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Paris Still Struggling With Worse Pollution Peak in Decade

On Dec. 7, Paris' Police authority is again cracking down on the city's rocketing air pollution with a 24-hour traffic-regulating scheme that aims to halve the day's emissions from road vehicles. Photo: Francois Mori / AP.

PARIS — Facing its worse winter pollution in a decade, Paris is sticking to controversial traffic restrictions.

Paris city hall has barred half of all cars from traveling and made public transportation free for a third consecutive day. A similar scheme will be implemented in the city of Lyon Friday as the pollution hit various regions across France including the Rhone valley.

Only vehicles with even-numbered plates are allowed to drive Thursday in the French capital and its nearby suburbs. The ban wasn’t respected by many drivers during the first two days, while disruption in transportation services added to confusion and triggered political bickering among local politicians.

The right-wing head of the Paris region, Valerie Pecresse, asked for a suspension of the ban on cars as long as troubles on the local train network aren’t settled. Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, a close ally to Socialist President Francois Hollande, replied that it was the region’s prerogative to fix public transportation problems.

According to Airparif, the body in charge of monitoring pollution in Paris, the drop in car emissions was limited to just between 5 and 10 percent on the first day of the ban because only half as many of the vehicles respected it compared to March 2014. Drivers face a fine between 22 ($23) and 75 euros ($80) if they ignore the rule.

To tackle the crisis, Paris’ Velib bike-share and Autolib electric cars will again be free Thursday, as well as the Paris metro and bus services.

In northern France, local authorities have reduced the maximum speed on major roads and urging drivers to resort to car-sharing while residents have been ordered to skip wood fires.

Airparif says the peak is due to the accumulation of pollutants because of anticyclonic conditions.

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Memes Take Flight Attendant’s Online Deception to New Heights

An image posted to Instagram by @ticha_ek, at left. At right, a parody created by the maker of popular web cartoon Jay the Rabbit.

BANGKOK — A former flight attendant exposed for photoshopping herself into amazing locations inspired the internet Thursday to escalate its ridicule with its own backlash of memes.

@Ticha_ek had more than 134,000 followers on Instagram when sharp-eyed netizens noticed photos of her awash in the Northern Lights, at Chichen Itza and with footballer Lionel Messi were actually just images pulled from the Internet with her pasted in.

Update: Flight Attendant Bullied Over Pics Gets Last Laugh

One of @ticha_ek's Instagram images.
One of @ticha_ek’s Instagram images.

Many quickly heaped scorn on the air hostess for touting her wanderlust lifestyle with photo captions (also plagiarized) such as, “You have to leave the city of your comfort and go into the wilderness of your intuition.”

Thursday’s top trending Twitter hashtag was #ticha_ek. People have pointed out many of the photos used were copyrighted by photographers, sometimes with identifying watermarks removed.

Being an air hostess is held up as a dream job for many young women in Thailand, and now many are loving to hate the unidentified woman for making up her too-good-to-be-true life.

Others were inspired by her audacity to go even further by taking the idea to new heights.

https://twitter.com/mayday_maydoy/status/806702034883751936

A graduate student travels the world in his gown.

https://twitter.com/shercrushh/status/806834301513781248

@Ticha_ek wasn’t the only one to enjoy some much-needed fresh air.

‘Northern Lights.jpg’ says this post by Drama-Addict page.

Marketers were quick exploit the opportunity. In this image, Ing On rice milk shower cream got on the bandwagon to tout its shower products being “as cool as getting to see the Northern Lights.”

The Department of Intellectual Property even joined the fray, warning that reproducing or editing copyrighted material is illegal with an image of a hot pot, which in Thai is an idiom for being caught red-handed.

‘I already went there 555555555555’

 

‘I don’t have a husband, so I can go be single anywhere.’

 

Popular satire page Pim Thai Mai Dai features fugitive abbot Dhammachayo mocking @Ticha_ek’s images. /  Photo: Pim Thai Mai Dai / Facebook

 

The photo which started it all. @Ticha_ek’s northern lights photo was one of the first ones where netizens spotted that the background was pulled from Google.

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DiCaprio Meets With Trump on Green Jobs to Boost Economy

Leonardo Dicaprio attends the premiere of National Geographic Channel's "Before The Flood," at the United Nations on Oct. 20, 2016. Photo: Brad Barket / AP.

NEW YORK — Leonardo DiCaprio and the head of his foundation met Wednesday with President-elect Donald Trump to discuss how jobs centered on preserving the environment can boost the economy.

In a statement to The Associated Press, Terry Tamminen, the CEO of the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, confirmed the meeting at Trump Tower in New York City. Tamminen said the pair gave a presentation to Trump, daughter Ivanka, and other members of Trump’s team on how focusing on renewable, clean energy could create millions of jobs.

“Today, we presented the President-elect and his advisors with a framework — which LDF developed in consultation with leading voices in the fields of economics and environmentalism — that details how to unleash a major economic revival across the United States that is centered on investments in sustainable infrastructure,” Tamminen said. “Our conversation focused on how to create millions of secure, American jobs in the construction and operation of commercial and residential clean, renewable energy generation.”

The Oscar-winning actor has been a strong advocate of fighting climate change and preserving wildlife, and his recent documentary, “Before the Flood,” addresses the peril that the world faces because of climate change.

DiCaprio previously met with Ivanka Trump and presented her with a copy of the film.

The meeting with Trump’s team lasted for about 90 minutes. The actor also gave the president-elect a copy of the documentary, and Trump promised to watch it, according to a person who was familiar with the meeting but not authorized to speak publicly.

Tamminen, who was secretary of California’s Environmental Protection Agency under former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, said Trump was receptive and suggested they meet again next month.

“We look forward to continuing the conversation with the incoming administration as we work to stop the dangerous march of climate change, while putting millions of people to work at the same time,” said Tamminen.

The meeting came after word got out Wednesday that Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, a climate-change denier whose policies have helped fossil fuel companies, is expected to be announced as Trump’s pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency.

 

Story: Nekesa Mumbi Moody

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Absolute Power Fails to Solve MRT’s Missing Link

A test train runs between the MRT Khlong Bang Phai and Talad Bang Yai stations on March 25 for the new Purple Line.

BANGKOK — The junta leader’s special power may be a shortcut to tackling many of the nation’s problems, but it turns out that the missing link between two commuter rail lines isn’t one of them.

The Mass Rapid Transit Authority, or MRTA, failed to meet a November deadline from Prayuth Chan-ocha to settle the contract dispute blocking connection of the Blue and Purple lines and said Wednesday that August 2017 is now the soonest it could be operational.

That’s a month later than the agency’s original July 2017 goal for connecting the MRT Bang Sue and Tao Poon stations, which prompted Prayuth in July to use his absolute power under Article 44 to order negotations settled.

Peerayuth Singpattanakul, head of the transit authority, said it has sought an extension from the cabinet to complete all the deals and contracts needed to make it happen.

Since the Purple Line opened in August, passengers have relied on a shuttle bus to travel the kilometer separating it from the Blue Line subway. Though construction of the rail link is actually complete, a conflict over who will operate it has remained unresolved for years.

Peerayuth said the original MRT Blue Line operator, Bangkok Expressway and Metro PCL, or BEM, is expected to sign the contract in January. The company will be paid 797 million baht for installing a signaling system and operating the link for two years.

MRTA blamed the delay on the need to negotiate the contracts as part of a larger and complex package.

Related stories:

With a Stroke of His Pen, Prayuth Solves MRT’s ‘Missing Link’ Problem

New MRT Purple Line Will Connect to Blue Line, But Not Anytime Soon

Frustrated Mess When Thousands Queue for Free Purple Line Tickets (Photos)

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Remains of 47 Victims of PIA Plane Crash to be Sent to Islamabad

Pakistani volunteers move remains of plane crash victims to a mortuary Wednesday at a hospital, in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Photo: B.K. Bangash / Associated Press

ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan — The remains of the 47 passengers and crew who were killed when a Pakistan International Airlines commuter crashed in the north of the country are being sent to Islamabad for identification, a hospital spokesman and the airline said Thursday.

Daniyal Gilani, a spokesman for Pakistan International Airlines, confirmed that 42 passengers and five crew members were killed in Wednesday’s crash. Earlier, PIA had put the total at 48.

Junaid Sarwar, a hospital spokesman in the northwestern city of Abbottabad, said only five bodies had been identified as the remains of others were burned so badly that the National Database and Registration Authority could not identify them.

“We are sending body parts of all the passengers to Islamabad for DNA tests,” he said. Wednesday’s crash took place in a village 75 kilometers (45 miles) northwest of the capital Islamabad. The small twin-propeller aircraft was travelling from the city of Chitral to Islamabad when it crashed shortly after takeoff due to an engine fault.

PIA says the plane lost contact with the control tower prior to the crash.

The passengers included Junaid Jamshed, a famous singer who had become an Islamic preacher, according to PIA.

“There are no survivors. All passengers and members of crew are dead,” Azam Sehgal, the PIA chariman told a news conference at the Islamabad airport late Wednesday. He said the plane’s black box recorder had been found.

Sehgal said the pilot of plane told the control tower that an engine had developed a technical fault. Moments later he made a “mayday call” shortly before the plane disappeared.

Sehgal said it was unclear what caused the crash.

TV footage at the site of the crash showed debris from the plane. The footage showed villagers collecting the remains of the passengers and covering their bodies with cloths.

Altaf Hussain, a rescue worker who transported the remains of passengers in an ambulance, told the AP that the crash site smelled of burned flesh and oil, and that body parts were scattered everywhere.

“We collected the burned bones … and wrapped them in cloth,” he said.

Ambulance driver Duray Hussain said the remains were “beyond recognition.”

Pakistan’s air industry had had a mixed record recently. About 150 people were killed in a crash near Islamabad in 2010, and last year a military helicopter carrying several diplomats also crashed in the country’s north, killing eight people. And a Bhoja Air flight passenger plane crashed near Islamabad due to bad weather in 2012, killing all 127 people on board.

Story: Asif Shahzad, Munir Ahmed

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Death Toll Reaches 102 as Aid Groups Reach Indonesia Quake Zone

Rescuers recover the body of a victim from the rubble of a collapsed building Wednesday after an earthquake in Pidie Jaya, Aceh province, Indonesia. Photo: Heri Juanda / Associated Press

MEUREUDU, Indonesia — Humanitarian organizations descended on Indonesia’s Aceh province Thursday as the government in Jakarta promised tons of emergency aid and officials raced to assess the full extent of damage from an earthquake that killed more than 100 people.

Search efforts involving volunteers and nearly 1,500 rescue personnel were concentrated on the hard-hit town of Meureudu in Pidie Jaya district near the epicenter of the magnitude 6.5 quake that hit before dawn Wednesday. Humanitarian assessment teams were fanning out to other areas of the district.

National Disaster Mitigation Agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said the death toll had risen to 102 and warned it could increase. Search teams were using devices that detect mobile phone signals with a 100-meter (yard) radius to help guide their efforts, he said. Aceh’s disaster mitigation agency said more than 600 people were injured.

Thousands of people are homeless or afraid to return to their homes. Aceh officials said more than 8,000 people spent Wednesday night in shelters in Pidie Jaya district alone.

Killer quakes occur regularly in the region, where many live with the terrifying memory of a giant Dec. 26, 2004, earthquake that struck off Sumatra. The magnitude 9.1 quake triggered a devastating tsunami that killed more than 100,000 Acehnese.

The Indonesian government said its urgent aid would be flown out of Jakarta early Thursday afternoon and will include 10 generators, tents, folding beds, baby supplies and body bags. The Red Cross deployed aid such as water trucks on Wednesday and humanitarian group CARE said it is leading an assessment team of four different international aid groups to avoid duplication of efforts.

“Every aid and civil society organization is piling into the area with as many boxes of rice, instant noodles, blankets and other aid as they can shift,” said Paul Dillon, a spokesman for the International Organization for Migration, which has an assessment team in northern Aceh.

It will take at least two more days before there’s a fuller picture of how many people are displaced and the relief effort required, he said.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the earthquake was centered about 19 kilometers (12 miles) southeast of Sigli, a town near the northern tip of Sumatra, at a depth of 17 kilometers (11 miles). The agency had initially placed the epicenter undersea. It did not generate a tsunami. As of 9 a.m. Thursday, some 36 aftershocks had rattled the area.

The world’s largest archipelago, Indonesia is prone to earthquakes due to its location on the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” an arc of volcanoes and fault lines in the Pacific Basin. The 2004 quake and tsunami killed a total of 230,000 people in a dozen countries, most of them in Aceh.

John Ebel, professor of earth and environmental sciences at Boston College, said there is a risk that even weak aftershocks could cause further damage to buildings, particularly because modern building codes aren’t consistently enforced in Indonesia.

Scores of rescuers were crawling over a market in Meureudu, the hard-hit town, where many shop houses collapsed.

One shop owner, Hajj Yusri Abdullah, didn’t hold out much hope of finding survivors. He said nearly two dozen bodies were pulled from the market debris the day before. They included a group of eight made up of a newlywed couple and family members holding an ornate celebration known as Antar Dara Baro.

Siti Rukiah, a mother of four, was among the many people who took refuge for the night in local mosques. She and about 100 other people from Pante Raja, a seaside village, fled to Nur Abdullah Mosque located on higher ground in a nearby hamlet.

She said the quake felt so powerful she had to grab onto a table to keep from falling down. She was sure a tsunami was coming.

“I’m really scared about a tsunami,” said Rukiah, whose brother and neighbors died in the 2004 disaster. She said she didn’t want to return home “not only because my house is damaged, but I am still afraid an aftershock could cause a tsunami.”

The national disaster agency said about 245 buildings were seriously damaged or destroyed in Pidie Jaya and neighboring Bireuen district, including 14 mosques. The rest were mainly dwellings and shop houses. Roads also cracked and power poles toppled over.

Story: Binsar Bakkara

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Cops Arrest Road Rage ‘Shooter’ (Video)

A screencap from a video of Wednesday’s road rage

BANGKOK — A man who fired what appeared to be a handgun at another motorist during a road rage incident on a Bangkok highway was arrested Wednesday night.

Nattawuth Puangthongkae was filmed chasing after a motorist who sideswiped his car on Bangna-Trad Road at about 2pm on Wednesday. In the video, which was widely shared, a driver said to be Nattawuth pulls out a weapon and shoots at the man he was pursuing, Assawadej Chalardlaem.

Assawadej filed a complaint at the Bangkaew Police Station, and after reviewing security camera footage, police tracked down and arrested Nattawuth several hours later.

Police said he confessed to being the man in the video and clarified that the weapon was actually a BB gun.

He was charged with intimidating others and reckless driving, while Assawadej was charged with property damage for sideswiping Nattawuth’s car.

The damage sustained by Nattawuth Puangthongkae’s car. Photo: Bangkaew Police
The damage sustained by Nattawuth Puangthongkae’s car. Photo: Bangkaew Police
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Tourists Ignore ‘No Climbing’ Sign, Internet Shames Them

Tourists climb atop a railing at the Kew Mae Pan Nature Trail in photos posted to the Pantip.com webboard.

CHIANG MAI — Keyboard warriors were slamming Thai tourists for breaking the rules posted at a scenic spot in Chiang Mai’s Doi Inthanon National Park to take photos.

Since Sunday, when a Pantip user posted a thread shaming visitors for not “respecting the rules” at the Kew Mae Pan Nature Trail, netizens have responded with photos of their own Facebook friends who ignored the “no climbing” rule to pose for photos on a railing overlooking a stunning valley view.

“It’s something that shouldn’t happen. We should cooperate and be responsible for public property,” read the post by user Pudding Chocolate and Soft Latte. “The railing is rickety, and some of the nails are half pulled-out.”

The thread then went on to detail in morbid detail what the user thought would happen if someone fell.

Some took the drama over scenic hiking photos by vacationers as an opportunity to reflect on others they have shamed.

Tourists climb atop a railing at the Kew Mae Pan Nature Trail in photos posted to the Pantip.com webboard.
Tourists climb atop a railing at the Kew Mae Pan Nature Trail in photos posted to the Pantip.com webboard.

“After seeing this, I can’t find it in me to berate Chinese tourists,” user Turn426 wrote. “We’re not good enough to do that.”

While some comments agreed with the risks of perching on the wood fence, at least person accepted the inevitability of hikers enjoying the summit view and suggested the park reinforce the railings.

“This will answer tourists’ needs, and more people will come to take selfies at the national park,” user 733265 wrote. “I’m just thinking like a private businessman.”

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All the Sights of Tokyo’s Tsukiji Fish Market (Without the Smell)

Still from ‘Tsukiji Wonderland’

BANGKOK — No need to go to Tokyo to explore its infamous Tsukiji fish market, as a Japanese documentary will bring a taste of it in a film about fresh fish, farmers’ rights and gastronomers at the city center.

Before it becomes sushi and sashimi, it’s at the Tsukiji market. Tokyo’s massive complex, known by many from “Jiro Dreams of Sushi,” is listed as the world’s biggest wholesale fish and seafood market. Its wonders are captured in Shotaro Endo’s doc “Tsukiji Wonderland,” which will screen in the Thonglor area as part of the Fisherfolk festival.

Apart from the film, the third edition of Fisherfolk will also feature seafood sold by farmers from Prachuap Khiri Khan, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Satun, Songkhla and Trat provinces which will serve fresh fruits de mer.

Live music, Japanese cooking workshops and a discussion panel will be held during the two-day event.

The film will be show for free at 5:30pm on Dec. 17.

Fisherfolk will be held from 9am to 6pm on Dec. 17 & 18 at Angoon Malik Garden, where Root Garden was previously situated, in Soi Thong Lo 3, next to the Pridi Banomyong Institute. It’s a 10-minute walk from BTS Thong Lo Station exit No. 1.

 

 

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Malta Bans Gay Conversion Therapy, a First for Europe

An LGBT flag painted on a wrist to celebrate LGBT Pride Day in 2014. Photo: Denise Coronel / Associated Press

VALLETTA, Malta — Malta has become the first European country to ban gay conversion therapy, imposing fines of up to 10,000 euros (USD$10,750) and a jail term of up to one year for offenders.

The Maltese Parliament approved a law Wednesday that effectively outlaws any attempts to “cure” gay people of their sexual orientations.

The law stipulates that “no sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression constitutes a disorder, disease or shortcoming of any sort.”

It also lowers to 16 the age at which minors can request a gender change without their parents’ approval.

Transgender Europe says the small Mediterranean country is the first in Europe to outlaw conversion therapy.

Malta has been at the forefront of progressive social reforms in Europe since the Labour government was elected in 2013.

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