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SOS for China’s SOEs

A signboard displays the logo of the Bank of China in 2008 in Hong Kong. Photo: Conor / Flickr

China’s economic slowdown has been the subject of countless debates, discussions, articles, and analyses. While the proposed remedies vary considerably, there seems to be a broad consensus that the illness is structural. But while structural problems, from diminishing returns to capital to the rise in protectionism since the global economic crisis, are certainly acting as a drag on growth, another factor has gone largely unnoticed: the business cycle.

For decades, China’s economy sustained double­digit GDP growth, seemingly impervious to business cycles. But it wasn’t immune: in fact, the six­year slowdown China experienced after the 1997 Asian financial crisis was a symptom of precisely such a cycle.

Today, China’s business cycle has led to the accumulation of non­performing loans (NPLs) in the corporate sector, just as it did at the turn of the century. While the rate of NPLs is, according to official data, lower than 2%, many economists estimate that it is actually more like 3­5%. If they are right, NPLs could amount to 6­7% of China’s GDP.

Most of this debt is held by state­owned enterprises (SOEs), which account for just one­third of industrial output, yet receive more than half of the credit dispensed by China’s banks. Though the debt­equity ratio of the industrial sector as a whole has declined over the past 15 years, the SOEs’ has increased since the global financial crisis, to an average of 66%, 15 percentage points higher than that of other kinds of firms.

A looming recession undoubtedly spurred this debt accumulation, possibly aided by former Prime Minister Wen Jiabao’s massive 2009 stimulus package. But it was lax financial discipline that enabled the debt buildup. Banks feel safe lending to SOEs, no matter how indebted, because the government implicitly guarantees the debt. As a result, the SOEs, not surprisingly, have developed a habit of debt­financed growth.

That may not have been a problem when China’s economy was growing, but it represents a serious economic risk today, which is why the government has set deleveraging as one of its major tasks for this year. But execution has been slow, owing partly to China’s failure to enforce its bankruptcy law fully.

The fact that commercial banks are not allowed to hold shares in companies has also impeded deleveraging, as it prohibits the use of direct debt­equity swaps to reduce SOE debt. This should change.

China has employed debt­equity swaps to reduce NPLs in the state­sector before. In 1999, it established four asset­management companies (AMCs) to take on the weakest loans of the four largest state-­owned banks, thereby improving those banks’ financial stability. Given China’s high growth rates in 2003­2012, the AMCs made handsome profits from those shares.

Today, too, debt­equity swaps may be the only viable solution to the NPL problem. But the government does not need to rely on government­owned entities to assume the debt. Instead, it should allow private equity funds, which have accumulated large amounts of savings as they await good investment opportunities, to act as AMCs, bidding for the NPLs at a discount.

Such an approach would not just address the NPL problem; by giving the private sector a stake in the SOEs, it would also help to spur performance­enhancing reforms. After all, despite their grim financial performance, many of China’s SOEs have a lot going for them, including state­of­the­art equipment, first­rate technical staff, and competitive products. Their problem is bad governance and poor management – a problem that, as China’s top leaders recognized in 2013, private­sector involvement can help resolve.

Of course, there are some obstacles to introducing debt­equity swaps between the public and private sectors, beginning with concern about the loss of state assets. Given the severity of SOEs’ debt problem – the National Railway Company alone holds CN¥3 trillion (over $40 billion) in debt – discounts are inevitable when SOE debts are transferred to private AMCs. This could cause some to assert that the private firms are realizing unjust gains.

In order to overcome this obstacle, China should engage in local experimentation – a tried­and-tested approach that has long guided the country’s reform efforts – beginning in the regions where the SOE debt problem is the most acute. The resulting revitalization of SOEs would also help quell any doubts about debt­equity swaps with the private sector.

Another obstacle is the fear that, by allowing SOEs, yet again, to escape market discipline, debt-equity swaps would set a dangerous precedent. But the improvements to corporate governance that would follow from the introduction of private shareholders would reduce substantially the likelihood that SOEs would continue to abuse the financial system. Moreover, their NPLs are essentially sunk costs; debt­equity swaps are pretty much the only way to claw back anything atall.

By allowing private­sector participation in debt­equity swaps, China could kill three birds with one stone: advance SOE deleveraging, strengthen corporate governance in the state sector, and enhance economic efficiency. With local experimentation, Chinese authorities map out that stone’s most effective trajectory.

Yao Yang is Director of the China Center for Economic Research and Dean at the National

School of Development at Peking University.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2016.

www.project­syndicate.org

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Suspect in Deadly Washington State Mall Shooting Captured

Cascade Mall in Burlington, Wash. on Saturday. Photo: Ted S. Warren / Associated Press

BURLINGTON, Wash. — The suspect in a shooting at a Washington state mall that left five dead is in custody, authorities said Saturday.

The Skagit County Department of Emergency Management said via Twitter Saturday evening that the suspect had been captured. No other details were immediately available. A news conference was set for Saturday night.

A gunman opened fire at the Cascade Mall in Burlington, Washington, Friday night, killing four females and a male before fleeing. Law enforcement staged a massive search over more than 20 hours for the suspect, initially described by witnesses as a young Hispanic male wearing black.

The first 911 call came in just before 7 p.m. on a busy Friday night at the Cascade Mall: A man with a rifle was shooting at people in the Macy’s Department Store.

By the time police arrived moments later, the carnage at the Macy’s makeup counter was complete. Four people were dead and the shooter was gone, last seen walking toward Interstate 5. A fifth victim, a man, died in the early morning hours Saturday as police finished sweeping the 434,000-square-foot building.

“There are people waking up this morning, and their world has changed forever. The city of Burlington has probably changed forever, but I don’t think our way of life needs to change,” Burlington Mayor Steve Sexton said Saturday at a news conference. “This was a senseless act. It was the world knocking on our doorstep, and it came into our little community.”

As the small city absorbed the tragic news, critical questions remained, including the identity of the shooter and his motive.

The FBI said terrorism was not suspected.

Surveillance video captured the suspect entering the mall unarmed and then recorded him about 10 minutes later entering the Macy’s with a “hunting type” rifle in his hand, Mount Vernon police Lt. Chris Cammock said.

Authorities did not say how the suspect may have obtained the weapon — whether he retrieved it from outside or picked it up in the mall — but they believe he acted alone. The weapon was recovered at the scene.

The identities of the victims — four women who ranged in age from a teenager to a senior citizen — were withheld pending autopsies and notification of family. The identity of the man who was fatally shot was also withheld and may not be released until Monday.

“Probably one of the most difficult moments for us last night was knowing that there were family members wondering about their loved ones in there,” Mount Vernon police Lt. Chris Cammock said.

Earlier Saturday as police scrambled to find the shooter, the small city about 60 miles (97 kilometers) waited and worried.

The community of 8,600 people is too far from Seattle to be a commuter town, but its population swells to 55,000 during the day because of a popular outlet mall, retail stores and other businesses. Burlington is the only major retail center within 30 miles (48 kilometers) in a region where agriculture is king, said Linda Jones, president of the Burlington Chamber of Commerce.

Residents gathered Saturday to comfort each other at a community gathering in a city park.

“It’s too scary. It’s too close to home,” said Maria Elena Vasquez, who attended the gathering with her husband and two young children.

Those who survived were still trying to process what happened as their community became the latest entry on a list of places known by the rest of world for mass shootings.

Joanne Burkholder, 19, of nearby Mount Vernon, was watching the movie “The Magnificent Seven” in the mall’s theater when security guards came in and told them to evacuate immediately. Dozens of panicked moviegoers gathered in the hallway, and Burkholder heard screaming as the officers escorted them to safety in a parking lot.

As she drove home later, she had to pull over because she was shaking so hard, she told The Associated Press.

“I’m just very thankful for my life this morning. I’ve never been so terrified in my life,” she said Saturday, trying to hold back tears as she attended the community vigil.

“You’d think it would happen in Everett or Seattle, but a small town of Burlington, I’d never dream something like this would happen.”

People who believed they may have lost loved ones were being sequestered at a church three blocks from the mall, where counselors and a golden retriever therapy dog were present.

Dozens of people attended a Saturday evening prayer service for the victims. The gathering was held at Central United Methodist Church in nearby Sedro-Woolley, Washington.

The Rev. Cody Natland lit five candles on a table in front of the church, one for each victim.

The Cascade Mall is an enclosed shopping mall that opened in 1990. It features J.C. Penney, TJ Maxx, and Macy’s stores, among other shops, restaurants and a movie theater.

On Sept. 17, a man stabbed 10 people at a Minnesota mall before being shot and killed by an off-duty police officer. Authorities say Dahir Ahmed Adan, 20, stabbed the people at the Crossroads Center in St. Cloud.

Story: Phuong Le and Gillian Flaccus

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Indonesia, Candidate for UN Security Council

Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla meets Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop in March in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Timothy Tobing / DFAT

JAKARTA — Indonesia announced Friday its candidacy for membership on the U.N. Security Council, saying its commitment and contribution to the world’s body make it a true partner for world peace.

In his speech before the U.N. General Assembly, the country’s Vice President Muhammad Jusuf Kalla said the United Nations needs reforms to make it stronger and more relevant to 21st century challenges and realities. Among issues it was facing, he cited irregular migration resulting from conflict in Syria, Yemen, Iraq and other places, along with climate change, unregulated fishing and cybercrime.

Kalla noted Indonesia’s steady commitment to increase its peacekeeping force to 4,000 personnel by 2019 and its efforts to fight terrorism both regional and globally. As the world’s most populous Muslim nation and its third-largest democracy, Indonesia sees Islam modernity and women empowerment as going hand in hand with the promotion of democracy, tolerance, pluralism and peace, he said.

Selections of the new non-permanent Security Council members in 2019-2020 will be made in mid-2019. Other Asia-Pacific candidates are India and Vietnam.

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Can We Properly Learn from Our Ugly Past?

A prison cell at Berlin-Hohenschonhausen.

Retention

In Berlin, one can accidentally walk past the Holocaust memorial near the Brandenburg Gate or parts of the remaining Berlin Wall. At leafy Tier Garten, one notices a memorial for killed Roma people. Just in front of Humboldt University’s Law Faculty, one can stare through a glass square into a white room full of empty bookshelves, as a reminder of the banned books burnt during the Third Reich.

When it comes to learning lessons from our ugly pasts, Germany is one of the nations that has succeeded. Think of Buchenwald Nazi concentration camp near Weimar, which is one of the largest such camps in Germany to have been turned into a museum. Its gruesome permanent exhibition of tools used to annihilate Jews are for all to see and the horror of Hitler’s genocide for all to grasp.

In former East Berlin, this writer recently visited Berlin-Hohenschonhausen, the most well-known secret Stasi Prison. Today it’s a museum where an English-speaking guided tour is available to recount how the now defunct German Democratic Republic (GDR) dealt with its dissidents and critics in captivity.

For those not satiated by the walking tour, the prison-turned-museum also has a bookshop with books detailing the horror of Stasi’s tactics in greater depth.

Pravit Rojanaphruk

According to the book “The Prohibited District: The Stasi Restricted Area Berlin-Hohenschonhausen” by Peter Erler and Hubertus Knabe, in the 1980s, anyone who “vilified” the state organs could be sentenced to up to two years in the prison.

Sound familiar?

Back to Thailand, as the kingdom approaches the 40th commemoration of the Oct. 6, 1976 massacre, the difference couldn’t be starker.

The Thai state is not doing anything to ensure that young Thais will remember what took place on that day almost four decades ago, when a mob of security forces and ultra-royalists killed at least 46, according to the government account. Some were lynched, and some survivors said more than 100 were killed. These people were accused of having committed the crime of being communist sympathizers and anti-monarchists. Some young female victims who were university students were raped and killed. Some perpetrators cast a deeply satisfied smile at the sight of dead bodies being repeatedly attacked and mutilated. Others were burnt alive or hung to death. The orgy captured by some photojournalists in print represents a testimony to arguably the ugliest and most senseless chapter in modern Thai history.

Today there’s no state-funded museum for Thais, particularly the young, to learn about this ugly past of Oct. 6, 1976. This historical incident continues to exist in obscurity among the majority of Thais, including young Thais, except for those who have a special interest in human rights, democracy and history.

There’s an old Thai adage that says: uneaten food will rot. Unrecounted old tales will be forgotten.

Pro-democracy activists and concerned academics are trying their best to document, make sense of the event and remind us of the significance of the day early next month. A number of forums are planned for next month, including ones at Chulalongkorn and Thammasat Universities despite Thai society being under military control. The front of Thammasat University at the Royal Lawn (Sanam Luang) was the actually site where the lynching took place.

Beyond these groups of politically-aware folks however, the general public continue to be oblivious to our society’s ugly past. We risk succumbing to the worst of political hatreds against those who think differently about politics and the monarchy if we do not try to properly learn from the past.

A state-funded museum and a guide or two who speak fluent English would also be helpful.

Correction: A previous version of this column indicated all victims of the massacre were lynched. Only some were killed by hanging, but the exact number is unknown.

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Internet Laughs Off Khon Controversy With Wonderful Memes

Photo: Teen Yak / Facebook

BANGKOK As debate over a tourism video using khon characters dominates the national conversation, the internet has weighed in with an abundance of humor and a fair amount of contempt.

The director of the video made for the tourism authority released a new version edited under pressure from a cultural purist who said scenes the fictional demons of Thai traditional dance go-karting and taking selfies was inappropriate.

Read: Khon Can’t Kart: Tourism Video Latest Front in Culture Wars

In recent days, disbelief that this was an issue inspired satire of the brouhaha in all forms, seemingly all in support of music video “Tiew Thai Me Hey (Travel in Thailand is Fun)” directed by Bhandit Thongdee for the Thai Tourism Authority.

Popular Facebook outrage forum Drama Addict has even started a Thotsakan fanart contest, referring to the demon king who is a lead character in khon drama. The contest currently has more than 800 works submitted.

It’s certainly inspired a lot more inappropriate portrayals for Ladda Thangsupachai, former head of the Cultural Surveillance Bureau, to complain about.

Photo: Pompam Papang / Facebook
Photo: Pompam Papang / Facebook

“Frozen Culture” chilled ready-to-eat lunch box. “Nationalism 50% Conservatism 50%” it reads. 

Photo: CafeMe2 / Facebook
Photo: CafeMe2 / Facebook
Photo: Suchanat Chidthai / Facebook
Photo: Suchanat Chidthai / Facebook
A mural portraying the demon king Tosakan flirting with Benjagai, a female character in Ramakien. “Lemme grab, lemme touch.” said the blue line, and red line reads, “Don’t get naughty, baby.” Photo: Underground Karaoke / Facebook
A mural portraying the demon king Tosakan flirting with Benjagai, a female character in Ramakien. “Lemme grab, lemme touch.” said the blue line, and red line reads, “Don’t get naughty, baby.” Photo: Underground Karaoke / Facebook

 

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MH370 Wreckage Hunter Determined to Solve Mystery

Blaine Gibson holds a piece of aircraft debris Sept. 16 on a beach in Madagascar. Photo: Blain Gibson / Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia — The fedora, the bomber jacket and the consuming quest invite comparisons to Indiana Jones. Blaine Gibson, though, hasn’t matched the film hero’s triumph in finding the legendary chest containing the stone tablets inscribed with the Ten Commandments.

Not that he didn’t try. “The Ark of the Covenant, I did not find it. However, I do believe that it’s in Ethiopia somewhere,” Gibson told AP recently.

The amateur sleuth has had far greater success finding clues from a modern mystery: the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.

He is the first person searching for the plane who’s actually found any trace of it and says he won’t quit gathering clues until the mystery is solved.

“Travel is what I do, but I always love travel with a purpose, and solving the mystery of Malaysia 370 is a purpose … until I or someone else finds out what happened to the plane and those on board,” he said while in the Australian capital of Canberra to visit the headquarters for the official plane search.

The Boeing 777 carrying 227 passengers and 12 crew members is thought to have plunged into the southern Indian Ocean after inexplicably flying far off course during a flight from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing, on March 8, 2014.

The first reports that Gibson had found a possible part of the plane met with skepticism. Other pieces of suspected debris have been stumbled upon by chance. But how could one private citizen succeed in finding a piece of the plane where a multi-government, multimillion-dollar search had failed? Answer: There is no official search being conducted, beyond that of the 120,000 square kilometers (46,000 square miles) of seabed southwest of Australia calculated to be the crash site.

But the triangular panel stenciled “no step” that Gibson found on Feb. 27 has been confirmed as almost certainly a horizontal stabilizer from a Flight 370 wing.

Gibson said he found himself in Mozambique partly because oceanographers had told him that debris might wash up on its beaches and partly because he had never visited the country. (The 58-year-old born in California has been to 177 countries in a quest to visit them all).

Getting to know relatives of the missing has ended any chance of him conceding defeat in his search.

“It was good management, but it was also a lot of luck,” Gibson said. “What you don’t see before that were the number of beaches that I combed in Reunion, in Mauritius in other parts of the world and found nothing.”

Gibson has since recovered another 13 pieces of potential debris in Madagascar, with the help of locals he has befriended who now search for him. He and victims’ relatives have been frustrated by Malaysia’s hesitance to collect the debris and potential personal effects and analyze them for clues.

Gibson hand-delivered five pieces of debris on Sept. 12 when he and relatives of Flight 370 victims met in Canberra with officials of the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, which is conducting the deep-sea sonar search on Malaysia’s behalf.

Warren Truss, a former deputy prime minister who oversaw the search until retiring from politics in February, expects more of Gibson’s finds will be confirmed. “He has certainly made a constructive contribution to the search,” said Truss.

Australian oceanographer David Griffin, one of two Gibson credits with pointing him the right direction, found the American to be frustrated that search responsibilities fell between cracks of coordinating agencies.

“He sees that one man can just go and get on with the job. I think it’s terrific that somebody who has the ability and resources to do that just gets on with it,” Griffin said.

Gibson has also been a volunteer archaeologist in Belize and Guatemala investigating the fate of the Mayan civilization. His old friend Peter Davenport said he was not surprised that the adventurer would immerse himself so completely in the aviation mystery.

Davenport, who is director of the National UFO Reporting Center based in Washington state, said he once got Gibson interested in the Tunguska event: a large explosion near the Stony Tunguska River in Siberia that flattened a vast area of forest in 1908.

“Next thing I know, he’s there trying to befriend people who knew something about it and trying to get to the heart of the mystery, which is still a mystery in my opinion. It was not a meteor, clearly,” Davenport said.

(Gibson concludes the explosion was caused by a meteor that vaporized in the atmosphere).

Davenport said his friend of more than two decades had the capability to solve mysteries as well as the desire.

“He is very engaging, he gets along with people very well, he’s non-confrontational, I would say, and these are all qualities that I think evoke in people a desire to work with him and to help him,” Davenport said.

Gibson said he has always worked to fund travel and selling his deceased parents’ home in Carmel, California, for more than USD$1 million in 2014 will keep him in the hunt for Flight 370.

But he and victims’ families wish governments would coordinate efforts to collect debris washing up on the western shores of the Indian Ocean. Studying the debris could explain the crash and drift modeling could better indicate where the main wreckage lies.

The underwater search is due to end around December if it finds nothing or fresh clues fail to pinpoint a crash site.

Gibson is not sure where he will search next, but the Seychelles and Comoros Islands are options unexplored.

He did not have a preferred theory of what happened, and warned against the public accepting a popular theory that Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah stole the plane.

“People jump to that conclusion simply because there’s no other explanation, it’s easy to pin it on the pilot who is not around to defend himself, write the mystery off and the search off forever: that is not acceptable,” he said.

He said the missing plane was a world problem that more nations needed to work to solve. “We need to know that if we get on a plane, we’re not just going to disappear,” he added.

Story: Rod McGuirk

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4 Dead in Shooting at Mall North of Seattle

Photo: Cascade Mall / Facebook

SEATTLE — Authorities in Washington state say four people have been killed during a shooting at a mall north of Seattle and that at least one suspect remains at large.

The Washington State Patrol says on Twitter that the four were shot Friday at the Cascade Mall in Burlington, about 65 miles (105 kilometers) north of Seattle.

Sgt. Mark Francis says authorities are searching for a man wearing gray who was last seen walking toward Interstate 5. Francis says it wasn’t immediately known if there was more than one gunman involved.

Francis said at about 8:30 p.m. that the mall had been evacuated and emergency medical personnel were cleared to enter and attend to any injuries. It wasn’t immediately clear how many people were hurt.

The Cascade Mall is an enclosed shopping mall in Burlington, Washington that opened in 1990, according to the mall’s website. It features J.C. Penney, TJ Maxx, and Macy’s stores, among other stores, restaurants and a movie theater.

Story: Lisa Baumann

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Mannequin Caught Driving in Carpool Lane

Photo provided by the Brea, Calif., Police Department shows a mannequin in the passenger seat of a truck that the driver was using to use the carpool lane instead of congested regular traffic lanes on Wednesday on the 57 Freeway in Brea. Photo: Police Department / Associated Press

BREA, California — A California driver has been cited for using a mannequin  not the required human being  to drive in the carpool lane.

The Orange County Register reports Brea police found the mannequin Wednesday inside a truck on the congested 57 freeway.

The truck veered out of the carpool lane close to an officer’s motorcycle. As the officer attempted to warn the driver to be careful, he noticed the passenger wasn’t a passenger.

Police say the driver acknowledged using the mannequin in the carpool lane for some time. The driver told police that he would now accept that he needs to sit in traffic like everyone else.

California requires that a vehicle have a minimum of two people for carpool lanes. Driving alone requires a fine of at least USD$481.

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Foreigners Arrested After Raid on Forgery Ring Leads to Body in Fridge

One of the unnamed suspects is escorted out of the building by police.

BANGKOK — A police officer was shot in a raid on an alleged forgery den in southwest Bangkok on Friday afternoon which turned up five foreign suspects, firearms, drugs and a dead man in a refrigerator.

Officers were left with a mystery on their hands when the relatively routine raid on a building in the Phra Khanong area turned up the dead body. In the course of arresting five suspects said to be a Briton, two Americans and two Burmese, a police officer was shot.

Forensic examiners were working to identity the body discovered in a large fridge on the ground floor of the commercial property.

Maj. Gen. Somprasong Yenthuam of the Metropolitan Police Bureau said police received reports that passports were being forged there, leading to Friday’s raid.

One of the suspects shot a Tourist Police officer in the chest during the operation, Somprasong said. The officer, Sgt. Maj. Kanjanapong Chedet, was in stable condition.

Police found three handguns and crystal meth inside the building, Somprasong said.

Update: Since publication, police have said the body was that of a man and not a woman.

Rescue workers on Friday carry the dead body from a building in Bangkok’s Phra Khanong area.
Rescue workers on Friday carry the dead body from a building in Bangkok’s Phra Khanong area.

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Watch 9 ASEAN Films Free Starting Sunday

BANGKOK — Preview a Thai film made in Myanmar and other cinematic gems of ASEAN starting Sunday at Ramkhamhaeng University.

Represented as the first Thai film shot in Myanmar in five decades, “From Bangkok To Mandalay” will hold a free test screening at the university’s ASEAN Film Festival and Conference, a five-day event featuring nine films selected from the region.

Representing Thailand “From Bangkok To Mandalay” telling a romantic story between two generations of Myanmar men and Thai women through their love letters.

Also showing will be “The Wandering” or Thudongkawat, an acclaimed monk film about a sorrowful man who tries desperately to escape his suffering. It will show Thursday with director Boonsong Nakphoo there to discuss it afterward in Thai.

Read: ‘Wandering’ Into The Woods, Director Captures Buddhism on Film

“My Teacher” is a 2014 Thai-Laotian drama about a teacher who wants to go back to teach kids in his village but is challenged by many obstacles. Davy Chou’s 2011 documentary “Golden Slumbers” represents Cambodia, telling the rise of its cinema industry from 1960 onward and how the Khmer Rouge played a part in its fall.

Also check out a Vietnamese sci-fi romantce “2030,” and Singapore’s “Unlucky Plaza,” about a poor Filipino single father pushed to take a rich Singaporean family hostage.

The screenings are free in Thai and English subtitles. Tickets can be reserved online.

The festival kicks off at 10:30am on Sept. 25 at SF Cinema, The Mall Bangkapi. After that, all screenings and conferences will be held in room No. 322 of the Sukhothai Building of Ramkhamhaeng University’s campus in Hua Mak.

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