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Porto Thrash Leicester, Foxes Still Secure Top UCL Group Spot

Leicester's Nampalys Mendy, left, and Jose Ulloa, right, react after Porto scored their fifth goal during a Champions League group G soccer match between FC Porto and Leicester City Wednesday at the Dragao stadium in Porto, Portugal. Photo: Paulo Duarte / Associated Press

PORTO, Portugal — FC Porto breezed into the Champions League knockout phase Wednesday with a 5-0 rout of Leicester, which had already secured top spot in Group G on its debut in European soccer’s elite competition.

Porto’s emphatic victory over the much-changed English champions ensured it was not overtaken by FC Copenhagen, which beat Club Brugge 2-0.

Andre Silva scored twice, including a penalty, while Jesus Corona, Yacine Brahimi and Diogo Jota also netted as Leicester slumped to its first Champions League loss.

Leicester finished two points ahead of Porto with 13 points from six games. In its Premier League title defense, Leicester has 13 points from 14 games to sit two points above the relegation zone.

Leicester defied 5,000-1 odds to be crowned Premier League champions for the first time in May and has advanced to the round of 16 in its first foray into the Champions League.

But this was a humiliating end to the group stage for the central England team, which lacked cohesion and confidence.

With Jamie Vardy, Riyad Mahrez and Robert Huth left at home, Leiecster’s shadow squad never got close to the 2004 European champions as manager Claudio Ranieri gambled on reviving its Premier League season by resting his big names.

While changes were expected, Ranieri sprung a surprise by picking 29-year-old goalkeeper Ben Hamer, who last played for the senior side almost two years ago.

Porto went in front after six minutes, with Silva beating Jeff Schlupp to head in a corner from six yards.

The Foxes barely made it out of their own half and Alex Telles swung in a fine delivery for the unmarked Corona to volley in the second.

Leicester was offering little resistance and Brahimi added Porto’s third, a minute before halftime, when he finished off a neat move with a back-heel.

Porto went further in front in the 64th minute after Danny Drinkwater clumsily fouled Silva, who then converted from the penalty spot.

Porto added a fifth when Jota was sent clear and he struck through Hamer’s legs on a comfortable night for the hosts.

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Fortune Favors the Bold Drawings of ‘Pomme Chan’

Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Get your fortune read and reflect on fortune and belief with the sacred animals of the Chinese Zodiac portrayed by a talented illustrator at an exhibition opening Saturday.

Masterful illustrator Tachamapan “Pomme Chan” Chanchamrassang challenged herself with new techniques in representing belief and fortune for her upcoming solo exhibition “Sirimongkol (Luck),” through drawings of the 12 animals of the Chinese Zodiac.

Showing not only 12 large-scale drawings on canvas, the exhibition also features the artist’s illustrations on paper painted with gold and red colors, a spirit house and ceramic merchandise.

At the launch party, free fortune-telling will be provided along with food, drinks and music.

“Pomme Chan” is a Thai illustrator based in London. Her hand-drawn works and typographical illustrations have been featured in various magazines and campaigns abroad such as the Telegraph, New York Times Magazine and La Perla Magazine.

The exhibition launches at 5pm on Saturday and runs through Feb. 12 at the gallery of The Jam Factory, which can be reached by bus or taxi from BTS Krung Thonburi, or a short walk from the Khlong San Pier.

 

Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy
Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy
Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy
Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy
Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy
Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy
Tachamapan “Pomme Chan” Chanchamrassang with her works. Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy.
Tachamapan “Pomme Chan” Chanchamrassang with her works. Photo: The Jam Factory Gallery / Courtesy.

 

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Duterte Says OK to Bomb Fleeing Militants and Their Hostages

Released Norwegian hostage Kjartan Sekkingstad, left, briefly delivers his statement after meeting Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, right in September in Davao city in southern Philippines. Photo: Manman Dejeto / Associated Press

MANILA — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said Wednesday he told his Indonesian and Malaysian counterparts that their forces can bomb fleeing Filipino militants and their kidnap victims at sea because the hostages “are not supposed to be there.”

Duterte said in a speech that he told Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo that their forces could enter Philippine waters while pursuing Muslim militants who are fleeing with hostages.

Duterte said he told the leaders that if the militants were about to escape, “bomb them. If they cannot be captured you bomb them. How about the hostages? Eh, bomb them also. They’re not supposed to be there, there is a warning.”

The brash-talking Duterte cited a U.S. travel advisory warning Americans not to travel in the treacherous waters bordering the three countries.

The Abu Sayyaf militant group is holding more than a dozen mostly foreign hostages in their jungle lairs on the southern Philippine island of Jolo.

Despite discussions among the three leaders on ways to strengthen security along their sea borders, Abu Sayyaf militants and allied gunmen from Jolo and nearby islands have continued to target and kidnap crewmen of slow-moving tugboats as well as fishing boats.

The ransom-seeking militants, who are notorious for beheadings, have also attacked cargo ships and separately snatched a South Korean skipper and Vietnamese crewmen in the southern Philippines. The U.S. and the Philippines consider the Abu Sayyaf a terrorist organization.

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Rarer Than Elephants, Giraffes Put on Extinction Watch List

A giraffe walks across the savannah in August in Amboseli national park, Kenya, as the highest mountain in Africa Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania is seen in the background. Photo: Khaled Kazziha / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The giraffe, the tallest land animal, is now at risk of extinction, biologists say.

Because the giraffe population has shrunk nearly 40 percent in just 30 years, scientists put it on the official watch list of threatened and endangered species worldwide, calling it “vulnerable.” That’s two steps up the danger ladder from its previous designation of being a species of least concern. In 1985, there were between 151,000 and 163,000 giraffes but in 2015 the number was down to 97,562, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

At a biodiversity meeting Wednesday in Mexico, the IUCN increased the threat level for 35 species and lowered the threat level for seven species on its “Red List” of threatened species, considered by scientists the official list of what animals and plants are in danger of disappearing.

The giraffe is the only mammal whose status changed on the list this year. Scientists blame habitat loss.

While everyone worries about elephants, Earth has four times as many pachyderms as giraffes, said Julian Fennessy and Noelle Kumpel, co-chairs of the specialty group of biologists that put the giraffe on the IUCN Red List. They both called what’s happening to giraffes a “silent extinction.”

“Everyone assumes giraffes are everywhere,” said Fennessy, co-director of the Giraffe Conservation Foundation.

But they’re not, Fennessy said. Until recently, biologists hadn’t done a good job assessing giraffes’ numbers and where they can be found, and they have been lumped into one broad species instead of nine separate subspecies.

“There’s a strong tendency to think that familiar species (such as giraffes, chimps, etc.) must be OK because they are familiar and we see them in zoos,” said Duke University conservation biologist Stuart Pimm, who wasn’t part of the work and has criticized the IUCN for not putting enough species on the threat list. “This is dangerous.”

Fennessy blamed shrinking living space as the main culprit in the declining giraffe population, worsened by poaching and disease. People are moving into giraffe areas especially in central and eastern Africa. Giraffe numbers are plunging most in central and eastern Africa and are being offset by increases in southern Africa, he said.

This has fragmented giraffe populations, making them shrink in size with wild giraffes gone from seven countries — Burkina Faso, Eritrea, Guinea, Malawi, Mauritania, Nigeria and Senegal, said Kumpel of the Zoological Society of London.

The IUCN says 860 plant and animal species are extinct, and another 68 are extinct in the wild. Nearly 13,000 are endangered or critically endangered. The next level is vulnerable, where giraffes were placed, followed by near threatened and least concerned.

The status of two snake species worsened. The ornate ground snake, which lives on the tiny island of Saint Lucia, deteriorated from endangered to critically endangered. The Lacepede’s ground snake of Martinique, which was already critically endangered, is now considered possibly extinct, pending confirmation, as is the trondo mainty, a river fish in Madagascar.

But there is also good news for some species. The Victoria stonebasher, a freshwater fish in Africa, went from being considered endangered to least concerned with a stable population. And an African plant, the acmadenia candida, which was declared extinct, has been rediscovered and is now considered endangered. Another freshwater fish, ptychochromoides itasy, which hadn’t been seen since the 1960s, has been rediscovered in small numbers in Africa’s Sakay River and is now considered critically endangered.

Story: Seth Borenstein

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Duterte Says Trump Made Him Feel ‘Like a Saint’

Philippines' President Rodrigo Duterte attends a meeting between business leaders and heads of states of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, APEC in 2016 during their annual forum in Lima, Peru. Photo: Martin Mejia / Associated Press
Philippines' President Rodrigo Duterte attends a meeting between business leaders and heads of states of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation, APEC in 2016 during their annual forum in Lima, Peru. Photo: Martin Mejia / Associated Press

MANILA — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said Wednesday he felt “like a saint” after his phone conversation last week with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, who he said praised him for “doing great” in his deadly campaign against illegal drugs.

He said in a speech that Trump told him not to worry about Americans criticizing him, saying “you are doing good, go ahead.”

Trump invited him for coffee if he visits Washington or New York, and told him he wanted to hear how Duterte deals with the media, his critics and the public, the Philippine president said.

“‘Oh President Duterte, we should fix our bad relations … you’re doing great,” he quoted Trump as saying. “So now, if you listen to Trump talk to me, I have become like a saint.”

Duterte called to congratulate Trump late Friday.

In earlier comments about the phone call, Duterte said Trump wished that his crackdown on illegal drugs would succeed, and said he assured the U.S. president-elect the Philippines would maintain its ties with America — a departure from Duterte’s hostility toward the Obama administration.

Duterte has lashed out at President Barack Obama, the State Department, EU and U.N. officials, and human rights groups for raising concerns over his drug crackdown, which has left more than 4,000 suspected drug dealers and users dead.

Obama canceled what could have been his first formal meeting with Duterte at an Asian summit in Laos in September after Duterte unleashed an expletive-laden warning for the U.S. leader not to lecture him on human rights. In one speech, Duterte told Obama to “go to hell.”

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Pakistani National Carrier’s Plane Crashes After Takeoff

ISLAMABAD — A plane belonging to Pakistan’s national carrier crashed on Wednesday shortly after takeoff from the country’s north with about 40 people on board, a spokesman and the police said.

According to senior police officer Khurram Rasheed, the plane crashed in a village near the town of Havelian, located about 75 kilometers (45 miles) northwest from the capital, Islamabad.

There were no immediate details on casualties but Pakistan’s interior ministry dispatched a team with experts on identifying bodies through DNA tests.

State-run Pakistan Television showed a huge fire rising from the site of the crash. Villagers were seen standing near the site.

Shortly before the crash was confirmed, Daniyal Gilani, the spokesman for Pakistan International Airlines, said their ATR-42 aircraft carrying 47 passengers and crew had lost touch with the control tower.

A local police official, Khursheed Tanoli, told state-run TV that the plane went down in a village in the northwest and that rescuers are trying to reach the site of the crash.

The army said it dispatched troops and helicopters to the location.

A resident of the area, Kashif Khan, told the TV that he saw the debris of the crashed plane.

Story: Munir Ahmed

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Taxi Driver Jailed For Steel Pipe Road Rage Assault

BANGKOK A taxi driver was charged Wednesday morning with assault for allegedly beating another motorist with a steel pipe.

Taxi driver Bawornpan Srimek was sent to jail for six months for attacking the driver of a Mini Cooper near Phetchaburi Road’s Phrom Pong intersection in the Makkasan area.

Sutthinan Polsin told police he had been trying to cut into Bawornpan’s lane, but the taxi driver wouldn’t let him in and honked his horn. Sutthinan then cut the taxi off and got out of his car to confront the driver.  

Bawornpan told police he was driving a passenger to the Pratunam area when Sutthinan signaled to get into his lane, but he didn’t make way because there wasn’t enough space.  He said he was angry when he got out of the taxi and repeatedly hit Sutthinan, according to Lt. Col. Suebpong Karuna of Nang Loeng police.

The incident was recorded and posted online, where it went viral Tuesday on social media and Bawornpan was roundly condemned for hitting the man despite his offer of an apologetic wai.

Sutthinan was treated at a hospital for a fractured ankle and bruises.

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Police Say They Didn’t Visit BBC Thai After Deputy PM Says They Did

The doors to the BBC’s offices in the Maneeya Building on Sukhumvit Road were locked Wednesday.

BANGKOK — Depending on who spoke Wednesday, police officers either did or did not pay a visit to the offices of the BBC’s Thai-language service last night.

A senior police official said neither police nor military officers went to the downtown location where the broadcaster’s headquarters are located. Higher up the command chain, Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan confirmed officers were dispatched for what he described as an inspection.

Their conflicting accounts came a day after reports that police had visited the office were confirmed by BBC Southeast Asia Bureau Chief Jonathan Head. Head added that their visit was followed by a brief visit from military officers inquiring about the earlier police visit. No staff was in the office.

The visit came as BBC Thai is under fire for publishing a contentious story about King Rama X that contained biographical details domestic news agencies, including Khaosod English, cannot publish for fear of prosecution. Thai internet users were blocked from accessing the article Tuesday.

Read:  Authorities Visit BBC Thai Offices, Block Article Online

Yet senior officer Maj. Gen.Chayaphol Chatchaidej said at a Wednesday news conference at the national police headquarters that no one was dispatched as had been reported.

Chayaphol said the Lumpini Police Station and Technology Crime Suppression Division were investigating BBC Thai’s website. He said they were considering calling in for questioning those involved such as the service’s editor, website admin and translator.

Someone working on the same floor as the BBC in the Maneeya Building, where several news organizations and the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand are located, said it was “bizarre” for police to deny the visit, as they were “seen by dozens of people.”

The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the situation, said Head did get one thing wrong: The cops didn’t drink the milk which had been delivered there. One of the BBC’s neighbors, he said, stole the Yakult milk the cops were accused of taking.

Despite contradicting each other on Tuesday’s visit, Chayaphol, Prawit and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha offered the same response that the outlet, if found guilty, must be prosecuted under the law, without exception.

“They have a branch in Thailand and have Thai reporters,” Prayuth said Wednesday. “When they violate Thai law, they must be prosecuted.”

The BBC Thai biography, published Friday, has already led to the arrest of a pro-democracy activist who shared it on Facebook. Jatupat “Pai” Boonpattararaksa was charged with defaming the monarchy, a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison, before being freed on bail Sunday.

Related stories:

Authorities Visit BBC Thai Offices, Block Article Online

Activist ‘Pai Dao Din’ Freed on Bail After 112 Arrest

Activist ‘Pai Dao Din’ Arrested For Lese Majeste

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Cambodian Deputy Opposition Leader Reconciles with Hun Sen

Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, right, walks together with opposition Cambodia's Rescue Party Deputy President Kem Sokha, center in 2016 during a break at National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press
Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen, right, walks together with opposition Cambodia's Rescue Party Deputy President Kem Sokha, center in 2016 during a break at National Assembly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — Cambodia’s deputy opposition leader who was pardoned from jail time for ignoring a court summons has returned to parliament, saying he and Prime Minister Hun Sen have agreed to reconcile.

Kem Sokha and fellow lawmakers of the Cambodia National Rescue Party last month ended a six-month boycott of parliament to protest what they said was politically motivated harassment after several were stripped of parliamentary immunity and sued by Hun Sen’s government. Opposition members said they returned to parliament to seek a political truce.

Kem Sokha was granted a royal pardon on Dec. 2 at Hun Sen’s request.

Kem Sokha said he and Hun Sen agreed to resolve their differences through talk.

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Dhammakaya Defies Order to Halt Broadcasts

Guards search vehicles entering Wat Dhammakaya on Wednesday in Pathum Thani province.

PATHUM THANI — The satellite channel of an influential Buddhist sect had yet to comply with an order to cease broadcasting Wednesday after it called for acolytes to gather in what police say is another bid to thwart the arrest of its fugitive abbot.

Wat Dhammakaya in northern metro Bangkok was told Tuesday to shut down its DMC TV and radio channels in anticipation of officers entering to execute an arrest warrant for the abbot, Dhammachayo, who faces prosecution on two criminal matters.

Read: Deadline for Dhammakaya Abbot to Surrender Expires, Again

The channel had been broadcasting calls for its followers to gather at the temple, ostensibly for religious rites, but Col. Paisit Wongmuang of the Department of Special Investigations said it was meant to prevent police from arresting Dhammachayo, a tactic that worked earlier this year.

Paisit said he asked the National Broadcasting Telecommunications Commission to suspend the channel’s broadcasts because they were deemed to be inciting citizens to criminality and possible violence or even broader social unrest.

The temple denied the broadcast was meant to incite, saying in a news release its programming consisted only of religious content.

“The station’s stance is moral education, enriching Buddhism and being an instrument of peace for people, society and nation,” read the statement from temple spokesman Sanitwong Wuttiwiso. “The channel does not cause any sort of unrest or encourage illegal actions, like we have been accused.”

Sanitwong’s announcement also said they would contest the shutdown order because it “encroaches on citizens’ freedom to access news.” As of Wednesday afternoon, DMC was still broadcasting.

Outside the temple, both police and temple officials have taken up positions.

The DSI’s latest deadline for Dhammachayo to surrender came and went on Nov. 30. The agency’s renewed bid to take him into custody on charges of land encroachment came six months after officers failed to arrest him on embezzlement charges for accepting 1.4 billion baht from a credit union executive.

The temple insists Dhammachayo was unaware the money was tainted and the charges were politically motivated.

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