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Biggest Mini Town to Open in Bangkok (Photos)

BANGKOK Meet mini Hoover Dam, mini Anfield Stadium and a mini railroad roundhouse. See the mini people go about their mini lives as Thailand takes modeling to the next level with a sprawling town at 1:87 scale in the Ekamai area this week.

Spanning over 1,000sqm on the second floor of the Gateway Ekamai shopping mall, Stanley MiniVenture will open Thursday. The open space of buildings and models is billed as the first 1:87-scale miniature town in Thailand, and the largest in Asia.

Khaosod English got in for a mini peek Friday – check out the photos below.

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Stanley MiniVenture covers 11 theme zones including a desert, beach, cave, residential, historical sites and an airport. Very Thai is the last zone added and will feature a mini Chinatown and mini Victory Monument. Expect to see models of childhood memories such as trains, ships and planes while learning of the world’s history and diversity from lifestyles to geographic features.

Stanley MiniVenture opens at 3pm on Wednesday. Day tickets for adults are 650 baht and 450 baht for children 80 centimeters to 130 centimeters. The regular operating hours will be 12:15pm to 8pm.

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Mother Arrested for Beating, Menacing Girl, 5, With Knife

Police and charity workers talk to a 5-year-old girl rescued on Sunday from her abusive mother in Samut Prakarn.

BANGKOK —  A 5-year-old girl was receiving counseling Monday after police rescued her from her mother who was filmed abusing her at their home.

Police in the southeastern capital suburb of Samut Prakan arrested Tassanee Kaewpila, 35, on Sunday following an outcry on social media over disturbing footage of the abuse, in which she used a broomstick to beat her daughter and at one point held a knife at her throat.

Police arrested Tassanee within four hours of the video being posted to Facebook.

“The girl is now under custody of the provincial chapter of the MSDHS,” local police station chief Col. Pichit Boonchinwutthikul said, referring to the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security. “She’s there for mental rehabilitation and questioning.”

Tassanee, a mother of twin girls, was released after interrogation on Sunday, and police will summon her back to hear the charges against her, Pichit said. She faces possible charges of assault and domestic violence.

He added that police are waiting for results of a medical examination of the girl’s injuries before they file charges against Tassanee, and depending on the severity, she would stand trial in either the Juvenile, Circuit or Provincial court.

“Once we have the examination result from doctors and the report from MSDHS, we will file charges and bring her to the appropriate court,” Pichit said.

Video of the alleged abuse was first posted to a popular Facebook page called YouLike at about 10am on Sunday. Footage of Tassanee appearing to thrash her toddler by the hair, beat her and hold a knife to her throat immediately drew widespread condemnation.

Police raided Tassanee’s residence at about 1:30pm and took her daughter into protective custody.

Tassanee reportedly said her mother-in-law in Surin province took care of her twin daughters while she and her husband worked in Bangkok, but recently her husband brought the children to stay with them in the capital city.

Tassanee told officers that raising the twins proved too difficult for her, and she lost her temper, police said.

“The mother was sorry,” Col. Pichit said. “She didn’t know that it would escalate into a big issue like this.”

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Nation Goes Black For Father’s Day

Sunrise over Bhumibol Bridge on Monday where an exhibition was being held in memory of the late King Bhumibol.

BANGKOK — A slew of events from Buddhist rites to a jazz concert were planned for Monday, the anniversary of His Majesty the Late King Bhumibol’s birthday that had been celebrated as Father’s Day for nearly four decades.

Buddhist ceremonies will be held at the Grand Palace, City Hall, Government House and other government properties. King Vajiralongkorn, the recently-ascended Rama X, is to preside over the ceremony at the palace.

To mark Father’s Day in years past, before the King grew too ill, citizens would gather to hear his unscripted annual birthday speech on TV. As the day faded and lights came on along Ratchadamnoen Avenue, crowds would also gather to light yellow candles for him. Last year, a nationwide “Bike For Dad” cycling event was held.

This year, an exhibition honoring King Rama IX on Bhumibol Bridge has seen large crowds gather, with 999 monks gathering there today to make merit for the late king.

At 6pm in front of City Hall there will be a jazz concert in honor of the late monarch, who was a jazz enthusiast and lifelong saxophone player.

The national Buddhist authority plans to hold mass ordinations of 88 monks per province.

Dec. 5 was declared National Day under junta chairman Sarit Thanarat in 1958. Starting in 1980, the date started being celebrated as Father’s Day, with the birthday of Queen Sirikit becoming celebrated as Mother’s Day on Aug. 12.

 

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‘Pedals’ the Bipedal Bear Killed by Hunter

TRENTON, New Jersey — New Jersey’s long-debated black bear hunts have stoked strong passions, blasted by animal rights activists as inhumane and supported by hunters and wildlife officials who say they help control the population and minimize run-ins with humans.

But the death of a bear presumed to be one that walked on two feet and became a social media darling has become a rallying cry for hunt opponents as they prepare to stage protests during the second segment of this year’s hunt, which starts Monday. It’s scheduled to run through Saturday, but officials said it could end early depending on how many bears are culled.

Read: American Bear Walks Around Like He Owns the Place

Pedals the bear first surfaced about two years ago in Jefferson Township. The bear walked with an unusual gait on his hind legs and was spotted ambling around neighborhoods. It also was caught on videos that were posted online and shown on national television.

Wildlife officials believe Pedals was killed during the expanded bear hunt staged in October. The Department of Environmental Protection released pictures showing the lifeless body of a black bear with injured paws, just like the ones Pedals had, but couldn’t confirm the identity because Pedals was never tagged.

Animal rights activists say the belief that Pedals is dead has motivated them and others to work even harder to end the hunt. Pedals was last seen on video in June.

“Our numbers have always been high, but the killing of Pedals has caused our support to increase,” said Janine Motta, programs director for the Bear Education And Resource program. The group has staged protests during previous hunts in New Jersey and plans similar events during the upcoming hunt.

“Here was one particular bear that people may have known, seen or just followed on Facebook. They felt a connection with Pedals,” Motta said. “When he was killed, it became personal for those who loved him, and that translated into a greater awareness of the hunt in general and the realization that all bears who are killed are important.”

New Jersey resumed state-regulated bear hunting in 2003 after a ban that lasted more than 30 years. Another hunt was held in 2005, and in 2010 the state instituted an annual hunt.

The expanded six-day hunting season took effect this year. Hunters were allowed to use only bows and arrows to during the first three days, and muzzle-loading guns were added during the second half.

This coming week’s hunt is for firearms only and runs concurrently with the six-day firearm season for deer. But wildlife officials anticipate the bear hunt will end early due to the harvest limit set in the state’s bear management policy.

Hunters harvested 562 bears during the expanded hunt, and 23.4 percent were previously tagged bears. This week’s hunt will be suspended once the cumulative harvest rate of tagged bears reaches 30 percent, officials said.

State wildlife officials have touted the annual hunt as an important part of controlling the bear population and minimizing run-ins with humans, particularly in the northern part of New Jersey known as bear country. They have estimated that 3,500 bears live in New Jersey north of Interstate 80, roughly the upper one-eighth of the state.

Critics have called the hunt brutal, cruel and ineffective. But James Doherty, a Toms River resident who has taken part in previous hunts, believes the critics are so focused on their cause that they don’t see why it’s needed.

“The stereotype of hunters is that we’re all gun nuts who like to kill things for the fun of it, but that’s not the case,” Doherty said. “Listen to the biologists, the experts — the hunt helps keep the bear population in control, and that’s very important. If the population gets too high, there’s not enough food for all of them, and it can lead to more bear-human interactions.”

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Flash Floods Kill 11 in South, Heavy Rain to Continue

Koh Samui in Surat Thani province flooded on Saturday.

BANGKOK — Flash floods in the south of Thailand have killed 11 people in recent days, disaster officials said, with rain continuing to fall Monday.

Since Thursday, flood-related fatalities have hit Surat Thani, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Songkhla, Phatthalung and Pattani provinces, with two people currently missing in Surat Thani.

The afflicted areas stretch from Chumphon province south to the border with Malaysia.

Koh Samui in Surat Thani has also been heavily affected by the relentless downpour, compounded by poor drainage due to garbage and the built environment.

Small craft advisories are in place along both coasts, as heavy rain is expected to continue along with rough sea conditions.

During the next two days, temperatures are expected to fall nationwide, with cloudy skies over Bangkok and average lows of 24C and highs of 32C.

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Bertolucci’s ‘Last Tango in Paris’ Rape Scene Revelation Sparks Outrage

LOS ANGELES — “Last Tango in Paris” is making headlines again 44 years after the controversial film came out. A recently unearthed video interview with Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci from 2013 has renewed interest, and outrage, over what happened to actress Maria Schneider on set during the infamous butter rape scene.

Bertolucci said that neither he nor Marlon Brando told Schneider of their plans to use the stick of butter during the simulated rape scene — a concept they came up with the morning of the shoot — because he wanted her to react “as a girl not as an actress.” He wanted her, he said, to feel “the rage and the humiliation.”

Schneider, who died in 2011 at age 58 after a lengthy illness, spoke a number of times about the scene between her, then aged 19, and Marlon Brando, then 48, even saying in a 2007 Daily Mail interview that she “felt a little raped” by her co-star and director.

“They only told me about it before we had to film the scene, and I was so angry,” Schneider said. “I should have called my agent or had my lawyer come to the set because you can’t force someone to do something that isn’t in the script. But at the time, I didn’t know that.”

But despite Schneider’s past comments, the video interview with Bertolucci struck a chord this weekend as it circulated on social media that the director was admitting that the scene was non-consensual.

Actress Jessica Chastain wrote on Twitter that she felt “sick” over the revelation that “the director planned her attack.”

Filmmaker Ava DuVernay called it “inexcusable.”

“As a director, I can barely fathom this. As a woman, I am horrified, disgusted and enraged by it,” DuVernay wrote.

Chris Evans also expressed his rage and said it was “beyond disgusting,” while Anna Kendrick weighed in that she “used to get eye-rolls” when she brought the incident up to people previously and that she was “glad at least it will be taken seriously now.”

Some, like actress Jenna Fischer, took a more extreme stance, writing that “all copies of this film should be destroyed immediately.”

Schneider, a relative unknown when she was cast in the film, said that the “whole circus” of suddenly being famous made her turn to drugs and she even attempted suicide a few times. She stayed friends with Brando until his death in 2004, but she said that “for a while we couldn’t talk about the movie.”

Bertolucci, however, did not maintain a relationship with Schneider. He said he knew she hated him for life in that interview two years after her death. And while he doesn’t regret the scene, he said he does feel guilty about it.

Story: Lindsey Bahr

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New Cross-Border Stock Link Widens Access to China’s Nasdaq

Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd. Chairman Chow Chung-kong, fifth from left, and Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, fourth from right, smile after banging a gong during a ceremony to launch the Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect on Monday in Hong Kong. Photo: Vincent Yu / Associated Press

HONG KONG — Trading began Monday on a new cross-border stock link between Hong Kong and the neighboring Chinese city of Shenzhen, widening access to China’s markets for global investors.

The long-awaited Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect link allows international investors to buy and sell 880 high-growth small and mid-cap stocks traded on the exchange in the southern boom town of Shenzhen via the Hong Kong exchange.

Its debut follows the launch of a similar link between Hong Kong and China’s main exchange in Shanghai two years ago.

Hong Kong’s top leader and the exchange’s chairman marked the occasion by banging a gong in a ceremony connected by live video link to their counterparts in Shenzhen, where officials rang a bell to kick off trading.

Market response was muted in early trading, with the Shenzhen All-Share index down 0.4 percent while the Hang Seng slipped 0.3 percent, in line with other Asia market declines.

“If Shanghai Connect was our baby step on the first step, Shenzhen connect is our second step. Now we can walk and we can begin to run. So this indeed is a historical moment,” said Charles Li, chief executive of market operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing.

With a market value of USD$3.3 trillion, Shenzhen’s exchange rivals Shanghai’s in size and is the world’s eighth biggest. While Shanghai is home to many huge state-owned enterprises, Shenzhen’s bourse is dominated by small, fast-growing private companies in up-and-coming sectors such as technology and health-care. It often is referred to as China’s Nasdaq.

“We believe Shenzhen is the largest untapped market in the world and, not surprisingly, investor knowledge is fairly limited,” HSBC’s Steven Sun and Bruce Pang said in a recent report.

Foreign ownership of Shenzhen-listed companies is minimal, at less than 1.2 percent. In Hong Kong, a former British colony controlled by China that has a financial system open to international investors, it’s 46 percent.

Hong Kong has long been used as an offshore outpost by Beijing, since China’s markets are still mostly fenced off from global capital flows. Before the links were launched, foreign access was limited to a quota program for selected fund managers.

Of the 880 stocks listed in Shenzhen that can be traded via the Hong Kong exchange about 200 on the tech-heavy ChiNext board will be open to institutional professional investors at first.

Mainland investors, meanwhile, get access to 417 Hong Kong small cap stocks. That might appeal to mainland investors looking to diversify away from assets denominated in the yuan, which has weakened to its lowest level in eight years. Hong Kong stocks are priced in the city’s own currency, which is pegged to the U.S. dollar.

Shenzhen’s status as a financial center has risen as China’s communist leaders have sought to shift away from reliance on export-oriented manufacturing toward growth based on self-sustaining, more environmentally friendly domestic demand.

“Shenzhen represents the ‘new economy,’ that’s very clear,” said Nicole Yuen, head of China equities at Credit Suisse. She noted that about two-thirds of Shenzhen-listed firms are private enterprises while the remaining third are state-owned. On the Shanghai board, it’s the reverse, she said.

The market’s not for the fainthearted: China’s markets are volatile partly because individual, or “retail,” investors dominate trading. In developed markets, institutional investors lead.

“With a retail-driven market, of course it’s riskier because you think alike with other retail people. It can swing more quickly,” leading to a “herd instinct,” said Yuen. So, “why would people go to a risky market? Because the reward is better.”

The Shenzhen All-Share index has risen 8.3 percent over the past six months but is down about 10 percent for the year. That compares with increases of 6.3 percent and 5 percent respectively for the Nasdaq Composite.

Expanding cross-border trading could help restore confidence in China’s markets after a spectacular meltdown last year that was worsened by regulators’ attempts to intervene. In June, the global stock benchmark provider MSCI opted not to add mainland Chinese stocks to its widely followed Emerging Markets Index. It said the markets need to be more accessible and closer to international standards.

“Shenzhen Connect may not simply open a floodgate of untouched opportunities as some might expect,” said Michael Karbouris, Nasdaq’s head of Asia-Pacific business development.

“The market is fairly expensive and already dominated by retail investors that like to speculate, and the combination of low cap stocks and volatility means the investment story is not straightforward. Investors will need to exercise caution.”

Story: Kelvin Chan

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Win for Protesters as U.S. Blocks Oil Pipeline Route

A crowd gathers in celebration at the Oceti Sakowin camp after it was announced that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers won't grant easement for the Dakota Access oil pipeline Sunday in Cannon Ball, North Dakota. Photo: David Goldman / Associated Press

CANNON BALL, North Dakota — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said Sunday that it won’t grant an easement for the Dakota Access oil pipeline in southern North Dakota, handing a victory to the Standing Rock Sioux tribe and its supporters, who argued the project would threaten the tribe’s water source and cultural sites.

North Dakota’s leaders criticized the decision, with Gov. Jack Dalrymple calling it a “serious mistake” that “prolongs the dangerous situation” of having several hundred protesters who are camped out on federal land during cold, wintry weather. U.S. Rep. Kevin Cramer said it’s a “very chilling signal” for the future of infrastructure in the United States.

The four-state, USD$3.8 billion project is largely complete except for the now-blocked segment underneath Lake Oahe, a Missouri River reservoir. Assistant Secretary for Civil Works Jo-Ellen Darcy said in a news release that her decision was based on the need to “explore alternate routes” for the pipeline’s crossing. Her full decision doesn’t rule out that it could cross under the reservoir or north of Bismarck.

“Although we have had continuing discussion and exchanges of new information with the Standing Rock Sioux and Dakota Access, it’s clear that there’s more work to do,” Darcy said. “The best way to complete that work responsibly and expeditiously is to explore alternate routes for the pipeline crossing.”

The company constructing the pipeline, Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners, had said it was unwilling to reroute the project. It had no immediate comment Sunday.

The decision came a day before the government’s deadline for the several hundred people at the Oceti Sakowin, or Seven Council Fires, encampment to leave the federal land. But demonstrators say they’re prepared to stay, and authorities say they won’t forcibly remove them.

As the news spread Sunday, cheers and cheers and chants of “mni wichoni” — “water is life” in Lakota Sioux — broke out among the protesters. Some in the crowd banged drums. Miles Allard, a member of the Standing Rock Sioux, said he was pleased but remained cautious, saying, “We don’t know what Trump is going to do.”

“The whole world is watching,” Allard added. “I’m telling all our people to stand up and not to leave until this is over.”

Attorney General Loretta Lynch said Sunday that the Department of Justice will “continue to monitor the situation” and stands “ready to provide resources to help all those who can play a constructive role in easing tensions.”

“The safety of everyone in the area – law enforcement officers, residents and protesters alike – continues to be our foremost concern,” she added.

Carla Youngbear of the Meskwaki Potawatomi tribe made her third trip from central Kansas to be at the protest site.

“I have grandchildren, and I’m going to have great grandchildren,” she said. “They need water. Water is why I’m here.”

Standing Rock Sioux tribal chairman Dave Archambault didn’t immediately respond to messages left seeking comment.

Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier, whose department has done much of the policing for the protests, said that “local law enforcement does not have an opinion” on the easement and that his department will continue to “enforce the law.”

U.S. Secretary for the Interior Sally Jewell said in a statement that the Corps’ “thoughtful approach … ensures that there will be an in-depth evaluation of alternative routes for the pipeline and a closer look at potential impacts.”

Earlier Sunday, an organizer with Veterans Stand for Standing Rock said tribal elders had asked the military veterans not to have confrontations with law enforcement officials, adding the group is there to help out those who’ve dug in against the project.

About 250 veterans gathered about a mile from the main camp for a meeting with organizer Wes Clark Jr., the son of former Democratic presidential candidate Gen. Wesley Clark. The group had said about 2,000 veterans were coming, but it wasn’t clear how many actually arrived.

“We have been asked by the elders not to do direct action,” Wes Clark Jr. said. He added that the National Guard and law enforcement have armored vehicles and are armed, warning: “If we come forward, they will attack us.”

Instead, he told the veterans, “If you see someone who needs help, help them out.”

Authorities moved a blockade from the north end of the Backwater Bridge with the conditions that protesters stay south of it and come there only if there is a prearranged meeting. Authorities also asked protesters not to remove barriers on the bridge, which they have said was damaged in the late October conflict that led to several people being hurt, including a serious arm injury.

“That heavy presence is gone now and I really hope in this de-escalation they’ll see that, and in good faith . the leadership in those camps will start squashing the violent factions,” Cass County Sheriff Paul Laney said in a statement, reiterating that any violation will “will result in their arrest.”

Veterans Stand for Standing Rock’s GoFundMe.com page had raised more than $1 million of its $1.2 million goal by Sunday — money due to go toward food, transportation and supplies. Cars waiting to get into the camp Sunday afternoon were backed up for more than a half-mile.

“People are fighting for something, and I thought they could use my help,” said Navy veteran and Harvard graduate student Art Grayson. The 29-year-old from Cambridge, Massachusetts, flew the first leg of the journey, then rode from Bismarck in the back of a pickup truck. He has finals this week, but told professors, “I’ll see you when I get back.”

Steven Perry, a 66-year-old Vietnam veteran who’s a member of the Little Traverse Bay band of Odawa Indians in Michigan, spoke of one of the protesters’ main concerns: that the pipeline could pollute drinking water. “This is not just a native issue,” he said, “This is an issue for everyone.”

Art Woodson and two other veterans drove 17 hours straight from Flint, Michigan, a city whose lead-tainted water crisis parallels with the tribe’s fight over water, he said.

“We know in Flint that water is in dire need,” the 49-year-old disabled Gulf War Army veteran said. “In North Dakota, they’re trying to force pipes on people. We’re trying to get pipes in Flint for safe water.”

Some veterans will take part in a prayer ceremony Monday, during which they’ll apologize for historical detrimental conduct by the military toward Native Americans and ask for forgiveness, Clark said. He also called the veterans’ presence “about right and wrong and peace and love.”

Story: Jamse MacPherson

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Italian PM Matteo Renzi Quits After Defeat in Referendum

Italian Premier Matteo Renzi speaks early Monday during a press conference at the premier's office Chigi Palace, in Rome, Italy. Photo: Gregorio Borgia / Associated Press

ROME — Italian voters dealt Premier Matteo Renzi a stinging defeat on his reforms referendum, triggering his resignation announcement and galvanizing the populist, opposition 5-Star Movement’s determination to gain national power soon.

“I lost, and the post that gets eliminated is mine,” Renzi said early Monday about an hour after the polls closed. “The government’s experience is over, and in the afternoon I’ll go to the Quirinal Hill to hand in my resignation” to President Sergio Mattarella.

Besides the “anti-establishment” 5-Stars, the outcome energized another “anti” party, the anti-immigrant Northern League, an ally of French far-right leader Marine Le Pen, a candidate in France’s presidential race.

In voting No, Italians also delivered a rebuke to Italy’s industrialists, banks and other establishment institutions, which had staunchly backed the referendum. The anti-reform victory, which could spook investors, comes just as the government had made some inroads in cutting the staggering rate of youth employment and while Italy’s banks have urgent need for recapitalization.

During the campaign, the risk of political instability in Italy, Europe’s fourth-largest economy, triggered market reaction, with bank stocks sinking and borrowing costs on sovereign debt rising.

But some analysts predicted the political crisis sparked by Renzi’s exit would be short-lived, as politicians focus on lining up support for a new electoral law they view as boosting their parties’ chances for whenever elections are called.

Wolfango Piccoli, a London-based analyst and co-president at Teneo Intelligence, said the main risk of Renzi’s “devastating defeat” will lie in the medium term.

That could see “a prolonged muddle-through period, the emergence of an ineffective patched-up coalition government in the post-election phase and continuously poor economic performance,” Piccoli said in an emailed comment.

The 5-Star Movement, led by anti-euro comic Beppe Grillo, spearheaded the No camp on the constitutional reforms, a package aimed at updating Italy’s post-war Constitution that Renzi had depicted as vital to modernizing Italy and reviving its economy.

Characteristically confident — detractors say arrogant — Renzi, 41, and Italy’s youngest premier, had bet his political future — or at least his current premiership — on a Yes vote win, and campaigned hard for a victory in recent weeks to confound opinion polls indicating that it would likely go down to defeat.

With votes counted from nearly all the polling stations in Sunday’s referendum, the No’s were leading Yes votes by a 6-to-4 margin, Interior Ministry data indicated. The turnout of 67 percent was especially high for a referendum, and more in line for a vote for Parliament.

Renzi had been hoping to beat off the rising populist forces that have gained traction across Europe, as well as with the U.S. presidential victory last month by billionaire political outsider Donald Trump.

Earlier on Sunday, in Austria’s presidential runoff, left-leaning candidate Alexander Van der Bellen prevailed over a right-wing populist.

Leaders of the populist 5-Star Movement, which is led by Grillo, joined the chorus among opposition forces for early elections. The 5-Stars are the chief rivals of Renzi’s Democrats and are anxious to achieve national power for the first time.

“Today the caste in power lost,” said a 5-Star leader, Luigi Di Maio. It was a sharp retort to Renzi’s characterizing the reforms as an opportunity to shrink the “caste” of elite, perk-enjoying politicians by reducing the numbers and powers of Senators.

“Arrogance lost, from which we’ll learn many things in forming our team for government and our platform,” Di Maio said. “Starting tomorrow we’ll be working on a government of the 5-Stars, we’ll involve the energies and the free persons who want to participate.”

The 5-Stars’ constituency is largely internet based, and bills itself as anti-establishment.

“The man alone at the command doesn’t exist anymore, but the citizens who govern the institutions” do, Di Maio told a news conference minutes after Renzi conceded.

In Bologna, traditionally a left-leaning city, about 100 people rallied after the defeat to burn several Yes-vote flags and carried a banner saying “Renzi go home.”

Mattarella, as head of state, would have to decide whether to accept Renzi’s resignation.

Renzi is widely expected to be asked to stay on at least until a budget bill can be passed later this month. Then he or some other figure, perhaps from his Democrats, Parliament’s largest party, could be asked to lead a government focused electoral reform.

The current electoral law would grant the biggest vote-getting a generous bonus of seats in Parliament.

Renzi’s Democrats and the center-right opposition of former Premier Silvio Berlusconi want the law changed to avoid risking that the bonus would go to the 5-Stars should they lead the vote-getting.

Elections are due in spring 2018, but Renzi’s resignation could prompt their being moved up a year.

Another opposition leader, Matteo Salvini, of the anti-immigrant Northern League, hailed the referendum as a “victory of the people against the strong powers of three-quarters of the world.” He urged elections straightaway.

Many had read the referendum as an outlet for growing anti-establishment, populist sentiment in Europe.

When Renzi late last year promised to resign if the referendum was defeated, it was months before Britain’s David Cameron had made his ill-fated bet that a referendum would cement the U.K.’s membership in the European Union. Cameron was forced to resign when Britons instead voted to leave the EU fold.

In Italy, the referendum was required because the reforms were approved by less than two-thirds of Parliament. The reforms included steam-lining the Senate and giving the central government more powers at the cost of the regions.

“We didn’t exit from Europe, but we didn’t ‘exit,’ from the Constitution either,” said former Premier Massimo D’Alema.

A former Communist, D’Alema opposed fellow Democrat Renzi on the referendum issue, aggravating tensions within their bickering party.

Story: Frances D’Emilio

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Graffiti Guru Alex Face Goes Gallery For ‘Alive’

Photo: Alex Face / Bangkok CityCity Gallery / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Glimpse the iconic three-eyed creature in the animal costume and know it must be the work of Alex Face. The prolific street artist is back with work that won’t be found dripping from a concrete wall but in a gallery.

Alex’s work has found its way onto walls from Bangkok and Tokyo to London and Berlin. To celebrate the end of 2016, his signature character and other works will welcome audiences to “Alive,” his sixth exhibition.

More than 30 new impressionist works will be shown including paintings, drawings and a large scale sculpture. Don’t be fooled by the new collection’s seeming tranquil, it reflects the artist’s view that Thai society may not be as serene as it appears.

Alex Face is the alias of Patcharapon Tangrue, a 35-year-old artist well-known for his street art in Bangkok, most iconically the three-eyed character inspired by his newborn daughter. He has been invited to several international street art festivals.

The exhibition starts Dec. 21 and runs through Feb. 19 at Bangkok CityCity Gallery, which can be reached via MRT Lumphini exit No. 2.

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