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Cristiano Ronaldo Clinches 4th FIFA Best Player Award

Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal poses with the trophy after winning for The Best FIFA Men's Player award during the The Best FIFA Football Awards 2016 ceremony held in January 2017 at the Swiss TV studio in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo: Ennio Leanza / Associated Press
Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal poses with the trophy after winning for The Best FIFA Men's Player award during the The Best FIFA Football Awards 2016 ceremony held in January 2017 at the Swiss TV studio in Zurich, Switzerland. Photo: Ennio Leanza / Associated Press

ZURICH — Capping what he called the best year of his career, Cristiano Ronaldo won his fourth FIFA best player award on Monday.

The double European champion with Portugal and Real Madrid beat great rival Lionel Messi and Antoine Griezmann to complete a sweep of top individual awards.

“It was a year that was magnificent at a personal level and at a sporting level,” the 31-year-old Ronaldo said in Portuguese in his acceptance speech, which he began by exclaiming “Wow, wow, wow.”

Ronaldo’s fourth career FIFA award closed the gap on five-time winner Messi, who has been the runner-up to each Ronaldo victory.

His 34.54 percent of total voting points in a 23-candidate ballot was clearly better than Messi’s 26.42 percent. Griezmann got 7.53 percent. Voting was by national team captains and coaches, selected media, and fans online.

Messi did not attend after being pulled out hours before the ceremony by his club Barcelona to prepare for a cup match on Wednesday.

“Of course, I wish that they (Barcelona players) had been here tonight like in the other years. We have to respect the decision,” Ronaldo said.

Yet again, Ronaldo and Messi snubbed each other on ballot papers they got as captains of Portugal and Argentina. Ronaldo selected three Real Madrid teammates headed by Gareth Bale, and Messi picked Luis Suarez atop an all-Barcelona ballot.

Ronaldo’s 2016 trophy haul included the European Championship, Champions League, and Club World Cup, plus individual best player awards from UEFA and France Football magazine.

“I won a lot trophies, collective and individual, so I am proud,” said Ronaldo, adding he would send the inaugural silver FIFA Best trophy to the museum dedicated to his career on his home island, Madeira.

Messi’s Barcelona won the Spanish league and cup double in 2016, though Argentina lost another Copa America final. Griezmann’s France and Atletico Madrid lost their finals to Ronaldo’s teams.

Ronaldo’s mentors for club and country were beaten to the coaching award by Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri, who earned the prize for a stunning English Premier League title.

“What happened last year was something strange. The God of football said Leicester must win,” said Ranieri, who was in his first season at the unfashionable provincial club widely tipped for relegation.

Ranieri rose from his seat and politely shook hands with his two opponents, Madrid’s Zinedine Zidane and Portugal’s Fernando Santos, plus their partners before heading to the stage.

The 65-year-old Italian collected his trophy from Diego Maradona, who earlier Monday played in an exhibition match with other retired greats at FIFA headquarters.

Carli Lloyd of the United States won a FIFA player prize for the second straight year, despite a quarterfinals exit at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

With gold-medal winner Melanie Behringer of Germany in third place, Lloyd got more than 20 percent of the vote and five-time winner Marta of Brazil was runner-up with 16.6 percent. Behringer got 12.34 percent.

“I honestly was not expecting this,” Lloyd said. “I know Melanie did fantastic in the Olympics.”

Germany did win the women’s coaching prize as Silvia Neid earned her second FIFA prize, after also winning the 2010 award. Neid beat two previous winners: last year’s winner, Jill Ellis of the United States, and Pia Sundhage of Sweden, the Olympic silver medalist.

The Puskas Award for best goal was won in an online poll by Mohd Faiz Subri, who scored with a wildly swerving long-range free kick for Malaysian club Penang.

A players’ vote organized by international union FIFPro gave a World XI of: Manuel Neuer (Germany, Bayern Munich); Dani Alves (Brazil, Barcelona/Juventus), Sergio Ramos (Spain, Real Madrid), Gerard Pique (Spain, Barcelona), Marcelo (Brazil, Real Madrid); Toni Kroos (Germany, Real Madrid), Andres Iniesta (Spain, Barcelona), Luka Modric (Croatia, Real Madrid); Messi, Luis Suarez (Uruguay, Barcelona), Ronaldo.

The First FIFA fan award was chosen by fans and was made to supporters of Liverpool and Borussia Dortmund, who joined in singing the English club’s anthem “You’ll Never Walk Alone” before a Europa League quarterfinal. The other nominees were Iceland fans at Euro 2016, and Dutch club ADO Den Haag, whose fans brought soft toys to children supporting rival team Feyenoord.

FIFA made its Fair Play Award to Atletico Nacional, the Colombian club which was scheduled to host Chapecoense in the first leg of the Copa Sudamericana final on Nov. 30.

After most of the Brazilian team died in a plane crash flying to the match, Atletico Nacional asked the South American soccer confederation to present the title and trophy to Chapecoense.

Story: Graham Dunbar

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Young Girl Drowns in Southern Flooding, Surprise Storm Lashes Bangkok

Rainy Bangkok. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — The heavy flooding inundating the southern region was blamed for the death of a young girl, as Bangkok woke up to find a surprise storm still surging Tuesday.

The worst flooding in a decade is now blamed for 25 deaths, including that of 5-year-old Patchatorn Somwhung, who was swept away by a flash flood and drowned sometime in the night. Her body was found at about 10am in a forest 200 meters from Phet Kasem Road in Prachuap Khiri Khan province.

Patchatorn and her family had been traveling south by van when floodwaters blocked the van from continuing, and passengers clambered onto its roof to stay dry. Patchatorn fell into the water and was swept away.

Thailand’s north and south were cut off from each other by the flooding of that vital highway. On Tuesday afternoon authorities were raising a temporary bridge expected to be completed later in the day. However, police advised motorists to avoid traveling.

Elsewhere in Prachuap, 34 patients from Bang Saphan Hospital were evacuated after its ground floor flooded this morning, with 40 patients still stuck on the upper floors.

In Bangkok, scattered rains have fallen across the capital almost continuously since Monday afternoon, with temperatures falling to a cool 25C under cloudy skies.

The Bang Phli–Suk Sawat Expressway heading toward western Bangkok was at a standstill, and so was traffic flow on Ngam Wong Wan Road near Soi Chinnakhet 1 in Laksi District. The eastern outer ring road into downtown was also clogged.

Rain is expected to continue falling throughout the day over 60 percent of the capital, then fall to 40 percent on Wednesday, with temperatures averaging about 26C. Expect cloudy skies through Friday but less chance of rain.

A tweet by the Bangkok Flood Control Center showing expected rain across all of Bangkok’s districts except Khlong Sam Wa.

A destroyed bridge on Phet Kasem Road Tuesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
A destroyed bridge on Phet Kasem Road Tuesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
Phet Kasem Road on Tuesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
Phet Kasem Road on Tuesday morning in Prachuap Khiri Khan.
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Trump Appoints Son-In-Law as Senior White House Adviser

Jared Kushner, son-in-law of of President-elect Donald Trump walks from Trump Tower, in November in New York. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press

NEW YORK — President-elect Donald Trump appointed his influential son-in-law Jared Kushner as a White House senior adviser Monday, putting the young real estate executive in position to exert broad sway over both domestic and foreign policy, particularly Middle East issues and trade negotiations.

Trump has come to rely heavily on Kushner, who is married to the president-elect’s daughter Ivanka. Since the election, the political novice has been one of the transition team’s main liaisons to foreign governments, communicating with Israeli officials and meeting Sunday with Britain’s foreign minister. He’s also huddled with congressional leaders and helped interview Cabinet candidates.

Ivanka Trump, who also played a significant role advising her father during the presidential campaign, will not be taking a formal White House position. Transition officials said the mother of three young children wanted to focus on moving her family from New York to Washington.

Kushner’s own eligibility for the White House could be challenged, given a 1967 law meant to bar government officials from hiring relatives. Kushner lawyer Jamie Gorelick argued Monday that the law does not apply to the West Wing. She cited a later congressional measure to allow the president “unfettered” and “sweeping” authority in hiring staff.

In a statement, Trump said Kushner will be an “invaluable member of my team as I set and execute an ambitious agenda.”

Kushner will resign as CEO of his family’s real estate company and as publisher of the New York Observer. He will also divest “substantial assets,” Gorelick said. The lawyer said Kushner would not be taking a salary. Ivanka Trump will also be leaving her executive roles at the Trump Organization  her father’s real estate company  and her own fashion brands.

Kushner, who turns 36 on Tuesday, emerged as one of Trump’s most powerful campaign advisers during his father-in-law’s often unorthodox presidential bid  a calming presence in an otherwise chaotic campaign. Soft-spoken and press-shy, he was deeply involved in the campaign’s digital efforts and was usually at Trump’s side during the election’s closing weeks.

He has continued to be a commanding presence during the transition, working alongside incoming White House chief of staff Reince Priebus and senior adviser Steve Bannon. He’s played a key role in coordinating Trump’s contacts with foreign leaders and has been talking with foreign government officials himself, according to a person with knowledge of the conversations.

Last week, Kushner and Bannon  the controversial conservative media executive  met with British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson.

Kushner and Bannon have also worked closely on issues related to Israel, including discussions over moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, which could inflame tensions in the Middle East, and on the Trump administration’s response to a United Nations Security Council measure condemning Israeli settlements.

Kushner is also weighing in on domestic policy. He joined other Trump advisers Monday night for a meeting with House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., on tax reform. He championed the pick of his friend Gary Cohn, the president of Goldman Sachs, for a top White House economic post, and Cohn’s influence within Trump’s team is said to be growing. He’s been a conduit between Trump’s team and the private sector, a role transition officials said would continue in the White House.

Those with knowledge of Kushner’s role spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal matters.

The anti-nepotism law had appeared to be the main obstacle to Kushner joining the White House. In arguing that the measure did not apply to the West Wing, Gorelick cited an opinion from two federal court judges in a 1993 case involving Hillary Clinton’s work on her husband’s health care law. She said Trump planned to seek an advisory opinion on the nepotism law from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.

Gorelick worked in the Clinton administration at both the Pentagon and Justice Department.

Norman Eisen, who served as President Barack Obama’s government ethics lawyer, said there is a “murky legal landscape” regarding the anti-nepotism law. But he said Kushner appeared to be taking the proper steps regarding the ethics and disclosure requirements for federal employees.

Like his father-in-law, Kushner pushed a mid-sized real estate company into the high-stakes battlefield of Manhattan. Though he is often viewed as more moderate than Trump, people close to him say he fully bought into the Trump campaign’s fiery populist message that resonated with white, working-class voters. He never publicly distanced himself from Trump’s more provocative stances, including the candidate’s call for a Muslim-immigration ban and his doubts about President Barack Obama’s birthplace.

Kushner’s place in Trump’s orbit  vital but often discreet  was vividly on display last month, when the president-elect toured the Carrier plant in Indiana to tout the jobs he says he saved.

Trump marched around the plant with Vice President-elect Mike Pence, shaking hands with workers, posing for photos and flashing his thumbs-up to the traveling press. Kushner stayed away from the cameras, lingering a deferential 10 or 20 feet from Trump while marveling at the scene.

“Look at these people,” Kushner was overheard saying as he watched dozens of workers cheer. “This is why he won.”

Story: Jonathan Lemire, Julie Pace

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China’s Xinjiang Tightening Border Amid Threats of Extremism

Police stand guard in 2013 in Shanghai, China. Photo: Tim Sheerman-Chase / Flickr

BEIJING — China says it is tightening border controls in its northwestern Xinjiang region amid rising terrorism threats.

State media reported Tuesday that Xinjiang’s governor Shohrat Zakir made the pledge in a speech at the region’s main annual political meeting on Monday. Zakir said increased measures taken in the last year would be further strengthened.

Xinjiang has long been home to a simmering insurgency against Beijing’s rule being waged by extremists among the native Turkic-speaking Uighur (WEE-gur) ethnic group, who are mainly Muslim and culturally distinct from most Chinese.

Xinjiang shares a border with Afghanistan, Pakistan and four nations in the often volatile Central Asian region. Uighur extremists have also been reported to have joined the fighting in Syria and were blamed for a deadly attack on a Buddhist temple in Thailand.

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Zygmunt Bauman, Sociologist who Coined ‘Liquid Modernity,’ 91

Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, attends a ceremony in 1998 in Frankfurt, Germany. Photo: Heribert Proepper / Associated Press

WARSAW, Poland — Zygmunt Bauman, one of the most prominent and prolific European sociologists of recent decades, has died at the age of 91. The Polish-born left-wing thinker’s works explored the fluidity of identity in the modern world, the Holocaust, consumerism and globalization.

Bauman died at his home in Leeds, England, on Monday surrounded by his family, according to Anna Zejdler-Janiszewska, a Warsaw-based philosophy professor and friend of Bauman’s who was informed of his death by his wife.

Renowned for an approach that incorporated philosophy and other disciplines, Bauman was a strong moral voice for the poor and dispossessed in a world upended by globalization. Whether he was writing about the Holocaust or globalization, his focus remained on how humans can create a dignified life through ethical decisions.

He wrote more than 50 books, notably “Modernity and the Holocaust,” a 1989 release in which he differed with many other thinkers who saw the barbarism of the Holocaust as a breakdown in modernity. Bauman viewed the mass exterminations of Jews as the very outcome of such pillars of modernity as industrialization and rationalized bureaucracy.

“It was the rational world of modern civilization that made the Holocaust thinkable,” Bauman wrote.

In the 1990s, Bauman coined the term “liquid modernity” to describe a contemporary world in such flux that individuals are left rootless and bereft of any predictable frames of reference.

In books including “Liquid Times” and “Liquid Modernity” he explored the frailty of human connection in such times and the insecurity that a constantly changing world creates.

“In a liquid modern life there are no permanent bonds, and any that we take up for a time must be tied loosely so that they can be untied again, as quickly and as effortlessly as possible, when circumstances change,” Bauman wrote.

In informing friends in Poland of his death Monday, Bauman’s wife wrote that he had gone “to liquid eternity.”

In Poland, he was a controversial figure in some circles. In 2006, a right-wing historian uncovered documents showing that Bauman served as an officer in a Stalinist-era military organization, the Internal Security Corps, which helped to impose communism on the nation by killing resisters to the regime.

Bauman acknowledged belonging to that unit, but he insisted that he only had a desk job. No evidence has surfaced linking him to any killings.

Some nationalists saw him as an enemy of the country.

In 2013, supporters of a far-right organization disturbed a public debate with Bauman in the western Polish city of Wroclaw, whistling and shouting “Shame!” and “down with communism!” and holding up photos of Polish resistance fighters killed by the communists.

After that he stopped visiting his homeland.

Beyond Poland, Bauman’s theories were a major influence on the anti-globalization movement. He focused on the outcasts and the marginalized, describing how many people have seen their chances of a dignified life destroyed by the new borderless world. As a result, he found a following in Spain and Italy, where young adults were hit especially hard by economic dislocation in recent years.

“The key thing was that Bauman did not talk at or down to his audience  when he was talking he was listening, when he was teaching he was learning. His books and seminars were places where we could come together and explore together how to be human,” Keith Tester, co-author of “Conversations with Zygmunt Bauman” and a former student of Bauman’s, told The Associated Press on Monday.

Bauman was born Nov. 19, 1925, in Poznan, Poland, into a Jewish family that had suffered poverty and anti-Semitism, something that inspired his lifelong belief in tolerance and social justice.

Speaking decades later of how he became a communist, he recalled his family’s poverty, the “blows and kicks” inflicted on him by non-Jewish children on the playground, and “the humiliations which my father, a man of impeccable honesty, had to suffer from his bosses to feed his family.”

He was not yet 14 when Germany invaded Poland in September 1939 and World War II began. His family survived the Holocaust by fleeing to the Soviet Union. There, Bauman, still a teenager, joined a Polish army unit that formed under Soviet command, earning Poland’s Military Cross of Valor for his bravery fighting the Nazis.

After the war, he rose quickly in the military ranks and by the early 1950s had become one of the youngest majors in the Polish army. During these years he was a communist and a member of the Polish Workers’ Party.

In 1953, he was abruptly fired from his army job, apparently the victim of the communist regime’s anti-Israel stance  Bauman’s father had been seen making inquiries at the Israeli Embassy about emigrating.

Bauman studied sociology, then philosophy, at the University of Warsaw, and was teaching there when the communist regime waged an anti-Semitic campaign in 1968. He lost his job and he and his family were expelled from the country along with thousands of other Polish Jews.

Though he was a vocal critic of Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians, once likening the West Bank to the Warsaw Ghetto, Bauman lived and taught for a short time in Israel. He lectured at universities in Tel Aviv and Haifa from 1969 to 1971, before he and his family settled in Britain.

Bauman headed the Department of Sociology at the University of Leeds until his retirement in 1990, but continued to write prolifically even after his retirement, often producing a book a year.

Among his numerous honors were the European Amalfi Prize for Sociology in 1992, the Theodor W. Adorno Award in 1998 and the Prince of Asturias Award in 2010. The University of Leeds also created the Bauman Institute in his honor, dedicated to many of his concerns, including ethics, consumerism, globalization and modernity.

Bauman’s wife of 62 years, Janina Bauman, died in 2009. He is survived by his second wife, Aleksandra Jasinska-Kania, the daughter of postwar Polish president Boleslaw Bierut, three daughters and several grandchildren.

Story: Vanessa Gera

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Japanese Man Reported Missing From Khaosan Road

A photo of Sonam Tsuboi. Image: Tama Tsuboi / Facebook

BANGKOK — The family of a Japanese tourist is pleading for information concerning his whereabout after they lost contact with him three weeks ago while he was traveling in Bangkok.

Sonam Tsuboi, 22, was last seen at Mama Guesthouse in the popular backpacker area of Khaosan Road on Dec. 27, according to a post shared online by someone who identified himself as his brother.

“We are yet to find him but we have many people on it, now it’s just a matter of time to find out if he’s okay,” wrote Tama Tsuboi. “Thanks to all the connections we have very powerful people in Thai [sic] on this, so right now I will count on these people.”

Tsuboi is described as a slim, 1.65 meter tall man with long bushy hair and a tattoo on his left foot.

Pitak Sitthikul, chief of the police station with jurisdiction over Khaosan Road, said his force received a missing-person report for Tsuboi on Dec. 27.

According to Col. Pitak of Chanasongkram Police Station, staff at Mama Guesthouse told police that Sonam checked out on Dec. 28.

However, immigration records suggest that Tsuboi has not yet left the country, he said..

“We have alerted every relevant agency,” Pitak said. “We’re handling the matter.”

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Reform Assembly Members Donate 5,000 Baht Each to Aid Flood Relief Efforts

Men row a boat to travel through his village Monday in Songkhla province.

BANGKOK — A junta-appointed reform assembly donated 5,000 baht each out of their 110,000 baht salary to help ongoing floods in the southern region.

Two-hundred members of the National Reform Steering Assembly were asked by their president, Capt. Tinnaphan Nakata, Monday to donate a small sum of their salary to help support the nearly one million people affected by flash floods in the southern provinces.

To provide instant assistance before noon, two members, police Lt. Gen. Suwira Songmetta and Seri Suwanpanon volunteered to pay one million baht in advance as the assembly’s reserved budget could not meet the sought amount.

The death toll had reached 21 as of Monday afternoon and two people remained missing as a result of the ongoing floods affecting 12 provinces in the southern region. Damages were expected to not exceed 15 billion baht, the Joint Standing Committee on Commerce, Industry and Banking said Monday.

The reform steering assembly was formed in October 2015 to succeed the National Reform Council which was scrapped after it voted against the draft charter. With a slightly different name, the steering assembly serves mostly the same function by proposing laws and studying issues related to what the junta wants to reform.

Each member appointed by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha receives a 71,230 baht monthly salary plus an extra 42,330 baht payment resulting in 113,560 baht monthly allowance.

The president receives more at 119,920 baht, while the vice presidents get 115,740 baht every month.

 

Related stories:

19 Die as Floods Continue to Submerge South

Malls, Airport Closed as Worst Flood in Decades Hit South

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Paris Police: 16 Arrested Over Kardashian West Jewelry Heist

In this Oct.3, 2016 file photo, a French police officer enters the residence of Kim Kardashian West in Paris.

PARIS — Police in Paris say 16 people have been arrested in connection with the October theft of more than $10 million worth of jewelry from Kim Kardashian West.

Police say robbers forced their way into a private Paris residence where Kardashian West was staying, tied her up and locked her in a bathroom before making off with her jewelry.

The reality TV star was in Paris attending fashion week shows. At the time a spokeswoman for Kardashian West said she was badly shaken but physically unharmed.

The robbery raised new concerns about security in the French capital after a string of deadly extremist attacks.

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Japanese Films To Screen in 4 Provinces

BANGKOK — The Japanese Film Festival returns in strong form for a 40th time this year with selected films to commemorate the 130th anniversary of Japan-Thailand relations.

Fifteen recent Japanese films, from comedies to thrillers, will show February through March at the Japanese Film Festival for cinephiles to indulge in the island nation’s unique culture and storytelling.

Headlining is talented director Naomi Kawase’s 2015 drama “Sweet Bean.” Premiered at Cannes and praised for its sentimentality, the film is about an old lady who offers to help a man make sweet red bean paste for his dorayakis, which helps boost his business.

“What A Wonderful Family!” is a comedic 2016 film about a wife who wants to divorce her husband as a birthday present after having been married for 50 years.

For thrill-seekers, there’s Cannes’ Un Certain Regard-winner “Creepy.” Directed by  Kiyoshi Kurosawa and premiered at the 2016 Berlin Film Festival, the novel-based story follows an ex-police detective and a criminal psychologist who move to seek peace in their suburban town only to face a psychopathic neighbor who wishes to take their lives.

Tickets are 120 baht in Bangkok and 80 baht in Chiang Mai. Entry is free in Khon Kaen and Phuket.

The schedules and more information are available online.

The festival kicks off in Bangkok Feb. 4-12 at SF World Cinema, CentralWorld. After that, it’ll tour to Chiang Mai on Feb. 23-26 at Maya Lifestyle Shopping Center, March 3-5 to Central Khon Kaen and March 17-19 at Central Festival Phuket.

 

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Fugitive Dhammakaya Spokesman Allegedly Photographed in France

A photo said to show Ong-art Thamnitha in France.

BANGKOK — Police on Monday were scrambling to confirm whether the spokesman of the controversial Dhammakaya movement had managed to slip through a police cordon and flee to France.

In a photo which surfaced on social media over the weekend, a man said to be Ong-art Thamnitha is dining with a group of monks at a Japanese restaurant in France. Ong-art, who had regularly defended his Buddhist sect in media appearances, had not been seen in public since he was charged with inciting unrest in December.

His colleague said he could not confirm Ong-art’s whereabouts.

“No one knows for sure, because no one could contact him,” Phra Pasura Dantamano said by telephone.

Read: A Look Inside the Besieged Wat Dhammakaya

He said the photo could be an old one. “Mr. Ong-art has traveled to a lot of overseas [Dhammakaya] centers, including the ones in France.”

The court approved on Dec. 15 an arrest warrant for Ong-art on charges of insurrection. Police accused Ong-art of mobilizing temple followers to resist police effort to arrest its fugitive ex-abbot Dhammachayo, who’s wanted on multi-million baht embezzlement charges.

Critics of Wat Dhammakaya have widely shared the photo and ridiculed authorities for somehow letting Ong-art escape the country.

A photo said to show Ong-art Thamnitha in France.
A photo said to show Ong-art Thamnitha in France.

The Department of Special Investigation, the agency responsible for prosecuting Dhammachayo and Ong-art, will ask French authorities whether Ong-art is really in the country, its spokesman Woranan Silam told reporters Monday.

Deputy junta chairman Prawit Wongsuwan also said he’s instructed police to find out whether or not the photo is genuine as soon as possible.

Dhammachayo, who left his post as the abbot last month but retained a ceremonial rank within the sect, faces two separate criminal charges. The first was for receiving funds embezzled from a credit union by one of its executives who is now serving a 16-year jail term. The most recent charge stemmed from illegally building a meditation center on public land.

The temple insists the charges are politically motivated, and said its spiritual leader could not turn himself in because he’s confined to his sick bed. The refusal led to an ongoing law enforcement presence outside the movement’s headquarters in Pathum Thani province.

Related stories:

Police Close Up on Wat Dhammakaya

Dhammakaya Asks Court to Cancel Search Warrant as Tensions Mount

Deadline for Dhammakaya Abbot to Surrender Expires, Again

 

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