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Live One Night of Rap, Comedy, Magic and More

Photo: Unda / Facebook

BANGKOK — Get locked and loaded and high at a 60th floor performing arts party in the Sathon area.

Be moved by words when Live By Night kicks off with legit poetry by Bangkok’s Bedroom Poet. Next up is a magic show performed by Stan Fitzgerald, aka One Night Stan. Improv comedy group Sea Stage will pull off visual skits and gags to coax some laughs.

As for music, DJ Octo will open the night spinning welcoming tunes before American-born rapper Unda drops some freestyle rap.

DJs Arin and Luck-E from Dope As Funk will take the stage for the closing party.

Tickets can be purchased online for 350 baht or 500 baht at the door. The event starts at 9pm on Jan. 21 at Vertigo Too high up in the Banyan Tree Hotel on Sathon Tai Road.

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British Conservationist Fights to Save Seahorses in Cambodia

Dried seahorses are displaying in plastic jars for sale in a traditional Chinese medicine shop last November in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

ACH SEH ISLAND, Cambodia — A 7-inch creature with a head resembling a horse and a monkey-like tail glides gracefully out of a dark coral crevice off the Cambodian coast. Master of camouflage, unrivaled as a hunter and a much-loved figure of ancient myths and legends, the seahorse may be spiraling toward annihilation after surviving beneath the waves for some 40 million years.

Taking photographs and detailed notes, two divers swim through turbid water to spot the male in the crevice and a nearby female, both hanging on in a once-pristine habitat turned to withered coral beds and ragged remnants of seagrass meadows.

The tropical seas around this jungled island depict, in microcosm, both the seahorse’s threatened state  tens of millions are harvested globally each year  and possible ways to save the iconic species from extinction.

“The seahorse faces an enormous variety of threats,” says Paul Ferber, a British conservationist who has lived on Ach Seh Island for three years, studying the genus Hippocampus and trying to protect its ravaged environment against an armada of illegal trawlers, crab traps and divers in sleek longboats specifically targeting seahorses and related species.

Peering into the darkness one night, Ferber hears the tell-tale chugging of his No. 1 enemy: trawlers from neighboring Vietnam dragging miles-long nets with mesh so fine that even creatures smaller than seahorses can’t escape.

“Big, nasty Vietnamese (boats). It’s either a seine trawler or a pair of them,” he says of vessels that leave behind a lifeless ocean. If equipped with electrified nets, they can even stun and suck in living things burrowed in sea beds.

A powerfully built man with a pair of seahorses tattooed on his chest, Ferber urgently calls his contact in the Cambodian fisheries department, hoping its speedboat can rush from the mainland to arrest the intruders. No luck; the department’s fastest boat was being repaired.

The 39-year-old Ferber, who underwent police training in Britain, said that before such cooperation began, he and his team confronted illegal fishermen alone, armed only with “a slingshot and a bunch of rocks.” He said they were shot at with AK-47 rifles and even a spear gun, and one of their boats was rammed and sunk. Death threats continue.

Seahorses, caught in waters around the world, are sold mainly for Asian traditional medicine, especially in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Vietnam and China.

Amanda Vincent, a Canadian marine biologist and founder of Project Seahorse, estimates that more than 20 million are so consumed each year. Lesser numbers end up as key rings, encased in jewelry or other curios, or in aquariums, with the United States the world’s top buyer for the pet trade. Data from CITES, the international monitor of the wildlife trade, shows that more than 630,000 were imported in the U.S. from 2004 to 2014.

Neither their unique look and behavior (the male, for example, gives birth to the young) nor their place in popular imagination (as charioteers for the Greek god Poseidon, or powerful sea dragons of Chinese myth) seems to have prevented massive exploitation. In Chinese traditional medicine, seahorses ground into powder or dried and eaten whole are believed to cure everything from kidney disease to baldness, despite a lack of scientific evidence. Rice wine with seahorses stuffed inside the bottles is advertised as a powerful sex tonic to “turn a man into an all-night Romeo.”

Visits to Chinese medicine shops in Bangkok and Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital, showed brisk sales. In Cambodia, where buying, selling and processing of seahorses is illegal, a dried seahorse was priced at $2 to $2.50.

“It’s a race between the conservation ethos and the rape-and-pillage ethos,” says Vincent, who chairs the seahorse expert group of the Switzerland-based International Union for Conservation of Nature. The legal export trade, she says, has been greatly reduced globally, but illegal fishing continues to threaten many of the 41 seahorse species.

Experts are reluctant to make predictions about possible extinctions but agree many populations are in retreat.

“Seahorses are increasing in our area but declining everywhere else,” says Ferber, who discovered the devastation of Southeast Asia’s seas as a dive instructor in Thailand and Cambodia. On Ach Seh Island, he has built a rudimentary station and quarters for his Thai wife, five children, staff, young volunteers and visiting marine biologists, all living together communal-style. His group, Marine Conservation Cambodia, is supported chiefly by the International Conservation Fund of Canada.

Illegal fishing within the roughly 80 square kilometers (31 square miles) that the group patrols has dropped dramatically, he says. Most of the area will become a marine conservation zone in mid-2017.

The group also maintains a small study area the size of six football fields, and while it has yet to be fully rejuvenated, Canadian staffer Anick Haissoune says, “It’s created a haven for seahorses. It’s small, but proves that a place can revive.” Initially, divers were lucky to spot two seahorses, but now as many as 14 are seen on dives.

More than 30 individual seahorses have been “tattooed”  injected with special dye to allow tracking of their lives and adaptations to surrounding habitat.

Although Ferber lacks academic training  among other occupations, he worked as a florist in London  and Vincent says he is still formalizing his scientific research, she believes his efforts will result in excellent long-term studies. She lauds his role as a front-line conservationist, calling him “not one of life’s bystanders.”

“Paul has enormous courage in tackling real problems with minimal resources,” she says. “I hope he can find a way to stay effective while staying safe. If I had a Paul in every country where we work, my life would be much easier.”

Ferber praises supportive officials in Phnom Penh and within the local fisheries department, but alleges corruption among police and some local government officials tasked with protecting the marine environment.

“It’s a cat-and-mouse game,” he says of the almost daily battle against encroachers.

On a trip to the mainland, Ferber and his crew spot a small craft, pull alongside and lasso it. Its four Vietnamese divers, smiling nervously, have no fishing permit, carry illegal spear guns and have already filled two jerrycans with an assortment of sea creatures.

“They’re small-scale poachers, but they strip everything off the coral reefs that makes them healthy,” Ferber says.

He calls the fisheries department. It’s ready to take action, but final approval for an arrest is needed. The provincial deputy governor then sends word to let the Vietnamese go.

A reason isn’t given; later attempts by The Associated Press to reach the governor and deputy governor by phone were unsuccessful.

But Ferber has his suspicions  and he unleashes a string of curses over the waters.

Story: Denis. A Gray

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Samsung Profits Jump 50% Despite Galaxy Disaster

A man walks by an advertising display for Samsung's Galaxy S7 Edge and S7 smartphones Friday in Seoul, South Korea. Photo: Lee Jin-man / Associated Press

SEOUL — Samsung Electronics Co. said Friday that its profits in the last quarter of 2016 surged 50 percent to the highest level in more than three years, despite the Galaxy Note 7 fiasco.

Analysts had expected Samsung’s profits to surge thanks to its mainstay semiconductor business, but the result surpassed even the most optimistic forecasts. The semiconductor division cashed in on strong demand and a tight supply for microchips during the September-December period, likely contributing to more than half of its quarterly earnings.

In its earnings preview, Samsung said it posted 9.2 trillion won (276.3 billion baht) in operating profit, up from 6.1 trillion won a year earlier. It was the biggest quarterly income since the third quarter of 2013.

Analysts polled by FactSet expected a figure of 8 trillion won.

Sales fell 1 percent to 53 trillion won (USD$44.9 billion). The company did not give net profit or breakdown figures for its businesses, which are due later this month.

For the full year, the South Korean tech giant saw a 10 percent gain in its annual income, its best result in three years.

“It’s thanks to the improvement in semiconductors and displays on top of favorable foreign exchange rates,” said Kim Young Woo, an analyst at SK Securities.

The result is a bright spot for the tech giant that was obliged to do multiple recalls last year of products that included a popular smartphone and a washing machine.

The stellar financial results come as Samsung faces an investigation linking it to an influence-peddling scandal that led to the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye. Samsung already has postponed its annual personnel reshuffle, usually announced in December, due to the scandal.

Samsung Group faces allegations that Samsung Electronics and its affiliated companies paid money to foundations and a company controlled by a long-time friend of Park’s, Choi Soon-sil, in order to get the government’s backing in a controversial merger of two Samsung affiliates related to Samsung’s father-to-son leadership succession.

It is still unclear why the Galaxy Note 7 smartphones were prone to overheating and catching fire. That prompted two recalls and eventual discontinuation of the flagship product.

Tim Baxter, chief operating officer at Samsung’s U.S. business, told reporters at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Wednesday that Samsung will share the root cause of the Galaxy Note 7 fires “very soon.” Samsung has been investigating the issue for more than four months.

Story: Youkyung Lee

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It’s About Time: New Play ‘Building’ to Touch Hearts

Promotional image for Democrazy Theatre Studio’s ‘Madam Ree Building.’

BANGKOK — Time, longing and the human heart are in play when a school building is to be demolished and students gather to ponder relationships, time and the universe in “Madam Ree Building.”

Twenty years after their first secret kiss, Somyos and Wipha reunite again at a reunion held to say farewell to a building where many memories lie buried. Along with their friends, those past unfinished stories resurface and begin to change the present.

The play is inspired by American playwright Craig Wright’s production about a man who dreams of winning back his ex-girlfriend at their 20-year high-school reunion in “The Pavilion.”

Director Jaturachai Srichanwanpen chose to challenge the story with a reverse analogy to question how time affects relationships and conflict between individual identity and social norms.

Tickets are 500 baht and can be reserved online.

The play will show in Thai with English surtitles. It will be staged at 8pm on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Mondays, with 3pm matinees on Sundays beginning Feb. 9 before taking a bow on Feb. 27.

Democrazy Theatre Studio on Rama IV Road can be reached on foot via MRT Lumphini Station’s exit No. 1.

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Suspect in Brutal Bangkok Knife Murder Video Arrested

Murder suspect Kittikorn Wikaha, at right, grimaces at Bangkok police commander Sanit Mahatavorn on Friday morning at the Kok Kram Police Station in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A 26-year-old former convict confessed Friday to stabbing a man to death in northern Bangkok to rob him of his iPhone, an attack that went viral on social media due to its brutality.

Kittikorn Wikaha, who police said has served eight separate terms in prison, was being led through a police “re-enactment” of the alleged crime at 11am after being arrested at his residence earlier in the morning.

He is charged with killing Vasin Lueangcham in Soi Sukhonthasawat 27 on Wednesday night. According to police, Kittikorn said he killed his victim because he resisted.

Speaking at a news conference, Kittikorn advised members of the public to think twice before flaunting their wealth at night lest they also end up as victims.

“Try not to put yourself at risk,” the alleged murderer said. “What’s valuable, keep it safe, don’t show off. The more you show off, the more tempting it is.”

In the security camera footage of Wednesday’s attack, Vasin is seen being stabbed repeatedly by the attacker as his accomplice waits on a getaway motorcycle. The victim tries to defend himself until he is knifed in the throat.

Bangkok police chief Sanit Mahatavorn said the suspect also went on to rob two more victims of their iPhone and cash after killing Vasin that night.

Kittikorn had been jailed eight times since 13, mostly on drug-related convictions; his latest sentence just ended Dec. 14, Lt. Gen. Sanit said. He added that police are still looking for Kittikorn’s accomplice.

A large crowd was gathering at the scene of the crime Friday morning where police planned the “re-enactment,” some holding signs demanding that Kittikorn be executed for his crime.

“Murderers must be executed,” several signs read.

People display signs demanding Kittkorn be executed.
People display signs demanding Kittkorn be executed.
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No Doubt Russia Interfered in Election, US Intel Chief Says

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper testifies Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Brushing aside Donald Trump’s dismissiveness, the U.S. intelligence chief insisted Thursday that intelligence agencies are more confident than ever that Russia interfered in America’s recent presidential election. And he called the former Cold War foe an “existential threat” to the nation.

Did Russian hacking sway the results? There’s no way for U.S. agencies to know, said James Clapper, the director of national intelligence.

Asked about the possible effect of the disclosure of private information stolen by hackers, Clapper said, “The intelligence community can’t gauge the impact it had on the choices the electorate made.” But he did say Russian hacking “did not change any vote tallies.”

Clapper’s testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee was short on concrete evidence of Russian activities, but it raised the stakes in the intelligence community’s standoff with Trump. Clapper indicated the agencies he leads would not back down in their assessment, even if that threatens a prolonged crisis of confidence with their next commander in chief.

That puts the pressure back on Trump, who has raised the possibility of more positive relations with Russia and has repeatedly disparaged the U.S. intelligence agencies. He will be briefed Friday on the classified evidence concerning Russian interference.

Shortly after Thursday’s hearing, news leaked that Trump would soon name former Republican Sen. Dan Coats of Indiana to replace Clapper after the new president takes office.

The intelligence agencies’ classified report, which was shared with President Barack Obama on Thursday, identifies multiple motives for Russia’s interference, Clapper said, but he did not provide details.

The Washington Post, citing anonymous U.S. officials, reported Thursday that intelligence agencies have identified parties who delivered stolen Democratic emails to WikiLeaks. The officials also said there were disparities between efforts to infiltrate Democratic and Republican networks, and said the U.S. intercepted communications in which Russian officials celebrated Trump’s victory. It was not clear which of those details are included in the classified report.

In a joint report that roiled the presidential campaign last fall, the Homeland Security Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said the U.S. was confident about foreign meddling, including Russian government hacking of Democratic emails.

“We stand actually more resolutely on the strength of that statement,” Clapper said Thursday. He declined to discuss whether Russia’s interference was aimed at helping Trump win.

An unclassified version of the report will be released next week, Clapper said. That version, expected to be a fraction of the length of the classified one, is not likely to answer all the questions about Russia’s actions. Exactly how the U.S. monitors its adversaries in cyberspace is a closely guarded secret, since revealing such details could help foreign governments further obscure their activities.

“I think the public should know as much about this as possible,” Clapper told the senators. “And so we’ll be as forthcoming as we can, but there are some sensitive and fragile sources and methods here.”

Clapper was less shy about declaring Russia “an existential threat to the United States.” That’s strong rhetoric that harkens back to the Cold War between the U.S. and Soviet Union, language Obama has avoided. For his part, Trump has embraced the possibility of warmer U.S.-Russian ties.

Republican John McCain of Arizona, chairman of the Senate panel, pressed Clapper as to whether Russia’s actions constituted an “act of war.” The intelligence director said that was “a very heavy policy call,” more appropriate for others in the government to decide.

Obama announced sanctions against Russia late last year, a move Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said was akin to throwing a pebble.

“I’m ready to throw a rock,” Graham said.

The GOP is divided over how to deal with Russia. Once Trump takes office, he is certain to face opposition from Democrats as well as some in his own party regarding his posture toward Russia.

Trump has criticized U.S. intelligence findings, even citing WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s contention that Russia did not provide him with hacked Democratic emails.

But in new tweets early Thursday, he backed away and blamed the “dishonest media” for portraying him as agreeing with Assange, whose organization has been under criminal investigation for its role in classified information leaks. “The media lies to make it look like I am against ‘Intelligence’ when in fact I am a big fan!” Trump wrote.

In fact, Trump has been skeptical to the point of dismissive about the certainty of the assessment of Russian hacking, bringing up past failures, specifically intelligence reporting the presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq in the lead-up to the war there.

Trump has derided the intelligence community on Twitter, his comments widely reported by The Associated Press and other news organizations.

Clapper said Thursday, “I think there is an important distinction here between healthy skepticism, which policymakers – to include policymaker No. 1 – should always have for intelligence, but I think there’s a difference between skepticism and disparagement.”

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Obama is confident that the intelligence assessment on Russia is “unvarnished.”

“The president has insisted that the intelligence community should not hesitate to present to the president what could be considered bad news, because a whitewashed assessment doesn’t serve anybody well,” Earnest said. He added that anyone who consumes intelligence “using rose-colored reading glasses is not going to be able to make good decisions.”

Story: Eileen Sullivan, Richard Lardner

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Ice Age: See How Meth is Swamping Southeast Asia

Photo: Benjamin Haselberger / Facebook

BANGKOK — Homeless children carry bags of glue and crystal meth, Laotian prostitutes smoke ice for intensified sexual pleasure and Burmese sweatshop laborers get high to forget their brutal reality.

After traveling around Southeast Asia, Bangkok-based photojournalist Benjamin Haselberger is ready to share his stories on meth addicts in the region at a gallery in Bangkok’s Chinatown next week.

Into the Dark features Haselberger’s prints capturing the fast-growing epidemic of crystal methamphetamine in poverty-stricken areas such as Cambodia, the Philippines, Myanmar and Thailand.

The photo exhibition runs Jan. 13 to Jan. 15 at Cho Why on Soi Nana 17 near Charoen Krung Road, a few minutes walk from MRT Hua Lamphong, exit No. 1.

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Run With Hello Kitty and More Wacky Races This Year

Runners in the 2016 Hello Kitty Run on Jan. 31 in Bangkok. Photo: Hello Kitty Run 2017 / Facebook

BANGKOK — Keep those New Year’s resolutions a little while longer with several fun runs coming up that anyone can join.

Cartoons and cosplay and even more cute characters will make for more fun with your run at several events.

Here’s a list of unusual running events coming in the first half of 2017.

1

Many children grew up watching Chao Khun Tong, an early morning educational cartoon since 1991. After 25 years, the show has arranged 2.5K and 5K races at 5:55am and 6:15am respectively on Jan. 29 at Wachirabenchathat Park in the capital’s Chatuchak district. Runners will receive unique character T-shirts in black or yellow, along with a Chao Khun Tong  medal awarded to those who make it across the finish line.

Registration is 500 baht and proceeds will go to support activities for a charity that provides self-sufficiency workshops for developmentally disabled Thais and their families in Nakhon Ratchasima.

2

Dino Run – Feb. 19

Dino Run offers a small race of 2.6K so families with children can run together at 6:30am or 8am on Feb. 19 in Queen Sirikit Park, also in Chatuchak. There’s no competition in this race, and children in baby carriages are allowed to join. There will also be many activities beginning at 7am such as painting neckerchiefs, dressing parents as dinos and a dino show at 8:10am and 9am.

Registration ranges from 750 baht to 2,600 baht. Part of the proceeds will support Books For Children Foundation, a four-decade old chapter of the Swiss International Board on Books for Young People.

3
Hello Kitty Run 2016 posted on Jan. 31, 2016. Photo: Hello Kitty Run 2017 / Facebook.

Hello Kitty fanatics, prepare to run with the beloved Japanese cat who will meet and greet her Thai fans at a 5K run beginning at 6:30am on Feb. 26 at Airport Rail Link Makkasan. Expect the route to be in dazzling pink color. Don’t expect to feel healthier afterward: Sweets, cupcakes, ice cream and more will be on hand for the “Sweet Wonderland” themed event. Apart from the run, participants will get a T-shirt, bag, sticker and bib. Registration is 950 baht to 1,050 baht.

4

Rider Run – May 28

For the first time, Masked Rider fans get a run in the theme of their favorite characters to celebrate the 45th anniversary of the Japanese manga series which later spawned a television series. Runners will choose sides for a running battle. The races are 2.5K, 5K and 10K on May 28 in Lumphini Park. Registration begins online Jan. 23 and ranges from 650 baht to 2,200 baht. Participants will receive a Masked Rider T-shirt, medal and race bib.

No Suspects Yet in Murder of Bangkok Man for iPhone (Video)

BANGKOK — Police were looking Thursday for two assailants in connection with the deadly stabbing of a 26-year-old man in northern Bangkok.

A security camera captured the moment Vasin Lueangcham was stabbed repeatedly by one of the attackers as his accomplice waited on a getaway motorcycle. Vasin was defending himself until the suspect plunged the knife into Vasin’s throat. He collapsed as the attacker escaped with Vasin’s phone.

The incident took place at about 10pm in Soi Sukhonthasawat 27. Footage of the attack has gone viral on social media due to its shocking brutality.

Bangkok police chief Sanit Mahatavorn said Thursday after meeting with investigators that police will bring the pair to justice.

Lt. Gen. Sanit added that although the attackers made away with the victim’s iPhone, police have not ruled out other motives such as a personal vendetta.

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Jailed Redshirt Leader Recovering From Kidney Infection

Jatuporn Prompan laughs and displays a backpack of clothes for prison as he arrives at the Criminal Court on Oct. 11 to hear its ruling on his bail status.

BANGKOK — Jailed Redshirt leader Jatuporn Prompan is expected to fully recover from a kidney infection in the next few days, his fellow activist said Thursday.

Prison officials announced last week that Jatuporn, who’s been jailed since October after his bail on a terrorism charge was revoked, was suffering from pyelonephritis. In a country known for poor inmate care and occasional deaths in custody, the news raised concerns among Redshirts for the leader of their movement’s umbrella organization.

Read: Redshirt Leader Imprisoned After Bail Revoked

But Redshirt activist Nattawut Saikua said Thursday that he’s been assured by officials at the Bangkok Remand Prison that his friend Jatuporn was recovering.

“He’s well now,” Nattawut said. “He will be given antibiotics during the next few days. As for other complications, none found so far.”

The activist said he’s not pleading for any privileges on Jatuporn’s behalf, but merely urging prison officials to respect his rights and provide him with adequate medical care.

Nattawut also called on the warden to recognize Jatuporn’s status as a suspect in an ongoing criminal trial, and not a convict.

Jatuporn is the chairman of the United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship, a movement loyal to fugitive former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his political dynasty.

Jatuporn was sent to prison three months ago after the court ruled he violated the conditions of his bail by “inciting unrest” in the country in his televised speeches. The charge was filed over six years ago by the government of Abhisit Vejjajiva in response to street protests Jatuporn helped organize in 2010.

Those protests, which called to demand Abhisit step down and hold fresh elections, ended in a bloody military crackdown and acts of arson by some protesters.

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