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Thai Football Fined 1M Baht Over Fiery Hooliganism

BANGKOK — The Thai Football Association was fined USD$30,000 (1 million baht) Thursday as punishment for failing to prevent hooligans from burning flares last month at at Rajamangala Stadium.

In a letter to Thai football, the Asian Football Confederation cited articles of its disciplinary code for fines penalizing improper conduct by spectators and the organization’s failure to meet its obligations over the Dec. 17 incident in the stands during an AFF Suzuki Cup match.

The fine must be paid within 30 days.

Despite the association’s cooperation with police in finding and arresting the hooligans, it was warned punishment will be more severe if it happens again at future FIFA or AFC matches, according to football association Patis Supapong said.

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Reward Offered For Hooligans Behind Thai Football Firestorm

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Absurd News Parody Brings Smiles to Flood-Ravaged South (Photos)

Abdulhakim Kasing risks rapid floodwaters to deliver his take on the situation on the ground in Narathiwat province. Image: Abdulhakim Kasing / Facebook

NARATHIWAT— As floods deluge Southern Thailand, devastate communities and drowned at least one man, some soggy smiles were found in the antics of an amateur news report skewering disaster-porn journalism.

Some of the heaviest rains in a decade have shut down rail service, shuttered dozens of schools closed and forced residents to travel by boat, and somewhere amid that all a Narathiwat man managed to find his footing to film a parody news report.

Waist- and then neck-deep in surging floodwaters, Facebook user Abdulhakim Kasing’s fake news report has been watched more than 1.1 million times since it was posted Monday.

“Sawasdee kaa, Khun Kitti, right now I’m in the flood disaster zone,” he says, yelling. “At this point, we have not received any relief packages. The citizens are in deep trouble. It’s flooding and the waters are very strong. I can’t take it anymore!”

Abdulhakim was apparently mocking the dramatic on-scene coverage of natural disasters in the South which cut back and forth with a field reporter and the serenely seated anchor Kitti Singhapud. The background music is Channel 3’s ever-familiar breaking news theme.

While the video was being liked and shared, waters in Pattani continue to rise, rain continues to lash Trang and Phattalung provinces, and high waves caused boat accidents in Krabi which dumped tourists into the sea.  

Off the coast of Koh Phangan, a three-day old search for a missing Japanese tourist was suspended due to the weather.

Needless to say, the south is flooded.

Nakhon Si Thammarat on Wednesday.
Nakhon Si Thammarat on Wednesday.
Residents aboard a boat Wednesday in Pattani province.
Residents aboard a boat Wednesday in Pattani province.
A failed bridge Wednesday in Trang province.
A failed bridge Wednesday in Trang province.
Flooded tracks on Wednesday in Nakhon Si Thammarat province.
Flooded tracks on Wednesday in Nakhon Si Thammarat province.
Residents fish in floodwaters Wednesday in Yala province.
Residents fish in floodwaters Wednesday in Yala province.
Pajorn Saedan’s Suzuki Caribbean after it was swept down the road Wednesday in Nakhon Si Thammarat.
Pajorn Saedan’s Suzuki Caribbean after it was swept down the road Wednesday in Nakhon Si Thammarat.
Rescue workers and residents Wednesday in Songkhla province.
Rescue workers and residents Wednesday in Songkhla province.
Children on Wednesday in Songkhla province.
Children on Wednesday in Songkhla province.
Twenty-two Chinese tourists were rescued after their speedboat capsized due to four-meter waves Wednesday in Krabi province.
Twenty-two Chinese tourists were rescued after their speedboat capsized due to four-meter waves Wednesday in Krabi province.

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Road Deaths to Persist After Deadliest Holidays in Decade

On Jan. 2, 2017, Policemen and rescue officials at the scene of a collision in Chonburi where 25 people died.

BANGKOK — Fourteen more people died on average during each day of the holidays over last year, with drunk and speeding drivers blamed for the highest year-end death toll in 10 years.

One particularly horrible accident contributed to making the so-called Seven Dangerous Days, which ended Wednesday, the deadliest in a decade with 478 people killed, 4,128 injured in 3,919 road accidents. What often goes unmentioned is the fact those grim numbers are little different from the other 358 days of the year.

“The government focuses too much on the seven days,” Liviu Vedrasco of the World Health Organization said.  “Roads in Thailand are dangerous every day, not only seven. [The safety] improvement must be done by the government every single day.”

For Monday’s horrific highway collision which killed 25, Chonburi province won the dire distinction of having the most fatalities. Thirty-three people were killed in road accidents there. Udon Thani topped the other 75 provinces in road accidents with 146, according to statistics released Thursday by the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department.

Drunk driving and speeding driving were the top causes responsible for the traffic accidents at 36.6 percent and 31.3 percent, respectively. Last week saw an increase of 14 more people per day than the daily average the year prior, when 52.2 people on average died every day in a total 380 road deaths.

The New Year death toll was also the highest since 2007 when 449 people were killed.

Thailand has some of the world’s highest road fatality rates, and although government and media attention tends to be seasonal, the rest of the year is also deadly.

An average of 68.2 people died during the seven-day holiday period which began Dec. 29 and ran through Jan. 4. That compares to the 66.4 people killed every day in 2015, according to a WHO estimate, which said Thailand has won the race to the bottom with the world’s highest rate of road fatalities.

Although the numbers aren’t out yet for 2016, Vedrasco said it was on par with previous years with roughly 24,000 deaths.

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25 Die in Fiery Chonburi Wreck

 

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Uprooted by War, Fearing Troops, Myanmar Girls Learn Karate

Internally displaced girls in Jeyang village camp, near the China border, join the karate training for self-defense in November in Kachin state, Myanmar. Photo: Esther Htusan / Associated Press

JE YANG, Myanmar — Every afternoon, dozens of teenage girls at the school for displaced children line up on the grounds, dressed in white uniforms with belts of various colors: yellow, blue, white. They kick high and jump with glee before settling into their exercises, shouting in Japanese as they punch into the air.

The reason many of these girls are in this class is sobering: They want protection from their own country’s military.

Mostly between 13 and 16, they have lost their homes, and in some cases their families, to the long-running civil war in Myanmar’s Kachin state  a war in which soldiers have been repeatedly accused of raping girls and women, but rarely prosecuted. This karate class offers some small sense of power to the vulnerable.

“For all the girls, we teach them how to protect themselves when someone tries to sexually assault them and how to fight back,” instructor Hkun Naw said. “Basically teaching the girls to make themselves safe.

“We wanted to make sure all the internally displaced children have the right to do something that gives them joy, and to be confident.”

More than 100,000 people in Kachin state, in Myanmar’s north, have been forced from their homes by fighting between government troops and ethnic Kachin rebels who have sought greater autonomy for decades. A 17-year-long cease-fire ended in 2011.

Je Yang is among the most crowded camps, with more than 8,000 people, including 16-year-old Hkawn Ra. She fled fighting in her village of Man Dung while she was at school five years ago, when she was 11. She has not seen her parents since.

She once dreamed of becoming a nurse, but no longer. “Because of the political situation and civil war, I cannot become who I want to be, and I am not angry about it anymore,” she said.

Hkawn Ra is, however, learning karate, after hearing about rapes and sexual violence against women in the region. A community-based organization operating under the Kachin Independence Organization has held karate classes in Kachin-controlled areas since the year the cease-fire ended, seeking to teach girls and boys self-defense and self-confidence.

“They (the military) rape women and that’s why I was interested, and decided to learn karate to protect myself at least,” Hkawn Ra said.

Women organizations say the military has been long using rape as weapon of war. The Women’s League of Burma says it has documented more than 100 cases of rape and sexual violence against ethnic women by the military army since 2010. The government and the military have remained largely silent on the issue.

This fall, Muslim Rohingya and rights groups have said soldiers and police have repeatedly raped members of the ethnic minority in northwestern Rakhine state. Authorities have been conducting sweeps of the region since October, when nine border guards were killed by unknown attackers. The government has blocked foreign media from the area, but Rohingya who fled to nearby Bangladesh report rapes and murders by security forces, and satellite images back up their claims of village-burning. At a recent press conference, military spokesman Soe Naing Oo denied that soldiers in Rakhine were committing any human-rights violations or sexual violence.

The Kachin Women’s Association of Thailand and the Legal Aid Network last year released a report on investigators’ lack of progress in the brutal 2015 rape and murder of the two Kachin volunteer teachers. Dozens of soldiers were housed closed to the rape scene, and several left shortly before the bodies were discovered, but no suspects have been identified.

Prosecutions have been few. In 2014, a soldier was sentenced to 7 years in prison for raping a 7-year-old Kachin girl in northern Shan state. Accused Myanmar soldiers normally face a military tribunal, but in that case lawyers successfully pressed for a civilian trial.

Ethnic minorities overwhelmingly voted for Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy last year, helping it replace an elected but military-dominated government. But many are now disappointed with her government’s efforts to resolve a host of ethnic conflicts and what they see as the military’s impunity.

“Without talking about human-rights violations and ignoring the truth and justice for the victims, there won’t be a real peace and national reconciliation in our country,” said Julia Marip, secretary of the Women’s League of Burma.

With little confidence that soldiers will be held to account for misdeeds, the girls in the karate class hope to at least deter them from committing any to begin with. They compete with each other, and some have dreams of fighting professionally.

“Our instructor said we can go abroad to learn more skills, and I want to go overseas and be a professional fighter,” said 14-year-old Nu Ja.

“When they know how to defend themselves,” said Hkun Naw, the instructor, “they will be able to protect their families, their people and their country.”

Story: Esther Htusan

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Taiwan Protests Vietnam Deporting Fraud Suspects to China

Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen speaks with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump through a speaker phone in December in Taipei, Taiwan. Photo: Associated Press

BEIJING — Taiwan has protested after Vietnam sent four of its nationals accused of fraud to China, saying they were denied visits by Taiwanese diplomats and forcibly sent to the mainland under pressure from Beijing.

Scores of Taiwanese have been arrested around the world in the past year in connection with vast telecoms fraud scams targeting Chinese. Countries including Malaysia, Cambodia and Kenya have recently deported Taiwanese suspects to China, in deference to Beijing’s claim to sovereignty over the self-governing island.

Taiwan has vigorously protested the deportations, saying it should be allowed to prosecute its own citizens. But it lacks diplomatic relations with many of the countries, which have close diplomatic and economic ties to Beijing.

The Taiwanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said this week that it “regretted” that the Vietnamese government violated the principle of governments exercising their jurisdiction over their overseas nationals. The ministry said mainland officials obstructed Taiwanese attempts to look into the case and visit its citizens, and despite several meetings, Vietnam “forcibly sent the suspects to the Chinese mainland under intense pressure.”

Beijing contends that Taiwan gives light treatment to the suspects, who are accused of extorting hundreds of Chinese by posing as bank or government officials. Chinese authorities say they should try the cases because their citizens are the primary victims and have been swindled out of millions of dollars.

China has upped pressure on Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen in recent months, suspending contacts with her administration and waging a diplomatic campaign to further isolate Taiwan after she refused to endorse Beijing’s claim that Taiwan and the mainland are part of a single Chinese nation.

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Cop Accused of Gunning Down Yala School Director

Rescue workers prepare to move the body of school director Saho Muleng on Wednesday in Yala province.

YALA — Following an hour-long standoff, a border patrol police officer was arrested Thursday on suspicion of murdering the director of a local school in his own home.

Police said Lance Cpl. Nirand Im-erb, 26, gunned down Saho Muleng, director of the Ban Tabin Tee Ngee School, on Wednesday following a heated argument at the victim’s residence in Yala province. Nirand was reportedly not cooperating with investigators.

“He has denied all charges,” said Chamlong Suvalak, chief of Yala city police. “He refuses to give any testimony.”

But Col. Chamlong said circumstantial evidence so far points to Nirand’s involvement. Nirand, who’s enlisted with the Border Patrol’s 44th Task Force, was on duty with his partner when they stopped by Saho’s home, which doubles as a grocery store. After Nirand entered the store, gunshots were heard, and the officer then fled. Saho was found dead inside.

Having identified Nirand as the likely perpetrator, security officers surrounded his home Thursday morning and spent an hour negotiating his surrender. He eventually relented and was taken to Yala City Police Station for questioning. He was also charged with murder.

Kritsada Kaewchandee, commander of Yala police, said investigators are still trying to determine Nirand’s motives. Witnesses at the scene told police Nirand had a heated argument with Saho prior to the killing. He said cultural misunderstanding and miscommunication may have played a role.

“He asked if he could use the toilet, and he might have entered without taking his shoes off, which offended the homeowner, who was Muslim,” Maj. Gen. Kritsada said, adding that the two did not know each other.

Lance Cpl. Nirand Im-Erb, in red, in custody at Yala City Police Station on Thursday
Lance Cpl. Nirand Im-Erb, in red, in custody at Yala City Police Station on Thursday

Nevertheless, Kritsada stressed that Nirand would only be considered a suspect until forensic examinations and court proceedings confirmed his guilt.

“We are not protecting anyone. It depends on the evidence,” the commander said.

Snapped?
Yala is part of the southern border region known as the Deep South, where Islamic separatists have waged a bloody campaign against the authorities for nearly 13 years. The conflict has cost at least 6,800 lives according to a December tally.

While the insurgents are blamed for many of the fatalities, there have also been incidents of security officers opening fire on civilians or their colleagues. Just two months ago, a policeman killed two fellow officers and wounded 16 at his own station in Yala.

Job stress at what is a hardship post in the nation’s most dangerous region has been cited in some incidents, but Kritsada said it was too early to conclude if it factored into Nirand’s alleged crime.

“A doctor is examining him” to assess his mental health, Maj. Gen. Kritsada said.

According to police, Nirand was posted with a unit in his hometown of Mae Sot in the north before being transferred to Yala two months ago.

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Support Local Acts at Free Ekkamai Fest

Alternative indie band Poomjit seen in a Long Khan fest promo clip.

Update: The location was changed to ACMEN Ekamai Complex

BANGKOK — Selling band tees, requesting their own songs and DIY music videos are some of the lengths to which indie musicians must go to be heard. One thing they usually cannot do: make money.

Rock band Ten to Twelve and the alt-musicians of Poomjit are headlining a music fest to support indie music at which audiences get in for free and pay something directly to the bands they want to support.

At Long Khan, eight bands will take turns playing what they please for people to pay for what pleases them into a bucket at the front of the stage. All the money will go to the artists.

The festival will be held 3pm to 11pm on Jan. 15 at ACMEN Ekamai Complex on Sukhumvit Soi 63, can be reached by motorbike from BTS Ekkamai.

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Bad Weather Disrupts Search for Japanese Diver

Diving instructors search for Irie Takuma on Wednesday just off Koh Phangan, where he went missing Tuesday.

SURAT THANI — Search efforts for a Japanese tourist who went missing in the sea off Koh Phangan were paused Thursday due to flooding and heavy rain.

Rescue personnel, Thai and foreign diving instructors and various marine officials had been searching for Irie Takuma, 23, since he was reported missing at about 2pm on Tuesday off the island’s eastern shore before suspending the effort today.

“It’s been raining heavily here for days. It’s flooded everywhere, including the precinct,” Col. Somchai Noppasri of Koh Phangan police said.

Takuma and his three friends had gone diving in areas marked with red flags warning of turbulent waves and wind. After two days the rescue efforts were disrupted by heavy rain.

Somchai said five fishing boats, 10 longboats, and five jet skis had been recruited for the search.

“If we were to go into the water, we would all drown in the search,” Somchai said.

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72 Films to Unspool at World Film Fest

"Elle" (2016)

BANGKOK — More than 70 films, from an adrenaline-soaked thriller and Israeli identity-swapping to a Studio Ghibli animation, are on their way to Bangkok screens this month.

After being postponed due to national mourning, the 14th World Film Festival’s 72 films are on for one week this month at CentralWorld.

Selection highlights include French psychological thriller “Elle,” in which a cat-and-mouse game unfolds between a revenge-seeking businesswoman and the man who sexually assaulted her. The film won the Critics’ Choice Awards for best foreign-language film at the Golden Globes and scored a nomination for lead actress Isabelle Huppert.

Described by Vanity Fair as Cannes’ “most shocking” film of 2016, “Staying Vertical” is about a blocked writer who goes rural to raise a baby he had with a shepherdess while looking for inspiration for his new film. It’s French.

Israeli and Palestinian women are forced to live each other’s lives after a mix-up at a security checkpoint in the black comedy “Self Made.”

See lives on an Italian island at the frontline of the European migrant crisis in “Fire at Sea.” Animation-lovers won’t disappoint as the event features dialogue-free fantasy animation “The Red Turtle,” set on a deserted island, and French-Swiss production “My Life as Zucchini,” a stop-motion film about an oddly named 9-year-old boy.

The schedule is available online. Tickets for each film are 120 baht. The festival starts Jan. 23 and runs through Feb. 1 at SF World Cinema CentralWorld.

 

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Bangkok’s World Film Festival Rescheduled to January

 

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Germany Arrests Tunisian who Dined With Market Attacker

Frauke Koehler, spokeswoman for federal prosecutors gives a statement Wednesday in Karlsruhe, Germany. Photo: Uwe Anspach / Associated Press

BERLIN — An acquaintance of suspected Berlin Christmas market attacker Anis Amri who dined with him the night before the rampage is under investigation for possible participation in planning the attack, German prosecutors said Wednesday. He was arrested, but in a separate case.

The 26-year-old Tunisian had known Amri since the end of 2015 and the pair ate together at a Berlin restaurant the night before the Dec. 19 attack, said Frauke Koehler, a spokeswoman for federal prosecutors. His quarters at a refugee home were searched on Tuesday.

The pair’s meeting led prosecutors to believe that the man may have been involved in the attack or at least knew that Amri planned to commit one, Koehler said. She said that “communications devices” seized in Tuesday’s search are being evaluated, but federal prosecutors do not currently have enough evidence to seek an arrest warrant against him.

The man was, however, detained Tuesday in a separate case run by Berlin local prosecutors, Koehler said. Berlin prosecutors said the arrest was for allegedly falsely claiming benefits.

A further search was conducted Tuesday at the home of a one-time roommate of Amri who is being treated as a witness in the case, Koehler said.

Amri, a 24-year-old Tunisian, tried to reach that person on the morning and afternoon of Dec. 19, but it isn’t clear whether they actually spoke, she added.

Investigators say Amri drove the truck that plowed into a Christmas market in central Berlin. Twelve people were killed — including the truck’s regular driver, whose body was found in the cab after the attack.

Koehler said that the Polish driver apparently was fatally shot before the truck set off for the market from its parking place north of central Berlin. She said investigations have shown “no indications that there was a third person in the cab at the time of the attack.”

Germany on Dec. 21 released a Europe-wide wanted notice for Amri, who used a string of different names and nationalities. He was killed in a shootout Dec. 23 with Italian police in a Milan suburb after they stopped him for a routine identity check.

Surveillance footage from the Zoologischer Garten station, a few minutes’ walk from the Christmas market, appears to show Amri shortly after the attack, Koehler said.

The pictures “suggest that Amri was aware that he was being recorded by this video camera,” she said. She added that he turned to the camera and showed a “tawhid finger”, or a raised index finger — an Islamic gesture sometimes used by jihadis.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack days afterward.

On Dec. 21, footage from cameras in the Netherlands suggests that he was at the railway station in Nijmegen, Koehler said.

Amri traveled by train from Nijmegen to Amsterdam the same day, then caught a train to Brussels, Dutch prosecutors said in a statement Wednesday.

Belgian authorities said that he spent two hours at the Brussels North station coming from Amsterdam. He then traveled to Italy via France.

Ballistics tests “confirmed 100 percent” that the .22-caliber, German-manufactured handgun, used by Amri to shoot one of the Italian policemen who had stopped him for a security check “was the same one that was fired in Germany at the Christmas market attack,” said Gianpaolo Zambonini, of the Rome forensic police.

Zambonini said investigations are ongoing to determine whether the gun might have been used in other crimes in Italy or elsewhere.

The bullet that lodged in the wounded policeman’s shoulder was too damaged to be used for comparison, so Italian police ballistics experts used a simulator at a laboratory in Rome to fire another bullet from the gun. Then they compared scratches on the bullet with those found on bullet cartridges recovered in Berlin, police said.

Koehler said investigators are still trying to figure out how Amri got hold of the gun, but that’s difficult because manufacturer Erma went bankrupt at the end of the 1990s, she added.

Amri, who had previously spent time in prison in Italy, arrived in Germany in July 2015. German authorities tried last year to deport him to Tunisia after his asylum application was rejected.

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