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Overdose on Metal at Immortal Bar

BANGKOK — Let off some steam and sweat to some snarling and growling death metal next month at an underground bar in the Din Daeng area.

Two international death metal bands and a slew of local acts will gather at the quintessential heavy metal bar to release their demons for the one-night Krungthep Death Fest.

Highlights include Brazilian-Japanese death metal band Neuroticos, who have toured with Cannibal Corpse, Napalm Death and Suicide Silence. The second imported group is Taste, a brutal three-piece death squad from Sendai, Japan. Bangkok-based bands include Plahn, Carnivora, Brain Scrubber, Drag Killer and Divide Socotra.

Krungthep Death Fest starts at 7pm on Nov. 5 at Immortal Bar. Tickets are 390 baht and can be purchased via Facebook. The bar is on Din Daeng Road and Bun Chu Si Alley, walkable from BTS Victory Monument.

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Ignore Fake Prayuths on Social Media, Real Prayuth Urges

Twitter profile of fake Prayuth Chan-ocha account at left, the real deal at right.

BANGKOK — Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha reminded reporters Tuesday he has no presence on social media after someone tweeted unkind things about the Malaysian prime minister from a satirical account using his name.

Prayuth (the real one) urged the public to exercise judgment before believing anything attributed to him on the internet after @PrayutChanocha (the fake one) described Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak as a “1 billion dollar stealing piece of shit [sic].”

“As far as I know, there have been many cases of this,” Gen. Prayuth said at Government House. “And it’s the same in other countries … even in the United States’ presidential election, similar things have happened, too. Does it mean this is a copycat case? I’m not sure.”

Nope, it isn’t. Prayuth’s English-language Twitter impersonator preceded the U.S. election season by several months. “Prayut Chan-0-cha” has been lampooning the junta chairman daily since active since October 2015 with sarcastic political commentary.

The tweet that got Prayuth’s attention appeared to be from Saturday, when the spoof account retweeted a Thai PBS photo of Razak paying respects to His Majesty the Late King at the Grand Palace.

“Get the fuck out of my country you 1 billion dollar stealing piece of shit,” Prayuth Chan-0-cha wrote.

https://twitter.com/PrayutChanocha/status/789702205079027712

At Tuesday’s news conference, Prayuth said he would never resort to that kind of language because he’s actually a good friend of Razak.

“We are close friends,” the general said. “We are fellow leaders of nations.”

As of Wednesday, Prayut Chan-0-cha remained active, having tweeted in response to a photo of Gen. Prayuth with Hollywood actor Steven Seagal.

“Fuck yeah!” the tweet said.

https://twitter.com/PrayutChanocha/status/760876060808404992

https://twitter.com/PrayutChanocha/status/776650478016835584

https://twitter.com/PrayutChanocha/status/775196847425986560

 

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Rehabilitated Endangered Orangutans Freed in Borneo

Activists open a cage to release a rehabilitated orangutan back into the wild Oct. 19 at Kehje Sewen forest in East Kalimantan, Indonesia. Photo: Associated Press

KEHJE SEWEN FOREST, Indonesia — Jamur didn’t hesitate as the door of her temporary cramped quarters slid open. In less than a second, the stocky red-haired orangutan was savoring freedom for the first time in nearly two decades.

Her 10-year-old daughter J-lo would join her, along with three more of the endangered great apes.

The long-limbed hirsute primates were the ninth set of Bornean orangutans to be released into natural habitat by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation after years-long rehabilitation from trauma often inflicted by people.

Taken from their sanctuary, Samboja Lestari, to an even remoter spot on the island of Borneo, a journey by road, boat and foot that takes nearly 24 hours, the orangutans bolted from their holding boxes and scaled the nearest trees with astonishing speed and agility.

“Because we love them, we have to let them go, to be free in their habitat,” said Jamartin Sihite, chief executive of the foundation, after all five orangutans had climbed into the tropical forest canopy.

“They have a right to live in their natural state and not with people as pets.”

The release of the five last week marked the 25th anniversary of the foundation and was done in conjunction with government conservation officials. It is part of a herculean effort to prevent orangutans from being wiped out.

The species, known for its gentle temperament and intelligence, lives in the wild only on the Indonesian island of Sumatra and on the island of Borneo, which is divided among Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.

Bornean orangutans were this year declared critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature due to hunting for their meat, which kills 2,000 to 3,000 a year, and destruction of tropical forests for plantation agriculture. The only other orangutan species, the Sumatran orangutan, is found only on Sumatra and has been critically endangered since 2008.

The conservation group estimates the number of Bornean orangutans has dropped by nearly two-thirds since the early 1970s and will further decline to 47,000 animals by 2025. Some conservationists are even more pessimistic, predicting extinction in the wild within 10 years.

The species is protected in Indonesia and Malaysia but deforestation has dramatically shrunk its habitat, with about 40 percent of Borneo’s forests lost since the early 1970s and another huge swath of forest expected to be converted to plantation agriculture in the next decade.

The Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation, one of several groups focused on oranguatan conservation, has 60-year concession rights to about 86,000 hectares (212,000 acres) of forest in Borneo that it bought from the government in 2011 for 12.9 billion Indonesian rupiah ($1.5 million at the time), though it says only about 20 to 25 percent of it is suitable orangutan habitat.

“We looked for a place to release them that is very far away from people. We hope that very few people will come to this area in the next 10 or 15 years,” said Sihite.

“Nowadays there is only a few of that kind of area left  far away and really difficult to reach.”

The foundation has released 234 orangutans since 2012. It says 90 percent of those releases are successful.

It typically takes years to return an orangutan to the wild. Finding a suitable location is challenging, as is rehabilitating orangutans so they can survive when returned to natural habitat.

J-lo was born in captivity in 2006 and had to learn survival skills such as nest building, identifying predators and foraging.

Kent, also released last week, was an orphaned 2-year-old suffering from dehydration and severe diarrhea in 1999, when he was rescued from a field.

He spent several years in forest school and graduated to a halfway house, where the apes are less dependent on humans, in preparation for release into the wild, which happened in 2014. But injuries from fights with another male meant he needed another stint in Samboja Lestari.

“We don’t have a choice,” said Sihite. “We have to do this to save the orangutan.”

Story: Andi Jatmiko

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Tourism Minister Talks Up 5-Year Visas

Foreign
Numerous expats work at a cafe at the Thailand Creative & Design Center in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A long-discussed plan to offer five-year visas for foreigners was floated again Tuesday by the nation’s top tourism official.

Visas to facilitate those staying for extended periods would make Thailand more competitive with neighbors such as Malaysia, where 10-year visas are available, according to Minister Kobkarn Wattanavrangkul, who said the issue would be raised with the relevant immigration and security agencies.

“If Thailand had a clear strategy and marketing plan, I believe we could attract long-stayers as much as Malaysia does,” she said.

Visas such as those offered in Malaysia are not valid for employment but hold appeal for retirees and students.

Kobkarn also singled out complaints about delays at the Chiang Mai immigration office, saying it needed to increase staff because it takes more than six times longer for expats to extend their visas there compared to offices in other provinces.

As the northern province is home to about 12,000 long-stay foreigners and a destination the government wants to promote as a medical hub, Kobkarn said her ministry would push the Immigration Bureau to loosen measures, such as dropping 90-day check-ins in favor of an annual system.

The population of long-staying residents is expected to grow 5 percent to 10 percent annually, she said.

Various efforts and calls for long-term visas have been brought up many times but none has yet been pushed toward implementation.

In March, an umbrella organization of trade groups called on the military government to issue a new type of five-year visa to attract highly skilled professionals. No progress was ever reported.

 

Related stories:

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Pattaya Cop Remains Free Week After Alleged Rape

Pattaya’s Walking Street red-light district in an undated file photo.

PATTAYA — Wednesday marked the seventh day to pass since a policeman allegedly ordered his subordinates to kidnap, extort and rape a bar worker in Pattaya without being arrested.

Although an arrest warrant was issued for Sgt. Maj. Kittikhun Fonrueng four days ago for the alleged Oct. 19 assault, police have not arrested the sergeant major because he needed time to raise money for a bail bond, the chief investigator of Pattaya City police said.

Read: Tourist Safety Pattaya’s No. 1 Priority, New Police Chief Says

“He was looking for assets for his bond, because he had a warrant on him, after he surrenders himself he would need to post a bond,” Col. Chatchapol Pattarasiriporn said by telephone Wednesday.

Kittikhun previously told his fellow police officers that he would turn himself in Tuesday but failed to appear, postponing his surrender to Wednesday, Chatchapol said, adding that he’s optimistic that the fugitive policeman would surrender by the day’s end.

Kittikhun would not be charged for defying the warrant, Chatchapol said.

Kittikhun and two police volunteers stand accused of kidnapping a bar worker in Pattaya on Oct. 19 in a hotel room and demanding she pay 20,000 baht in ransom money. According to the victim, she told the men she had no money at which point Kittikhun’s underlings sexually assaulted her and released her from detention a day later.

Upon her release, the woman reported the assault to a junta complaint center in Pattaya before filing a criminal complaint to the police Friday, Chatchapol said. Arrest warrants for the suspects were issued Saturday.

It’s acceptable for Kittikhun to keep “postponing” his surrender as long as it doesn’t exceed 15 days, the maximum time he can miss work as a policeman, Col. Chatchapol said.

“If it’s over 15 days and he didn’t show up, it would be like committing suicide,” Chatchapol said. “Even if he doesn’t get fired over the case, he would get fired because of the disciplinary issue.”

Only one of Kittikhun’s accomplices has been identified by name: Pana Mekkhla, 26. Police have yet to learn the other’s identity, Chatchapol said.

He added that police are still looking for Pana and the third suspect.

Asked whether Kittikhun would be granted bail, the colonel said police would base their decision on his testimony.

Correction: Due to a reporting error, an earlier version of this story mistakenly said Sgt. Maj. Kittikhun Fonrueng was accused of sexually assaulting a woman in Pattaya. In fact, Kitthikun was accused of kidnapping and extorting her.

Related stories:

Pattaya Cops Accused of Kidnapping, Raping Masseuse Freed on Bail

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Free Food Curfew as Trash Floods Sanam Luang

Mourners receive free food Tuesday at Sanam Luang in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A curfew on free food giveaways at the Sanam Luang begins at 8pm tonight in response to the enormous volume of trash being generated by the tens of thousands of mourners encamped there.

Measures to reduce the amount of garbage being generated and improve health and safety are being put in place before the Grand Palace opens Saturday for the public to enter and pay their respects to King Bhumibol, who died Oct. 13.

“Sanam Luang receives 40,000 to 80,000 visitors per day,” Treedao Apaiyawong of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration said Wednesday. “After Saturday, we will be ready to receive this number and more for the coming year-long period of mourning.”

The mourners which have converged on the field outside the palace have produced an average of 66 tons of trash per day, a weight equivalent to 22 Asian elephants. The garbage output peaked Sunday at 594 tons.

Because most of the trash is food waste, and there has been a great surplus of food brought in, officials have banned the distribution of free food after 8pm so that cleanup efforts can begin at that time. Water can still be provided.

Plastic bottles and bags account for much of balance of the daily rubbish, with styrofoam containers making up about five tons.

Newly appointed Bangkok Gov. Aswin Kwanmueng urged people giving out food to use paper or biodegradable containers instead of styrofoam. He said mourners can bring their own containers or bottles from home as well.

More than 2,300 of nearly 7,000 volunteers at the scene have been tasked solely with sorting trash for recyclables at the scene.

Concerns about the waste situation accompanied a number of new measures to increase cleanliness and order.

Officials on Tuesday also banned street vendors from selling goods in the area, as some products were deemed inappropriate. Security cameras and officers have also been put in place to monitor and prosecute violators.

Motorcyclists offering free rides have also been asked to register. People with children are encouraged to put their contact information on their child’s body in case they become separated.

Those needing assistance should look for balloons marking tents set up by City Hall.

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Alleged Bali Bombing Leader to Stay at Guantanamo

Mugshot from 2003 of Southeast Asian terror mastermind Hambali. Photo: Associated Press

MIAMI — A U.S. government review board has rejected the release of the alleged Southeastern Asian terrorist leader known as Hambali from the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The Periodic Review Board said in a short statement released Tuesday that Hambali continues to be a “significant threat to the security of the United States.” It came to the same conclusion in a separate decision on a prisoner from Somalia, Guleed Hassan Ahmed.

Hambali, whose real name is Encep Nurjaman, appeared before the board in August by video link seeking his release after being held 10 years at the base without charge. The Pentagon described him in a profile released ahead of the hearing as a leader of a Southeast Asia-based extremist group known as Jemaah Islamiyah. The group is blamed for a string of bombings in Indonesia, including the 2002 bombings in Bali that killed 202 people. Hambali also is alleged to have had links to al-Qaida.

The board, which was created by the Obama administration to help it winnow down the prison population at Guantanamo as part of a broader effort to close the detention center, cited Hambali’s “significant role in major terrorist attacks,” as well as a failure to show remorse as factors in its decision.

The Somali prisoner was described as a “key member of al-Qaida’s East Africa network” in a profile released before he appeared before the board in August. The New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights, which represents him, called the hearing unfair and said it relied on information obtained through torture by the CIA.

“He should not have been brought to Guantanamo 10 years ago, and his continued detention only serves as another opportunity for the Obama administration to avoid accountability for what happened in the CIA torture program,” the center said in a statement.

The board said in its decision that it rejected his release, in part, because of his “lack of specificity and credibility” in response to questions but said they would reconsider his case in six months.

There are 60 prisoners left at Guantanamo, including 20 cleared for release.

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US, Vietnam Committed to Rule of Law in South China Sea

Vietnamese Executive Secretary Dinh The Huyn with Secretary of State John Kerry, speaks Tuesday to reporters in the Treaty Room at the State Department in Washington. Photo: Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State John Kerry says the U.S. and Vietnam share a commitment to rule of law in the disputed South China Sea.

Kerry was speaking ahead of talks Tuesday with a top figure in Vietnam’s ruling communist party, Executive Secretary Dinh The Huynh (din tay hwin).

Vietnam is among governments claiming territory in the South China Sea, where China’s assertive behavior and land reclamation has stirred tension.

The meeting comes five months after President Barack Obama visited Vietnam and lifted restrictions on arms sales to the former U.S. enemy. It also takes place as longstanding U.S. ally in Southeast Asia, the Philippines, is strengthening its ties with China.

Kerry said he and Huynh will also discuss human rights — still a sore point in U.S.-Vietnam relations.

Story: Matthew Pennington

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Prince Harry ‘Grateful’ for Chance to Return to Caribbean

Prince Harry seen here in 2015 during his trip to New South Wales, Australia. Photo: Eva Rinaldi / Flickr

LONDON — Prince Harry will return next month to Barbados, where he previously charmed locals with his dance moves.

On his last official visit to the island, in 2010, the prince was keen to embrace local culture and attempted the Calypso at a fund-raising event.

His Caribbean island tour, where he will be representing his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, will include visits to Antigua and Barbuda and St Lucia.

Kensington Palace said Tuesday that Harry is grateful for the chance to visit nations which have “extended such warmth” to his family over the years.

The palace also said that Prince William will make an official visit to Vietnam next month. A strong supporter of conservation charities, William is to attend a conference on the illegal wildlife trade.

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As Sales Fall, Apple Pins 2017 Hopes on iPhone 7

Apple CEO Tim Cook announces the new iPhone 7 during an event to announce new products on Sept. 7 in San Francisco. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — After stumbling in 2016, Apple is betting on a better year ahead.

The Silicon Valley tech giant is forecasting a return to growth in iPhone sales this winter, after a rare slump that dropped a wet blanket on Apple’s revenue and stock performance over the last three quarters.

The company is also set to unveil new Mac computers later this week, hoping to boost lagging interest in a set of products that are symbolically significant even if they’re less financially important to the company than the iPhone.

Read: iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, Apple Watch 2 Go On Sale Today

Apple has been struggling with shrinking demand for its signature products at a time when analysts say it’s increasingly difficult for tech companies to come up with dramatically new features. Many consumers are holding onto their old smartphones and PCs for longer, seeing little reason to buy a new model that’s only slightly better.

One consequence: Apple sold 45.5 million iPhones in the quarter that ended in September. That was slightly more than the 45 million that Wall Street expected, but still 5 percent fewer than the 48 million iPhones it sold in the same period a year earlier.

Renewed Interest in iPhones

Still, analysts say consumers are showing renewed interest in Apple’s latest iPhone models. Based on early sales, AppleChief Financial Officer Luca Maestri told The Associated Press, “We feel very good about the momentum of the 7 and 7 Plus.”

The 7 and 7 Plus models aren’t a radical change from the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, which were wildly popular when they were introduced two years ago. But analyst Patrick Moorhead said the new phones have enough improvements, including new camera systems, longer battery life and water resistance, to fare better than last year’s lackluster 6S and 6S Plus.

Apple could also benefit because many iPhone 6 owners may be ready to replace their two-year-old phones.

The company only started selling the new iPhone 7 models last month, which means it had less than two weeks of sales in the quarter. But Apple’s revenue forecast calls for sales of USD$76 billion to $78 billion in the December quarter. That’s higher than the Wall Street estimate, which was just under $75 billion.

Apple’s forecast also represents a modest increase over the $75.8 billion in sales that Apple reported for the December quarter last year, and it suggests the company expects to beat last year’s record of 74.8 million iPhones sold in that period, which is traditionally Apple’s biggest quarter for sales.

Maestri wouldn’t comment on how many iPhones Apple expects to sell in December quarter, but Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster estimated the company’s revenue forecast suggests it will sell 78.5 million iPhones.

But Still iPhone-Dependent

Apple shares closed Tuesday at $118.25, but fell two percent in late trading. The stock had been gaining in recent weeks after wallowing below $100 for much of the spring and summer.

Reporting on its fiscal fourth quarter, which ended Sept. 24, Apple said revenue declined 9 percent to $46.8 billion, while profit fell 19 percent to $9 billion profit. Earnings amounted to $1.67 a share, compared with Wall Street estimates of $1.66 a share on revenue of $47 billion.

Apple ended its fiscal year with annual sales of $215.6 billion and profit of $45.7 billion. Most companies would be thrilled with those numbers. But some analysts warn Apple relies too heavily on a single product line, the iPhone, which contributed nearly two thirds of Apple’s revenue.

“Management hasn’t diversified the revenue stream,” said BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis, who noted that Apple faces a host of competitors in a global smartphone market that’s seeing slower growth overall. “Counting phones is a horrible way to live and die every quarter.”

Samsung’s Bad News is Good News

Some of Apple’s growth in coming months may come at the expense of its biggest rival. South Korea’s Samsung was forced this month to recall its entire output of Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, which it introduced this fall to compete with Apple’s newest iPhones. As consumers look for alternatives, analysts say that could boost iPhone unit sales by 5 million or more in the coming year.

Apple had its own setbacks this year, though on a lesser scale. While notoriously tight-lipped about future plans, Apple is widely believed to be working on new products in areas like virtual reality and self-driving cars. But the company recently shifted gears on its automotive ambitions, deciding to focus on creating technology for autonomous vehicles, rather than take on the more daunting task of building an entirely new car. According to news reports, the shift led Apple to cut jobs and trim its auto division.

Other Hits Still Elusive

Another new product, the Apple Watch, has drawn lukewarm consumer interest since it launched in 2015. Apple doesn’t break out watch sales figures, but market researchers at IDC estimate the company shipped 1.1 million units in the last quarter. While that’s still more than any other smartwatch maker, it’s down significantly from IDC’s estimate that Appleshipped 3.9 million watches a year earlier.

Revenue in Apple’s “Other Products” category, which includes the Apple Watch and the iPod music player, fell 22 percent to $2.4 billion in the July-September quarter. Apple recently updated the watch and Maestri said he expects strong sales in coming months.

Apple’s also hoping to reverse a yearlong decline in sales of its Mac computers – its original product line – by unveiling updated Macbook and desktop iMacs later this week. Apple sold 4.9 million Macs in the three months ending Sept. 24, down 14 percent from a year earlier.

As in other recent quarters, Apple continued to show strength in its “Services” business, which includes iTunes, the App Store, Apple Pay and other digital services. Apple said revenue in that category rose 24 percent to $6.3 billion in the quarter.

Story: Brandon Bailey

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