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Longtime Gambian Ruler Refuses to Step Aside

Gambia's president Yahya Jammeh shows his inked finger Dec. 1 before voting in Banjul, Gambia. Photo: Jerome Delay / Associated Press

DAKAR, Senegal — Gambia’s ruler of more than 22 years announced late Friday that he no longer accepts defeat in the country’s presidential election, reversing course a week after he conceded to his rival.

In a speech on state television, President Yahya Jammeh said that investigations since the Dec. 1 vote have revealed a number of voting irregularities that he called unacceptable.

“I hereby reject the results in totality,” he said in his address that aired late Friday. “Let me repeat: I will not accept the results based on what has happened.”

Only one week ago, a jovial Jammeh was filmed on state television calling opposition candidate Adama Barrow to wish him the best.

“You are the elected president of The Gambia, and I wish you all the best,” Jammeh told Barrow at the time. “I have no ill will.”

The dramatic about-face was certain to spark outrage among the opposition and the tens of thousands of Gambians living in exile abroad. Already in the week since Jammeh had been defeated, several dozen political prisoners had been released on bail.

“We are deeply concerned by reports of belated objections to the Gambian election results raised by President Jammeh,” said Babatunde Olugboji, deputy program director at Human Rights Watch. “The international community, notably (regional bloc) ECOWAS and the African Union, should loudly protest any unlawful attempt to subvert the will of the Gambian people.”

The U.S. government also condemned Jammeh’s rejection of the election result, calling it an attempt to remain in power illegitimately.

“The people have spoken and it is time for Gambians to come together to ensure a peaceful transition to President-elect Barrow,” said State Department spokesman Mark Toner in a statement.

It remained unclear whether the tiny country of 1.9 million people would accept Jammeh’s continued rule. As news spread last week of his defeat, Gambians took to the streets — singing, dancing and shouting “Freedom!”

Under Jammeh’s rule, the country surrounded almost entirely by Senegal has become notorious for its abysmal human rights record as well as the president’s erratic behavior.

The Jammeh regime has long been accused of imprisoning, torturing and killing its opponents, according to human rights groups. He also has issued increasingly virulent statements against sexual minorities, vowing to slit the throats of gay men.

In 2007, Jammeh claimed to have developed a cure for AIDS that involved an herbal body rub and bananas. Alarming public health experts, he insisted patients stop taking antiretroviral medications so his remedy could have an effect.

He also has increasingly isolated Gambia, whose economy has long been dependent on tourism. In 2013 he exited the Commonwealth, a group made up mostly of former British colonies, branding it a “neo-colonial institution.” And in October, Jammeh said Gambia would leave the International Criminal Court, which he dismissed as the ‘International Caucasian Court.'”

In his speech Friday, Jammeh said some figures in the results had been transposed and that voter turnout had been suppressed.

“Our investigations reveal that in some cases voters were told that the opposition has already won and that there was no need for them to vote and, out of anger, some of them returned home,” he said.

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Obama Orders Review of Election Hacking

President Barack Obama shakes hands with Russian President President Vladimir Putin before a September 2015 bilateral meeting at United Nations headquarters. Photo: Andrew Harnik / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama has ordered intelligence officials to conduct a broad review of election-season cyberattacks, including the email hacks that rattled the presidential campaign and raised fresh concerns about Russia’s meddling in U.S. elections, the White House said Friday.

The review, led by intelligence agencies, will be a “deep dive” into a possible pattern of increased “malicious cyber activity” timed to the campaign season, White House spokesman Eric Schultz said. The review will look at the tactics, targets, key actors and the U.S. government’s response to the recent email hacks, as well as incidents reported in past elections, he said.

The president ordered up the report earlier this week and asked that it be completed before he leaves office next month, Schultz said.

“The president wanted this done under his watch because he takes it very seriously,” he said. “We are committed to ensuring the integrity of our elections.”

U.S. intelligence officials have accused Russia of hacking into Democratic officials’ email accounts in an attempt to interfere with the presidential campaign. The Washington Post reported Friday that the CIA has concluded that Russia aimed specifically to help Donald Trump win the presidency.

The Post said the CIA presented its assessment to senators last week. The newspaper’s report cited anonymous U.S. officials who were briefed on that closed-door meeting.

Trump’s transition team was dismissive of the hacking claims Friday night, releasing a statement referring to intelligence agents as “the same people that said Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.”

The Kremlin has rejected the hacking accusations.

In the months leading up to the election, email accounts of Democratic Party officials and a top Hillary Clinton campaign aide were breached, emails leaked and embarrassing and private emails posted online. Many Democrats believe the hackings benefited Trump’s bid. Trump has downplayed the possibility that Russia was involved.

Schultz said the president sought the probe as a way of improving U.S. defense against cyberattacks and was not intending to question the legitimacy of Trump’s victory.

“This is not an effort to challenge the outcome of the election,” Schultz said.

Obama’s move comes as Democratic lawmakers have been pushing Obama to declassify more information about Russia’srole, fearing that Trump, who has promised a warmer relationship with Moscow, may not prioritize the issue.

Given Trump’s statements, “there is an added urgency to the need for a thorough review before President Obama leaves office next month,” said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., senior Democrat on the House intelligence committee. If the administration doesn’t respond “forcefully” to such actions, “we can expect to see a lot more of this in the near future,” he said.

The White House said it would make portions of the report public and would brief lawmakers and relevant state officials on the findings.

It emphasized the report would not focus solely on Russian operations or hacks involving Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta and Democratic National Committee accounts. Schultz stressed officials would be reviewing incidents going back to the 2008 presidential campaign, when the campaigns of Sen. John McCain and Obama were breached by hackers.

Intelligence officials have said Obama and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney were targets of Chinese cyberattacks four years later.

Story: Kathleen Hennessey

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American Tourist Alleging Bangkok Abduction Speaks Out

Alexandra Fairfield in a 2012 Facebook photo.

BANGKOK — One moment Alexandra Fairfield says she was dancing at a bar Saturday night in the Silom area. The next, the 26-year-old said, everything went foggy and she was taken to a windowless room where a man attempted to sexually assault her.

Addressing questions raised after reports based on a family member’s account appeared in the media, Fairfield recounted Friday dramatic details of a struggle with an attacker she described as wearing a tan uniform that ended with her escaping by leaping from a balcony.

“I was able to break free from the ropes that were binding my forearms, though I acted as if I were still bound,” Fairfield, now back in the United States, said in an online interview. “When he picked me up to a standing position, I began punching him, aiming for his nose with the heel of my hand, as this does the most damage.”

She said putting up a fight made the difference.

“I believe I took him by surprise and he fell,” she said. “Once he was on the ground, I started kicking him.”

Fairfield’s harrowing tale of attempted rape was first shared by her sister on Facebook, which got picked up by a local news station in Michigan. Then, as things do, that story was re-reported online in Thailand in both Thai and English. Certain elements of the account by Samantha Joe Moore struck some as implausible: that she hid in a bush for seven hours and assertion the attacker was “likely a part of the royal family.”

Images said to be wounds sustained by Alexandra Fairfield posted Tuesday to Facebook.
Images said to be wounds sustained by Alexandra Fairfield posted Tuesday to Facebook.

Giving her own account for the first time to the media in Thailand, Fairfield insists the assault took place.

Her claim the attacker could be linked to the police force prompted the opening of an investigation, but a police spokesman on Friday cast doubt on her story.

“There is no evidence that points to what she has claimed,” Col. Krissana Pattanacharoen said.

Fairfield said she did not file any report to the police because she didn’t trust them.

Despite that, Krissana said they probed her claim as reported in the media but nothing turned up.

“Even though there was no complaint, we looked into the matter, but there were no details,” he said. “Anyone who has a clue is welcome to alert us.”

The only thing Col. Krissana said he could confirm was that Fairfield entered and left Thailand on a tourist visa.

According to an account of the attack she posted early Friday morning, Fairfield said she was dancing at a club not far from her hotel where she met a group consisting of two Thai women, a Thai man and white foreigner.

“The boy showed up later,” she wrote. “He was wearing a tan military-looking outfit.”

They bought her some shots, and that’s when things went hazy. She said they took her in a car to another club where a live band was playing and she was led to a room where the alleged assault happened.

After jumping off a balcony, she described passing through what looked like a parking structure until she reached a large road where she hid in some bushes until the sun rose, eventually getting help from two foreigners who put her in a cab back to the Pullman G Hotel.

“I remember seeing a white sign with black letters ‘S….. Plaza.’ Again I did not have my glasses so I am not sure what the S was,” she wrote.

Her family also posted photos said to be of her injuries.

Images said to be wounds sustained by Alexandra Fairfield posted Tuesday to Facebook.
Images said to be wounds sustained by Alexandra Fairfield posted Tuesday to Facebook.

During the next few days, Fairfield said she tried to fly out of Thailand while hiding from her attacker, who she believes wielded police connections to block her departure.

“I did not tell anyone I was taken by a law enforcement officer, that was false reporting [by the media]. What I do know is that he had on a tan uniform,” Fairfield said. “I also believe he had the police looking for me after my escape. That is why I did not file any official reports, I needed to get back to the USA as soon as possible.”

When she tried to board a United Airlines flight on Tuesday, Fairfield said her booking was canceled without explanation, and the staff would not issue or sell new tickets on the spot.

“They had told us to book online, but the booking was closed, this was about one-and-a-half hours before departure,” she said.

A GoFundMe crowdfunding effort launched by her family to help her return home raised almost USD$8,000, far exceeding the stated goal of $3,000. In a message posted online early Friday morning, Fairfield said the money would be donated to International Justice Mission, an anti-trafficking nonprofit that has operations in Thailand.

Fairfield eventually secured a flight and arrived home Wednesday. Moore, her sister, said she’s recovering from the alleged assault.

“She is definitely traumatized, but getting lots of rest back home,” Moore said.

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Police Arrest 3 French in Killing of Another on Samui

Cyrille Jean Paul Larignon and Yves Claude Daniel Climent reenact the killing of Laurent Lacques Jean Delacherie in front of police Friday on Samui.

KOH SAMUI — Police have arrested three Frenchmen in connection with the killing of one of their countrymen on the southern resort island of Samui.

Samui police chief Col. Paitoon Krajajang said Friday the three had confessed to their parts in the Wednesday night shooting at a restaurant of 44-year-old Laurent Lacques Jean Delacherie. Police believe a business dispute was the cause.

Surat Thani provincial police chief Maj. Gen Apichart Boonsriroj said the man suspected of shooting, identified by his passport as Georges Michel, was captured Thursday after fleeing to the mainland.

The other two suspects  Cyrille Jean Paul Larignon, owner of the restaurant where the killing took place, and Yves Claude Daniel Climent  are accused of helping to dispose of the body.

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South Korean President is Impeached in Stunning Fall

A defaced portrait of South Korean President Park Geun-hye is seen as protesters sit demanding the parliamentary impeachment of Park in front of the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, Dec. 9, 2016.(AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean lawmakers on Friday voted to impeach President Park Geun-hye, a stunning and swift fall for the country’s first female leader amid protests that drew millions into the streets in united fury.

Once formal documents are handed over to the presidential Blue House later Friday, Park will be stripped of her power and Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn will assume leadership until the country’s Constitutional Court rules on whether Park must permanently step down.

The court has up to 180 days to decide. Park will be formally removed from office if six of the court’s nine justices support her impeachment, and the country would then hold a presidential election within 60 days.

National Assembly speaker Chung Sye-kyun said the bill on Park’s impeachment was passed by a vote of 236 for and 56 opposed, with 9 invalid votes and abstentions. That well surpassed the necessary two-thirds support in the 300-seat assembly. The opposition needed help from members of Park’s party to get the needed votes, and it got it.

Relatives of the victims from a 2014 ferry disaster that killed more than 300 and was blamed in part on government incompetence and corruption, who were in the parliament observing the vote, cheered and clapped after the outcome was announced. Most lawmakers left the hall quietly, though some could be seen taking selfies as they waited to vote.

Once called the “Queen of Elections” for her ability to pull off wins for her party, Park has been surrounded in the presidential Blue House in recent weeks by millions of South Koreans who have taken to the streets in protest. They are furious over what prosecutors say was collusion by Park with a longtime friend to extort money from companies and to give that confidante extraordinary sway over government decisions.

Her approval ratings had plunged to 4 percent, the lowest among South Korean leaders since democracy came in the late 1980s, and even elderly conservatives who once made up her political base have distanced themselves from her. An opinion survey released Thursday showed about 78 percent of respondents supported Park’s impeachment.

South Korean lawmakers last voted to impeach a president in 2004, when they accused late liberal President Roh Moo-hyun of minor election law violations and incompetence. The court restored Roh’s powers about two months later, ruling that his wrongdoings weren’t serious enough to justify his unseating.

The chances of the court reinstating Park are considered low because her charges are much graver. However, some legal experts say the court might need more than a couple of months to decide. This is because Park’s case is much more complicated than Roh’s, and because her lawyers will likely press the court not to uphold the impeachment unless the suspicions against her are proven.

Friday’s vote was a remarkable fall for Park, the daughter of slain military dictator Park Chung-hee who convincingly beat her liberal opponent in 2012. Park’s single, five-year term was originally set to end Feb. 24, 2018.

The political turmoil around Park comes after years of frustration over a leadership style that inspired comparisons to her father’s. Critics saw in Park an unwillingness to tolerate dissent as her government cracked down on press freedom, pushed to dissolve a leftist party and allowed aggressive police suppression of anti-government protests, which saw the death of an activist in 2016.

She also was heavily criticized over her government’s handling of the 2014 ferry sinking, a disaster partially blamed on official incompetence and corruption.

Park has repeatedly apologized over the public anger caused by the latest scandal, but has denied any legal wrongdoings. She attempted to avoid impeachment last month by making a conditional offer to step down if parliament comes up with a stable power-transfer plan, but the overture was dismissed by opposition lawmakers as a stalling ploy.

Talking with leaders of her conservative ruling party on Tuesday, Park said she would make “every available effort” to prepare for the court’s impeachment review.

In indicting Park’s longtime friend, Choi Soon-sil, and two former presidential aides last month, state prosecutors said they believed the president was “collusively involved” in criminal activities by the suspects. Choi and the two former aides were accused of bullying large companies into providing tens of millions of dollars and favors to foundations and businesses Choi controlled, and enabling Choi to interfere with state affairs.

Park’s lawyer has called the accusations groundless and said she would only cooperate with an independent probe led by a special prosecutor.

Park first met Choi in the 1970s, around the time Park was acting as first lady after her mother was killed during a 1974 assassination attempt on her father. Choi’s father, a shadowy figure named Choi Tae-min who was a Buddhist monk, a religious cult leader and a Christian pastor at different times, emerged as Park’s mentor.

The Choi clan has long been suspected of building a fortune by using their connections with Park to extort companies and government organizations. Choi’s ex-husband is also a former close aide of Park’s.

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Flight Attendant Bullied Over Pics Gets Last Laugh

@Ticha_ek hit back at the flamers Thursday after a scandal erupted over her photoshopped Instagram images.
caption

  • @ticha_ek เจ้าของอินสตาแกรมที่กำลังเป็นประเด็นร้อนในโลกออนไลน์ขณะนี้ ให้สัมภาษณ์พิเศษ Khaosod English ชี้แจงว่าภาพที่ชาวเน็ตแซวกันว่าตัดต่อ “ไม่เนียน” นั้น ตนเองทำขึ้นเพื่อเล่นๆอยู่แล้ว พร้อมระบุว่าไม่คิดว่าจะมีคนคิดว่าเป็นของจริงด้วยซ้ำ
  • “ลูกตาล” อดีตแอร์เอมิเรตส์ กล่าวด้วยว่า โพสต์รูปแซวตัวเองบนดวงจันทร์เพื่อบอกกับชาวเน็ตที่เข้ามารุมรังแกในอินสตาแกรมของเธอว่า “เราจะไม่ล้ม”
  • เธอกล่าวทิ้งท้ายว่า บางคนก็คอมเมนต์ในลักษณะที่รุนแรงและรังแกเธอมากเกินไป แต่สำหรับคนที่เอารูปไปทำเป็น “มีม” ล้อเลียนนั้น ลูกตาลไม่ถือสาและมองว่าก็ฮาดีเหมือนกัน

 

BANGKOK — Instead of ghosting, raging or lawyering up, a former flight attendant ridiculed online for her bogus travel photos thumbed her nose at the scorn and one-upped those mocking her.

In her Instagram reply to all the memes mocking her photoshopped travel pics, @Ticha_ek on Thursday night posted her face atop an image from the Apollo moon landing, scribbled some home colors over the flag and captioned it, “I’ve been to the moon … Opps! Would @nasa report me?”

“It’s my way of telling the bullies that they can’t knock me down,” she said Friday from Calgary, Canada.

Read: Memes Take Flight Attendant’s Online Deception to New Heights

So why did the former flight attendant, who appears in other videos and images to genuinely be widely traveled, photoshop herself into random images found online?

Identifying herself only as “Louktarn” for fear of further harassment, she said that she thought everyone was in on the joke.

“For example, that picture with the Northern Lights was done by my boyfriend as a joke,” she said.

She had been persistently nagging him to go see them, she said.

“So he photoshopped me with the Northern Lights and sent it to me as a joke, saying ‘Here, you get to go there already!’” Louktarn said.

Louktarn removed her original, now- infamous Northern Lights pic, but it was reproduced by countless haters. Photo: Niphon Saengpueng / Facebook
Louktarn removed her original, now- infamous Northern Lights pic, but it was reproduced by countless haters. Photo: Niphon Saengpueng / Facebook

Thinking it was funny, she uploaded it with a caption about believing in magic.

“I thought it was obvious to anyone seeing it that it was photoshopped. It was done just for fun. I’m not a net idol or a celebrity, this is just my personal account where I like to edit photos and post them. My style of editing pics is to make them bright and dramatic.”

She said she was unaware of the copyright on images she used, but didn’t think too much about it as it was done for fun. Unlike most social media personalities, she doesn’t appear to sell anything to profit from her popularity.

In various videos, Louktarn is seen strolling through the American southwest, touring Easter Island and dog sledding in Lapland.

“I really did go to all these places, because when I was a flight attendant, I got really cheap tickets to go and traveled alone. Sometimes, when the pictures didn’t turn out the way I wanted them to, I just added stuff into them, like extra fish in the photo of me diving.”

Visiting museum to the next level #underwatermuseum #inspiredbyyou #mexico

รูปภาพที่โพสต์โดย LoUK✞A®N™ (@ticha_ek) เมื่อ

She said she never expected anyone to take them seriously.

Like the photo with Lionel Messi.

A screengrab of 'Louktarn and Messi.' Image: Krittaya James Akajioyi / Facebook
A screengrab of ‘Louktarn and Messi.’ Image: Krittaya James Akajioyi / Facebook

“When I was at the stadium in Barcelona, they had this photo spot where you can take a photo with a cutout of Messi and they print it out for you. My IG post was a photo of that printout. I thought everybody would get it. It’s so obvious that it’s not really Messi!”

Yet many did not, and her username, @Ticha_ek, became the top trending hashtag Thursday on Twitter, in countless tweets faulting her for deception.

The internet drama took her by surprise.

“I’m in Calgary right now, so I was asleep when the whole thing happened,” she said. “I woke to tons of flames and spiteful messages. My mother was calling me from Thailand, she was so upset and worried about me.”

Louktarn said the cyberbullying was intense, and she had no chance to reply.

“I have to admit, I’m not so ‘Thai’ when it comes to replying to people who send me berating messages that are perverted or involve my parents. One message even said they would throw acid in my face and slap me if I showed my face again.”

She said it went too far.

“The bullies were really harsh. If I was someone weaker, it could’ve been very dangerous. There have been suicides due to cyberbullying before, so I’d like to ask Thai social media to give me some justice.”

✈️ #FlyEmirates #FirstClass ✨✨

รูปภาพที่โพสต์โดย LoUK✞A®N™ (@ticha_ek) เมื่อ

The memes, however, are fair game.

“They’re funny, and if they make people happy, go ahead,” she said, giggling.

Louktarn said she was an air hostess for eight years until about three months ago when she quit. She hasn’t spent much time in Thailand since, where her gender seemed to be a factor in the criticism.

“A lot of the comments were in disbelief that a woman who looked like me could go traveling alone to places,” she said. “I seem cutesy, but I’m actually an adventurous person who loves to travel alone.”

She decided not to let them win.

“I don’t want to be a nang ek about this,” she said referring to the archetypal leading ladies-cum-victims of Thai soap operas. “But I remembered a story about the Buddha that inspired me to think, ‘You can’t hurt me if I don’t let you.’”

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Slide, Grind Through Thai Skate Co. Preduce’s New Feature

Still image from "Selamat" promotional video. Image: Preduce / YouTube

As a child in the ‘80s, I would vent my anger and frustration with the family warfare going on at home skateboarding with my friends. Like most kids from that era, we got into it watching cats like Tony Hawk hot dog around Southern California in Powell Peralta’s “Public Domain” (1988) and other videos. The skating skills were impressive but what really took a hold of our lives was skateboard culture.Notes from the Underground - Mongkorn 'DJ Dragon' Timkul

The music and fashion has been mainstreamed since then, at the time this was our Punk Rock, and in conservative 1980s Thailand, being a part of it was the biggest “fuck you” out there.

As with many imports, the scene in Bangkok started with a handful of early adopters, but in the decades since has flourished into a thriving scene supported by its own domestic industry.

Preduce is a Thai skateboard company that’s putting the kingdom on the world map. The company had modest beginnings in 2003 when it was started by Rthit Phannikul, Simon Pellaux and Guillaume Wyss. Now it’s a powerhouse with its own pro team, clothing line, skateboard decks and five full-length skate videos.

Their latest, “Selamat,” video features footage from both their original and new team members but is focused on new addition Absar Lebeh from Indonesia. It premiers tonight at Whiteline.

I met up with Pellaux at Preduce’s flagship store in Siam Square on Father’s Day morning. Not exactly the time one would expect a meeting with a skater but, skaters gotta hustle too.

Simon Pellaux, at left, and Guillaume Wyss. Photo: Tetsuya Ishikawa
Simon Pellaux, at left, and Guillaume Wyss. Photo: Tetsuya Ishikawa

Born and raised in the Swiss town of Vevey, Simon’s interest in Thailand came when he watched Thai-American skater Eric Koston’s segment in 2000’s “Menikmati,” which was partially filmed in Bangkok.

“In 2001 I came for three weeks, went to Koh Chang. I really liked it here and had a hard time going back to Switzerland,” he said. “So I came back again the next summer, so after two months I called my university and said that I’m taking a year off.”

Mongkorn Timkul: Switzerland is most famous for its mountains and I guess it isn’t exactly the best place for skateboarding.

Simon Pellaux: We skated in winter, it was super harsh (laughs). If it snowed, we couldn’t skate outside, but we would go skate in underground parking lots. We would always find a way.

MT: You got into skateboarding in the ‘90s. Who were some of the riders that got you into the sport?

SP: I looked up to the guys from World Industries, Girl Skateboard and Chocolate Skateboards

The author and Pellaux. Photo: Tetsuya Ishikawa
The author and Pellaux. Photo: Tetsuya Ishikawa

MT: What was it about them that inspired you?

SP: It’s hard to say because it was the skater, but it’s also the brand image, and it was the start of hip-hop being really influential in skating. We didn’t know much about their personalities but what came through the videos and interviews is what I really liked.

MT: From skating with friends and filming skate videos for fun, how did you get the idea of opening your store in Siam Square?

SP: In 2005 we premiered the first video “Smooth,” after that we got approached by Nike. They wanted to find an account where they could sell their skateboard shoes. So I told them to give us a year and that we’d open a shop. I didn’t know how yet, but I didn’t want to let that opportunity pass. So I went back to Switzerland with Guillaume and came up with a business plan and found some investors there. In 2006 we opened the shop and had our first pro board series.

Absar Lehbeh pro deck. Photo: Tetsuya Ishikawa
Absar Lehbeh pro deck. Photo: Tetsuya Ishikawa

MT: So “Selemat” is your fifth full-length release and you will showcase some of your new riders, Absar Lebeh being one of them. How’d you link up with him?

SP: Absar has been with Preduce for two years and his section in our new video ”Selamat” is him turning pro. We met Absar while we were in Malaysia. A friend of ours there said he wanted to come skate with us. So Absar flew himself to Kuala Lumpur, we skated with him that week and got along with him really well. He’s an amazing skater, but he’s also a famous musician in Indonesia.

MT: You grew up in Europe and have traveled with the team to many countries in Asia. What do you think our scene lacks?

SP: The one thing that lacks in the scene in comparison to America or Europe is that there’s not much public support for skateboarding. Not that you need skateparks – because we can skate on the street – but if you want skateboarding to really progress, and for kids to get good, we need skateparks.

MT: And with skateboarding being part of the Olympics in 2020…

SP: Maybe it’s gonna be good for skateboarding, who knows? But for me I feel the Olympics needs skateboarding more than skateboarding needs the Olympics. They need young viewers, young viewers don’t give a fuck about track and field or horse racing, so skateboarding will appeal to a younger demographic. 

Preduce's shop in Siam Square. Photo: Courtesy
Preduce’s shop in Siam Square. Photo: Courtesy

One positive thing about the Olympics is that they will showcase women’s skateboarding at the same level as men’s skateboarding.

What I fear the most is that now skaters, to some extent, control most of the skate industry and culture, but by putting it in the Olympics I feel there’s a big chance we might lose that control to big corporations.

 

The “Selamat” premiere is tonight, Friday, at Whiteline. There will be a screening for juniors followed by another for adults. Get a Preduce logo tattoo and stick around later for DJs Mt. Markus, Octo and Hibiya Line (The Observatory) to control of the booth and get the funk flowin’. Whiteline is located at Silom Soi 8.

Until next time, Dub be good to you.

Preduce team skater Absar Lebeh. Photo: Janchai Montrelerdrasme
Preduce team skater Absar Lebeh. Photo: Janchai Montrelerdrasme

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Hear the Music of Rama IX at Musical Tributes to His Majesty

The Royal Celebration Concert by Feroci Philharmonic Winds posted on Aug. 3, 2016. Photo: Feroci Philharmonic Society / Facebook.

BANGKOK — Several of His Majesty the Late King Bhumibol’s musical compositions will be performed by two orchestras next week to commemorate the late monarch.

College of Music from Mahidol University, and Faculty of Music from Silpakorn University will perform compositions of King Rama IX on the same week with their unique style.

The Mahidol Wind Orchestra

Various arrangements of the late King’s composition will be presented through a different perspective by the Mahidol Wind Orchestra. The program will feature famous pieces and rarely heard works by the King, including his ballet score “Kinari Suite.”

Tickets are 200 baht or 100 baht for students with ID cards and are available at the box office. For more details check out Mahidol’s College of Music on Facebook.

The performance begins from 7pm on Tuesday at college’s music auditorium located in Mahidol University, Nakhon Pathom. It can be reached by taxi from BTS Bang Wa.

 

Silpakorn’s Feroci Philharmonic Winds

Apart from King Rama IX’s composition, Silpakorn University’s Feroci Philharmonic Winds will perform a recent composition of Princess Sirindhorn followed by their own works,  Brahms’ requiem and Faure’s Cantique de Jean Racine. The Bangkok Music Society choir and Silpakorn’s Thai Music Club will also join, with former Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai bending the horn for a saxophone solo.

Admission is free. Polite mourning clothes are required. More information is available via email.

Prior to the concert, activities dedicated to the late King such as free T-shirt screenings, an art exhibition and a painting workshop will start from 2pm.

The show starts at 7pm on Dec. 18 at the Thailand Cultural Centre, a 10-minute walk from MRT Thailand Cultural Centre Exit No. 1.

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Muse Among Thonglor-Ekkamai Bars Raided by Military

Military officers confiscate shisha equipment Thursday night from She Bar in Bangkok’s Soi Thonglor 16.

BANGKOK — Soldiers hunting for contraband tobacco products raided three bars in the Thonglor and Ekkamai areas Thursday night.

Military officers confiscated shisha equipment from Muse in Soi Thonglor 10, She Bar in Soi Thonglor 16 and Cubic Bar near Big C Ekkamai. The managers of all three bars were hauled down to the Thonglor Police Station, but no customers were arrested.

Army 2nd Lt. Rinthong Namkot said the raid was conducted after they were tipped off the venues were selling shisha, known locally as barakoo. Long illegal, its use was widely tolerated until Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha made snuffing it out a priority after taking power in 2014.

Ten soldiers went to She Bar at 11pm, where they found 13 hookahs and three jars of tobacco. They went to Muse at 11:30pm and confiscated another 13 hookahs and a large pot of tobacco.

Since the regime seized power in 2014, military have often stepped in to conduct police work such as inspecting bars and clubs. Arrests in the nightlife scene have become routine on charges such as staying open past closing time or offering illegal services, such as selling shisha.

At 1am on Friday, the shisha squad moved on to Cubic Bar, which is located in a Soi Sukhumvit 63 beer garden. They found seven hookahs being using by customers. They went on to search the bar’s storage room, where they seized another 19 hookahs as well as two kilograms of tobacco and a gram of marijuana.

Shisha raid

Shisha raid Shisha raid Shisha raid Shisha raid

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On Nut Vendors Told to Move Out as Nana Vendors Move Back In

The banner installed on the street of On Nut recently, saying the street stalls are no longer allowed from January 3.

BANGKOK — The sidewalk bazaars of the On Nut area were living on borrowed time Friday under a city-imposed deadline to clear out, just as the vendors kicked out of Sukhumvit Road’s Nana area have quietly returned.

Notices were put up recently by Watthana district officials declaring that as of Jan. 3, no vendors would be allowed to set up their stalls on the street, from BTS On Nut through Soi Sukhumvit 77, including those in front of the Big C mall.

“For the cleanliness and order and to restore the sidewalks to the public,” read the announcement.

The area has long been a bustling commercial zone with all manner of merchandise, from clothing and electronic to fresh vegetables and sausages for sale.

Another banner displayed a Sept. 30 order signed by Bangkok Gov. Asawin Kwanmuang revoking permission granted to some vendors to sell from 7am to 10pm.

The banner installed on the street of On Nut recently, saying the street stalls are no longer allowed from January 3.
The banner installed on the street of On Nut recently, saying the street stalls are no longer allowed from January 3.

Read: Siam, Silom, Sukhumvit Street Markets Shut Down

Asawin has been the driving force of City Hall’s campaign to clear the capital’s footpaths of the informal marketplaces for which it is famous. In fact his dogged execution of the policy set forth by the junta after it seized power in 2014 was partly credited for it naming him governor in October.

The city has forged ahead while the debate over the campaign’s merits – some cheer clearing sidewalks for pedestrians while others lament the city’s vanishing character and life – remains unresolved.

After months of piecemeal efforts, the city made its most aggressive move in October when it dispatched officers to forcibly end sidewalk sales in several key areas such as Siam, Silom and Nana.

Vendors have drifted back to some locations since then. On a recent evening, the hustle of street sales appeared in Sukhumvit Road’s Nana area.

Nana street vendors returned to their business on Oct. 29.
Nana street vendors returned to their business on Oct. 29.

Related stories:

Siam, Silom, Sukhumvit Street Markets Shut Down

‘We’ll Be Back,’ Siam Square Sidewalk Sellers Swear

Sukhumvit Street Vendors Ordered Off Road Tonight. Will it Be Business as Usual?

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