘About you!’ And he said, ‘People want to know about me?'” she said.

“They’re so humble. They truly are the most humble people,” Mynderse said.

Story: Michael Graczyk

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Lotus Basin Placed in Prayuth’s Path For Greater Fortune Breaks

Lotus ponds, costing 5,000 each, were found broken Tuesday. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — Auspicious lotus basins installed during the weekend on the grounds of the Government House to enhance the government’s fortunes through better Feng Shui were in need of repair by Tuesday.

At least one of 10 large bowls placed in the seat of power’s gardens to boost the status and luck of the state – specifically Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha – were found leaking. A worker quickly plugged the hole with a Scotch-Brite cleaning pad.

The yin-yang sensitive gardening was initiated by Gen. Wilat Arunsri, a top aide to the prime minister. Gardening experts from the Nong Nooch Tropical Botanical Garden were consulted for the installation. Each bowl cost 5,000 baht for a total of 50,000 baht.

The lotus bowls were filled with auspicious purple, blue, pink and white blooms and strategically placed in paths Prayuth frequents in the eastern gardens.

For his part, Prayuth played down their implications.

“They’re for decoration, according to regulations to improve government environments for citizens who come to visit,” he said. “The basins don’t harm anyone. They’re not about Feng Shui either, because this is a workplace.”

But he gave a nod to divine power.

“If you don’t focus on work and become corrupt, even sacred objects can’t help you out,” he said.

In Thailand, lotuses hold a number of auspicious meanings and are often used in Buddhist ceremonies. Blue lotuses symbolize victory of the mind over desire, white symbolize purity, purple mean mystery and pink represent the Buddha.

Some Thai houses have lotus bowls to boost that household’s luck and feng shui: It is believed that people in these houses will prosper and bloom like the long stems of the lotuses.

Prayuth is known to be deeply superstitious and wears many magical amulets under his shirts. Magic rites are commonly practiced at all levels of government.

The Government House, as the seat of power, seems especially haunted by superstitious associations. Anti-government protesters exorcised its grounds in 2014 in response to a Redshirt blood curse laid out there in 2010. Ghosts have been particularly pernicious, blamed for disrupting work and refusing to be appeased by a previous round of feng shui.

New lotus basins seen Monday at the Government House.
New lotus basins seen Monday at the Government House.

Lotus pond at Government House Monday.

A broken lotus pond bowl Tuesday at the Government House. Photo: Matichon
A broken lotus pond bowl Tuesday at the Government House. Photo: Matichon

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Feng Shui Fails To Stop Gov’t House ‘Ghosts’

Auspicious Beginning For Thailand’s New Government

Gov’t House Renovation Briefly Stalled By ‘Ghosts’

Protesters Cleanses ‘Black Magic’ From Govt House

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Reconciliation is Junta’s Desired Legacy, Activists Say

Then-army chief Prayuth Chan-ocha gives a fruit basket as a New Year present to retired army chief Prawit Wongsuwan on Dec. 26, 2013, at his Bangkok residence.

BANGKOK — Those who have worked on similar efforts believe the junta’s latest bid to forge national reconciliation is an attempt to leave something lasting after elections are held. Yet they warn it’s unlikely to yield results if it doesn’t move away from a top-down and non-participatory approach.

A week has passed since the military regime announced its bid for national reconciliation, which has already been met with obstacles and skepticism. The regime’s proposal for all parties to end the decade-old political conflicts by signing a multilateral agreement hit a snag after it was met with tepid responses. Most significantly, former Democrat Party official Suthep Thaugsuban, who quit the party to organize street protests which paved the way for the 2014 coup, publicly announced he would not sign on.

Junta deputy leader Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan heads the reconciliation initiative and has vowed to produce tangible results within three months. He made it clear that he doesn’t see the military as a party to the conflict, thus drawing doubts as to the junta’s sincerity. Prawit added that it would also not sign any agreement committing the army to never staging a coup again.

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

Somchai Homlaor, a former member of the Truth for Reconciliation Commission formed to investigate the 2010 political crisis said he believes some army officers mean well. He said the move must have come from a junta desire to show the public it has something concrete to leave as a legacy.

But forming a committee dominated by military and police officers, he said, doesn’t bode well for the effort.

“This matter must be inclusive. The military must reduce its role as a party to the conflicts and acknowledge that not a small number of people who love freedom and democracy have conflicts with the National Council for Peace and Order, particularly through its use of [absolute power],” Somchai said, referring to the junta by its formal name.

The former commissioner said that no matter what he thinks of the approach, it’s a good sign that reconciliation is being revived after a very brief – and fruitless – attempt made right after the coup.

Somchai warned that it could be years before any reconciliation is achieved, even if done properly, because ongoing conflicts continue.

A peace advocate and advisor to Mahidol University’s peace studies program who has also worked on reconciliation over the years also welcomed the latest move, but not without caveats.

Gothom Arya also believes the junta wants to show some results before its promised elections, now most likely to be held in 2018.

“Why are they doing it now? As they say in English, “Time is up!’” Gothom said.

The military, he added, has claimed from the outset of the coup that it wants to close the political rift and bring about reconciliation.

But he also hopes the junta will make the committee more diverse. He warned that Prawit’s promise to produce something concrete in three months is implausible, given the timelines of similar reconciliation efforts in other countries. He also criticized the idea of forcing people to sign a Memorandum of Understanding.

“This makes it difficult to start. When Prawit said the military is not a party to the conflict, that’s also just rhetoric. They are definitely a party to the conflicts,” Gothom said. “The military doesn’t just solve problems, but causes them as well. If they would admit this, it would be good and we could talk.”

Just to give a glimpse of how people may construe the word differently, consider what Same Sky Magazine editor Thanapol Eawsakul wrote online Tuesday about how “reconciliation” means something different to everyone.

For the coup makers, he said it means immunization from future punishment for the 2014 putsch.

“Reconciliation for politicians means to do whatever it takes as long as there will be elections,” he wrote.

For the Democrat Party and various incarnations of the Yellowshirt movement, he said it means doing whatever it takes so eternal boogeyman and former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra can never return. Thanapol said that for Thaksin’s Pheu Thai Party and the Redshirts’ United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship, or UDD, it means doing whatever it took to secure Thaksin’s return.

“Reconciliation for those appointed under an unelected regime means doing whatever it takes so they can be appointed again without running in elections. Reconciliation for technocrats who served in a coup system in so-called independent bodies means doing whatever it takes so they can keep their jobs,” Thanapol added, saying that they were ready to pay lip service to any power to assure their continuity.

While the UDD agreed in principle to sign the memorandum, one of its leaders, Weng Tojirakarn, cautioned that it remains premature to know what will come. He also blamed Suthep for being “insincere” by not committing the group he led against the previous civilian government to the yet-to-be-revealed agreement.

“It reflects his trickiness,” said Weng, who also reserved criticism against Prawit. Weng said it would be hard for the junta to achieve any reconciliation as long as is refused to acknowledge itself as a party to the political conflicts.

Ekachai Hongkangwan is a Redshirt, former lese majeste convict who now advocates on behalf of prisoners of conscience. He gave the junta’s intentions the benefit of doubt but said no reconciliation can be achieved without justice through amnesty.

According to Ekachai, there are still 60 or so Redshirt political prisoners serving sentences on politically related convictions during the past decade.

He said nothing short of a blanket amnesty could bring about reconciliation, and even then, it may be too late.

Ekachai said many Redshirts have been imprisoned over the years while criminal cases against Yellowshirts and their allies have moved at a glacial pace. If there would be amnesty, they would not face prison, he said, while many Redshirts have been jailed, and a few released.

“This is unfair and unjust,” said Ekachai, who spent nearly three years in prison for peddling burned CDs of an Australian news report critical of the monarchy.

He said all lese majeste prisoners, which he believes to be about 30, should also granted amnesty, something the junta has so refused to entertain. Among his many preconditions, he also said that any reconciliation committee must include stakeholders from all sides; in contrast, the committee established by the regime is mostly occupied by military and police officers.

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Trump Wrongly Blames Illegal Immigrants for Loss of Popular Vote

President Donald Trump leaves the President's Room of the Senate on Capitol Hill in January after he formally signed his cabinet nominations into law. Photo: J. Scott Applewhite, Pool

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump asserted in a private meeting with congressional leaders Monday night that he would have won the popular vote in the 2016 election if 3 million to 5 million immigrants living in the country illegally hadn’t voted.

Trump made the debunked claim, without offering any evidence, at a White House meeting with Democratic and Republican leaders, according to a Democratic aide familiar with the exchange who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meeting.

House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., alluded to it, telling reporters that Trump and the lawmakers talked about “the different Electoral College, popular vote.” Asked if anything surprised her about the meeting, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said, “I won’t even go into that.”

There has been no evidence of widespread tampering or hacking that would change the results of the presidential contest. Trump won the Electoral College by a comfortable margin but Democratic rival Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by nearly 2.9 million votes.

Throughout the campaign, Trump pushed false claims about the propensity of voter fraud, telling his supporters the election had been “rigged” against him.

Trump has made the unverified claims before, tweeting in late November that he would have won the popular vote “if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally.” He also alleged at the time that there had been “serious voter fraud” in California, New Hampshire and Virginia and complained that the media wasn’t covering it.

Story: Ken Thomas, Erica Werner

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UK Can’t Trigger Brexit Without Parliament, Supreme Court Rules

Painter Kaya Mar shows his latest painting of British Prime Minister Theresa May in 2017 in front of the Supreme Court in London: Photo: Frank Augstein / Associated Press
Painter Kaya Mar shows his latest painting of British Prime Minister Theresa May in 2017 in front of the Supreme Court in London: Photo: Frank Augstein / Associated Press

LONDON — Britain’s Supreme Court says that the government can’t trigger Brexit without an act of Parliament.

Supreme Court President David Neuberger says the vote was a majority of 8-3.

This is a developing story and will be updated without notice.

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Beam it Up Again as Thonglor Nightclub Turns 1

Photo: Beam / Facebook

BANGKOK — Thonglor nightclub Beam will celebrate its first birthday by cranking up the light and sound Saturday.

Above the club’s vibrating dance floor and below some vibrant projection mapping, local and international DJs will come around to celebrate the venue with a night of deep house, techno and hip-hop.

Special guests in the main room include French DJ Jennifer Cardini, DJ Kingkong’s side project called Marmosets and tech-house, girl-powered NT66.

To go full hip-hop, keep it downstairs in the Dalmation Room with sounds by WHVCK and Bunnyman.

The event runs from 9pm until late on Saturday. Admission is 500 baht and includes one free shot.

Beam is located inside the 72 Courtyard community mall on Sukhumvit Soi 55.

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Third Woman Alleges Attempted Abduction by Pattaya Cops

A woman filed complaint on Monday she was nearly abducted by a group of police officers in Pattaya

PATTAYA — Police in the resort town of Pattaya on Monday confirmed a group of men who attempted to abduct a woman from a street during the weekend were members of the force.

The latest case in which policemen allegedly used a drug search as a pretense for rape and extortion, a 23-year-old bar worker’s allegations that two police officers attempted to abduct her was backed up by the city police chief, who has vowed to investigate.

“For what happened, I, as the commander, would like to apologize to the public for the misunderstanding,” Col. Apichai Klobpetch said.

The incident took place in South Pattaya on Sunday night. The woman, who spoke anonymously out of fear for her safety, said two men identified themselves as officers and told her to get on their motorcycle for a drug test as she was leaving home for work.

They took her to a van parked in a secluded area where another group of men were waiting and told her to get into the vehicle, according to the woman. She said she refused and ran away for help, which prompted the men to flee.

The men were not dressed in police uniform and did not show any police ID throughout the encounter, she said.

Col. Apichai told reporters Monday night he learned all of the suspects were either police officers or volunteers with the Pattaya police force. He said they had been summoned to the regional police headquarters for a formal inquiry.

Apichai could not be reached for comment Tuesday, but he said in a televised interview earlier today that the matter would be taken seriously.

He also advised the public to be vigilant of suspicious police officers and always ask to see their identification if they are stopped by officers.

Police often work without uniforms and employ “volunteers,” civilians recruited to help with police work, in their operations. The force also insists on conducting random body searches and drug tests in the streets.

In June, six cops and volunteers were charged on suspicion of detaining a woman in Pattaya on a drug-related charge before raping and extorting her. That trial is ongoing, police said.

Something similar happened in Pattaya three months later when a cop and two volunteers were accused of raping and demanding ransom from a woman whom they detained to search for narcotics.

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Women’s Fights a Strong Part of One’s Expansion Plans

Taiwan's Jenny Huang, right, fights against her opponent Filipina April Osenio in a women's mixed martial arts tournament in Manila on Dec. 2, 2016. Photo: Dux Carvajal / One Championship

BANGKOK The head of One Championship, Asia’s leading mixed martial arts promoter, is aiming to almost triple the current number of events per year as it chases an ambitious expansion agenda.

Chatri Sityodtong said an event every week in Asia was the ultimate goal, representing a significant increase on the 2017 schedule of 18 events, with new markets such as Japan and South Korea expected to soon become part of the calendar.

“Over the years you will see us expand,” Chatri told The Associated Press. “My ultimate vision is 52 events, one every week, and a different venue each time, in the biggest cities, including Tokyo and Seoul.

“I would rather go carefully and steadily, but it’s always good to have a vision to aim for.”

Read: Women Fighters to Smash Bangkok as MMA Penetrates Homeland of Muay Thai

Such an increase in events would require a matching boost in the number of fighters, and part of that plan was to broaden the presence of women’s events.

The upcoming promotion in Bangkok on March 11 will be headlined by the women’s atom weight title fight between Angela Lee and Jenny Huang.

Lee’s fight was also top of the card when she won the title in Singapore last year, but she trains in that country, so there was a connection for local fans.

Mixed martial arts One Women's Atomweight World Champion Angela Lee, left, poses with challenger Jenny Huang of Taiwan at a In Jan. 17 press conference in Bangkok. Photo: One Championship
Mixed martial arts One Women’s Atomweight World Champion Angela Lee, left, poses with challenger Jenny Huang of Taiwan at a In Jan. 17 press conference in Bangkok. Photo: One Championship

Chatri said that having a women’s fight, with two foreign contestants, as the headline act despite Thailand having a number of fighters on the card, was part of One’s ethos.

“Having local headliners makes a lot of sense and drives TV ratings of course,” Chatri said. “But we want to mix that with having the global superstars.”

The 20-year-old Lee has not fought since winning the title in May last year, but believes the 10-month break between fights will be beneficial.

“I wouldn’t say it took so much out of me physically but more mentally and emotionally that fight there was a lot of pressure going into that fight and the training for that fight was very rigorous,” Lee said. “So, I really appreciated the time off but I am really excited, I am hungry to get back in that cage now.”

The Bangkok event will also have another intriguing women’s fight as Rika Ishige of Thai and Japanese heritage will make her professional debut. Ishige splits her time between fighting and modelling and is the partner of Thai fighter Shannon Wiratchai, who will also be on the card.

“We share the same passion in MMA,” Ishige said of her relationship. “The sport has brought us together and allowed two human beings to meet and fall in love with each other.”

Story: Chris Lines

Related stories:

Women Fighters to Smash Bangkok as MMA Penetrates Homeland of Muay Thai

ONE Championship MMA Coming to Bangkok, New Markets for 2017

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After 3-Month Delay, PromptPay Fully Launches Friday

Kasikorn Bank promotes people to register for PromptPay on July 1.

BANGKOK — A much-touted national e-payment system delayed for several months will be fully operational throughout the country Friday, a top finance official said Monday.

After three months of delay, the PromptPay system, which has been used for governmental transactions since late last year, will activate electronic transfers between private parties. Part of the government effort to push a cashless society, PromptPay users will only need their national ID or mobile phone number to make transactions.

After months of heavy promotion by officials and banks, the service was about to go live in October when the Bank of Thailand put the kibosh on it at the last minute. The central bank said time was needed for more testing; critics said the move came after a string crimes highlighted potential vulnerabilities.

Finance Minister Apisak Tantivorawong said the system, which allows transfers of under 5,000 baht free of charge, will save 180 billion baht in domestic transfer fees.

Benefits would extend to all sectors, Apisak said. Users will pay less in fees, commercial banks will have less overhead and the government will more easily keep track of taxpayers.

PromptPay was overseen by the National Interbank Transaction Management Exchange, or NITMX, a bank consortium set up in 2005 to act as an electronic exchange system under the direction of the central bank.

Related stories:

Gov’t Apologizes for Delayed PromptPay Tax Returns

Not Ready: Indefinite Delay For PromptPay

What is PromptPay? A Guide for Noobs.

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Aussie Open: Venus Williams, Oldest Woman to Reach Semi-Finals

United States' Venus Williams celebrates after defeating Russia's Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova during their quarterfinal Tuesday at the Australian Open tennis championships in Melbourne, Australia. Photo: Aaron Favila / Associated Press

MELBOURNE, Australia — Venus Williams has reached her 21st Grand Slam semifinal, her first at the Australian Open in 14 years.

CoCo Vandeweghe advanced to her first major semifinal, anywhere, beating Grand Slam winners in back-to-back rounds. The one sure outcome when they meet this week will be an American in the final at Melbourne Park.

The 36-year-old Williams beat No. 24-seeded Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-4, 7-6 (3) on Tuesday, becoming the oldest player to reach the Australian Open women’s semifinals in the Open era.

She’ll be meeting a confident Vandeweghe, who dictated play against French Open champion Garbine Muguruza in a 6-4, 6-0 quarterfinal win.

The No. 35-ranked Vandeweghe upset top-ranked Angelique Kerber, who won the Australian and U.S. titles last year, in the fourth round. She followed it up with another commanding win, the 10th in her career against a Top 10 player.

Vandeweghe saved the only break point she faced in the first set with an ace, and only conceded 10 points in the 28-minute second set. Of her 31 winners, 14 were from her powerful forehand side.

“Once I got rolling in the second, it was like a freight train,” she said, “You couldn’t stop it.”

Williams has advanced through the tournament without dropping a set, and isn’t ready to stop there in the latest installment of her career revival.

“It’s wonderful to start the year out with this appearance,” said Williams, who hadn’t reached the semifinals in Australia since 2003, the year she lost the final to her sister, Serena. “I want to go further. I’m not happy just with this. But I’m so happy to be in the position to like go further.”

Williams didn’t reach the quarterfinals at any of the Grand Slams from 2011  when she was diagnosed with the Sjogren Sydnrome, which saps energy and causes joint pain  and the 2015 Australian Open.

She lost in the first round here last year, but returned to reach the semifinals at Wimbledon and finished the year ranked 17th. Vandeweghe also lost in the first round here last year, and at the U.S. Open last September, but has hit form in Melbourne. As well as the wins over Kerber and Muguruza, she has had wins over No. 15-seeded Roberta Vinci and Eugenie Bouchard, who reached the semifinals here and the final at Wimbledon in 2014.

Williams said the quarterfinal results were a “great win for the U.S.”

“I’m sure she’s going to want to be in her first final,” Williams said. “I’m going to want to be in only my second final here. So it’s going to be a well-contested match.”

Williams dropped four service games against Pavlyuchenkova, but she responded each time by breaking back. In the tiebreaker, she trailed 3-1 before winning the last six points  clinching the match on Pavlyuchenkova’s double-fault.

It earned her a spot in the semifinals for the second time in three majors  after a six-year absence from the last four.

With her run to the Wimbledon semifinals last year, Williams became the oldest woman since Martina Navratilova (at 37 years, 258 days) in 1994 to advance so far at a major.

With Serena Williams in the quarterfinals and targeting a record 23rd major, there’s the prospect of another sisters final in Australia.

Williams isn’t looking across the net, though, saying that’s not what makes a champion. She is focused on Grand Slam title No. 8.

“I try to believe,” she said. “I’d like to be a champion, in particular this year. The mentality I walk on court with is: ‘I deserve this’.”

Story: John Pye

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