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Pattaya Sex Show Touts Arrested For Harassment, False Advertising

Brochures confiscated from 16 people arrested on public nuisance charges Monday night on Pattaya’s Walking Street.

PATTAYA — Soldiers and local officials arrested 16 people Monday night holding laminated cards promising salacious entertainment at Pattaya’s infamous sex shows.

Two Russian nationals were among 16 people taken from the Walking Street red-light district to the Pattaya City Police Station at about 11pm. There they were charged with creating a public nuisance after army Lt. Suwit Laklang said tourists complained they were aggressively pushing people to attend the shows.

“Tourists also said they were fooled because when they paid and entered the place, there was no such show as the agents claimed,” Suwit said.

The suspects were reportedly fined 500 baht each. No obscenity charges were filed.

“We chose to charge them with the smallest misdemeanor because we just wanted to warn them,” he said, explaining the arrest was meant to stop false advertising and public nuisance – not the actual shows.

Reached for comment Tuesday afternoon, Pattaya police chief Col. Aphichai Krobphet said he did not believe the arrests happened. However army Lt. Suwit confirmed it went down as described.

“It is impossible for police to say they were unaware of it,” he said. “Though we made the arrest, they are the ones with the authority to fine them.”

The military officer said should the same people be arrested again, they will be fined 5,000 baht. Suwit said it is acceptable if they only stood in front of their venues without following people in the street.

Sex show touts from Pattaya’s Walking Street on Monday night at the Pattaya City Police Station.
Sex show touts from Pattaya’s Walking Street on Monday night at the Pattaya City Police Station.
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Chonburi Man Fights Off Kidnapper Dressed as Police Officer (Video)

CHONBURI — Police said Tuesday they’re looking for three armed men, including one dressed as a cop – who attempted to abduct a man from his home in Chonburi.

Thanongsak Lueng-on, 30, told reporters the men identified themselves as policemen and ordered him to go with them to a police station for questioning. Thanongsak said the men, who carried handguns, only fled after realizing that his sister-in-law filmed the altercation, footage of which she posted on social media.

“I am very scared,” Thanongsak said Monday after filing charges at Phan Thong Police Station. “I never had problems with anyone.”

Station chief Preecha Somsathan said he’s not sure whether the men in the video were policemen as they claimed.

“We’re checking to be sure,” Col. Preecha said by telephone Tuesday. “If they were real cops, they would have come with search warrants. But they didn’t.”

In the video, a man wearing a police vest and two others in civilian clothes were seen manhandling and shouting at Thanongsak to come with them. “Come come come!” one of the men said, as Thanongsak struggled. “Let’s talk later.”

“Stop filming!” one of the men said to the person recording, waving a handgun.

Preecha said he checked with his own station and other precincts in the region, and none said their officers were the ones seen in the video.

According to the police colonel, Thanongsak’s brother is in prison on a drug-related conviction, and the three men told Thanongsak they wanted to talk to him about his brother. He added that police checked a license plate number reportedly used by the perpetrators turned out to have been forged.

Thanongsak told reporters he was at home with his wife, his children and his sister-in-law when the three men broke into his home.

“Come with me right now!” he said they yelled. The men also tried to take his necklace and iPhone but eventually fled the scene after his sister-in-law, Chatmanee Ponpao, started filming the incident.

The video had been shared more than 13,000 times by Tuesday afternoon.

Chatmanee said she believed the video saved Thanongsak from being kidnapped.

“If I didn’t film them, and my brother-in-law was taken away, who would have helped us?” Chatmanee told reporters Monday.

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9 Places in Bangkok to Avoid Unless You Have a Boat

BANGKOK — The capital city wrung itself out Tuesday and prepared for more torrential rain to turn its roads into rivers.

While all parts of Bangkok were inundated, the most severe flooding was reported Monday evening in the Bang Sue area, where waters rose upward of 30 centimeters along stretches of road extending up to half a kilometer, according to the flood control department.

With more heavy rain expected throughout the week, traffic police have urged the public to check weather and road conditions before leaving home and planning their trips to avoid flooded areas. Accidents and floods can be reported at hotline 1197.

Police Maj. Gen. Jeerasan Keawsaengek singled out nine flood-prone areas:

  • Rama VI Road in front of Samsenwittiyalai School in the Phaya Thai district
  • Kamphaeng Phet 2 Road across from the Chatuchak Weekend Market
  • Chaeng Watthana Road right before the Laksi intersection
  • Phahon Yothin Road at the Kasetsart University intersection
  • Krungthep-Nonthaburi Road around the Wongsawang-Tiwanon intersection
  • Ratchadapisek Road in front of the Criminal Court
  • Ngam Wong Wan Road in front of Phong Phet Market
  • All along Thetsaban Songkhro Road
  • Under the Sirat Expressway at the Siritwat-Muang Thong U-Turn

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Monsoon Week Starts With Monday Downpour

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UN Opposes Swaziland Proposal to Sell Rhino Horn

Rhinos walk in the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve in 2015 in South Africa. Photo: Schalk van Zuydam / Associated Press
Rhinos walk in the Hluhluwe-Imfolozi game reserve in 2015 in South Africa. Photo: Schalk van Zuydam / Associated Press

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — It was a big, and ultimately doomed, proposal from a small country at a U.N. wildlife conference in South Africa: legalize the international sale of rhino horn because a 1977 ban on its trade has failed to stop the scourge of poaching.

The African kingdom of Swaziland, which has 73 rhinos, said Monday that it could use funds from the sale of its stockpile of 330 kilograms (727 pounds) of rhino horn to pay for wildlife protection. Its presentation included an appeal from delegate Ted Reilly, whose voice broke with emotion as he recalled rangers who have been killed across the continent while protecting rhinos and elephants over the years.

“We all know the ban is not working,” Reilly said at a committee meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, or CITES.

Delegates, however, rejected the Swazi proposal by a vote of 100 to 26, with 17 abstentions. Conservationists said they expected the decision to be confirmed at a plenary session on Tuesday or Wednesday, the last day of the meeting.

Most delegates disagreed with the Swazi stance that a regulated trade would undermine poachers who have slaughtered rhinos in record numbers to meet demand in parts of Asia, particularly Vietnam. Some consumers believe rhino horn in powder form can cure illnesses, although there is no evidence that the horn, made of the same substance as human fingernails, has any medicinal value.

South Africa, home to most of the world’s rhinos, has been hit particularly hard by poaching. It had considered making a similar proposal at the CITES meeting to sell rhino horn but decided more preparation was required. Nevertheless, it backed the Swazi proposal, as did Namibia and Zimbabwe, which also have significant rhino populations.

The three southern African countries also spoke in support of selling ivory on the basis that their elephant populations are stable, even though poachers across Africa have killed elephants by the tens of thousands in recent years. But delegates at the wildlife conference rejected proposals to allow the sale of ivory. China, the world’s biggest consumer of ivory, has said it will close its domestic market.

Countries opposing the Swazi proposal included Indonesia, Nepal, Bhutan and India, all of which have rhino species. Indonesia said a Swazi sale could have “grave effects” on its critically endangered Javan and Sumatran rhinos if poachers target them more aggressively.

Swaziland has had success in protecting its rhinos, even as neighboring South Africa struggles to protect its far bigger population of roughly 20,000. The two countries say they struggle for resources to protect their threatened species and sometimes bristle at international suggestions about how to handle their wildlife.

“The underlying issue is, who pays for it?” said Tom Milliken of the TRAFFIC conservation group.

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Australians Arrested For Drinking From Shoe in Malaysian-Flag Underwear

Red Bull driver Daniel Ricciardo of Australia drinks champagne from his shoe as he celebrates on the podium after winning the Malaysian Formula One Grand Prix at the Sepang International Circuit in Sepang, Malaysia on Sunday. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia — Officials say a government political adviser is among nine Australians arrested in Malaysia for stripping down to their briefs and drinking beer from shoes after Australian driver Daniel Ricciardo won the Malaysian Formula One Grand Prix on Sunday.

Government officials confirmed Tuesday that Jack Walker, adviser to Defense Industry Minister Chris Pyne, is among the men aged 25 to 29 who were arrested after they stripped down to Budgy Smuggler-brand swimsuits decorated with the Malaysian flag at the Sepang race track.

Pyne’s office says in a statement the matter is being “handled appropriately” by the Australian High Commissioner in Malaysia. It is not clear whether the men will be charged with public indecency or with disrespecting the Malaysian flag.

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Monsoon Week Starts With Monday Downpour

Policeman and motorists on Monday push a car that went kaput in the flood on Ngamwongwan Road.

BANGKOK — Parts of Bangkok were drenched Monday evening as an expected week of powerful monsoon rain hit.

Reports on social media suggested several roads were already flooded by what is known as the “Bureaucratic Rain,” a nickname Thais give to rain which seems to start just when people leave work in the late afternoon.

Affected routes included Chaeng Wattana, Vibhavadi-Rangsit and Phahonyothin roads.

The City Hall said its flood response teams had been deployed to relieve the traffic.

The Meteorological Department previously forecast heavy rain every day this week through Friday. Up to 70 percent of the metro Bangkok will face the daily downpour.

 

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Bus Driver Charged With Reckless Driving for Hitting, Killing Baby Elephant

Phlai Udom was hit by bus No. 999 as he was crossing the Lampang-Chiang Mai Road.

LAMPANG — A bus driver was charged with reckless driving Monday after hitting and killing a baby elephant on the Lampang-Chiang Mai Road in Lampang province.

Local police in the Hang Chat district were alerted to a crash on the Lampang-Chiang Mai road Friday night and arrived to find a tour bus had slammed into an 8-year-old elephant, killing it.

According to Col. Pisupakorn Noipaksa, the tour bus driver, Narit Chittong, 45, was driving at high speed when he suddenly tried to overtake using the right lane.

The young elephant, named Phlai Udom, was walking in the right lane, within a barrier put up especially for elephants to walk behind. At that moment, the elephant turned left to walk into the forest.

The bus crashed into the calf, who died immediately, said Pisupakorn. Narit’s legs were also immediately broken as a result of the impact, preventing him from applying the the vehicle’s brakes, which slid 70 meters. The elephant’s body was trapped underneath the front wheels.

Pisupakorn said that Phlai Udom was an elephant in the Thai Elephant Conservation Center, where the baby pachyderm had lived for four years. The nearby conservation center allowed elephants to roam around the nearby forested area as part of their Elephant Reintroduction Foundation program to return elephants to the wild.

According to Pisupakorn, Phlai Udom often walked around the forested area and the road, even visiting local traffic police who were quite fond of him.

“Phlai Udom roams the area regularly. He definitely didn’t break loose,” Pisupakorn said.

The road has many signs telling drivers to yield to elephants crossing. Local road officials were aware that Phlai Udom was walking around that night, and held up many signals and flashlights telling cars to be vigilant.

The Chiang Mai-bound bus had left Bangkok at 10:30am.

One of the passengers, a university student, saw Phlai Udom and yelled for Narit to slow down, but said the driver did not. Narit sustained a number of injuries including two  broken legs and cuts to his face caused by the shattering windshield. None of the passengers was injured.

Police said Narit was sober at the time of the incident and will be charged with reckless driving, which amounts to a fine of 400 baht to 1,000 baht. Narit will also have compensate the Thailand Elephant Conservation Center.

“Drivers, please heed road officials’ signals to slow down for elephants crossing. I pity Phlai Udom so much,” Pisupakorn said.

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Defeat of Colombian Peace Accord Leaves Nation in Unchartered Territory

A supporter of the peace accord signed between the Colombian government and rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC, cries Sunday as she follows on a giant screen the results of a referendum to decide whether to support the deal in Bogota, Colombia. Photo: Ariana Cubillos / Associated Press

BOGOTA, Colombia — After a stunning referendum defeat for a peace deal with leftist rebels, Colombians are asking what comes next for their war-torn country, which like Britain following the Brexit vote has no Plan B to save an accord that sought to bring an end to a half century of hostilities.

The damage from Sunday’s vote is still sinking in. Instead of winning by an almost two-to-one margin as pre-election polls had predicted, those favoring the accord with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia lost by a razor-thin margin, 49.8 percent of the votes to 50.2 percent for those against the deal.

Both President Juan Manuel Santos and leaders of the FARC, having come this far after four years of grueling negotiations, vowed to push ahead, giving no hint they want to resume a war that has already killed 220,000 people and displaced 8 million.

“I won’t give up. I’ll continue search for peace until the last moment of my mandate,” Santos said in a televised address appealing for calm.

But it’s not clear how the already unpopular Santos can save the deal given the stunning political defeat he suffered. For now, he has ordered his negotiators to return to Cuba on Monday to confer with FARC’s top leaders, who watched the results come in with disbelief after earlier ordering drinks and cigars at Club Havana, once Cuba’s most exclusive beach club.

“The FARC deeply regret that the destructive power of those who sow hatred and revenge have influenced the Colombian people’s opinion,” the FARC’s top commander, a guerrilla known as Timochenko, told reporters later.

The loss for the government was even more shocking considering the huge support for the accord among foreign leaders, who have roundly heralded it as a model for a world beset by political violence and terrorism. Many heads of state as well as U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry were present when Santos and Timochenko signed the deal less than a week ago in an elaborate, emotion-filled ceremony.

With the outlook uncertain, all eyes are on Santos’ former boss and chief rival: Alvaro Uribe, the powerful former president who led the grass-roots campaign against the accord. With none of the government’s huge PR machine an angry Uribe gave voice to millions of Colombians, many of them victims of the FARC like him, who bristled at provisions in the 297-page accord sparing rebels jail time if they confessed their crimes and instead reserved them 10 seats in congress.

Uribe, in prepared remarks from his ranch outside Medellin after the results were in, called for a “big national pact” and insisted on “correctives” that guarantee respect for the constitution, respect for private enterprise and justice without impunity. But he didn’t specify whether he would join Santos in trying to salvage the deal, and took more swipes at the FARC, who he demanded put an end to drug-trafficking and extortion.

“The entire accord was full of impunity,” said Ricardo Bernal, 60, celebrating the victory for the “no” side in a Bogota neighborhood where opponents were gathered. “We all want peace but there has to be adjustments made.”

Across town, hundreds of supporters of the peace deal who had gathered in a hotel ballroom for what they expected would be a victory party with Santos wept in despair.

The FARC’s 7,000 guerrilla fighters are unlikely to return to the battlefield any time soon. For now, a cease-fire remains in place.

One option for Santos would be to reopen negotiations, something he had ruled out previously and his chief negotiator said would be “catastrophic.” The president, who has a little under two years left in office, could also seek to bypass another popular vote and ratify the accord in congress or by calling a constitutional convention, something both the FARC and Uribe have previously favored.

“I’ve always believed in a wise Chinese proverb to look for opportunities in any situation. And here we have an opportunity that’s opening up, with the new political reality that has demonstrated itself in the referendum,” Santos said Sunday night before descending to the steps of the presidential palace to address a small group of supporters, some of waving white flags symbolizing peace.

But bringing Santos and Uribe together might be harder than achieving peace with the FARC. Santos served as Uribe’s defense minister, when they worked together with the U.S. to drive the FARC to the edge of the jungles, but the two haven’t spoken for years and frequently trade insults.

One of the reasons for the surprise defeat was low turnout, with only 37 percent of the electorate bothering to vote, a further sign to some analysts that Colombians’ enthusiasm for the ambitious accord was lacking. Heavy rains from Hurricane Matthew especially dampened voting along the Caribbean coast, where the government’s electoral machinery is strongest and the “yes” vote won by a comfortable double-digit margin.

The campaign exposed deep rifts in Colombian society, dividing many families and making clear the road to reconciliation would have been long and torturous even had the accord passed. Colombians overwhelmingly loathe the FARC, which the U.S. considers a terrorist group, and many considered the accord an insult to victims of the long-running conflict.

“In the end, hate toward the FARC won out over hope for the future,” said Jason Marczack, an expert on Latin America at the Washington-based Atlantic Council.

Story: Joshua Goodman, Andrew Rodriguez; additional reporting Michael Weissenstein

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Bar B Q Plaza Closes 26 Restaurants For 2 Days

The promotional photo of Black Magic pan. Photo: Bar B Q Plaza / Facebook.

BANGKOK — A popular barbecue franchise is closing 26 restaurants for two days after using a new type of pan customers said spoiled their food.

Two weeks after Bar B Q Plaza launched its much-hyped “Black Magic” pan, customers complained its magic seemed to be making their soup rusty and black, prompting the company to announce the closure on Sunday.

Since the new type of pan went into use Sept. 22, many customers began posting photos showing blackened soup and rusty pans on social media.

Photo: Aubeve Amatathongchai / Facebook
Photo: Aubeve Amatathongchai / Facebook

“Look, Black Pan is black including the soup. Does the color from the pan wash out?” Aubeve Amatathongchai wrote on Facebook, adding that she asked the waiter at Central Rama 9 branch to change the pan twice but the soup was still black.

“Oh, do you miss the old pan so much that you transformed yourself back into the golden pan? … At some branches, the new pans have already gone rusty,” user Tita Peerawat Kitti wrote on the page.

Photo: Tita Peerawat Kitti
Photo: Tita Peerawat Kitti

Bar B Q Plaza published a statement on Sunday that it has taken all the comments into consideration and was trying to solve the problems.

The statement said the soup was blackened because the pans were washed improperly. As a result, a soy-based oil used on the cast iron pans degraded.

”The black color doesn’t come from the peeling of the pan and is not a dangerous chemical,” the statement read. It blamed the rust on employees not drying them correctly.

The promotional photo of Black Magic pan. Photo: Bar B Q Plaza / Facebook.
The promotional photo of Black Magic pan. Photo: Bar B Q Plaza / Facebook.

The company also said this type of pan is widely used around the world and has been approved for use by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The company said it would use the two days to retrain staff. They will reopen in Bangkok on Oct. 5 and outside of Bangkok on Oct. 7.

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309 Kilos of Illegal Ivory Imports Seized in Vietnam

Ivory structure displayed in 2003 at a museum in Vietnam. Photo: Josh Smith / Flickr

HANOI — Vietnamese authorities say they’ve seized 309 kilograms (682 pounds) of elephant tusks illegally imported from Nigeria.

A customs official says the tusks were seized at Hanoi’s airport on Saturday. She said Monday that the cargo had been declared as glass. She spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to speak to the media.

Wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said in a statement Sunday, “Illegal trade in ivory continues to be a major threat to the survival of elephant populations in Africa.”

It said, “Traffickers continue to move ivory into and through Vietnam, and this seizure highlights the country’s role in the illegal ivory trade.”

Elephant tusks are used as jewelry and home decorations in Vietnam, which bans hunting of its dwindling population of elephants.

Story: Tran Van Minh

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