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Military Chopper With 3 On Board Goes Missing in Vietnam

An image from last May shows a Eurocopter EC 130 helicopter, similar to the one that crashed missing Tuesday in Vietnam, overflying Sussex, England. Photo: MercerMJ / Flickr

HANOI, Vietnam — A Vietnamese official and state media say a military helicopter with three people on board went missing during a training flight Tuesday, in the latest such incident involving military aircraft.

Online newspaper Dan Tri said the Eurocopter EC 130, a light training helicopter produced by Airbus Helicopters, lost contact 15 minutes into a flight and was believed to have crashed into a mountain 80 kilometers (50 miles) east of the southern commercial hub of Ho Chi Minh City.

It says a pilot and two trainees were on the helicopter.

A provincial border guard says smoke was spotted at the suspected crash site, but rescuers have not been able to reach the spot.

Three crashes involving military planes that killed 11 people have been reported over past two months.

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Chonburi Man Beaten by Mob Over Royal Defamation

Jirawat Pathumthong is kicked to the ground before a portrait of His Majesty the Late King on Tuesday in Chonburi province.

CHONBURI — A man was hauled out of his bedroom by a mob Tuesday, beaten and forced to apologize to a portrait of His Majesty the Late King for allegedly posting content defaming the monarchy on social media.

It was a scene that has played out in the past week in several provinces, where vigilantes have assaulted or harassed individuals accused of insulting King Bhumibol, the widely revered monarch who died at 88 on Thursday. Many of the incidents were filmed and spread on social media, drawing further condemnation of the victims.

Read: Calls For Calm Over ‘Witch Hunt’ Concerns After HM King’s Death

The latest of such incidents was livestreamed over Facebook. In the footage, a man with a bloodied face is seen bleeding from a wound to his head as he is beaten and chastised before being forced to kneel in apology to King Bhumibol’s portrait. One man kicks his head as he is bowing to the ground.

“You remember, that wound on your face is from a Phetchabun native! You insulted my royal father,” someone in the crowd shouted.

Others threatened his life.

“Do you want to die here? Apologize to him now!” another man is heard calling.

Comments left on the video indicated the man worked for Thai Steel Cable PCL in Chonburi province.

Chotipat Hancharoen-asawasuk, the company’s human resources manager, said the man in the video was 19-year-old Jirawat Pathumthong and admitted giving out his home address to an angry mob.

Jirawat, who works a night-shift, posted an offensive message about the monarchy Monday night, Chotipat said, despite the company’s guidelines forbidding social media posts that could be interpreted as insulting to the monarchy.

Read: King Bhumibol 1927 – 2016

Company management learned about the post Tuesday morning and immediately fired him, Chotipat said.

“We summoned his relatives to the company even before the beatings,” Chotipat said by telephone. “We told them to order him to remove our company’s name from his Facebook bio section, and we fired him.”

About 10 minutes later a large crowd gathered in front of the company and demanded to see Jirawat, according to Chotipat. He told the mob Jirawat no longer worked there and gave them his home address. He said that he didn’t expect the vigilantes to take matters into their own hands.

“I gave away the information to show we weren’t hiding anything, but they should have let the police handle it,” Chotipat said. “They shouldn’t assault him like that. I mean, you and me, we would want to beat the crap out of him, too, right? But it’s not a right thing to do.”

A photo later circulated on social media showed Jirawat in the back of a police vehicle, but the officer in charge of the case would not discuss the case other than to say police are investigating it.

“We don’t know details for sure yet. The matter is still under investigation,” Capt. Somsak Jailae of Phan Thong Police Station said. He referred the reporter to his supervisor, station chief Preecha Somsathan. Preecha said he was in a meeting and could not comment on the case.

Screencaps posted in discussions of Jirawat’s offense showed he made comments in a Facebook group used by antique sellers. When someone chided him for making an apparent joke during national mourning period, Jirawat quipped back with a negative reference to the monarchy.

Due to strict lese majeste laws, which have become broadly applied to include most discussion of the Royal Family, Khaosod English is withholding the message’s contents.

Tuesday’s mob justice in Chonburi came one day after a woman was forced from a bus and slapped in Bangkok for allegedly insulting the monarchy, and two days after a large crowd on Koh Samui forced a woman accused of royal defamation to kneel in penance before King Bhumibol’s portrait. Police later charged the woman with lese majeste, partly to placate the mob.

None of the vigilantes involved in these incidents is known to be under criminal investigation for any crimes.

Related stories:

Woman Forced Off Bangkok Bus, Slapped for Allegedly Insulting Late King

Mob Demands Woman Accused of Royal Defamation Kneel Before Portrait

Another Man Arrested for Lese Majeste in Phuket

Phang Nga Mob Enraged by Alleged Royal Defamation Post

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Govt Warns About Misinformation on Sponsoring Royal Funeral

People line up Monday to pay tribute to His Majesty the Late King at the Grand Palace in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Warnings were made Thursday about online messages soliciting donations to sponsor the funeral of His Majesty the Late King in a program not yet announced by the palace.

Government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd warned the public to ignore the messages being spread online since Monday, which asked people to contribute 20,000 baht to support a night of the funeral. Sansern said the palace had yet to establish any means by which the public could underwrite the funeral.

“I urge people not to believe the forwarded messages claiming it costs 20,000 baht per night,” Sansern said Tuesday.

Whether it was genuinely a scam or just misinformation was unclear however. The appeal for donations did not instruct people to send money but included a genuine phone number for the Royal Household Bureau. Someone answering the phone there explained how people could submit their names to participate in such a program and said people should be careful about transferring any funds.

According to the information given by the Royal Household Bureau, those who want to take active part in the funeral can submit their document including their contact information. The office will supposedly contact back after the regulation is officially made public.

 

Related stories:

Volunteers Give Boost to Others in Time of Grief (Photos)

Morning of Mourning (Photos)

Black Friday: Crowds Throng Palace For Final Glimpse of King (Photos)

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Free Dyeing Stations Set Up For Mourners Nationwide

Clothes are dyed Tuesday morning at vocational education offices in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Boiling vats of black dye are being set up nationwide to meet the demand for black clothes during the period of mourning for His Majesty the Late King.

In the northern province of Loei, education officials set up a dyeing station Monday for citizens to remedy the problem of high demand for black clothes. The office also taught citizens how to make their own mourning ribbons, an acceptable alternative to wearing black.

Clothes are dyed Tuesday morning at vocational education offices in Loei.
Clothes are dyed Tuesday morning at vocational education offices in Loei.

Clothes are dyed Tuesday morning at vocational education offices in Loei.“As a low-ranking civil servant, I will wear my dyed clothes today until the official mourning period is over, no matter how many years it is,” said Srireun Eamjumrud, a teacher at Loei Technical College. “It is my duty as a good civil servant.”

On Wednesday, vocational education offices across the kingdom will offer free dyeing services.Clothes are dyed Monday at vocational education offices in Bangkok.

In Bangkok, Thammasat University’s science department will provide the service at its Rangsit campus from 8:30am to 9:30am and noon to 1:30pm. People can take their clothes to the Mirror Room on the first floor of the faculty’s Lecture Center 4. They will be ready for pickup the next day.

The official mourning period for citizens is 30 days, while civil servants are obligated to observe it for one year.

Thammasat University is offering to dye clothes black for free 18 October. Call 02-5644440-59, extension 2002, 2045, 2065, and 2070 for more details.
Thammasat University is offering to dye clothes black for free 18 October. Call 02-5644440-59, extension 2002, 2045, 2065, and 2070 for more details.
Clothes are dyed Monday at vocational education offices in Bangkok.
Clothes are dyed Monday at vocational education offices in Bangkok.

Related stories:

Go Modest, Natural, Minimal During Mourning, Fashion Blogger Says

Do’s and Don’ts of Mourning Period for Expats and Visitors

Black Ribbons Emerge as Alternative Way to Mourn King Bhumibol

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Prayuth Makes Surprise Appointment of New Bangkok Governor

Aswin Kwanmuang, foreground center, visits Saphan Lek in Bangkok in October 2015. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha used his absolute power under Article 44 of the interim constitution Tuesday to appoint a replacement for Gov. Sukhumbhand Paribatra.

Deputy Bangkok Gov. Aswin Kwanmuang, 65, was appointed to the top job Tuesday morning, two months after Sukhumbhand was suspended from duty in August in light of an ongoing graft investigation into his use of funds.

Sukhumbhand, a member of the Democrat Party, was twice elected to the post.

Read: You Just Got 44’d: Prayuth Suspends Bangkok Governor

In May, the former governor and eight officials were accused by the Auditor General of colluding to embezzle state funds in the case of a 39 million baht light show said to be tainted by bid rigging.

Investigators identified other irregularities, such as the use of emergency funds to hire a company with no experience in such projects.

Sukhumbhand denied the allegations, sued the auditor for defamation and refused to step down.

He’s kept a low profile since being suspended without pay on Aug. 25.

Aswin, his replacement, is best known as the driving force behind City Hall’s ongoing campaign to clear out street markets and communities located on public land. His successes include the demolition of a toys and electronic market at Saphan Lek and the Pak Khlong Talad flower market.

With his outspoken and uncompromising personality, Aswin, a retired police officer, was also the force behind the eviction of Pom Mahakan community where for the first time in a 24-year struggle the city managed recently to knock down more than a dozen homes.

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Halloween Pretty Much Canceled at This Point

Photo: Bruce Szalwinski / Flickr

Updated at 10:45am Wednesday

BANGKOK — Those looking forward to that one night a year when they can dance to “Thriller” in a Spongebob Squarepants costume may have to hold off this year.

Although private entertainment events are allowed during the national mourning period, many events to celebrate Halloween have been canceled out of respect for the death of His Majesty the Late King. Some organizers are still shilly-shallying.

Here’s a list of Halloween parties and events around Bangkok that have been postponed, canceled or yet undecided.

Canceled

Dia De Los Muertos on Oct. 29 at Cuban-themed Havana Social nightclub is off.

Signal Flair: Halloween Edition, which was to include a costume contest, rap battle, improv comedy, poetry music and more on Oct. 29 at Vertigo Too was canceled. Advance tickets will be refunded.

The rest of Scare Season’s spooky movies at Bridge Art Space are canceled.

Dance nightclub Glow announced it has suspended all coming events, including an Oct. 29 Halloween costume contest at its venue on Soi Sukhumvit 23.

House and hip-hop night The Haunted Rooftop on Oct. 29 at Above Eleven on Soi Sukhumvit 11 was canceled.

Three nights Oct. 27, Oct. 29 and Oct. 30 at CentralWorld’s Groove, the Mejico Halloween Scare Fest, won’t happen.

Oskar Halloween Party on Oct. 29 at Oskar Bistro announced that it event was canceled on Wednesday.

Vampire’s Balls for Oct. 30 at Maggie Choo’s on lower Silom Road was definitely canceled, according to organizers on Tuesday.

Undecided

Swing dance party Halloween+The Hop’s 4th Anniversary may happen or not. Host Bun Young Ji Kim said they will make an announcement on Facebook.

Vampire’s Balls for Oct. 30 at Maggie Choo’s on lower Silom Road is a definite “maybe.”

Oskar Halloween Party on Oct. 29 at Oskar Bistro said it will decide by Wednesday.

Organizers of 72 Halloween, a makeup and music party set for Oct. 29, said they’ll decide by Friday.

Postponed

John Carpenter’s 1978 classic “Halloween” hosted by the Bangkok Open Air Cinema Club was postponed from Oct. 15 to Nov. 19 at The Hive Bangkok on Soi Sukhumvit 49.

A movie marathon hosted by the Horror Club set to run overnight on Oct. 29 at the Knowledge Exchange Center is postponed until further notice.

Related stories:

What’s Canceled, Closed and Open in Bangkok During Mourning Period (Updated)

Entertainment Behind Closed Doors Okay, Gov’t Clarifies

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Typhoon Sarika to Hit Vietnam, Death Toll Totals 31

Residents walk with bags of plastics bottles and other reusable materials under a slight rain brought about by Typhoon Sarika Sunday in Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

HANOI, Vietnam — Vietnam is bracing for Typhoon Sarika as the death toll from flooding in the central part of the country triggered by heavy rains rose to 31.

The typhoon with sustained winds of 165 kph (103 mph) and gusts of up to 200 kph (124 mph) is moving toward northern Vietnam at 15 kilometers per hour (9 miles per hour), the national weather forecast center said Tuesday.

It warned that heavy rains are expected Tuesday night and Wednesday in the northeast of the country.

The government has urged ships and vessels to stay away from the typhoon path in the South China Sea and take shelter. It also urged local authorities to prepare to evacuate people from high-risk areas.

Sarika, named after a singing bird in Cambodia, slammed the northern Philippines on Sunday, killing two people and displacing 150,000.

In Vietnam, seven more bodies have been recovered, bringing the death toll from the flooding in central region to 31, while authorities are still searching for another person who was reported missing, disaster officials said.

The flooding triggered by heavy rains of up to 90 centimeters (3 feet) last week submerged 125,000 homes and damaged infrastructure, crops and temporarily disrupted the North-South Highway and railway links.

Vietnam is prone to floods and storms, which kill hundreds of people and cause damages of millions of dollars each year.

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Woman Forced Off Bangkok Bus, Slapped for Allegedly Insulting Late King

A woman is slapped in a video uploaded Monday to Facebook after being forced off a bus for allegedly insulting His Majesty the Late King.

BANGKOK — A woman passenger was slapped in the face after being accused of defaming the king and forced off a public bus Monday, an incident captured in a video posted online.

In the three-minute clip posted to Facebook, passengers are heard verbally harassing an unidentified woman who they loudly accuse of speaking ill of the King, who died Thursday at 88.

“She has been defaming the king for an hour!” one woman is heard shouting.

The clip continues with the bus coming to a stop, at which point police board and instruct the woman to step off the vehicle.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVQLDAfo3tw

Officers can be heard asking if anyone has any video evidence of the woman’s remarks, as insulting the monarchy is a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison. The other passengers said they did not.

“I admit I didn’t manage to tape it. It failed to record,” a woman says. “It’s like there’s some fucking thing [wrong with it].”

The video was originally uploaded by Facebook user Mai K. Phakaporn and has since been deleted.

Another woman can be heard complaining she had been verbally attacking the late King on the bus for some time.

Just after the woman steps off the bus, someone suddenly steps over and slaps her hard on the face, as others shout for her arrest.

“Damn you. You defamed the King!” shouts a woman.

A crowd gathered on the sidewalk continues shouting at her.

“You defamed the royal father. You shouldn’t have been born,” someone else on the sidewalk shouts.

Police and a soldier guard the woman for some time before she is seen walking away.

Additional reporting Chayanit Itthipongmaetee

 

Related stories:

Calls For Calm Over ‘Witch Hunt’ Concerns After HM King’s Death

Another Man Arrested for Lese Majeste in Phuket

Phuket Mob Demands Arrest of Man For Alleged Royal Defamation

Phang Nga Mob Enraged by Alleged Royal Defamation Post

Mob Demands Woman Accused of Royal Defamation Kneel Before Portrait

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King Bhumibol to Remain a Future Father Figure

File photo of Bhumibol at Siriraj Hospital

BANGKOK — For Thailand’s royalists – and there are millions of them – King Bhumibol Adulyadej will probably long remain embedded as a potent, father-like figure who guided them through turbulent decades and espoused ideals of national harmony, labor on behalf of the poor and the virtues of an agrarian society vanishing in the wake of headlong modernization.

But how such affection and the King’s ideals will impact the country’s turbulent political arena and day-to-day life remains to be seen. That depends on how successfully Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn ultimately fills his father’s shoes, how the ruling military regime shapes the vacuum left by the politically powerful king and whether Thais translate some of Bhumibol’s admonitions – like not succumbing to rampant greed, corruption and environmental exploitation – into practice.

“We will hear people in power asserting that they will continue his legacy by following his examples. Will this be just more lip service?” wrote a columnist in the Bangkok Post.

Other comments in local newspapers note that despite the surface calm imposed by the junta, deep divisions still permeate society following more than a decade of mass protests, bloodshed and coups. The King resolved several political crises over his reign, but over the last several years, illnesses had removed him from center stage.

Conservative, largely urban elites who champion the monarchy and at times favor military intervention in politics – labeled “Yellowshirts” – have long been pitted against “Redshirts” from rural regions and among the intelligentsia who decry inequality and a lack of popular participation in political decision making. While many in the red faction held great respect for Bhumibol himself, they view the institution of the monarchy as having held back Thailand’s progress toward democracy, with some favoring largely ceremonial royals along European lines.

These rifts escalated in 2006 when the military ousted populist Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and exploded four years later when pro-Thaksin Redshirts took over central Bangkok, only to be bloodily suppressed by the military in clashes that killed nearly 100 people. Generals led by current Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha staged a second coup in 2014 against a government headed by Thaksin’s sister and present themselves as defenders of the monarchy against those who allegedly seek its demise.

“A military government that bases its support on defense of the monarch in Bangkok will become deeply problematic,” said Charles F. Keyes, an emeritus professor at the University of Washington who has followed developments in Thailand for more than half a century. “But the return of democracy will come from increasing pressure from the populace who no longer can be cowed by invoking the support of the monarchy.”

Whatever happens next, the country’s 800-year-old institution is likely to change.

“After seven decades under one King, who became known as the father of the country, there is nobody to fill those shoes,” said Paul Handley, author of a critical biography of Bhumibol, “The King Never Smiles.”

The King once described himself as “unique” among the world’s 26 remaining monarchs.

He was not an absolute ruler like some still holding power in the Middle East and elsewhere, yet as a constitutional monarch he far exceeded the power and influence of such similarly defined royals as Great Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.

Through his personality, political acumen and good works, Bhumibol created a new role for himself and energized an institution which had been waning since the abolition of absolute monarchy in 1932. He called himself a “self-made man.”

Much of this clout and the reverence in which he is held by Thais stems from his years working in the countryside on behalf of the poor. The palace initiated more than 4,300 development projects, and while some have floundered, others still reap benefits. Hilltribe families in northern Thailand will to this day say how the coffee plants or pigs they acquired from the royal projects years ago continue to better their lives.

The King’s rural bias spawned a philosophy of “sufficiency economy” – living modestly and sustainably, conserving natural resources and shielding the country from negative economic forces from abroad. While this has been given lip service by Thai officials as well as some foreign critics of globalization, it matches up with neither Thailand’s highly capitalist economy nor its poor environmental record.

Born in the U.S. and Swiss-educated, the King maintained healthy relations with the West. Though he hadn’t traveled abroad in nearly 50 years, the king and his wife, Queen Sirikit, made many foreign trips in the 1950s and ’60s that helped put Thailand, then a little-known country, on the world map. Ties with the United States were particularly close during that time, and he maintained warm ties with Europe’s royal families.

 

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Austria to Destroy Hitler’s Home

The face of Adolf Hitler is projected onto a 3D canvas as part of an art installation during a rehearsal for the 'Berlin Leuchtet' (Berlin shines) festival Thursday in Berlin. Photo: Michael Sohn / Associated Press

VIENNA — The house where Adolf Hitler was born will be torn down and replaced with a new building that has no association with the Nazi dictator, Austria’s government announced Monday as it moved to eliminate the property’s pull as a place of pilgrimage for neo-Nazis.

The plan still has to be formalized in legislation and voted on in Parliament. But the Interior Ministry said demolition was recommended by a government-appointed commission.

With the Social Democratic and centrist People’s Party in the majority, and most opposition parties expected to support the plan, passage was likely no more than a formality.

Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka said that “a thorough architectural remodeling is necessary to permanently prevent the recognition and the symbolism of the building.”

Adolf Hitler's birth house in Braunau am Inn, Austria in a 2012 file photo. Photo: Kerstin Joensson / Associated Press
Adolf Hitler’s birth house in Braunau am Inn, Austria in a 2012 file photo. Photo: Kerstin Joensson / Associated Press

Ministry spokesman Karl-Heinz Grundboeck said that means that except for its foundations, nothing will be left of the house in the western town of Braunau and that a new structure will be erected in its place.

A ministry statement emailed to The Associated Press quoted Sobotka saying he wants to ensure that any association with Hitler is eliminated at the site, adding that he could conceive of it being repurposed to house either government or social agency offices.

The statement said the commission had recommended against leaving the site empty, which could be interpreted as an attempted “denial of Austrian history.”

The government this year launched formal legal procedures to dispossess the home’s owner after she had repeatedly refused to sell the building or to allow renovations that would reduce its symbolic impact as Hitler’s birthplace — and its draw for admirers of the Fuhrer.

The statement said the Interior Ministry planned to finalize a draft law making the house state property before putting it to a vote in Parliament by the end of the year.

Vienna’s Jewish community and a government-supported anti-Nazi research center support tearing down the imposing three-story yellow house, where Hitler was born on April 20, 1889.

But some historians argue that the house and the apartment inside where the Hitler family lived briefly should be preserved specifically because they are among the few surviving structures linked to the Nazi leader.

A house in nearby Leonding, where Hitler lived as a teenager, is now used to store coffins for the town cemetery. There, the tombstone marking the grave of Hitler’s parents, another pilgrimage site for neo-Nazis, was removed last year at the request of a descendant.

A school that Hitler attended in Fischlham, also near Braunau, displays a plaque condemning his crimes against humanity.

The underground bunker in Berlin where Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945, was demolished and the site left vacant until the East German government built an apartment complex around it in the late 1980s.

The apartments overlook the German capital’s monument to victims of the Holocaust.

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