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Bangkok’s World Film Festival Rescheduled to January

BANGKOK —The 14th World Film Festival of Bangkok set for November has been postponed to next year to mourn the passing of King Bhumibol.

Kriengsak “Victor” Silakong, festival director of Thailand’s longest-running film festival, announced the postponement online, saying it would be moved to January.

“The Kingdom of Thailand has lost its beloved monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej and is now in mourning,” he wrote.

The World Film Festival of Bangkok has selected more than 70 international films to screen with a focus on exploring the world’s cultures from filmmakers’ perspectives.

Selections include French psychological thriller “Elle,” Davy Chou’s “Diamond Island” from Cambodia, LGBT-oriented “Present Perfect” from Thailand, Taiwanese action movie “Dragon Inn” and acclaimed animation “The Red Turtle.”

The festival’s Lotus Award is to be given to American director Oliver Stone for his contribution to the film industry.

More information and updates can be reached on its website and Facebook page.

Ticket prices for all films will be 120 baht with discounts for buying five. The festival has been rescheduled for Jan. 23 through Feb. 1 at SF World Cinema CentralWorld.

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Statue to Ivan the Terrible Inaugurated in Russia

People hold various flags of Russian patriotic and Orthodox movements at the unveiling ceremony for a monument to Czar Ivan the Terrible in the city of Orel, 350 kilometers south of Moscow, on Friday. Photo: Howard Amos / Associated Press

OREL, Russia – Despite protests and court battles, the Russian city of Orel has unveiled the country’s first monument to Ivan the Terrible, the bloody 16th-century czar who massacred his subjects by the thousands and even reportedly killed his own son.

At a ceremony Friday, officials inaugurated the statue of Ivan on horseback, wielding both a sword and a cross, in the city (pronounced ahr-YOL) 350 kilometers (225 miles) south of Moscow. The region’s governor likened the brutal czar – favorably – to current Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“We have a great, powerful president who has forced the whole world to respect and defer to Russia – just like Ivan the Terrible did in his time,” Vadim Potomsky said at the ceremony.

Ivan, who reigned from 1547 to 1584, was responsible for violence including the Novgorod Massacre, which killed thousands. But he is also respected as both key to Russia’s establishing itself as an empire and as a patron of the arts, including commissioning the landmark St. Basil’s Cathedral, which dominates Red Square in Moscow.

The czar’s moniker reflects his mixed reputation – in Russian, it can mean not only “terrible” but also “formidable.”

The erection of the statue comes as Russia, encouraged by Putin, is undergoing a broad reassessment of its history. The current Russian narrative justifies violence and repression if it’s seen as having been necessary to strengthen the Russian state, including atrocities ordered by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.

Among the crowd of 1,000 who witnessed the monument’s inauguration in Orel was Alexander Zaldostanov, the burly leader of the pro-Putin biker group Night Wolves.

On the other side of the political spectrum, some activists in Orel had held protests against the statue and launched an unsuccessful court attempt to block it. One of them, Natalia Golenkova, told The Associated Press she had been assaulted walking home one night and warned to stop her opposition to the statute.

“Who was a fan of Ivan the Terrible? Stalin,” she said. “Tyrants love tyrants.”

Story: Harold Amos

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Bangkok, Famed Capital of Free-Wheeling Fun, Goes Dark Indefinitely (Photos)

Go go bars in Soi Cowboy were ordered closed indefinitely starting at 8pm on Thursday.

BANGKOK — In Bangkok’s red light district Soi Cowboy, 7pm is usually the beginning of a long, neon night of music and enticement. But on Thursday’s historical night of Oct. 13, it was the end.

On Friday, Paithoon Khumkhaeng, who works at famous go go bar Suzie Wong, described how the whole garish scene there suddenly became paralyzed with light banter replaced by echoes of crying after the broadcast announcement King Bhumibol had passed away.

“Some really can’t take it, they can’t even listen to the news,” the 49-year-old Friday said as he began crying anew. “The owner said to close our place immediately. No one could continue working.”

Read: What’s Canceled, Closed and Open in Bangkok During Mourning Period

All places in Soi Cowboy eventually closed by 8pm, an hour after the news shook the country, Paithoon said.

When all the workers, from bartenders to bikini-clad dancers burst into tears, Paithoon said tourists seem to understand, as they also saw the news hit the internet at the same time.

“Though some of them might not really have understood how big it is for us,” he said.

Patchara Sotnirunchai directs people to a free shuttle bus to the Grand Palace on Friday where the funeral bathing ceremony for HM the King was to take place.
Patchara Sotnirunchai directs people to a free shuttle bus to the Grand Palace on Friday where the funeral bathing ceremony for HM the King was to take place.

Waking up for the first day in their lives without the king treated as a spiritual leader for 70 years, Bangkok on Friday appeared to be living without its soul. Most people walked quietly in black clothes, and all significant activities were halted. Public transportation such as the BTS Skytrain was silent, the advertising pulled.

The military government announced Friday would be a national holiday. Many people were grieving and finding it difficult to do their jobs.

Patchara Sotnirunchai was one of them. The 40-year-old from the Bangkok Mass Transit Authority on Friday was tasked to stand at the Victory Monument bus station and give information to people about free shuttles to join the royal procession from Siriraj Hospital to the Grand Palace.

As she was directing the buses on the street and shouting information to the public, tears were still running from her eyes.

“I can’t control it,” she said before continuing to shout and hide her wet eyes behind her glasses.

A customer shops for black shirts Friday at Victory Monument in Bangkok.
A customer shops for black shirts Friday at Victory Monument in Bangkok.

Having no chance to join the thousands of people thronging along the route of the procession, Patchara said she was proud of her contribution to her beloved king, even from far away.

For some industry, the sudden national demand signaled opportunity.

Kamonthanat Kaewbudda has a small line of factories to make shirts she sells from a shop in Victory Monument. With many citizens expected to wear black for a year in mourning, she said she will need a new plan.

“I think I will have to increase the ratio of black shirts from 10 percent to 50, or perhaps 80 to 90 percent,” she said while packing hundreds of colored shirts into bags and replaced most with black ones.

Read: King Bhumibol, Monarch and Father to Millions, 88

The 30-year-old said she heard the price of black shirts at the wholesale Bo Bae market has doubled from 60 baht to 120 baht.

Go go bars in Soi Cowboy were closed indefinitely starting at 8pm on Thursday.
Go go bars in Soi Cowboy were closed indefinitely starting at 8pm on Thursday.

Like many other vendors, Kamonthanat said she did not prepare ahead for the situation, as she never imagined it would really happen.

Yet for the people who toil for their livelihood in the engine of entertainment, the future holds other concerns.

Although some of venues in Soi Cowboy briefly tried to resume business Friday evening without playing music, Suzie Wong remain closed.

Working in Soi Cowboy for many decades, Paithoon said he has witnessed many incidents that forced all the go go bars to close down, including three days closure after the 1995 death of Princess Srinagarindra, King Bhumibol’s mother. The longest closure period was five days after the junta seized power in 2014.

Government spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd on Thursday asked to postpone all public entertainment for 30 days. For activities organized in private places, he urged people to be careful and considerate.

A vendor packs colored clothes into bags and pull out black shirts to display instead Friday at Victory Monument in Bangkok.
A vendor packs colored clothes into bags and pull out black shirts to display instead Friday at Victory Monument in Bangkok.

“We still don’t know how long we will be closed this time,” Paithoon said. “We will wait for the notice from local police.”

Despite his acute grief and despair, Paithoon was concerned that should the order for entertainment venues to stay closed continue for a long period, it will be difficult for most workers, who get paid only for days worked and receive no other benefits. Even people who have monthly salaries there, Paithoon said, still usually depend on tips from tourists.

Weeping tears away, he said, “We can’t live like this for long. We have to move forward.”

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Morning of Mourning (Photos)

BANGKOK  Thais from the city and the provinces gathered Friday morning around the Grand Palace and to see-off their beloved King. For many, a dawn without King Bhumibol Adulyadej would never be the same.

The procession left Siriraj Hospital in the afternoon and reached the Grand Palace at about 3pm. People were advised to remain quiet and calm and were asked not to take photos, wear sunglasses or use umbrellas during the ceremony.

Photo: Khaosod / Courtesy

Photo: Khaosod / Courtesy

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Actor Ruengrit “Willy” McIntosh and his mother
Actor Ruengrit “Willy” McIntosh and his mother
Famous teen actor Wongravee “Sky” Nateetorn
Famous teen actor Wongravee “Sky” Nateetorn

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Khaosan Road: Open But Silent (Photos)

Khaosan Road, Friday afternoon

BANGKOK — In the aftermath of HM King’s death Thursday, tourist hub Khaosan Road has become a much more subdued version of itself.

Some restaurants will be open for business, while others have decided to temporarily shut down to observe a period of mourning. Police on Thursday night approached entertainment venues and restaurants to ask for their cooperation in turning off music on the street known for being loud.

“Khaosan has been as quiet as a graveyard,” said Kanchorn Ruchiwatthakorn, 42. “While there were some people still around yesterday, it’s been super quiet today.”

Read: What’s Canceled, Closed and Open in Bangkok During Mourning Period

However the owner of the popular food cart Jojo Pad Thai said it’s happened before and been even quieter on previous occasions, such as the 2013-2014 and 2010 protests. Despite this, Kanchorn predicted his regulars, especially the Korean tourists, would continue to visit. 

Bars that have to shut down temporarily though will likely have to send home their promotional beer babes.

“Yesterday I saw a bunch of them show up to work and then immediately go home,” Kanchorn said.

Samart Sateansut, staff manager at The Hub Khaosan pub, said that the most striking difference for him was the silence. The pub will continue to operate, he said, but without music and will close at midnight instead of the usual 2am.

Khaosan tourists seemed to be aware of the HM the King’s death, too. Valerie Jones, 35, an American visiting Thailand for the first time said that she and her friends were aware that the King had passed. However, their vacation would continue as planned, she said.

Photos and additional reporting by Kaewta Ketbungkan 

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Celebrities Mourn Death of King Bhumibol

Photo: miorrr08 / Twitter

BANGKOK — Thai and international celebrities posted their condolences on social media Thursday after news broke on the passing of King Bhumibol.

Araya Alberta “Chompoo” Hargate posted several solid-black Instagram photos.

Singer Amita “Tata” Young Seenapongpipit also posted various black and white photos on Instagram to recall the memories of the late king with the hashtags “King in my heart” “His majesty the king of Thailand” “We will love his majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej forever.”

Actor Sunny Suwanmethanont posted a photo on Instagram quoting King Bhumibol, “The place where I belong on this planet is being among my people which are Thai people.” 

The 28-year-old actress Usamanee “Kwan” Waitayanon posted photos of King Rama IX on Instagram sailing and producing a sailboat in Switzerland, writing that he was the only Asian King to have won a gold medal at an international sailing competition. She ended by writing “May I be the servant underneath your feet in all future lives.”

Panisara “Opal” Arayaskul, actress and TV presenter, tweeted several photos and texts insisting and that she feels blessed to be born under King Rama IX’s reign.

Actress Pimchanok “Baifern” Luevisadpaibul tweeted “Our father had been dedicated for us for long. Don’t worry, we’ll help protect your beloved land from now on #MayIBetheServantUnderneathYourFeetInAllFutureLives.

Renowned TV presenter Woody Milintachinda tweeted a photo of himself bowing to the image of King Rama 9 with a hashtag #MayIBetheServantUnderneathYourFeetInAllFutureLives.

Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit, Thai acclaimed director, posted on Facebook a photo of HM Queen Sirikit that King Bhumibol took, stating “In memory of”.

Boyzone’s former member Ronan Keating also expressed his condolences on Twitter: “A Sad Day. The king of Thailand has passed Rest in Peace.”

In contrast to the pink-and-yellow profile pictures, many netizens have changed their profile pictures to a solid black square with words of condolence, along with the hashtag #MayIBetheServantUnderneathYourFeetInAllFutureLives, quickly making it Thailand’s top trending hashtag on Twitter.

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Glimpses Behind the Exalted Persona of Thailand’s King

In this April 21, 2008 photo provided by the Thai Bureau of the Royal Household, Associated Press journalist Denis Gray, left, speaks with Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej in Bangkok. Thailand's King Bhumibol passed away on Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016, at the age of 88. (Bureau of the Royal Household via AP)

BANGKOK — The body language was as stiff as the gilded robes and bemedaled uniforms he wore. The face rarely betrayed even a flicker of emotion. He was the king, wrote one biographer, who never smiled.

And indeed when appearing before the public or during the thousands of state and religious ceremonies over which he presided, King Bhumibol Adulyadej assumed the role of “dhammaraja,” the impassive, righteous Buddhist monarch, an heir to 800 unbroken years of royal rule, the dominant figure in Thailand’s modern history.

But my own most vivid recollections of the world’s longest reigning monarch, who died Thursday at the age of 88, are rather different.

The last time I met the king, in 2008, he was dressed in a Western suit, relaxing on a sofa — and smiling. Behind closed doors of Bangkok’s Chitralada Palace, Bhumibol was seemingly enjoying the repartee with a small group of foreign journalists.

Far from the often stilted, vague language of his public speeches, he punctuated his remarks with colorful anecdotes and jokes in excellent English, talking for more than two hours about jazz, his family and beloved pet dogs, growing old and the downsides of golf courses and dams. Over the years, some of the king’s advisers noted that he seemed more at ease with foreigners because there did not exist the barriers of protocol as with most Thai subjects.

That evening was one of several times I glimpsed some of the contrasting sides of a complex personality, one that may never be fully plumbed given the almost godlike aura with which he was invested and a strict law forbidding criticism of the monarch and royal family.

There was the king’s rigid adherence to tradition and his modern informality, the severe demeanor and ready humor, his simple lifestyle and his reported status as the world’s richest royal with a net worth of $30 billion. And he fused a Thai Buddhist self with a Western persona, perhaps natural since Bhumibol was born in Massachusetts and spent his formative years in Switzerland with his much-loved mother, a commoner who may have imparted some of her down-to-earth ways.

“My mother praised me when I did something good and then the next moment she would say, ‘Don’t float.’ She put me in a balloon and then pricked it,” he told me in a 1982 interview, one of the very few he gave.

At the 2008 gathering and earlier, a palpable sadness also suffused his critical comments about the course Thailand had taken as it shed traditional moral values in favor of a me-first, greed-is-good society, criticism he had only obliquely expressed in public.

It was a very different time, and he was in some respects a different man, when I first came in contact with the king in the late 1970s, accompanying him on trips to the northern mountains, the rice paddies of the northeast and the Muslim communities of the deep south.

Then, some 80 percent of the population still lived in the countryside and Thailand had yet to become an economic dynamo linked to global trends and a magnet for foreign tourists by the millions. The 1970s were perhaps the last decade of the old Thailand, with its charming customs and picturesque villages along with widespread poverty.

This was also the heyday of Bhumibol’s reign as he set about initiating and personally monitoring projects in health, education, poverty alleviation, water management and eradication of opium.

“They say that a kingdom is like a pyramid: the king on top and the people below. But in this country it’s upside down,” the king said in the interview, his facing breaking into a broad smile as he pointed to his shoulder. “That’s why I sometimes have a pain around here.”

In his 40s, the king was at his prime, jogging 3 kilometers a day followed by push-ups, and I shed a few pounds trailing him up steep hillsides along with paunchy bureaucrats and panting courtiers.

During one of several grueling, consecutive days, the king, queen and eldest daughter arrived in the morning by helicopter at an agriculture experimental station in the northern province of Chiang Mai, the king having gone to bed at 2 a.m. the night before to prepare for the day’s work. Dressed in a gray sports jacket and camouflaged combat boots, he carried a 1:50,000-scale map, 35mm camera and walkie-talkie.

The day proved another whirlwind of treks on foot and by jeep with tribal people cataloguing their woes, officials briefing and the king asking for results through both stern demands and gentle cajoling. At 8:30 p.m. the royals returned to Bhuping palace, high above Chiang Mai city, where the queen hurriedly changed from her jogging shoes and pants to meet some 100 guests.

The atmosphere was mellow and enchanting, the French menu superb. But from the royal table came snatches of conversation: dams and weirs … soil content … fertilizer. “I think the queen may have told you: We don’t have a private life,” the king later said.

While much of the regal formality was dropped on upcountry trips, in Bangkok’s palaces and reception halls, officials, courtiers and favor-seekers would prostrate themselves, crawling forward on their hands and knees before speaking to him using an archaic royal vocabulary.

A month after the station visit, the king was back in the hills, this time meeting with five Lahu who had come to seek his help in reclaiming land another tribe had taken from them. One was picking his teeth with a sprig of straw, another chewed noisily on betel nut. Rivulets of sweat mingled with the reddish upland dust on the king’s face as he spread a map on the ground and dropped to his knees to study the problem, the Lahu casually ranged around him.

The king clearly savored such encounters, bantering with rural dwellers and trying to solve their problems, even marital ones. He once told me the story of a hilltribesman whose wife ran away after he had purchased her with two pigs. The king decided the husband deserved compensation which would allow her freedom. “The only trouble was I gave the money,” he joked. “So the woman belonged to me.”

The king’s time in the countryside probably did much to shape his idealized vision of Thailand, one more rooted in a self-sufficient agricultural society than urban aspirations and values that were taking hold.

In the late 1980s, during another meeting with a few foreign journalists, the king said rapid growth had outpaced social and spiritual development, leading to both moral and environmental depredations. The poor and the powerless in the way of the barreling economic engine, he said, stood to lose their traditional livelihoods, their land and their laudable qualities.

“Thailand was built on compassion,” he said in an undertone of melancholy. He spoke of now-vanished huts in the forests — “when there were still forests” — where travelers could have free lodging and food left behind by others.

In my 1982 interview, for National Geographic magazine, Bhumibol indicated that in modern times royal success would depend a great deal on the person who sits on the throne rather than the throne itself. And that his success as a monarch came from his own merit rather than mere inheritance.

To drive home the point the king said, “The father of one of our ladies-in-waiting, Prince Sri Visar, was very good at reading palms. He used to take mine in his hand, look at it, and say: ‘Your Majesty, the lines show that you are a self-made man.'”

The king said the throne had sunk to vulnerable depths following the abolition of absolute monarchy in 1932.

“When I was young we had nothing,” the king recalled, his normally composed voice taking on a quiver of emotion. “The carpets and upholstery in the palace were full of holes. The floors creaked. Everything was so old. Yes, we had a piano, an upright given to us by the Fine Arts Department. But it was out of tune.”

“There was none of this,” he said, motioning toward finely brocaded upholstery, plush silks and a mantelpiece crowded with photographs of world leaders the king had known. A few feet away from where we sat stood a magnificent, immaculately polished grand piano. Aides assured us that it was in perfect tune.

___

Denis Gray has been covering Thailand and neighboring countries for the AP for more than 40 years.

 

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Crown Prince Leads King Bhumibol’s Funeral Procession

Crowd of mourners at the Grand Palace on Friday.

BANGKOK — Funerary rites for His Majesty the late King Bhumibol began Friday afternoon with Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn leading his royal cortege from Siriraj Hospital to the Grand Palace, where he will lie in state for the months to come.

Tens of thousands of mourners were lining along the route that will take King Bhumibol’s body from the hospital where he died Thursday to the Grand Palace. The monarch passed away at the age of 88.

The procession will be broadcast live on national television.

According to the schedule released by the Royal Household Bureau, the motorcade carrying King Bhumibol’s body will leave Siriraj Hospital at around 4.15pm. It is expected to arrive at the Grand Palace about 15 minutes later.

Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn will preside over a funeral bath ceremony at the Grand Palace at about 5pm. The bath is an elaborate ancient ceremony in which the prince pours perfumed water over parts of King Bhumibol’s body, combs his hair and lights incense and candles.

Over the following months, the late king will remain at the Grand Palace where monks will recite prayers for him day and night. The palace has not released a schedule for further funerary rites beyond Friday’s ceremonies.

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

BANGKOK — In the thousands, they squatted Friday on plastic sheets that offered no protection from the searing asphalt and steamed under plastic umbrellas.

Thais from across the realm crowded near the Grand Palace along the route where they would see pass, perhaps for the first time, the man whose image was everywhere all their lives.

With the death of His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej on Thursday initiating a year of mourning, every person along Ratchadamnoen Avenue was dressed in black, white or a uniform. Some wept; others sat listlessly with wet eyes. Almost all clutched portraits of the only king they have ever known.

They waited for his royal procession to pass after it left Siriraj Hospital on its way to Wat Phra Kaew, where funerary rites would be performed later this afternoon.

Laksami Sinpraset, 60, traveled alone from Chai Nat province as soon as she heard the news Thursday. She went straight to the palace Friday morning

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Laksami Sinpraset

“The feeling is completely indescribable. I can’t compare it with anything I’ve ever felt in my entire life,” Laksami said.

She choked up and shut her eyes for a moment before continuing.

“Let’s not talk about the future today,” she said, gesturing shakily toward the black bag packed with her clothes. “I can keep staying here.”

Jidapa “Maprang” Junsun, 43, is a street cook near the palace in the Tha Prachan area along the river. She was frying up noodles she gave to mourners without charge.

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Jidapa “Maprang” Junsun (right)

“I want to do good deeds for our father,” she said before getting emotional and turning away from a steaming pan full of mama pad. “He’s not here anymore. I need to keep doing good deeds for him.”

Since 10:30am, Maprang and a group of students from the Suan Dusit Rajabhat University have cooked up huge batches of fried mama noodles and Hale’s Blue Boy red drinks to give to mourners.

“Usually, I go to every single event about the King and the Queen. I will continue to go to every single event about them, I can promise you that,” she said. “I made my boyfriend stop working to come help me. My daughter’s left hand is disabled, and I want merit [from helping out here today] to affect her too.”

Tongmun Dontianpuang, 63, is a homemaker from western metro Bangkok who arrived to the palace at 9am with her family.

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Tongmun Dontianpuang

“I haven’t eaten. I cried and prayed all night for him,” Tongmun said. “Still, I think the country will continue to be in good hands. The prime minister is a good leader, like the King.”

Supasit Chinvinijkul, 23, was there with friends.

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Supasit Chinvinijkul

“Since I found out yesterday through the official announcement, I’ve cried countless times. I haven’t slept at all and came there this morning with my classmates for him.”

A number of foreign nationals were also present to witness the historic moment.

“I have never seen so many people moved and mourning on this scale. I want to share in this emotional moment with Thai people,” said 33-year-old Stanislas Détroyat, a French engineer. “For them the King was truly a historical character and personage of the Thai people.”

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Stanislas Détroyat

Laksita “Ping” Suwachupetnoi, 8, was sitting in the sun next to her mother and sister.

“I came today to send the King. I usually see him on the TV and big signs. I cried last night until my eyes were puffy.”

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Laksita “Ping” Suwachupetnoi (left)

The procession was to leave Siriraj Hospital with his majesty’s body at 1pm and arrive to the Grand Palace in time for 5pm funerary rites.

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Who’s Who in Thailand’s Royal Family

King Bhumibol Adulyadej, seated center, and his family members, from left: Princess Somsavali, Princess Ubolratana, Princess Chulabhorn, Princess Siribhachudabhorn, Royal Consort Princess Srirasm, Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti, Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, Princess Sirindhorn; after addressing the crowd from a balcony of the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall on his 85th birthday in 2012 in Bangkok. Photo: Wason Wanichakorn / Associated Press

A look at the most prominent members of the Thai royal family:

King Bhumibol Adulyadej

Photo: Associated Press
Photo: Associated Press

The world’s longest-reigning monarch, who died Thursday at age 88, was revered by his subjects as a demigod and father figure. He held no formal political power but was seen as an anchor of stability who has stepped to the forefront at crucial moments of Thai history. He was 18 when he was named king in 1946, and married Sirikit Kitiyakara, a beautiful Thai aristocrat he met initially in Paris, in 1950.

Queen Sirikit

Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press
Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

The 84-year-old queen charmed world leaders in her youth and earned the loyalty of her subjects from decades of work on behalf of the rural poor and the environment. Older Thais think fondly of the fairy-tale romance that led to the royal marriage in 1950. The ailing queen has been rarely seen in recent years. In a rare statement on her health in May 2016, the Royal Household Bureau said she has “insufficient blood in the brain,” a condition that she had at least since 2012.

Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn

Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press
Photo: Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press

The 64-year-old designated heir to the throne is the king and queen’s second child and only son. Vajiralongkorn went to England for secondary schooling before graduating from the Australian Military College in Duntroon in 1976. The crown prince notched more than 3,000 hours in jet fighters after military training courses in the United States. He is qualified in a wide range of aircraft ranging from helicopters to commercial passenger planes. He has held high ranks in the Thai army, navy and air force.

Princess Sirindhorn

Photo: Peerapat Wimolrungkarat / Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Peerapat Wimolrungkarat / Wikimedia Commons

The most beloved royal after her father, Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn is commonly referred to as “Pra Thep” — or “Princess Angel” — an abbreviated version of her ceremonial title. The king and queen’s third child has a down-to-earth reputation despite her royal status. When taking field trips to rural Thailand, the princess is often spotted with a camera around her neck, scribbling in a notebook, in much the same way the king did in his younger, more active years. Sirindhorn has never married and does not have children.

Princess Ubolratana

Photo: Peerapat Wimolrungkarat / Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Peerapat Wimolrungkarat / Wikimedia Commons

The eldest child of King Bhumibol and Queen Sirikit was born on April 5, 1951, in Lausanne, Switzerland, where the young king was studying at the time. She was raised in Thailand and engaged in several activities that the king enjoyed, including sailing. The father and daughter won a gold medal in a sailing competition at the Southeast Asian Games in 1967. Ubolratana graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1973 with a biochemistry degree. She married an American, Peter Ladd Jensen, and as a result was stripped of her royal title under palace law. They had three children but later divorced, and Ubolratana returned to Thailand and took part in royal duties. Her son, Poom Jensen, was lost in the 2004 tsunami. Her two daughters live in the U.S. The princess spearheaded an anti-drug campaign among Thai youth and hosts a TV talk show, giving advice to teenagers.

Princess Chulabhorn Walailak

Photo: Peerapat Wimolrungkarat / Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Peerapat Wimolrungkarat / Wikimedia Commons

The king and queen’s youngest child was born July 4, 1957, in Bangkok. She has supported a variety of scientific work in the country and was awarded an Einstein Medal from UNESCO in 1986 for her efforts in promoting science. She has worked as a veterinarian at a university animal hospital. She had two daughters with an air force officer before they divorced in 1996. Princess Chulabhorn likes to play the guzheng, or Chinese zither, and is a fan of Chinese culture.

Princess Bajrakitiyabha

Photo: Mahmoud / Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Mahmoud / Wikimedia Commons

The first grandchild of the king and the queen, Princess Bajrakitiyabha or “Ong Pa” was born to Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn and his first wife and cousin Princess Soamsawali on December 7, 1978. She went to Thammasat University in Bangkok, where she studied law, and received a doctoral degree at Cornell University in the U.S. She was appointed goodwill ambassador for U.N. women in 2008 and named the Thai ambassador to Austria in 2012. She later returned home to become a public prosecutor. Among other charity projects, the princess focused on working against violence against women and initiated a project that aims at improving the conditions for female inmates and their children in correctional facilities.

Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana

Photo: Seaman Tatiana Avery / Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Seaman Tatiana Avery / Wikimedia Commons

Born in 1987, Princess Sirivannavari is the youngest of five children born to the crown prince and his second wife. The princess’s four brothers all migrated to the United States with their mother and do not have royal titles. Sirivanavari has interests in sports and fashion. She represented Thailand in badminton and equestrian events at regional sports competitions. She also studied fashion and textiles at the Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts at Chulalongkorn University and studied couture at the Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne. She has shown catwalk collections in Paris and Bangkok and has her own fashion clothing line “Sirivannavari.” She is a regular at the Paris Fashion Week.

Note: Portions of these profiles have been redacted due to the present sensitive climate and draconian lese majeste law.

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