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Nepal Storyteller Uses Photos and Few Lines to Reveal Lives

Nepalese photographer Jay Poudyal checks photos he took after chatting up different people Oct. 17 in Lalitpur, Nepal. Photo: Niranjan Shrestha / Associated Press

KATHMANDU, Nepal — It started with a photograph of a smirking, young man wearing a heavy-metal band T-shirt and selling tea on the streets of Kathmandu. It has become a wildly popular blog chronicling street life in the Himalayan nation of Nepal.

Inspired by the similar project “Humans of New York ,” Nepalese photographer Jay Poudyal has posted biographies and photographs for more than 800 Nepalis including villagers, bureaucrats, schoolchildren, housewives and students since launching his blog three years ago.

Stories of Nepal ,” with 270,000 followers and growing, has become a mission for the 37-year-old college dropout: to highlight the heroism of Nepal’s common men and women as they struggle against widespread poverty, natural disasters and a government widely seen as corrupt.

“I was searching for purpose of life,” Poudyal said in an interview with The Associated Press, admitting to past struggles with alcohol and drug abuse. “When I started doing this, it was like a calling for me.”

Each morning, Poudyal takes to the streets of his native Kathmandu to chat with people, share jokes or heart-wrenching memories, and snap their photos. Occasionally, he’ll drive his motorcycle to a nearby village, or take a bus to a community farther out along Nepal’s mountain roads.

The blog has led to some freelance photography work, which he said gives him enough income to get by and still focus on the blog.

“I really love the freedom,” he said. “When you plan something, you are limiting the possibilities. But when you are just walking, when you are keeping yourself very open, there is so much that comes in which you are not expecting.”

Poudyal tries to make more than half of his stories about women. That’s in line with his goal of giving a voice to the most marginalized in Nepal, a mostly patriarchal society best known as the home of Mount Everest.

For one story, posted last week, Poudyal photographed a man he came upon sitting alone in a crowded Kathmandu square surrounded by old palaces and temples. They spoke for an hour, with the photographer recording the man’s tale of how he missed his wife, who had died three years earlier and left him to raise their four children.

Later, Poudyal met truck driver in a narrow stone-paved alley, and heard about how he had just been shopping for new clothes for his family. The man, smiling wide and holding up a bag of rice he had purchased, said he was heading home with the gifts before a Hindu festival celebration.

“When I am listening to the stories, I go into that emotional space, and the struggle, the pain, suffering or the happiness, hopes and aspirations, it sort of also becomes mine,” Poudyal said. “Sometimes I am laughing with the person who is telling me a story, sometimes we are both crying.”

But hearing so many stories of woe sometimes takes its toll, even in a country that has endured a bloody communist insurgency, a massacre inside the royal palace, the abolition of a centuries-old monarchy, and most recently, a devastating set of earthquakes that killed thousands in 2015.

“I don’t think I have leant the art of detachment yet,” Poudyal said. “At times I don’t want to go out of the house, and I just want to draw the curtains and just do nothing.”

Then he watches the news and sees how it subverts individual people into the generalized narrative, and feels compelled to go out again and tell their stories.

“I feel like it is my responsibility to somehow bring out these stories of these individuals that failed to reach mainstream media,” he said.

The son of a jewelry trader, Poudyal and his two brothers and two sisters grew up in a middle-class neighborhood of Kathmandu. His struggles with alcohol began when he was a teenager. He later spent four years attending a college inThailand before dropping out without a degree.

He went to Australia, searching for something to do, but instead reached a low point in drug and alcohol abuse and depression. He recalled begging in the streets of Melbourne for money to buy cheap wine.

He returned to Nepal in 2009, got a job as a graphic artist for an advertising agency and got married to his girlfriend of many years. But his depression only got worse.

“I drove in my scooter and I wanted to jump off a cliff and end it all, but something stopped me,” he said. Instead, he rode home crying and told his wife he needed help, leading him to spend three months in drug rehabilitation at a clinic in the Nepalese capital.

A few months after finishing rehab, he started “Stories of Nepal” in October 2013.

As its popularity grew, he also used the blog to raise funds for some he had photographed. He managed to raise USD $14,000 to help the eastern village of Ghumthang recover from the 2015 earthquake by buying food and medicine, building temporary shelters and a primary school. A year later, he raised about USD $700 in two hours for a girl’s mother who lost the family’s savings when the quake started a fire that destroyed everything inside her stone hut.

The project has brought him praise from around the world. One 73-year-old follower named Doug Hall, from Chichester, New Hampshire, said Poudyal’s work gave outsiders a sense “of life in the early 21st century in Nepal.”

“One is better able to understand the pain of women left behind when their husbands emigrate for jobs, of the pride in small accomplishments, of the emotional toll of caste discrimination, of the beauty of childhood friendships,” Hall said in an email to the AP.

Another follower, airline pilot Pratistha Karki from Kathmandu, said the blog was inspiring.

“When the only people to have media space are celebrities and politicians … ‘Stories of Nepal’ has let an everyday Nepali participate in the major Nepali discourse,” Karki said.

Story: Binaj Gurubacharya

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The Overstay Raided, 11 Foreigners Arrested

The Overstay in a 2011 photo. Photo: The Overstay / Facebook

BANGKOK — The proprietor of an underground nightlife venue was hoping to be released on bail Saturday, one day after he and 10 other foreign nationals were arrested in an early morning raid by police and military.

A combined force of officers arrived at dawn on Friday morning to conduct a search of The Overstay on Charan Sanitwong Road in Bangkok’s Bang Phlat and drug test those found within.

“So yeah 200 cops with swat teams, dogs and a TV channel came to wake me up yesterday at 6am,” Yuval Schwok wrote Saturday morning in a public Facebook post. “The result is quite sad they found 20 grams of herbs under my cupboard and try to put me down for dealing … I’m about to go to court to be released on bail.”

Drug tests were conducted on 25 unidentified foreigners found in the six-story venue, which also operates as a guest house. Police said six had traces of marijuana in their systems, one refused to be tested, and one was arrested on suspicion of possessing weed.

The Overstay has long been in the mix of Bangkok’s underground, after-hours entertainment options. Part art space and music hall, it’s got a hippie vibe and has played host to music festivals, performance art and parties which once ran till dawn.

Like other venues serving after-hours crowds, it has been forced to rein in its festivities due to aggressive enforcement of closing times since the 2014 coup.

Police said they found a quantity of weed in the Friday morning raid of The Overstay in Bangkok.
Police said they found a quantity of weed in the Friday morning raid of The Overstay in Bangkok.

Related stories:

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Foreigners Arrested in Raid on Nana ‘Ethiopian Restaurant’

All Six Floors of Overstay to Burst With Rock & Art on Saturday

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Teacher Shot Dead at Pattani School

A captured image from the security camera footage shows the moment when two men on motorcycle open fire on the two teachers Friday in Pattani province.

PATTANI — A teacher was shot dead Friday in the southern border province Pattani, two days after a government peace delegation pleaded for a year-long cessation of violence.

A security camera recorded the moment Friday morning when two men on a motorcycle opened fire on 49-year-old Sunisa Boonyen and a colleague in front of the continuation school where they taught. The men escaped; Sunisa died.

Her colleague Chataporn Sriseng remains in critical condition. The two women were said to be on their way to dye clothing black for the national mourning period.

A leaflet was left behind by the gunmen, according to police Lt. Col Noppasit Temongla, though he denied knowing what it said.

“It was collected by forensic police,” he said.

According to reporters at the scene it said, “For you bastards who kill Melayu,” in reference to the ancient kingdom later annexed by Bangkok over 100 years ago.

Noppasit, the officer in charge of the case, dismissed reports police had already identified the gunmen and the motorcycle used in the crime.

The shooting comes four days after a bomb exploded in a Pattani city night market, killing a 60-year-old woman and injuring 21 people.

The head of the military government’s delegation tasked with negotiating peace with separatist umbrella group Mara Patani said he had asked Wednesday that they to put all incidents on hold for a year as the nation was in mourning.

Gen. Aksara Kerdphol said the group offered condolences for King Bhumibol and insisted peace talks were making progress with discussions now focused on establishment of a safe zone.

Thai teachers have been targeted for assassination by separatists over the years, in part because they are perceived as agents of Bangkok rule. Nearly 200 have been killed since the conflict first surged in 2004, according to Human Rights Watch. Three were killed in 2015, according to the Deep South Watch.

 

Related stories:

Crude Cluster Bomb Kills 1 in Night Market, Injures Dozens

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‘Photo Festival’ Blows Up Gallery Expectations With Lights, Action, Fish

Photo: Rapat Bunduwanich / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Forget shuffling between white walls looking at framed pictures. This photo exhibition is different.

Artist Rapat Bunduwanich said he was frustrated by how many artists have to lick curators’ boots to succeed in getting shown. So he decided to do something different and defy the cozy art world’s expectations at an alternative art space near Chinatown.

Visual illusions, a pool of fish and interactive light installations involving LEDs, spotlights and neon eschew gallery convention at Flash Forward: Rapat’s Photo Festival.

“I feel my heart was broken by the art circles these days. So I want my audiences to feel the same from my exhibition, but in a positive way,” Rapat said.

Flash Forward runs now through the end of November at NACC, a new art space in the burgeoning Soi Nana 17 off  Charoen Krung Road.

Rapat’s previous projects include Peep in Me, for which he and a partner livestreamed performances in front of CCTV cameras at several locations in Bangkok to viewers at Speedy Grandma.

Photo: NACC / Facebook
Photo: NACC / Facebook

Related stories:

Peepshow: See Bangkok Under Surveillance at Livestreamed CCTV Performance

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Easy Pass, M-Pass: It’s All the Same Nov 1

BANGKOK — Easy Pass, M-Pass, which one do you have? It won’t matter soon, as motorists will be able to use either on both expressways and motorways as soon as November begins.

After the joint system was promised over a year ago, the Highways Department and Expressway Authority have managed to make it work. Starting Nov. 1, both Easy Pass and M-Pass accounts will be linked and usable on either highway system.

To make the change, both Easy Pass and M-Pass toll booth entrances will be closed from 10pm to midnight on Monday. As soon as the clock ticks 12:01am on Tuesday, motorists will have the green light to go wild.

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Duckworth’s Thai Heritage Attacked by U.S. Senate Opponent

U.S. Representative Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., appears at a brunch in Springfield, Illinois. Duckworth is now a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate in the November 2016 general election. Photo: Seth Perlman / Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD, Illinois — A Bangkok-born candidate for the U.S. Senate and American war hero was attacked for her Thai heritage during a televised debate Thursday night in Springfield, Illinois.

As Tammy Duckworth spoke about her family’s long history of serving the U.S. military stretching back to the nation’s founding during a debate at the University of Illinois, her opponent fired back with a comment painting her as a foreigner.

“I had forgotten that your parents came all the way from Thailand to serve George Washington,” said GOP candidate Mark Kirk, a congressman elected to the upper house in 2010.

Read: Bangkok-Born U.S. Senate Candidate’s ‘War Hero’ Record Attacked

Kirk’s one sentence response came after Duckworth, who lost both legs when the Black Hawk she was co-piloting was shot down in Iraq, laid out her family’s history of service during the 90-minute debate.

“My family has served this nation in uniform going back to the Revolution. I am a daughter of the American Revolution,” she said. “I’ve bled for this nation.”

Born in Bangkok, the congresswoman is the daughter of an American father and Thai mother of Chinese descent.

She is an important part of the U.S. Democratic Party’s bid to reclaim control of the Senate in the Nov. 8 election. Most polls overwhelmingly favor her to defeat Kirk.

Related stories:

Bangkok-Born U.S. Senate Candidate’s ‘War Hero’ Record Attacked

Half-Thai Congresswoman Cautions Against Syria Intervention

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Songtaew Driver Hunts Down Farang Who Stole His Wallet

Englishman Bates Aaron Walter, 27, is believed to be the thief caught on tape stealing a songtaew driver’s wallet Saturday on Phuket.

PHUKET — When Tawatchai Namwong discovered his wallet was missing from his songtaew recently on Phuket, he took matters into his own hands.

Now, six days later, an Englishman is behind bars after Tawatchai’s amateur sleuthing put together what happened and led him to the suspected thief. More importantly, he has his wallet back, though he admits it was more about seeking justice than recovering property.

“I can’t believe someone was this evil,” Tawatchai said, declining to say how much – or little – was in the wallet. “It may not be a lot of money to some people, but it’s a lot to me.”

It all began Saturday morning when the driver stopped at a Family Mart near Karon beach to buy some water for his shift. When he realized his wallet was missing, Tawatchai drove back to the convenience store to see the security footage. The manager was out, so he had to wait until Tuesday.

Sure enough, in the footage, he saw a foreign man in a gray hoodie and yellow trucker hat drive up to his truck, get out, grab his wallet and take off.

With that the 45-year-old driver went around checking other CCTVs in the area until he found what he was looking for: the license plate number of the Honda Jazz seen in the Family Mart tape.

Footage allegedly shows Bates Walter driving up to Tawatchai’s vehicle on Saturday in order to rob him.
Footage allegedly shows Bates Walter driving up to Tawatchai’s vehicle on Saturday in order to rob him.

It was a rental. Tawatchai handed over the evidence to the police, but he wasn’t done. He continued his investigation by visiting the rental shop, where he was told a foreigner had rented the vehicle but already returned it Sunday.

The shop didn’t have his identification – only the name of a hotel. But there was none with that name.

Instead of giving up, Tawatchai visited other hotels in the area until, sure enough, by Wednesday he turned up one Bates Aaron Walter, a 27-year-old Englishman.

With that, he went public. Tawatchai posted the CCTV footage of his truck being robbed and asked for help. It wasn’t long until someone called and told him Walter had rented another car due back in Patong that night.

It was time to call in the police. Officers called the rental shop and asked them to stall Walter and keep him in the establishment. They soon arrived and took Walter into custody.

The hero of the tale, Tawatchai Namwong, in a photo from his Facebook page.
The hero of the tale, Tawatchai Namwong, in a photo from his Facebook page.

Still, Tawatchai was not done. He wanted the suspect to know who had got him – and why.

“I opened the CCTV video on my phone and showed it to him in the backseat, using the rearview mirror,” said Tawatchai, who was riding in the police vehicle with Walter. “I wanted him to see what he had done.”

Police now believe Walter was responsible for a string of similar robberies. He has denied any wrongdoing.

The first rental place soon gave a positive ID that he was the same person who rented the Honda Jazz used in the crime. Police also found Tawatchai’s identification card, driver’s license, motorcycle license and public health care card in his possession.

“I went back to the police station after he confessed, and saw those four cards lying there,” Tawatchai said. “My money and wallet were gone, however.”

Tawatchai is planning to sue Walter for further damages.

“I couldn’t work for four days, I couldn’t drive my [songtaew] for customers,” he said. “I live hand-to-mouth, and the economy is quite bad too.”

Walter regularly visits Thailand and lives in Patong with his boyfriend, Col. Sanya Tongsawat said. A search of their house also turned up an ATM card that didn’t belonging to them, Sanya said, leading them to believe Walter may be guilty of multiple felonies in both the Patong and Karon areas.

For now, Walters has been charged with vehicle-assisted robbery and is being held in the Karon jail.

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North Korea Nuke Threat Awaits Next US President

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves at parade participants in 2016 at the Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

WASHINGTON €” If North Korea has been a foreign policy headache for Barack Obama’s presidency, it threatens to be a migraine for his successor. The next president will likely contend with an adversary able to strike the continental U.S. with a nuclear weapon.

Whoever wins the White House in the Nov. 8 election is expected to conduct a review of North Korea policy. It’s too early to predict what that portends, but the North will grab more attention of the next president than it did for Obama, who adopted strategic patience: ramping up sanctions in a so-far fruitless effort to force the North to negotiate on denuclearization.

With surprising candor this week, National Intelligence director James Clapper said that persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons is probably a “lost cause.” That appeared to challenge to a key tenet of U.S. policy shared by U.S. allies and adversaries alike that agree on the goal of the denuclearization of the divided Korean Peninsula, however distant it may be.

But Clapper was also channeling what many experts are thinking. Leader Kim Jong Un appears to see nuclear weapons as a guarantee of his own survival. Six-nation aid-for-disarmament talks have not convened since Obama took office in 2009, during which time the North’s capabilities have leapt ahead.

“Without a shift in U.S. strategy toward North Korea, the next U.S. president will likely be sitting in the Oval Office when the regime finally acquires the ability to strike the continental United States with a nuclear weapon,” said a recent Council on Foreign Relations report.

Speaking at the council in New York on Tuesday, Clapper said that North Korea has yet to test its KN-08 intercontinental ballistic missile, so it is unclear if it works, but the U.S. operates on the “worst-case” assumption that Pyongyang is potentially capable of launching a missile with a weapon on it that could reach Alaska and Hawaii.

Experts have estimated the missile, which can be moved by road, making it harder to target in a pre-emptive strike, could be operational by around 2020.

With five nuclear tests now under its belt, the North may already be able to miniaturize a warhead for use on a short-range missile, if not on an intercontinental missile. It has also launched two rockets into space, and has begun testing submarine-launched missiles. U.S. experts estimate that it now has 13 to 21 nuclear weapons, and could have as many as 100 by 2020 €” approaching what India likely has today.

Clapper said the best hope for the U.S. is probably to negotiate a cap on the North’s nuclear capabilities. But that implies recognition of North Korea as a nuclear weapons state, which the U.S. has said it will not do.

“The dilemma for policymakers in dealing with North Korea is that if one accepts that the door to negotiation of denuclearization with North Korea is closed, the alternative set of options involves either acquiescence to a nuclear North Korea on the one hand or pressure leading to regime change on the other,” said Scott Snyder, senior fellow for Korea studies at the council.

Of the U.S. presidential candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton wants the international community to intensify sanctions as the Obama administration did with Iran, which eventually opened the way for a deal to contain its nuclear program.

Divining what Republican Donald Trump might do is tricky. He wants the U.S. to leverage its trade ties to get China to rein in its unpredictable ally. But he’s also said he’d be ready to meet Kim, and suggested detaching the U.S. from the problem by allowing its allies Japan and South Korea to get nuclear weapons.

U.S. experts who held unofficial talks with North Korean officials in Malaysia last week maintain that negotiations on denuclearization are still possible.

“I think the best course would be to test the proposition by some serious engagement in which we see whether their (North Korea’s) legitimate security concerns can be met,” said Robert Gallucci, who negotiated a 1994 disarmament agreement that curbed North Korea’s nuclear program for nearly 10 years.

He added that the concerns of neighboring South Korea and Japan € they face the most immediate threat from Pyongyang — would also have to be met.

“We don’t know for sure that negotiations will work, but what I can say with some confidence is that pressure without negotiations won’t work, which is the track we are on right now,” said another participant, Leon Sigal from the New York-based Social Science Research Council.

But there is a deep, bipartisan skepticism in Washington about talks with Pyongyang, which has recanted on past accords and says it will never give up its nuclear weapons. It claims it needs nukes to deter an invasion by the U.S., which has 28,500 troops in South Korea.

Still, North Korea has not entirely closed the door to talks.

A July government statement suggested it remained open to discussions on denuclearization of the peninsula. The U.S., however, slapped sanctions on Kim the same day for human rights abuses. The North said that was tantamount to declaring war.

Story: Matthew Pennington

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Of E-Gamers and Armageddon: 7 French Docs Keep November Real

BANGKOK — Clicking is a sport and Moon a star in a French director’s exploration of his online e-sports life in “Game Fever,” one of many interesting docs showing throughout next month.

November is Documentary Film Month, and in Bangkok that means seven selected French docs highlighting cultural themes and new cinematic perspectives will screen starting Wednesday at the Alliance Francaise.

Fresh from the success of his documentary on French electro duo Daft Punk, director Herve Martin-Delpierre tackled another corner of pop culture: gaming. This time, he went to Korea to follow gaming legend Moon, who recently retired from competition to mentor a rising Chinese star. “Game Fever” reflects the online culture revolution where a new generation pursues its dreams.

Six other films will screen as well.

Fresh young immigrant arrive in Paris in 2013’s “School of Babel,” a troubled teenager is confined to a remote area in Senegal in “Death of the Serpent God” (2014). In “Once Upon a Forest,” Oscar-winning director Luc Jacquet brings the same perspective of “March of the Penguins” into the rainforest. Come out of the woods and dive into 2009’s “Oceans” before exploring a Bolivian mine in “The Magic Mountain.”

The final film is 2015’s “Tomorrow,” which takes a philosophical look at human lives in the shadow of climate change.

A special engagement for children features an animated story of a Korean boy’s adoption by a Belgian family in “Couleur de Peau: Miel” at 2pm on Nov. 12.

Regular tickets are 100 baht, while students and members pay 50 baht. Admission is free to the closing film “Tomorrow” on Nov. 30, which will be followed by a discussion panel with director Cyril Dion.

Go on Wednesdays to see the films with English subtitles and Fridays to see them subtitled in Thai.

The films will show at 7pm on Wednesdays and Fridays in the auditorium of Alliance Francaise Bangkok. Find the full schedule online.

Alliance Francaise Bangkok is located on Wireless Road just a few minutes walk from exit No. 3 of MRT Lumphini.

 

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Bill Murray or Tom Hanks (?) Photo is New Blue-Gold Dress

Where in the Murray-Hanks continuum does hits photo fall? Photo: Reasons My Son in Crying / Facebook

A photo of a man with a crying toddler is making the rounds online as people debate whether it depicts Bill Murray or Tom Hanks.

The photo was shared by the Facebook group “Reasons My Son Is Crying” three years ago. It identified the man standing with a crying toddler as Bill Murray at the famed St. Andrews golf links in Scotland. Immediately, some Facebook users commented that the person who shared the photo must have been mistaken because it was clearly Hanks.

The BBC reports that it contacted the mother of the boy in the picture and confirmed that it was indeed Murray. She also shared a copy of the photo she later had signed by Murray.

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