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Military to Hand Over More Alleged Hackers

Natdanai Kongdi, 19, accused of hacking a police database, was presented to reporters Monday at a police news conference.

BANGKOK — Police said Wednesday more alleged hackers will be handed over by military while a 19-year-old, arrested earlier for allegedly attacking police site, will spend the New Year’s holidays in prison.

A court Wednesday ruled Natdanai Kongdi, who is accused of hacking into a central police investigation database, a flight risk and denied him bail. He will remain in custody another 12 days until Jan. 8.

Deputy police spokesman Krissana Pattanacharoen said the military will soon send police more suspected hackers it has detained for prosecution. He said he did not know how many people were being held in military custody.

Police said they did not know how long Natdanai has been detained. Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan said Monday authorities have taken nine people into custody for hacking into government websites, but no details were given to the media.

Read: Military Gives Police Alleged Hacker to Display to Public

It is common for the regime to use its special, self-granted authority to hold people for questioning in secret detention without charge if the suspected offenses are deemed by the regime to be threats to national security.

Natdanai was said to have links to the online activist group Citizens Against Single Gateway, which has been calling for attacks on government, police and military websites to demand revocation of the revised Computer Crime Act.

He was also charged with being part of criminal network, and possessing guns and drugs as authorities said they found firearms and marijuana at his place.

Some expressed skepticism that the evidence displayed by the police after his arrest consisted of a PC and generic book on network security.

Kritsana on Wednesday insisted Natdanai was not a scapegoat, saying he had confessed to hacking the police site and sharing screenshots of his exploits to the hacktivist page.

Related stories:

Army Denies Buying Web Security Cracking Devices

Military Gives Police Alleged Hacker to Display to Public

Five Hacktivists Arrested, Junta Source Says

Gov’t Payment System Offline As Hacktivists Focus Online Assault

Dismissive Prayuth Tells Hackers to Knock it Off

Computer Crime Act 2.0 Passes Unanimously

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Actress Debbie Reynolds Has Died at Age 84, Son Says

Debbie Reynolds, left, and Carrie Fisher arrive at the Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards in Los Angeles Sept. 10, 2011. Photo: Chris Pizzello / AP.

LOS ANGELES — Actress Debbie Reynolds, the star of the 1952 classic “Singin’ in the Rain,” has died. She was 84.

Her son, Todd Fisher, said Reynolds died Wednesday, a day after her daughter, Carrie Fisher, who was 60.

“She’s now with Carrie and we’re all heartbroken,” Fisher said from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where his mother was taken by ambulance earlier Wednesday.

He said the stress of his sister’s death “was too much” for Reynolds.

Reynolds was not yet 20 when she won a starring role in the Gene Kelly musical “Singin’ in the Rain.” She was also known for her Oscar-nominated role in another musical, “The Unsinkable Molly Brown.”

Her messy divorce from singer Eddie Fisher, who left her for Elizabeth Taylor, made headlines in the late 1950s.

 

Story: Lynn Elber

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Art, Culture, Politics Continued to Collide in 2016

There might be no better words to describe the year in art, culture and entertainment better than “same same but different,” as 2016 saw many trying to create good work while facing the same challenges that never go away.

From censorship and bans to criminal prosecution, artists struggled with little support to fulfill their roles in society under pressure from external factors.

Still, 2016 was a year that saw some beautiful things flourish and even brought great sadness for many.

Here are some of the memorable checkpoints from the year.

Kaewta Ketbungkan

 

 

 

POLITICAL COMMEMORATION

Artists have always sought a way to express their opinion on society through their works. This year marked the increasingly un-celebrated 84th birthday of Thai Democracy and 40th anniversary of the 1976 massacre at Thammasat University, and artists responded to reflect on these unresolved issues on stage and in the gallery.

One of the best performances of the year was B-Floor Theatre’s September staging of Fundamental, which represented the massacre and the never-ending cycle of violence.

Anatta Theatre Troupe also produced two related pieces: “Dragon’s Heart the Musical” about former Thammasat University rector Puey Ungpakorn and “A Nowhere Place,” a drama about the reunion of an estranged couple.

On Oct. 6, Anocha Suwichakornpong’s second feature “By The Time It Gets Dark (Dao Khanong)” had a special screening on the anniversary date before its December premiere. Through extraneous narrative, the film reflects a past atrocity where the truth has never been revealed.


CANCELED EVENTS

When the nation plunged into mourning after the Oct. 13 death of King Bhumibol, artists expressed sorrow through works ranging from from photography, visual art, music and tattoos.

And as the nation mourned, artists from high culture and low felt the pinch. Venues for the arts and entertainment shut down, events and festivals were canceled or rescheduled. This affected not only the tourism sector, but also many lives of the small-time musicians who keep the country awash in music and cheer, forcing those who could to find a way to survive aboard.

Outspoken artist Chalermchai Kositpipat leads Chiang Rai artists to draw an image of King Rama IX on a 17 meter canvas on Oct. 24. Photo: Matichon
Outspoken artist Chalermchai Kositpipat leads Chiang Rai artists to draw an image of King Rama IX on a 17 meter canvas on Oct. 24. Photo: Matichon
Ceramic artist Wasinburee Supanichvoraparch creates a pink sculpture in the shape of a famous photo of His Majesty the Late King at the Khao Cha-Ngum Reservoir in Ratchaburi, a project credited to King Rama IX. Photo: Wasinburee Supanichvoraparch / Facebook
Ceramic artist Wasinburee Supanichvoraparch creates a pink sculpture in the shape of a famous photo of His Majesty the Late King at the Khao Cha-Ngum Reservoir in Ratchaburi, a project credited to King Rama IX. Photo: Wasinburee Supanichvoraparch / Facebook
Art students paint His Majesty the Late King’s portraits on the walls of Silpakorn University’s Wang Tha Phra campus on Oct. 17.
Art students paint His Majesty the Late King’s portraits on the walls of Silpakorn University’s Wang Tha Phra campus on Oct. 17.


MOVIES

Nothing new emerged from Thailand’s film industry in 2016 apart from the ongoing struggle of filmmakers to get by.

Among the 49 films that hit theatres, the most memorable (though not the best) was writer Prabda Yoon’s directorial debut with “Motel Mist,” which for some weeks was barred from release for its raunchy scenes not by government censors – but its own production house.

The most successful film was Poj Arnon’s monk comedy “Luang Pee Jazz 4G,” which earned almost 300 million baht nationwide despite being cam ripped and livestreamed shortly after its launch in theaters.

Another movie to pass the 100 million baht milestone was romantic-comedy “One Day (Fan Gan Kae Wan Diew)” from GDH559, a film studio which emerged from the ruins of feel-good studio GTH, proving audiences still want the product they’re selling.

To the joy of film lovers, 2016 brought back to Scala Theater the restored version of a long-lost film from the 1950s, “Santi-Vina,” the first Thai film to win international awards.


NEW ART SPACES

Several new and interesting venues opened this year, but possibly the best was in store for for moviegoers with the arrival of an alternative cinema in the heart of the city.

Launched in late September in the Lumphini area, the Bangkok Screening Room has become a home for art house flicks and classics. Despite the high ticket price of 300 baht, the well-designed, 50-seat cinema seems to be a good option for independent filmmakers and small distributors to screen their films apart from arthouse Apex theatres and House RCA in an otherwise unequal market controlled by two big chains theaters.

Up north, the Maiiam Contemporary Art Museum successfully introduced itself to art lovers in Chiang Mai with an exhibition by filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul. In Bangkok, Thong Lor Art Space and Bangkok CityCity Gallery continued exploring their spaces’ possibilities with a variety of works from theatre, gallery to cinema.

 

WHAT IS THAI?

Hypersensitive cultural conservatives in the government sector continue to be a problem for contemporary artists. This year, they couldn’t stand the sight of traditional khon characters karting or taking selfies in a travel promo video, leading renowned contemporary dancer Pichet Klunchun to comment on Facebook “Traditional art needs no protection under discussion or social restrictions.”

On the silver screen, the obsession with “Thainess” remains poorly defined as somehow “From Bangkok to Mandalay” was rejected from consideration at the annual Golden Swan Awards despite the fact that its director and most crew were Thai. With more cross-border investment a growing ASEAN trend, the industry raised insist the national film federation reconsider their inflexible procedures.


PRINT MEDIA

This year was awful for print media and had to give up, including “Sakulthai Weekly Magazine,” which had been published for 62 years, and “Baan Muangnewspaper shut down after 44 years. Finally 42-year-old “Pappayon Banterng Magazine (Movie-Entertainment)” ceased operations.

However, the print world shifted more aggressively online, with noteworthy examples being online news agency “The Matter,” born of a six-decade old comic book publisher and “The Momentum” under the same roof as popular youth magazine “A Day.” Both seek to provide news online in a different approach from traditional media by being analytical yet more friendly in terms of language and use of graphics.

 

Khaosod English says goodbye to 2016:

From Trafficked Tigers to Charred Children, 2016 Delivered on Awful

Of Pokemon and Creepy Dolls: The Trendiest Trends of 2016

Calls for Justice Answered by Social Media in 2016

Our Most/Least Read Stories of 2016

2016’s Most WTF and Very Prayuth Stories

Khaosod English Writers on Their Favorite Stories of 2016

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Khaosod English Writers on Their Favorite Stories of 2016

We asked our staff members to name their favorite stories of the year and explain why.

 

From Bangkok With Love: Russian Startups Digitize Thai E-Commerce

cobble2

I set out to do a piece on Russians with interesting jobs in Bangkok as a reply to the stereotypes found in the news. The Bangkok Russian community introduced me to several Russians responsible for Thai e-services many are familiar with. “From Bangkok With Love” was close to my heart as it combined my interests in the country and overturning negative stereotypes. Asaree Thaitrakulpanich

 

That One Time Michael Jackson Came to Bangkok 20 Years Ago

Michael Jackson is greeted by children in traditional dress as he arrives ahead of his 1996 concert in Bangkok. Photo: Charles Dharapak / Associated Press
Michael Jackson is greeted by children in traditional dress as he arrives ahead of his 1996 concert in Bangkok. Photo: Charles Dharapak / Associated Press

I barely knew Michael Jackson when I set out to write the story. I took a long time to research him and dug into Thai fanpages to find anyone who went to his concerts in Bangkok 20 years ago. It wasn’t easy, but I finally found two die-hard MJ fans who were willing to share their unique, hard-core experiences from two decades ago. I could sense their deep passion and nostalgic obsession during our interviews. – Chayanit Itthipongmaetee

Read: Our Most/Least Read Stories of 2016

Why is Popular Culture Afraid of the 1932 Revolution?

Activists lay garlands and candles at the 1932 Revolution plaque on 24 Jun. 2016, the anniversary of the 1932 popular uprising in Bangkok.
Activists lay garlands and candles at the 1932 Revolution plaque on 24 Jun. 2016, the anniversary of the 1932 popular uprising in Bangkok.

This article was not only my first feature at Khaosod English but also helped me better understand my role as an arts and culture reporter for an English-language audience, as I’d been writing for Thai audiences for several years. As there are many artists who try to reflect Thai society and controversial issues through their works subtly or overtly, I consider it part of my duty to pass on those messages. It would be best if all artists could freely express what they think, and even better if truths could be openly discussed by all. – Kaewta Ketbunkan

 

Freedom Fighters: Prison Doesn’t Deter Vietnam’s Dissident Bloggers

A large portrait of Ho Chi Minh hangs in display Nov. 11 in front of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union headquarters in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
A large portrait of Ho Chi Minh hangs in display Nov. 11 in front of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union headquarters in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.

The struggle for freedom of information is unfortunately still an issue in the 21st century. I had the opportunity to go to one of the most repressive and unforgiving countries when it comes to the protection of journalism, journalists and press freedom to interview those daring enough to question state censorship. As journalists advocating the liberation of silenced voices, it was important to shine light on their cause. – Lobsang Dundup Sherpa Subirana

Read: Of Pokemon and Creepy Dolls: The Trendiest Trends of 2016

The Making of a Cult of Personality

Singer Parn Uthaisri Srinarong of Vie Trio band, who sang the Royal Anthem soon after the passing of King Bhumibol, in a video clip that went viral within few hours.
Singer Parn Uthaisri Srinarong of Vie Trio band, who sang the Royal Anthem soon after the passing of King Bhumibol, in a video clip that went viral within few hours.

I chose this commentary written just weeks after the passing of HM the late King as my favorite piece for 2016 because to be a journalist is to try to warn the public about things, including the excesses of a cult of personality, even if it goes against the tide of popular sentiment. Committed journalists must be willing to take a stance, no matter how unpopular. – Pravit Rojanaphruk

 

Vanishing Bangkok: What is the Capital Being Remade Into, And For Whom?

Vanishing Bangkok
Vanishing Bangkok

The campaign to restore public spaces became a lot more intense this year as it has changed the face of Bangkok forever. This interactive map was pieced together from months of reporting I spent on the issue. By bringing some different attractive tools and offering many points of view, I hope “Vanishing Bangkok” can be a best one-stop source for anyone wondering what is going on under this “reorganization” policy. – Sasiwan Mokkhasen

Read: Calls for Justice Answered by Social Media in 2016

King Bhumibol, Monarch and Father to Millions, 88

File photo of Bhumibol at Siriraj Hospital, 24 April 2015
File photo of King Bhumibol at Siriraj Hospital, 24 April 2015

As the cliche goes, I was proud to have the privilege of contributing to the “rough draft of history” by reporting the most historic news in Thailand’s modern history: the passing of King Rama IX, the longest-reigning monarch Thais ever knew. Together with my colleagues I also closely covered the subsequent interregnum and succession, which culmimated in King Rama X’s ascension to the throne. – Teeranai Charuvastra

 

Lives Interrupted for Asylum Seekers Facing Desperation, Detention in Thailand

At right, Song Zhiyu, in foreground, and Li Xiaolong seen held in immigration detention after their bid to leave Thailand ended late Tuesday night on a beach in Chumphon.
At right, Song Zhiyu, in foreground, and Li Xiaolong seen held in immigration detention after their bid to leave Thailand ended late Tuesday night on a beach in Chumphon.

At the oldest newspaper in Los Angeles, writing about the annual Rose Parade did not capture this reporter’s imagination, at least not until 2007 when China was invited to participate and promote the Beijing Olympics. Soon Human Rights Watch, Reporters Without Borders and Chinese dissident groups were protesting, but none so diligently as Falun Gong, a group perplexing in their one-mindedness yet also convincingly sincere and reasonable. So when a Caltech contact reached out eight years later with the phone number of a Falun Gong man who’d washed ashore in Chumphon, it brought a lot of things together for a news feature about human beings in impossible circumstances. – Todd Ruiz

 

Read: From Trafficked Tigers to Charred Children, 2016 Delivered on Awful

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Kachin Rebels See More Myanmar Attacks, No Hope For Peace

A soldier in 2016 patrols the front line near Laiza, the headquarters of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in Kachin State, Myanmar. Photo: Esther Htusan / Associated Press
A soldier in 2016 patrols the front line near Laiza, the headquarters of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in Kachin State, Myanmar. Photo: Esther Htusan / Associated Press

LAIZA, Myanmar — Ethnic Kachin rebels long at war with Myanmar troops say the government has only escalated fighting since Aung San Suu Kyi took over as leader, crushing the hopes that had led many ethnic minorities to support her party and leaving them with no confidence in the peace process that Suu Kyi has identified as a priority.

Rebels and observers say government offensives including airstrikes have increased since Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy party took control in March. Suu Kyi’s government has said little about the attacks, and the Kachin Independence Organization accuses her of cooperating with the military.

“Suu Kyi tried so hard to gain this power for many years and she needs to make deals with the military in order to sustain her power,” said La Nan, the chief spokesman of the KIO.

Rebels say they have been hit with airstrikes in areas of northern Shan and Kachin states including Mongo, a Shan town that was heavily bombed and suffered an unknown number of civilian casualties. Other fighting has occurred in Hpakant, center of Myanmar’s lucrative jade-mining region, and Laiza, headquarters of the KIO.

Suu Kyi, who serves as state counselor and foreign minister but effectively rules Myanmar, faces high expectations from ethnic groups and the international community. As opposition leader, the Nobel Peace laureate was held under house arrest by the former junta for years, but her landslide election victory in November 2015 ended more than half a century of military control.

Though she has called the peace process her top priority, many local and international political analysts do not see significant achievements since the NLD came to power, and say she has failed to cooperate enough with ethnic leaders.

“National reconciliation cannot be built only between the government and the military,” said Yan Myo Thein, a prominent Myanmar political analyst. “There must be negotiation between ethnic parties, armed groups, the military and the government.”

Ethnic Burmans form a majority in Myanmar, also known as Burma, but ethnic minorities make up about 40 percent of the population. Some of those groups have fought for greater autonomy for decades.

Suu Kyi held a peace conference in late August attended by representatives of 17 of the 20 major ethnic groups, including the Kachin. The conference was intended to build on a ceasefire agreement that ethnic groups insist include a political solution to their longstanding demands. Ethnic leaders have asked for political dialogue, but the peace conference met few of their expectations, and some may drop out of the next round, expected in February. The conference was dominated by short speeches from a wide range of stakeholders, leaving little time for more significant discussion.

“There was really no substance at all,” said David Mathieson, a senior researcher of Human Rights Watch who has been researching civil conflict in Myanmar for a more than a decade. “How can Suu Kyi expect to bring peace if she is not sitting down with Kachin and Shan leaders and when she is not taking the grievances of human rights abuses seriously?”

Suu Kyi’s peace negotiator, Dr. Tin Myo Win, did not return phone calls from The Associated Press.

Khin Maung Myint, an NLD upper house member of parliament from a constituency in Kachin state, blamed the military and army commander Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing.

“Min Aung Hlaing is doing whatever he wants. … They are just trying to make NLD look bad,” he said. “They are bullying ethnic people as well. The main problem with the military is that they don’t want a federal system. … This is just the bad inheritance from the bad dictatorship. The military doesn’t want to change.”

Col. Wunna Aung, second secretary of the Joint Monitoring Committee on Ceasefire, defended the army’s actions at a committee meeting Thursday.

“We are only fighting in the ethnic region to protect our own country,” he said. “We want to unite the country. I don’t think we have lost trust.” He said the army “always welcomes everyone for peace,” but that “the fighting happens because it is necessary.”

Concerns about the prospects for Myanmar’s peace process were heightened further after the newly formed Northern Alliance, comprised of the KIO’s Kachin Independence Army, the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, the Ta’ang National Liberation Army and the Arakan Army, began a joint offensive in response to military attacks in the ethnic regions of northern Myanmar.

These attacks are part of more widespread increase in fighting since the Thein Sein government launched the peace process in 2011. According to Bertil Lintner, a longtime Myanmar political analyst, fighting is now the heaviest that it has been in decades.

The heavy fighting, combined with a stalled peace process, has created fears among some that the prospects for Myanmar’s peace process are dim.

“If Suu Kyi can’t start a discussion with the ethnic leaders soon enough, the tension between the military and the ethnic armed groups will go higher and the possibility of ceasefire and peace process will be less,” said Yan Myo Thein, the analyst.

Linter said, “It should be evident to anyone that an entirely new approach is needed” that would “include a genuine political dialogue, not just meetings with dozens of ethnic representatives.”

Rebel groups are not optimistic.

“We ethnic people are not very happy even though there is a so-called democratic government. The new government is trying to hold, gain and sustain power and to get that they make deals together with the military,” said La Nan, the KIO spokesman.

Story: Esther Htusan

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Facebook Says Panic-Inducing Bangkok Explosion Actually Happened

Image: Facebook

BANGKOK — Facebook has denied its Tuesday night alert about an explosion hitting Bangkok was made in error, saying it was supported by news reports about a man who threw fireworks from the roof of a bank nine hours earlier.

Citing English-language reports by Khaosod English, Bangkok Post, Thai PBS and The Nation, Facebook said the system was working as intended when it was activated “in Thailand following an explosion.”

“As with all Safety Check activations, Facebook relies on a trusted third party to first confirm the incident and then on the community to use the tool and share with friends and family,” the statement said.

The “explosion” Facebook is referencing was a mentally ill man who had ascended to the roof of a bank near the prime minister’s office to throw homemade “ping pong” bombs that caused no injuries.

Read: Man Tosses Small Bombs at Gov House for ‘Justice’

Those assertions did not match up with Facebook’s own original Safety Check, which listed as “confirmation” a bogus news report on a news aggregating site, an automated MSN news report derived from the first and a story on Thai street food.

A Facebook Thailand representative reached for comment Wednesday afternoon said the alert had been activated since Tuesday morning but declined to explain why it didn’t begin circulating until 9pm.

Media reports cited as evidence supporting Facebook's Safety Check on Tuesday night. Image: Facebook
Media reports cited as evidence supporting Facebook’s Safety Check on Tuesday night. Image: Facebook

The representative declined to give her name saying it was company protocol.

Asked why Facebook now says it was caused by the Government House incident when their system showed the bogus news story, the spokeswoman declined to answer.

A reporter also asked if their system is working when a man throwing firecrackers from a roof triggers panic 12 hours later, but the representative declined to answer.

The representative said they were “gathering information” and would send more details later today.

Additional reporting Sasiwan Mokkhasen

Related stories:

Police Weigh Computer Crime Act Prosecution for FB Bangkok Bomb Hoax
‘Fake News’ Prompts Facebook Bangkok Bomb Scare

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Thai Life Pulls Tearjerker Ad Following Complaints

BANGKOK — Thailand’s most prominent life insurance firm on Wednesday took pulled a commercial due to complaints from a group of nurses that it damaged their image.

The piece, called “Opportunity,” showed a Thai Life Insurance agent prostrating, or performing graab, in front of nurses at a hospital and beseeching them to give medical care to a member of her client’s family. In a press release, a company spokeswoman said it didn’t intend to portray the nurses as villains but nonetheless apologized for the ad.

“The company respectfully accepted the feedback,” spokeswoman Duangduen Kongkasawat said in the letter. “The company has halted the airing of the aforementioned commercial.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XL8UiNprCvQ

The five-minute “Opportunity” spot depicts a woman going through the ups and downs of life before joining Thai Life Insurance as an agent. She works hard and cares for her customers partly because she lost a child to illness. The climax involves the agent performing a graab to stone-faced nurses for them to take pity on the young son of her client, who needed immediate care.

The Thailand Nursing and Midwifery Council slammed the commercial. Speaking to reporters Tuesday, chairwoman Krisada Sawangdee said it did not only portray nurses as inhumane, but also misrepresents health welfare because all hospitals, public or private, are required to give care to all patients in emergency cases.

She called upon the company to remove the ad.

In Wednesday’s press release, Thai Life Insurance’s Duangduen said the scene was meant to symbolize the protagonist’s bitterness over losing her child and had nothing to do with disparaging the nurses.

“How she threw herself to the ground portrays the most painful emotion of someone who has lost a child. One day, she again encountered a similar horrible experience like the one she has suffered before,” Duangduen wrote.

By Wednesday morning the ad was removed from the firm’s YouTube channel, but copies of it remain. Many comments on those copies also criticize the company for the plot.

“They should have made a more realistic commercial,” wrote user Katzz Kopthanarat. “Doctors and nurses have ethics in taking care of their patients. It’s not like they would leave patients to die because they don’t have insurance.”

Thai Life Insurance is known for its many melodramatic, tearjerker ads, some of which backfired, like a 2014 commercial that praised its protagonist for giving alms to child beggars.

The company took down the video after a charity said the depiction encouraged support for the trafficking networks which often buy or abduct children to serve as beggars on the streets of Bangkok.

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Police Weigh Computer Crime Act Prosecution for FB Bangkok Bomb Hoax

Image of story at Bangkok Informer

BANGKOK — Those responsible for a bogus news article that triggered Facebook to warn people there had been a large explosion in the capital could be prosecuted under the Computer Crime Act, police said Wednesday.

The false report created alarm throughout the capital Tuesday night and was traced back to a fake news site that routinely takes content from other sites. But a police spokesman said investigators were verifying whether it was a technical error or if someone intentionally created the hoax to instigate unrest.

Image: Facebook
Image: Facebook

“If it was intentionally created by someone, they will be punished under the Article 14(2) of the Computer Crime Act,” said deputy police spokesman Krissana Pattanacharoen.

Update: Facebook Says Panic-Inducing Bangkok Explosion Actually Happened

Article 14(2) of the 2007 law said those who put false information onto a computer which could damage national security or instigate unrest can be punished by up to five years in jail or a 500,000 baht fine.

Read: ‘Fake News’ Prompts Facebook Bangkok Bomb Scare

The function was apparently activated by an article from a website called Bangkok Informer. The content was a BBC video about the August 2015 bombing of Bangkok’s Erawan Shrine. It appeared to have been republished Tuesday.

That republished article was picked up by other automated news sites which use algorithms to write stories instead of people. That triggered  Facebook to activate its Safety Check feature just after 9pm, which began notifying users of an explosion.

Kritsana said the relevant agencies have contacted Facebook to verify the cause of the mistake.

He said police even considered the possibility that it was done by the hackers who have been protesting the revised Computer Crime Act by waging a cyber campaign against the government online.

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Venezuela Military Trafficking Food as Country Goes Hungry

A young man collects rice that fell from a cargo truck waiting to enter the port and refill in Puerto Cabello, Venezuela on Nov. 14. Photo: Ariana Cubillos / AP.

PUERTO CABELLO, Venezuela — When hunger drew tens of thousands of Venezuelans to the streets in protest last summer, President Nicolas Maduro turned to the military to manage the country’s diminished food supply, putting generals in charge of everything from butter to rice.

But instead of fighting hunger, the military is making money from it, an Associated Press investigation shows. That’s what grocer Jose Campos found when he ran out of pantry staples this year. In the middle of the night, he would travel to an illegal market run by the military to buy pallets of corn flour — at 100 times the government-set price.

“The military would be watching over whole bags of money,” Campos said. “They always had what I needed.”

With much of the country on the verge of starvation and billions of dollars at stake, food trafficking has become one of the biggest businesses in Venezuela, the AP found. And from generals to foot soldiers, the military is at the heart of the graft, according to documents and interviews with more than 60 officials, business owners and workers, including five former generals.

As a result, food is not reaching those who most need it.

The U.S. government has taken notice. Prosecutors have opened investigations against senior Venezuelan officials, including members of the military, for laundering riches from food contracts through the U.S. financial system, according to four people with direct knowledge of the probes. No charges have been brought.

“Lately, food is a better business than drugs,” said retired Gen. Cliver Alcala, who helped oversee Venezuela’s border security. “The military is in charge of food management now, and they’re not going to just take that on without getting their cut.”

“WHAT’S THE PROBLEM?”

After opposition attempts to overthrow him, the late President Hugo Chavez began handing the military control over the food industry, creating a Food Ministry in 2004. His socialist-run government nationalized farms and food processing plants, then neglected them, and domestic production dried up. Oil-exporting Venezuela became dependent on food imports, but when the price of oil collapsed in 2014, the government no longer could afford all the country needed.

Food rationing grew so severe that Venezuelans spent all day waiting in lines. Pediatric wards filled up with underweight children, and formerly middle class adults began picking through trash bins for scraps. When people responded with violent street protests, Maduro handed the generals control over the rest of food distribution, and the country’s ports.

The government now imports nearly all of Venezuela’s food, according to Werner Gutierrez, the former dean of the agronomy school at the University of Zulia, and corruption is rampant, jacking up prices and leading to shortages.

“If Venezuela paid market prices, we’d be able to double our imports and easily satisfy the country’s food needs,” Gutierrez said. “Instead, people are starving.”

One South American businessman said he paid millions in kickbacks to Venezuelan officials as the hunger crisis worsened, including $8 million to people who work for the current food minister, Gen. Rodolfo Marco Torres. The businessman insisted on speaking anonymously because he did not want to acknowledge participating in corruption.

Last July, he struggled to get Marco Torres’s attention as a ship full of yellow corn waited to dock.

“This boat has been waiting for 20 days,” he wrote in text messages seen by AP.

“What’s the problem?” responded Marco Torres.

Although money was not mentioned, the businessman understood that he needed to give more in kickbacks. In the end, he told the general, the boat had to pull out because costs caused by the delay were mounting.

Bank documents from the businessman’s country show that he was a big supplier, receiving at least $131 million in contracts from Venezuelan food ministers between 2012 and 2015. He explained that vendors like him can afford to pay off military officials because they build huge profit margins into what they bill the state.

For example, his $52 million contract for the yellow corn was drawn up to be charged at more than double the market rate at the time, suggesting a potential overpayment of more than $20 million for that deal alone.

The Food Ministry’s annual report shows significant overpayments across the board, compared to market prices. And the prices the government pays for imported foods have been increasing in recent years, while global food prices remain stable.

This spring, the opposition-controlled congress voted to censure Marco Torres for graft. Maduro vetoed it as an attempt to hurt the Food Ministry, and Marco Torres stayed on as minister.

Internal budgets from the ministry obtained by AP show the overpayment continues. For example, the government budgeted for $118 million of yellow corn in July at $357 a ton, which would amount to an overpayment of more than $50 million relative to prices that month.

“What’s amazing about this is it’s like a clean form of corruption,” said Carabobo state lawmaker Neidy Rosal, who has denounced food-related government theft worth hundreds of millions of dollars. “It’s like drug trafficking you can carry out in broad daylight.”

Marco Torres did not respond to several requests for comment by phone, email and hand-delivered letter. In the past, he has said that he will not be trapped in fights with a bourgeoisie opposition.

“SCRAPING THE POT”

By putting the military in charge of food, Maduro is trying to prevent soldiers from going hungry and being tempted to participate in an uprising against an increasingly unpopular government, said retired Gen. Antonio Rivero. Venezuela’s military has a long history of coups against governments, and Maduro has arrested several officials for allegedly conspiring against him from within.

“They gave absolute control to the military,” Rivero said from exile in Miami. “That drained the feeling of rebellion from the armed forces, and allowed them to feed their families.”

However, it also opened the door to widespread graft and further squeezed the food supply. In large part due to concerns of corruption following the government’s takeover of the food industry, the three largest global food traders — U.S.-based Archer Daniels Midland Co., Bunge Ltd. and Cargill — have stopped selling to the Venezuelan government.

One major scam involves the strict currency controls that have been a hallmark of the administration. The government gives out a limited amount of coveted U.S. currency at a rate of 10 bolivars to the dollar. Almost everyone else has to buy dollars on the ever more expensive black market, currently at 3,000 bolivars to the dollar.

The holders of licenses to import food are among the select few who get to buy dollars at the vastly cheaper rate. Alcala, the retired general, said some officials distribute these much-desired licenses to friends. The friends then use only a fraction of the dollars to import food, and share the rest with the officials.

“We call it ‘scraping the pot,’ and it’s the biggest scam going in Venezuela,” Alcala said.

In 2014, one general presented Maduro with a list of 300 companies suspected of simply pocketing the cheap dollars they obtained with their licenses and not importing anything. No action was ever taken and the general was forced into exile, accused of corruption himself.

Some contracts go to companies that have no experience dealing in food or seem to exist only on paper. Financial documents obtained by AP show that Marco Torres gave Panama-registered company Atlas Systems International a $4.6 million contract to import pasta. Atlas has all the hallmarks of a shell company, including no known assets and the use of secretive shares to hide the identity of the company’s true owners. Another government food supplier, J.A. Comercio de Generos Alimenticios, lists on its website a non-existent address on a narrow, partially paved street in an industrial city near Sao Paulo, Brazil.

The two companies transferred more than $5.5 million in U.S. dollars in 2012 and 2013 to a Geneva account controlled by two young Venezuelans, according to bank and internal company documents seen by AP. The Venezuelans were Jesus Marquina Parra and Nestor Marquina Parra, brothers-in-law of the then-food minister, Gen. Carlos Osorio. Efforts to reach the brothers were unsuccessful.

Osorio is no longer food minister, but has an even more important role in overseeing food. He was promoted in September to inspector general of the armed forces, with the mission of ensuring transparency in the military’s management of the nation’s food supply.

Arturo Sanchez, a former supply chain manager at a multinational dairy company, recounted unpleasant encounters with Osorio. In one case, officers forced the company to buy fructose it didn’t need because they wanted to unload merchandise he suspected was ill-gotten. Another time, he said, national guardsmen took four trucks of goods without paying. Sanchez fled to Florida in 2014.

“I spent a year living in the U.S. not being able to sleep remembering all the risky situations I lived through,” he said.

Osorio did not respond to requests for comment. But in the past he threatened to sue opposition lawmakers for staining his honor with false accusations of corruption. He blamed an economic war for the food shortages.

The Defense Ministry and presidential press office refused to answer repeated calls, emails and hand-delivered letters requesting comment. In the past, officials have accused the opposition of exaggerating the problem of corruption for political gain. They have said that the military’s hierarchical structure makes it ideally suited to combat the real culprits: Right-wing businessmen trying to bring down the economy.

From time to time, the government carries out raids of warehouses holding smuggled goods and arrests lower-ranking military officers accused of graft. For example, the night market in Carabobo state where Campos bought his corn flour was eventually shut down and 57 tons of smuggled food seized. Now Campos buys staples from intermediaries he suspects are working with the same military officials.

In January, the government quietly arrested 40 state employees for stealing large quantities of food from open-air markets. One of those still in jail is a colonel who had been named by Osorio to serve as president of a state agency that imported food.

“We have the moral fortitude and the discipline to take on this task of protecting what belongs to the people,” the defense minister, Gen. Vladimir Padrino Lopez, said in September. “The state has an obligation to root out corruption in all levels of public administration.”

“IT’S THE CUSTOMER WHO PAYS”

And yet the corruption persists from the port to the markets, according to dozens of people working in Puerto Cabello, the town that handles the majority of Venezuela’s food imports.

Sometimes the officials who control access to the docks keep ships waiting until they are paid off, said a stevedore at the port, who spoke anonymously because he feared losing his job.

The stevedore said clients give him envelopes of dollars to pass on to officials. He described visiting the sergeant in charge and making small talk while placing an envelope in the wastebasket. Then he slides the basket under the table and leaves. That night, his client’s ships are allowed in, he said.

After ships unload their cargo, customs officials take their share, according to four customs workers. They said that without a payment equivalent to a month’s minimum wage, officials will not start the process of nationalizing goods.

Bribes are also required for any missing paperwork, and can exceed $10,000 for a single shipping container, customs worker Aldemar Diaz said.

“Sometimes you actually want to do it legally, but the officials will say, ‘Don’t bother,'” he said.

Luis Pena, operations director at the Caracas-based import business Premier Foods, said he pays off a long roster of military officials for each shipment of food he brings in from small-scale companies in the U.S.

“You have to pay for them to even look at your cargo now,” he said. “It’s an unbroken chain of bribery from when your ship comes in until the food is driven out in trucks.”

Worst of all, he added, is that he is forced to pay to skip a health inspection. Officials make him buy a health certificate and don’t even open the containers to test a sample, he said.

A version of this process also takes place on the border, said Alcala, the retired general who was once in charge of border control. He said officers allowed smugglers to pay bribes to bring in food without proper health and safety checks. This year, Venezuelans began posting photos and videos showing magnets pulling tiny iron shavings out of freshly opened bags of sugar smuggled in from Brazil.

Pena said his contacts at the port have offered to illegally sell him government-imported staples like sugar and rice, complete with falsified papers and a military escort.

“The military was supposed to step in and make sure the food got to the people, but it’s been the exact opposite,” said Pena, sitting in his warehouse. “They’ve made it into a business, and there’s no one to appeal to. In the end, it’s the customer who pays.”

If he tries to get through the process without bribes, he said, the food sits and spoils.

Rotting food is a problem even as 90 percent of Venezuelans say they can’t afford enough to eat. In some cases, partners buy food that is about to expire at a steep discount, then bill the government for the full price. The government has sometimes acknowledged that food it imported arrived already expired.

The problem of rotting food got so bad at Puerto Cabello that it drew rebuke in the most recent state comptroller’s report, which expressed particular dismay that thousands of tons of state-imported beans had been allowed to spoil.

When the food is no longer usable, the military tries to get rid of it quietly. Puerto Cabello crane operator Daniel Arteaga watched one night last winter as workers at a state-run warehouse buried hundreds of containers of spoiled chicken and meat imported by the government.

“All these refrigerated containers, and meanwhile people are waiting in food lines each week just to buy a single chicken,” he said.

Photos taken at the Puerto Cabello dump last year show men in green military fatigues helping bury beef and chicken. Residents at a slum down the hill said after the military visits the dump, they dig up animal feed, potatoes, even ham to give their children.

The docks are hidden behind high concrete walls, and guards watch every entrance. AP gained rare access in November. The low-ranking military members assigned to guard the port can be seen collaborating with thieves to steal what little food comes in, according to eight people who work behind the walls.

“You see people making off with whole sacks of flour or corn on their shoulders, and paying the guards on their way out,” logistics coordinator Nicole Mendoza said. “You see the money changing hands, and you just lower your eyes and don’t say anything.”

Lt. Miletsy Rodriguez, who is in charge of a group of national guardsmen running security at the port, said people are just looking to scapegoat the military. If her unit wasn’t around, looting would be even more widespread, she said.

“The majority of us are doing our best. And sooner or later we’ll catch people who are not doing the job right,” she said.

BRIBES ON THE ROAD

Just as bribes are needed to get food into the port, they are also required to move food out, truckers said.

The roads near the port are lined with trucks waiting to be let in. Drivers sling hammocks in their wheel wells and sometimes wait several days in the thick tropical heat. Trucking bosses recently banded together to stop paying bribes to port officials, and the officials are now punishing them by delaying the movement of cargo onto vehicles, said Jose Petit, president of the Puerto Cabello trucking association.

When the food is finally loaded onto the trucks, soldiers come by to take a cut. Photos and videos taken by truckers show officials taking sacks of sugar and coffee. As the trucks rattle off down the highway, hungry women in clothes that no longer fit chase after them to pick up anything that falls out.

Billboards lining the highway feature a drawing of an enormous ant beside a nonworking phone number to denounce corruption, and the warning, “No to bachaqueros.” That’s what Venezuelans call people who make a living illegally reselling food, after the leafcutter ants that haul many times their weight through the jungles.

On the roads, truck drivers face an obstacle course of military checkpoints, ostensibly set up to stop bachaqueros. Truckers say soldiers at about half the checkpoints demand bribes. Some invent infractions such as an insufficiently filled tire, and take cash along with sacks of pantry items, produce and even live chickens, the drivers said.

“It used to be you’d go your whole route and not have to pay any anything. Now at every checkpoint, they ask for 10,000 bolivars,” said trucker Henderson Rodriguez, who was waiting for a third day to get into the port to pick up a load of sugar.

The surest way to move food through the network of checkpoints is to transport it under military guard. For a percentage of the product’s value, military officers on the take will assign a moonlighting soldier to ride along in the truck, according to five store and restaurant owners.

Sugar and flour are among the items most in demand because they have become virtually impossible to find legally, and some businesses, like bakeries, cannot function without them. A half dozen bakery owners across the country said in interviews that military officials regularly approach them with offers to sell supplies in exchange for a bribe.

In the city of Valencia, bakery owner Jose Ferreira cuts two checks for each purchase of sugar: one for the official price of 2 cents a pound and one for the kickback of 60 cents of pound. He keeps copies of both checks in his books, seen by AP, in case the authorities ever come asking.

“You make the legal payment, and then you pay the kickback,” he said. “We have no other option; there’s no substitute for sugar.”

The theft extends to the very end of the food supply chain, vendors said. At one market in Valencia, the military members who were appointed in August to stop contraband confiscated vendors’ produce. They said the vendors did not have the right permits. The food was piled in an olive green cargo truck.

In Puerto Cabello, hungry residents said it feels like corrupt soldiers are taking food off their children’s plates. Pedro Contreras, 74, watched more than 100 trucks carrying corn rattle onto the highway, and walked stiffly into traffic to sweep up the kernels that had sifted out. He planned to pound them into corn flour that night to feed his family.

“The military is getting fat while my grandchildren get skinny,” he said. “All of Venezuela’s food comes through here, but so little of it goes to us.”

 

Story: Joshua Goodman 

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Vietnam Says Economy Expected to Have Grown 6.2 Pct in 2016

A man and a woman waiting waiting for customers at their tailor accessories shops in Hanoi, Vietnam, Dec. 1. Photo: Tran Van Minh / AP.

HANOI, Vietnam — Vietnam’s gross domestic product was expected to have grown 6.2 percent this year, driven mostly by industrial expansion and growth in construction and services.

The General Statistics Office said Wednesday on its website that even though the growth rate is lower than the increase of 6.68 percent in 2015 and the target of 6.7 percent, it was still considered a success given unfavorable global economic conditions, and natural and environmental disasters.

The southern Mekong Delta, the country’s main rice growing region, earlier this year suffered the worst draught and salt water intrusion in nearly a century, while toxic chemicals dumped into the sea in April by a steel complex in central Ha Tinh province, owned by a unit of Taiwan’s Formosa Plastics Group, devastated the fishing and tourism industries in the region.

The statistics office said the services sector expanded 6.98 percent, contributing 2.67 percentage points to GDP growth while industrial production and construction grew 7.57 percent, contributing 2.59 percentage points.

The government normally issues the GDP growth rate before the end of the year based on estimates.

In 2016, the country of 93 million people exported goods valued at $175.9 billion, posting an increase of 8.6 percent, while imports totaled $173.3 billion, it said.

The World Bank in a report earlier this month said Vietnam’s economy remains resilient, thanks to robust domestic demand and export-oriented manufacturing. It said Vietnam’s medium-term outlook remains favorable, with GDP expected to expand by 6 percent this year.

The statistics office said natural disasters caused damages worth 18.3 trillion dong ($813 million).

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