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Abductions and Passion in North Korea at Alt Cinema

BANGKOK — Of all his alleged glorious talents, filmmaking held a special place in the heart of late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il. Problem was, his isolated nation made terrible films, so he concocted a simple plan.

“The Lovers and The Despot,” a 2016 documentary by Robert Cannan and Ross Adam, reveals the infamous 1978 abduction of South Korean director Shin Sang-ok and his ex-wife, actress Choi Eun-hee. It was Kim, of course, behind the zany scheme.

In 95 minutes, the doc not only explores the relationship of the young couple, but also their rise and fall in the South Korean film industry. Choi was kidnapped in Hong Kong in 1978. When Shin went there looking for her, he was snatched as well.

Fast-forward through five years of indoctrination and the couple were reunited in a moment of real-life cinematic punch. That’s when Kim Jong-il told them what was up: He wanted them to be his personal filmmakers. And that’s what they did for several years, winning his trust and secretly planning their escape.

“The Lovers and The Despot” shows at 9pm on Thursday at dive-bar thrift store I Hate Pigeons on Soi Si Bamphen, in the Ngam Duphli area just off Rama IV Road. The nearest MRT is Khlong Toei Station.

Tickets are 120 baht and include a Danish beer while supplies last. Advance booking can be made via Facebook.

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Tune Into World Music at The Overstay

Musicians perform at the Overstay in a photo posted Nov. 7. Photo: The Overstay / Facebook.

BANGKOK — Indulge in the world’s sounds at a hostel-arts venue in the Pinklao area.

The Overstay is hosting volume two of its Bangkok Noi World Music Festival this weekend with original live music from around the world.

Hear traditional Mor Lam from the Wat Noi Nang Hong Band, Thai psychedelia from Jinda John, dub duo Bangkok Riddim Syndicate and Genevan DJ Jerome Doudet, aka The Dude of Stratosphear.

Apart from food for the ears, visual ambrosia will be available in a market zone where artists will showcase alternative music with a projection mapping performance and live painting. Learn some new moves in an Isaan music dancing 101 workshop.

It’s the first event at the venue since a police raid in October.

Admission is 250 baht and includes a drink. CDs will be given to the first 20 attendees.

The festival will kick off at 6:30pm on Saturday at The Overstay, located near Soi Charansanitwong 40 which can be reached by a motorcycle or taxi from the Phra Pinklao pier.

 

 

 

 

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Chinese Paper Calls Trump ‘Ignorant’ After Taiwan Comments

U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, left, speaking during a "USA Thank You" tour event in Cincinatti Dec. 1, 2016, and Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen, delivering a speech during National Day celebrations in Taipei, Taiwan, Oct. 10, 2016. Photo: Evan Vucci, Chiang Ying-ying / AP.

BEIJING — An official Chinese newspaper called Donald Trump “as ignorant as a child” on Monday after the president-elect again suggested that he was reconsidering how America deals with Taiwan, one of the most sensitive issues in the relationship between the U.S. and China.

The Global Times, a Communist Party-controlled newspaper, was responding to Trump’s comments in a television interview Sunday that he wouldn’t feel “bound by a one-China policy unless we make a deal with China having to do with other things, including trade.”

Beijing was already angered by Trump’s Dec. 2 call with Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, the first time an American president or president-elect has publicly spoken to a Taiwanese leader in nearly four decades. China considers the self-governing island to be its territory and any reference to a separate Taiwanese head of state to be a grave insult.

Hours after Trump’s interview on “Fox News Sunday” aired, the Global Times published a Chinese-language editorial headlined: “Trump, please listen clearly: ‘One China’ cannot be traded.”

“China needs to launch a resolute struggle with him,” the editorial said. “Only after he’s hit some obstacles and truly understands that China and the rest of the world are not to be bullied will he gain some perception.”

“Many people might be surprised at how the new U.S. leader is truly a ‘businessman’ through-and-through,” the paper said, referring to Trump’s suggestion of using the “one China” policy as a bargaining chip. “But in the field of diplomacy, he is as ignorant as a child.”

The Global Times, which is published by the Communist Party’s mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, often runs commentaries that target nationalistic sentiment with provocative language.

Chinese officials have had a muted response so far to Trump, who followed the Tsai phone call with two tweets accusing China of manipulating its currency, taxing American imports and provoking tensions in the South China Sea. Foreign Minister Wang Yi blamed the call on a Taiwanese “trick,” and the ministry has repeatedly reaffirmed that Taiwan is part of China without directly criticizing the president-elect.

Trump appeared Sunday to back off reports that his call with Tsai was planned well in advance by advisers positioning him to confront China over the island. He said he heard about the call “probably an hour or two before.”

“Why should some other nation be able to say I can’t take a call?” he said. “I think it actually would’ve been very disrespectful, to be honest with you, not taking it.”

The Chinese foreign ministry did not immediately respond to faxed questions Monday about the interview.

Dali Yang, a political science professor at the University of Chicago, said that Taiwan would remain at the “very core of China’s national interests,” but that Chinese leaders would downplay Trump’s statements before he takes office, given the number of issues facing both countries, from trade to climate change.

“The Chinese government actually so far has been very careful not to mobilize public opinion very much at this point,” Yang said. “Once they mobilize public opinion, they also make it very hard for them to have room for a maneuver.”

Story: Nomaan Merchant

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7 Exotic Ways to Christmas This Year in Bangkok

BANGKOK Have a holly jolly Christmas eating German sausages, watching holiday classics, partying with fabulous drag queens and more this year in Bangkok.

Although the year-end holidays will be muted this festive seasonyear, there are a number of events from fun to random going around town. So expand your holiday experience beyond shopping mall sales and Christmas-tree selfies with a variety of reasons to celebrate the season.

Eat, Play, Shop at German-Style Christmas Market

GOETHE 1Bangkok goes Berlin for one night when German flea market pops up on a Lumphini-area lawn.

At Weihnachtsmarkt, expect everything traditional and German from currywurst, mulled wine and homemade baked goods to crafted gifts, board games and a raffle. Shop through knick-knack stalls and watch a German holiday short.

Tickets are 150 baht and include food, drink and a raffle ticket. Don’t want them? Guests can walk in without tickets.

The street market starts at 5pm on Saturday at the Goethe-Institut.

Gin-sane Feast at Chomp

Photo: Chomp / Facebook
Photo: Chomp / Facebook

A cafe on Soi Samsen 1 will serve five courses from a delightful gin-based menu, with cocktails to wash it down. Expect a variety of choices from the meaty – shrimp and turkey with Citadelle Gin – to vegetarian-friendly options like spicy pomelo salad with citrus gin dressing and Sloe Gin baked apples with vegan whipped cream.

The full menu and booking details are available online. The event is limited to two seatings and costs 1,000 baht per person.

The dinner goes from 6pm to 8pm on Dec. 25 at Chomp.

Have A Very Merry Malaise at The Friese-Greene Club

Private cinema the Friese-Greene Club on Soi Sukhumvit 22 will screen Christmas selections for two weeks straight. Expect cheerful festive flicks such as Bing Crosby-starring musical “Holiday Inn” and 2003 romcom “Love Actually” from Dec. 21 to Dec. 25.

Prefer your holidays maudlin? You got it. Five films with a darker side will show in the final week of the year including 1980 slasher “Christmas Evil” and Terry Gilliam’s masterwork of Kafkaesque dystopia, “Brazil.” The schedule is available online.

Watch Well-Loved Christmas Classics at Bangkok Screening Room

The most traditional Christmas movie ever, “It’s a Wonderful Life,” will show at Bangkok’s new alt cinema.

The 1946 fantasy drama will show at 6:30pm on Dec. 24 and 9pm on Dec. 25. Tickets are 300 baht for adults, 250 baht for students and 200 baht for children.

The Bangkok Screening Room is located on the second floor above a 7-Eleven on Soi Saladaeng 1. It’s walkable from MRT Lumphini’s exit No. 2 or BTS Sala Daeng’s exit No. 4.

Sing ‘Ho Ho Ho’ At Maggie Choo’s

Photo: Maggie Choo’s / Facebook
Photo: Maggie Choo’s / Facebook

Sunday’s regular Gay Night at Maggie Choo’s down Silom Road will be even more special it will throw a joyous party Ho Ho Ho X’mas Party.

The lineup features fabulous drag queen Pan Pan Narkprasert aka Pangina Heals. DJ Yui Truluv and DJ Steven G will spin all things ‘90s music.

Admission is 500 baht and there will be two hours of free flow 7pm to 9pm. The price after 9pm is 300 baht and includes one drink.

The party starts at 7pm on Dec. 25 at Maggie’s Choo’s in the basement of Novotel Fenix Silom hotel. It can be reached by taxi from BTS Surasak, BTS Chong Nonsi or MRT Silom.

Enjoy Latin-American Christmas Dishes in Sathon

Corn tortilla cones stuffed with guacamole, topped with cheese and pomegranate seeds. Photo: Ceresia Coffee Roasters / Facebook
Corn tortilla cones stuffed with guacamole, topped with cheese and pomegranate seeds. Photo: Ceresia Coffee Roasters / Facebook

Expand your definition of “American” southward when vendors and chefs from restaurants around town will gather at a coffee shop in the Sathorn to offer a variety of Latin recipes to celebrate Christmas season.

Hosted by Thai-Venezuelan, family-owned Ceresia Coffee Roasters, Latin Food Fest Christmas welcomes traditional food and dessert from six countries: Argentina, Venezuela, Ecuador, Mexico, Spain and Cuba. Stalk the stalls for yuletide yummies. Dishes will cost 100 baht to 300 baht.

The event starts at noon and runs until 4:30pm on Saturday at Ceresia Coffee Roasters. The cafe is located inside the 22-story Tisco Tower. The nearest public transportation is MRT Lumphini, MRT Silom or BTS Sala Daeng.

Have a Holly Bolly Xmas at Hidden Japanese Concert Venue

Mumbai-based folk soloist Maalavika Manoj aka Mali will sing her heart out on the fourth floor of a Japanese restaurant on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.

Mali will perform acoustic songs from her albums and singles at 8pm on Dec. 24 and 7pm on Dec. 25. And yes, guests can always request some Christmas songs.

Tickets are 200 baht and include one drink, or pay 500 baht for all you can drink. The small space can accommodate only 30 people.

Livecube sits on the fourth floor of Okinawa Kinjo restaurant on Soi Sukhumvit 69. The best way to get there is via BTS Phra Khanong.

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Police Weigh Australian Tourist’s Tuk-Tuk Rape Allegation

A deserted building in Soi Borommaratchachonnani 43, west of Bangkok, attracts photographers for its graffiti.

BANGKOK — Police had yet to rule Monday whether a 23-year-old Australian tourist was sexually assaulted by a tuk-tuk driver as she alleged earlier this month.

Citing the woman’s intoxicated state at the time of the alleged assault, the commander of Taling Chan police said they would base their decision on results of a forensic examination expected tomorrow from Siriraj Hospital.

The Australian woman went to the police station at 4:25am on Dec. 5 and said she got into a tuk-tuk at Khaosan Road. The driver, she said, took her to an abandoned building in Soi Borommaratchachonnani 43 where he and a friend sexually assaulted her before fleeing in the tuk-tuk.

“We found footage from a security camera that showed she was still walking near Khaosan Road around the Khok Wua junction at 3:48am,” Col. Thanawat Taraka said. “So the question is, if it was possible in that time frame.”

Update: Police Confirm Australian Tourist Raped, Issue Arrest Warrant

The building where the alleged assault happened is 6 kilometers from the intersection. The police station is a kilometer away from the building.

A deserted building in Soi Borommaratchachonnani 43, west of Bangkok.
A deserted building in Soi Borommaratchachonnani 43, west of Bangkok.

She told police she was traveling alone after landing in Thailand on Dec. 2. Prior to the incident, she went to a bar in Khaosan Road, not far from where she was staying and started drinking at 6pm on Dec. 4 before becoming heavily intoxicated.

In the security footage, the woman was seen walking with a foreign man at the Khok Wua intersection.

“She accepted that was her in the footage but could not remember anything,” Thanawat said. “She said, ‘I don’t know how come I was there.’”

Police did not identify the woman, so it was not possible to reach her for comment.

Word of the allegations went public Friday and quickly became a topic of interest, prompting police to take action.

Bangkok Metropolitan Police on Sunday summoned several tuk-tuk drivers who work in the Khaosan Road area for the woman to identify. Police said they released a man she pointed out, saying he had evidence supporting an alibi at the time.

“She said she was 80 percent confident, so I said it is not enough to prosecute,” Bangkok Police Chief Sanit Mahatavorn said Sunday.

The abandoned structure, Wattajak Building, is famous for its graffiti and attracts professional and amateaur phtographers.

The case also provoked the Talingchan District Office to order the caretaker of the building to install lights and CCTV cameras.

Police said they were would try to complete their investigation before the woman leaves the country.

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‘La La Land,’ ‘Moonlight’ Among Winners at Critics Choice

Director Damien Chazelle, center, accepts the award for best picture for "La La Land" at the 22nd annual Critics' Choice Awards, Dec. 11, 2016. Pictured on stage from left, Gary Gilbert, Jordan Horowitz, Mary Zophres, Emma Stone, and Ryan Gosling. Photo: Chris Pizzello/ AP)

SANTA MONICA, California — The host of the 22nd Critics Choice Awards chose not to discuss his legal troubles and instead focused on President-elect Donald Trump and the controversies surrounding his election, the Los Angeles Times reports.

T.J. Miller, a star of the TV series “Silicon Valley,” was arrested Friday after he police say he slapped a car service driver on the head after remarks about Trump.

The Times says that on Sunday night at the awards show, Miller joked about possible hacking of the election by Russia and the automation of jobs.

The big winners at the show include:

IN THE FILM CATEGORIES

— “La La Land” for best picture.

— Casey Affleck for best actor for his lead role in “Manchester by the Sea.”

— Natalie Portman for best actress for her lead role in “Jackie.”

— Mahershala Ali for his supporting role in “Moonlight.”

— Viola Davis for her supporting role in “Fences”

IN THE TELEVISION CATEGORIES

— Courtney B. Vance for his “The People v. O. J. Simpson” role as Simpson attorney Johnnie Cochran.

— Donald Glover as lead actor in a comedy series for his role in “Atlanta.”

— Thandie Newton as supporting actress in a drama series for her role in the “Westworld.”

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Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/

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3-Day Vintage Flea Market Takes You Back to the 1930s

Union Camp Flea Market site. Photo: Union Camp / Facebook

BANGKOK — What promises to be a special three-day vintage flea market will take place  Friday through Sunday at Bangkok’s ACMEN Ekamai Complex.

Dubbed “Union Camp Flea Market,” the event will gather not just dealers of vintage furniture, clothing, cars and motorcycles, but also musical performances, food and props to accentuate the whole experience.

Those running the popular Train Market are behind the attempt to create a special three-day fair and claim that the dozens of vendors have sourced their vintage goods from all corners of the globe.

This includes the likes of “Kai London,” a Thai dealer who used to sell beads at London’s Portobello market before turning into a dealer and an importer of vintage English furniture. There too, will be famous independent vintage cloth shop Bangklyn, which sourced its goods from upcountry United States, Japan and much more.

The venue will be transformed into a prop that mimics the America of the 1930s and 1950s.

The event starts Friday, which is designated as “Dealer Day,” from 6pm till late. The entrance fee on the day is 200 baht. The event on Saturday and Sunday, aimed at ordinary revelers and shoppers, starts from noon to 11pm. The entrance fee is 100 baht. Union Camp will be located between Soi Ekkamai 13 and 15, a 5 motorcycle ride from BTS Ekkamai.

For more information call 063-816-9357 or 091-795-4310 or visit the event’s Facebook page.

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Image: Union Camp / Facebook
Image: Union Camp / Facebook
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Mosul Doctors Struggle to Save Civilians on Iraq Front Line

Yousuf Odey, 10, wounded in the eye by Islamic State militants is treated by doctors at a clinic in Zahra district in Mosul, Iraq on Dec. 7, 2016. Photo: Manu Brabo / AP.

MOSUL, Iraq — A crowd of men rushed through the narrow hallway of Mosul’s al-Zahra clinic carrying a slight 10-year-old boy. Yousef Oday’s face was covered in blood.

A team of doctors quickly gathered around his cot. “What happened to you?” one of the men asked.

“I have no idea. I was bleeding on one side,” the boy said. He didn’t make another sound, lying motionless as a doctor put an IV into his arm. His eyes were wide and pupils dilated.

Oday was hit in the side of his head with a stray bullet as he was waiting in line to gather water from a well in eastern Mosul. Two other young men waiting with him were also shot. Dr. Ahmed Hussam methodically tended to Oday’s wounds. “He’s in shock,” he explained.

While Iraqi forces announce daily advances, the city’s civilians continue to be killed and maimed by indirect fire, clashes and counterattacks.

The Mosul front line in the city’s east is being pushed forward in two columns: one led by the Iraqi army’s 9th Division and the other by the special forces. In some places, Iraqi forces are just over two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the Tigris River that splits the city. But along the main highway that cuts through the center of Mosul’s eastern half, Iraqi forces have made hardly any advances at all.

The jagged edge leaves troops vulnerable to counterattacks, but also thousands of civilians exposed to ongoing clashes as the operation slowly grinds forward.

Oday was shot in al-Zahra, a neighborhood declared liberated nearly a month ago. Since then, Iraqi forces have captured nearly half a dozen other neighborhoods and districts, but have not managed to completely secure al-Zahra so that aid groups and supply trucks can access the hundreds of civilians still living there.

“This is nothing,” whispered one of the nurses in the emergency room where Oday was being treated. “We have people who come in here without any arms or legs,” she said, asking to only be identified by her first name, Malkiya, out of concern for her safety.

Doctors in the small clinic in eastern Mosul say that since the operation to retake the city began nearly two months ago, they’ve only received intermittent deliveries of supplies. Nurses say they’re running out of basic items like clean bandages. In a hallway that’s been converted into an emergency room, doctors say all they have are bottles of saline solution, gauze and iodine. Like nearly all of Mosul, the clinic also lacks running water.

Hundreds of other patients also filled the dim hallways waiting for antibiotics, cough syrup, allergy medicine or insulin. A woman and her three daughters said they walked 3 kilometers (1.8 miles) across a front line to reach the clinic to obtain antibiotics. Since the operation to retake Mosul began, temperatures have dropped and, without electricity or fuel, her children have all gotten sick.

The women spoke on condition of anonymity as they were still living in a Mosul neighborhood controlled by IS. “We have no protection,” the mother said, walking inside the examination room and lifting the black veil she wore to travel to the clinic. He youngest daughter screamed as the nurse gave her an immunization shot.

During the first few battles of the Mosul operation, IS fighters largely fled the villages around the city, giving Iraqi and coalition commanders hope they would do the same inside the city. But as the battle reached the city’s edge, intense resistance has repeatedly stalled advances and at times forced Iraqi forces to retreat.

Unlike in past fights where civilians were moved out of the way of front-line clashes, in Mosul, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has asked civilians to stay in their homes. The move prevents massive displacement — Mosul is still home to an estimated one million people — but it also leaves thousands in harm’s way and thousands more out of reach of aid organizations wary of operating close to the front.

The clinic inside Mosul estimates it has treated at least 800 severely wounded civilians since Iraqi forces first pushed into the city in early November.

“All we can do is work as a stabilization unit,” said Dr. Muhammad Hassan Ali, explaining that without the ability to perform surgery, most of the emergency cases he receives need to be transferred to a hospital in Irbil more than an hour’s drive away across bad roads and through half a dozen checkpoints.

Oday, the young boy, lost his left eye, but the doctors at the clinic were able to bandage his wound and slow the bleeding. As quickly as he was rushed into the building, he was carried out into an ambulance bound for Irbil.

“He’ll live,” said Hussam, the doctor who treated him. “He’s very lucky.”

Story: Susannah George 

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Kissinger Asks for Patience Despite Trump’s Provoking Ideas

Former US National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, left, greets Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger Sunday at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum in Oslo. Photo: Terje Bendiksby / Associated Press

HELSINKI — Former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has described President-elect Donald Trump as being a personality that has “no precedent in modern American history,” but cautioned against judging him on his campaign rhetoric.

The Nobel Peace laureate says that before “postulating an inevitable crisis,” the new administration should be given a chance to present its international policies, despite the “rhetorical elements … (and) challenging patterns” presented during Trump’s campaign.

Kissinger, who was awarded the 1973 peace prize, was speaking Sunday at the newly-established Nobel Peace Prize Forum Oslo.

He shared the award with Vietnamese politician and diplomat Le Duc Tho for their efforts in negotiating the Paris Peace Accords aimed at ending the Vietnam War. Tho, however, declined the award.

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Myanmar Town Wants The Secret Out: George Orwell Slept Here

Amateur George Orwell scholar Nyo Ko Naing, center, leaves the house of the former British commissioner in Katha with the caretaker, right, and Kyal Ni, member of the local office of the National League for Democracy, in Katha, Myanmar. Photo: Aung Naing Soe / AP.

KATHA, Myanmar — In the 1990s, Nyo Ko Naing noticed that the handful of foreign tourists who made it to his remote hometown were carrying their own maps and looked like they were searching for something. Someone, it turns out, by the name of George Orwell.

Katha was Eric Blair’s last posting in the Imperial Police before he sailed back to England in 1927, adopted the nom de plume Orwell and launched a writing career that would produce powerful novels and commentary. Seven years after leaving the sleepy town on the Irrawaddy River, he immortalized it as the setting of his first novel, the vehemently anti-colonial “Burmese Days,” though he called it not Katha but “Kyauktada.”

The British Club, where much of the novel’s scheming, fighting, drinking and sweating takes place, still stands, as do other sites mentioned including a tennis court, a pagoda and a prison. A house believed to have been Orwell’s home in Katha remains in use.

Nyo Ko Naing, a graphic designer and cartoonist, didn’t know much about “Burmese Days” at first, but soon grasped how important it was to the future of the town.

He has since become the town’s preservationist, in-house historian, amateur Orwell scholar and literary tour guide, keen to market Katha as a tourist destination. He’s helping to renovate the 19th-century house of the former British commissioner for use as a museum that is expected to open next year.

“It is not easy to get attention from the world,” the 45-year-old said in a recent interview. “So it’s like Katha won the lottery.”

Orwell-related tourism has grown in Myanmar, also known as Burma, since a half-century of military rule ended in 2011, though numbers remain small. Nyo Ko Naing estimates that Katha sees 300 to 400 such visitors per month.

In 2012, he founded the Katha Heritage Trust and mounted a campaign through the media to save the commissioner’s house from a local businessman who wanted to turn the property into a skating rink.

The first floor is now full of archival photos, including one of Orwell as a young policeman, and several portraits of the writer painted recently by local artists.

“We’re collecting materials for the museum right now, such as photos, data and other heritage of Katha. And we’re also renovating that house by maintaining its own original style. That’s why it takes time,” he said.

“Now we have spent 4 million kyats ($3,000) and some tourists have donated,” he added. “We will renovate more whenever we get money.”

The museum will also focus on Katha’s history, with information about nearby battles during World War II and other aspects of the area deemed significant.

Nyo Ko Naing hopes Orwell will be a magnet for foreign tourists who will linger for other attractions, such as Katha’s traditional elephant camps, which the government is exploring turning into eco-tourism destinations amid a wide-ranging ban on logging.

A 12-hour train ride from Mandalay, Katha is a small, idyllic town in the Sagaing region. The atmosphere is as tranquil as the flowing Irrawaddy. As the sun sets, visitors and families stroll along the promenade as mountains darken in the distance.

In the past five years, Myanmar has been rapidly modernizing, and Katha is no exception. There are shiny new bank branches and new hotels. Mobile phone shops proliferate. Many colonial buildings have been left alone, giving the place a timeless feel, though many structures are dilapidated.

Both the tennis court and the prison are still in use. The British Club is now a local business cooperative.

The Hotel Katha, which opened last year, has seized on the Orwell connection. Built to resemble a red-brick colonial home, it offers brochures at the front desk with maps guiding visitors to key sites from the novel. Guests can read copies of “Burmese Days” and Orwell’s essays in the lobby or dine at the Kyauktada Cafe & Restaurant. Meeting rooms are named “Flory,” ”Elizabeth,” and “Macgregor,” after three of the book’s characters.

“I want visitors to feel like they are in the book,” said the owner, Bran Aung, in a phone interview. “I want to add more about Orwell. I am still collecting.”

Best known for “1984” and “Animal Farm,” Orwell is also admired for his condemnation of colonialism in “Burmese Days,” depicting the British denizens of Kyauktada largely as racist exploiters. Yet the novel was more read and celebrated abroad than in Burma.

Censorship was lifted in 2012. A year later, Maung Myint Kywe won the government’s most prestigious literary award for his Burmese translation of “Burmese Days.”

“He told me that his translation had been sleeping in the hands of the publisher for more than 30 years,” Thurein Win, who has translated Orwell’s essays, wrote in an email interview. Maung Myint Kywe died in 2014.

Orwell wrote darkly about British and Burmese alike. “Some Burmese don’t like him for his provocative words, but others love his writing,” Thurein Win said.

Nyo Ko Naing’s most impressive Orwellian work may be tracking down the author’s house, which he had previously confused with the commissioner’s. He used a colonial-era map to pinpoint the residence as a two-story teak home on the main road, not far from the Katha Hotel.

In a twist that might amuse Orwell, it is still occupied by a police officer.

“My colleagues said that the house you are going to stay in belongs to the English writer George Orwell,” said Police Chief Myint Aung, who was recently transferred to Katha. He didn’t know anything about the writer, but he is embracing the former resident.

Although the home isn’t officially open to tourists, he lets curious visitors poke around, and he has allowed the trust to hang a banner on the porch explaining some basic history.

“The town of George Orwell is lovely as well as interesting,” the sign says.

Story: Ung Naing Soe 

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