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Niece of Army Torture Victim Indicted for Defaming Officer

A group of army conscripts march in a drill parade May 23 at the 11th Army Circle headquarters in Bangkok. Image: Matichon

BANGKOK — A woman whose uncle was beaten to death by drill sergeants on a southern army base five years ago was indicted Thursday for writing about his torture.

Naritsarawan Kaewnopparat is charged with defamation and violating the Computer Crime Act – two laws long described by activists as tools to suppress free speech – filed against her by the army officer who reportedly oversaw the deadly abuse.

Niece of Army Torture Victim Arrested For Internet Messages

A court official informed Naritsarawan about her indictment Thursday morning, Prachatai news agency reported.

She will stand trial at a court in Narathiwat province, where Maj. Phuri Perksophon filed charges against her in December.

Naritsarawan’s uncle was Pvt. Wichian Puaksorn, a draftee who was tortured and beaten to death by a group of soldiers in June 2011 at an army base in Narathiwat, reportedly for trying to desert.

Last year Naritsarawan posted photos and stories about the brutality that killed her uncle in a bid to seek on his behalf. No one was ever held legally accountable for Wichian’s death.

Phuri, a lieutenant at the time of Wichian’s death, was identified as the commanding officer present when the beating took place. He took offense to Naritsarawan’s messages and filed the defamation charges.

Related stories:

New Recruit Beaten to Death As Draft Season Begins

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Selfie Series: History Seen Through Lens of Vanity at BACC

Photo: Chumpol Kamwanna / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Movies, music, theatre plays and talks. While a variety of events will mark the 40th anniversary of the Thammasat University massacre, one artist has a unique approach.

Taking a note from those who commemorate important dates from coups to uprisings by uploading selfies, Chumpol Kamwanna created 10 oil paintings to show off at Selfie Series.

“What I see on [important occasions] is no longer different from other ordinary days,” Chumpol said. “Commemorating an event now means just taking a picture with a monument.”

One of his works depicts a naked man taking a selfie of himself that recalls an infamous photo of a cigarette-smoking police officer aiming a pistol into the campus.

A photo taken by Thairath photographer Wirot Mutitanon
A photo taken by Thairath photographer Wirot Mutitanon

The opening reception for Selfie Series starts at 6pm on Oct. 6. The exhibition runs through the end of the month at People’s Gallery on the second floor of the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre.

The Bangkok Art and Culture Centre can be reached on foot by skywalk from BTS National Stadium.

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Will Thailand Choke on the Tailpipe of Bangkok’s Eco-Hubris?

The Mae Moh coal burning power plant in the northern province of Lampang. Photo: Watanyou Intachai / Flickr

Green – not army but eco – is en vogue. Electric vehicles have been buzzing in the headlines, with Deputy PM Somkid Jatusripitak saying the country will become a hub for electric vehicles, or EV, and the Energy Ministry pushing plans to reduce taxes on EVs to spur adoption.

But while the Bangkok elite talks about how green it will be with a shiny new Tesla or BMW i3 EV, are they actually saving the planet? Thailand’s mid-20th century energy mix – namely fossil fuels such as coal – could mean the green brigade’s misguided idealism will make things worse.

A Bloomberg report on Tuesday concluded the benefits of EVs depend on where they are used — the energy sources in play.

“In places that use low-carbon energy sources like renewables and nuclear, electric vehicles dramatically reduce emissions,” it read. “There’s less of a difference in regions where most of the power comes from coal, like China.”

The electricity needed to charge a zero-emission vehicle still needs to be produced somewhere, and that somewhere usually means burning fossil fuels. Countries with a heavy reliance on nuclear energy such as France (over 90%) came out with huge improvement. Germany, a country with a reputation for excess daytime energy because of solar production, only saw CO2 output reduced by roughly a third.

China, which does have a well-known problem of coal-fired smog, put out more CO2 per kilometer than Germany, but EV use reduced it by 40 percent. Japan is a paradox. Though EV use brought down output, electric cars there are getting dirtier as more gas-fired energy plants replace nuclear, post-Fukushima.

But what of Thailand?

Back in January, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha used Article 44 of the interim constitution, aka the absolute power clause, to fast-track construction of two new coal plants: the 2,200MWh Theptha plant in Songkhla and an 800MWh power plant in Krabi. He also exempted them from environmental and health impact reviews.

Well, to be fair, Dear Leader exempted every power plant already planned through to 2036 under his long-term power roadmap, as well as biogas and waste-to-gas plants (not all bad, one may argue). It so happens that 2036 is the same year the same energy master plan sees 1.2 million EVs on Thai roads.

The idea of commissioning dirty coal-fired power plants to charge clean EVs must be worthy of some award.

Last month the Energy Ministry announced how EVs would save the country transport-energy related costs. However, those were immediate costs rather than those born of long-term environmental impacts. And although there don’t seem to be any published studies on EV carbon emissions under the country’s power mix, we can make some extrapolations.

In the UK, according Bloomberg, an EV “emits” just over 80g/km of CO2 from the power plants. The UK energy mix still has a substantial basis in carbon fuels, mostly natural gas.

In Q1 this year, the UK energy mix was 25.1 percent renewables, 18.7 percent nuclear and over half from various fossil fuels. In Thailand, domestically produced clean energy accounts for 8 percent with another 7 percent of imported hydro energy. To oversimplify, England’s energy is 43.8 percent clean vs. 15 percent for Thailand.

Using rough back-of-envelope calculations (wrongly treating all fossil fuels as the same), Bloomberg’s hypothetical EV would emit 142g/km if the non-carbon energy was removed from UK figures. In Thailand, with 15 percent renewables, the equivalent CO2 emissions would be 120.7g/km.

That is not bad, but it far from zero-emission, as the green brigade would like to have you believe. The real problem for anyone thinking of buying an EV is that a diesel Mazda 2 boasts just 89g/km of carbon emissions.

Yes, let that sink in. In Thailand, a 780,000 baht Mazda is arguably cleaner than a 5 million baht Tesla EV because of the country’s carbon fuel-heavy energy mix.

Both figures are best-case scenarios, before air-conditioning, traffic and bad driving take their toll.

But, but, but – one might argue, EVs remove the pollution from overcrowded Bangkok and put it at the energy plant where it can be dealt with properly. Yes, the residents of Rayong’s Map-ta-phut district who are dying from respiratory illnesses from the gas-fired power plants would undoubtedly agree with that argument, if they could still speak out at all, what with all the coughing.

We all need to do our part to save the world. But we need to save the world by actually saving the world instead of further damaging it with make believe. That path starts with informed debate and dialogue, not dismissing naysayers as troublemakers and overruling environmental protection laws with diktats in the name of efficiency.

For Thailand, it starts with cleaning up our energy and focusing on the big picture that is best for our children, not the bottom line of state enterprises.

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Bangkok Copes as Roads Run Wet And Prepares For More (Photos)

Srinakarin Road on Friday morning. Photo: FM. 91 Trafficpro / Facebook

BANGKOK — Relentless outpouring from the sky turned to traffic tears Friday morning with consequences?

Flooding was reported in various locations and roads throughout the capital including Asoke, Bearing, Sri Nakarin and Saphan Kwai.

Monsoon strength will remain concentrated in east and central Thailand, with heavy rain in Bangkok expected Saturday before diminishing slightly as a weakening northern pressure front pushes monsoon forces toward the north.

https://twitter.com/TZ_Ploii/status/779112979203620865

 

https://twitter.com/manopsi/status/779153788384845824

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Rat Couturier Amongst Winners of Ig Nobel Prize

Thomas Thwaites, left, accepts the Ig Nobel prize in biology from Nobel laureate Eric Maskin (economics, 2007) Thursday during ceremonies at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Photo: Michael Dwyer / Associated Press

BOSTON — A Swede who wrote a trilogy about collecting bugs, an Egyptian doctor who put pants on rats to study their sex lives and a British researcher who lived like an animal have been named winners of the Ig Nobels, the annual spoof prizes for quirky scientific achievement.

The winners were honored  or maybe dishonored  Thursday in a zany ceremony at Harvard University.

The 26th annual event featured a paper airplane air raid and a tic-tac-toe contest with a brain surgeon, a rocket scientist and four real Nobel laureates.

Winners receive $10 trillion cash prizes  in virtually worthless Zimbabwean money.

This year’s Ig Nobels, sponsored by the science humor magazine Annals of Improbable Research , included research by Fredrik Sjoberg, who published three volumes about collecting hoverflies on the sparsely populated Swedish island where he lives.

It sounds downright dull, but Sjoberg’s books are a hit in his homeland, and the first volume’s English translation, “The Fly Trap,” has earned rave reviews.

“I had written books for 15 years (read by no one) when I finally understood it’s a good thing to write about something you really know, no matter what that might be,” Sjoberg said in an email, describing the award as the pinnacle of his career.

“The Ig Nobel Prize beats everything,” he said. “At last I hope to become a rock star. Leather pants, dark sunglasses, groupies. All that.”

Ahmed Shafik decided rats needed pants.

He dressed his rodents in polyester, cotton, wool and polyester-cotton blend pants to determine the different textiles’ effects on sex drive. The professor at Cairo University in Egypt, who died in 2007, found that rats that wore polyester or polyester blend pants displayed less sexual activity, perhaps because of the electrostatic charges created by polyester. He suggested that the results could be applied to humans.

The study did not explain how he measured a rat’s waist and inseam.

Charles Foster, a fellow at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, won for literally living like an animal. He spent months mimicking a badger, an otter, a fox, a deer and a bird in an attempt to see the world through their eyes, then wrote a book, “Being a Beast,” about his experiences.

He lived as a badger in a hole in a Welsh hillside; rummaged like a fox through trash cans in London’s East End looking for scraps of chicken tikka masala and pepperoni pizza; and was tracked by bloodhounds through the Scottish countryside to learn what it’s like to be a deer.

It wasn’t much fun.

“I was hunted down quite quickly,” he said.

Andreas Sprenger was part of a team at the University of Luebeck in Germany that found that if you have an itch on one arm, you can relieve it by looking in a mirror and scratching the opposite arm. Sound silly? But imagine, Sprenger said via email, if you have a skin condition with an intolerable itch, you can scratch the other arm to relieve it without rubbing the affected arm raw.

Gordon Logan, a professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University, and colleagues from Canada and Europe won for their research on lying. Their study of more than 1,000 people who are ages 6 to 77  “From junior to senior Pinocchio: A cross-sectional lifespan investigation of deception”  found that young adults are the best liars.

How do the scientists know their subjects weren’t lying to them?

“We don’t,” Logan said.

Story: Mark Pratt

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Record-Breaking Hack Stole 500 Million Yahoo Accounts

People walk in front of a Yahoo sign in 2014 at the company's headquarters in Sunnyvale, Calif. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Computer hackers swiped personal information from at least 500 million Yahoo accounts in what is believed to be the biggest digital break-in at an email provider.

The massive security breakdown disclosed Thursday poses new headaches for beleaguered Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer as she scrambles to close a $4.8 billion sale to Verizon .

The breach dates back to late 2014, raising questions about the checks and balances within Yahoo — a fallen internet star that has been laying off staff and trimming expenses to counter a steep drop in revenue during the past eight years.

At the time of the break-in, Yahoo’s security team was led by Alex Stamos, a respected industry executive who left last year to take a similar job at Facebook.

ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH

Yahoo didn’t explain what took so long to uncover a heist that it blamed on a “state-sponsored actor” — parlance for a hacker working on behalf of a foreign government.

The Sunnyvale, California, company declined to explain how it reached its conclusions about the attack for security reasons, but said it is working with the FBI and other law enforcement. Yahoo began investigating a possible breach in July, around the time the tech site Motherboard reported that a hacker who uses the name “Peace” was trying to sell account information belonging to 200 million Yahoo users.

Yahoo didn’t find evidence of that reported hack, but additional digging later uncovered a far larger, allegedly state-sponsored attack.

“We take these types of breaches very seriously and will determine how this occurred and who is responsible,” the FBI said in a Thursday statement.

MOST ACCOUNTS EVER STOLEN

The Yahoo theft represents the most accounts ever stolen from a single email provider, according to computer security analyst Avivah Litan with the technology research firm Gartner Inc.

“It’s a shocking number,” Litan said. “This is a pretty big deal that is probably going to cost them tens of millions of dollars. Regulators and lawyers are going to have a field day with this one.”

Yahoo says it has more than 1 billion monthly users, although it hasn’t disclosed how many of those people have email accounts. In July, 161 million people worldwide used Yahoo email on personal computers, a 30 percent decline from the same time in 2014, according to the latest data from the research firm comScore.

The data stolen from Yahoo includes users’ names, email addresses, telephone numbers, birth dates, scrambled passwords, and the security questions — and answers — used to verify an accountholder’s identity. The company said the attacker didn’t get any information about its users’ bank accounts or credit and debit cards.

Security experts say the Yahoo theft could hurt the affected users if their personal information is mined to break into other online services or used for identity theft. All affected users will be notified about the theft and advised how to protect themselves, according to the company.

Yahoo also is recommending that all users change their passwords if they haven’t done so since 2014. If the same password is used to access other sites, it should be changed too, along with any security questions similar to those used on Yahoo.

THE VERIZON IMPACT

News of the security lapse could cause some people to have second thoughts about relying on Yahoo’s services, raising a prickly issue for the company as it tries to sell its digital operations to Verizon.

That deal, announced two months ago, isn’t supposed to close until early next year. That leaves Verizon with wiggle room to renegotiate the purchase price or even back out if it believes the security breach will harm Yahoo’s business. That could happen if users shun Yahoo or file lawsuits because they’re incensed by the theft of their personal information.

Verizon said it still doesn’t know enough about the Yahoo break-in to assess the potential consequences. “We will evaluate as the investigation continues through the lens of overall Verizon interests, including consumers, customers, shareholders and related communities,” the company said in a statement.

DELAY OF SALE?

At the very least, Verizon is going to need more time to assess what it will be getting into if it proceeds with its plans to take over Yahoo, said Scott Vernick, an attorney specializing in data security for the law firm Fox Rothschild.

“This is going to slow things down. There is going to be a lot of blood, sweat and tears shed on this,” Vernick said. “A buyer needs to understand the cybersecurity strengths and weaknesses of its target these days.”

Investors evidently aren’t nervous about the Verizon deal unraveling yet. Yahoo’s stock added a penny Thursday to close at $44.15. But the Verizon sale represents a sliver of Yahoo’s total market value, which primarily consists of a stake in Chinese e-commerce leader Alibaba Group currently worth $42 billion.

Story: Michael Liedtke

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In Interview, Syria’s Assad Blames US for Collapse of Truce

Syrian President Bashar Assad speaks to The Associated Press at the presidential palace in Damascus, Syria, in a Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2016, photo released by the Syrian Presidency. Photo: Syrian Presidency / Associated Press

DAMASCUS, Syria — President Bashar Assad rejected U.S. accusations that Syrian or Russian planes struck an aid convoy in Aleppo or that his troops were preventing food from entering the city’s rebel-held eastern neighborhoods, blaming the U.S. for the collapse of a cease-fire many had hoped would bring relief to the war-ravaged country.

In an interview with The Associated Press in Damascus, Assad also said deadly airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition on Syrian troops last week were intentional, dismissing American officials’ statements that they were an accident. Assad said the U.S. lacked “the will” to join forces with Russia in fighting extremists.

In Washington, the State Department countered that Assad’s assertions on the attack were “ridiculous.”

Assad, who inherited power from his father and is now in his 16th year in office, cut a confident figure during the interview — a sign of how his rule, which once seemed threatened by the rebellion, has been solidified by his forces’ military advances and by the air campaign of his ally Russia, which turned the tables on the battlefield last year.

He said his enemies alone were to blame for nearly six years of devastation across Syria, and while acknowledging some mistakes, he repeatedly denied any excesses by his troops. He said the war was only likely to “drag on” because of continued external support for his opponents

“When you have many external factors that you don’t control, it’s going to drag on and no one in this world can tell you when” the war will end, he said, insisting Syrians who fled the country could return within a few months if the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar stopped backing insurgents.

He spoke Wednesday in Damascus’ Muhajireen palace, a white-stone building where he often receives guests, nestled among trees on the foothills of Qasioun Mountain. The Syrian capital, seat of Assad’s power, has stayed relatively untouched throughout the conflict, spared the devastation inflicted on other, opposition-held areas of the country. In recent months,Assad’s forces have taken rebel strongholds in suburbs of the capital, bolstering security and reducing the threat of mortar shells.

The attack on the aid convoy outside Aleppo took place Monday night, hitting a warehouse as aid workers unloaded cargo and triggering huge explosions. Footage filmed by rescuers showed torn flesh being picked from the wreckage. Witnesses described a sustained, two-hour barrage that included barrel bombs — crude, unguided explosives that the Syrian government drops from helicopters.

A senior U.S. administration official said the U.S. believes with a very high degree of confidence that a Russian-piloted aircraft carried out the strike. The official wasn’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter and asked for anonymity.

Assad dismissed the claims, saying whatever American officials say “has no credibility” and is “just lies.”

Like Syria, Russia has denied carrying out the convoy bombing.

Syria and the United States have been at loggerheads since the Sept. 17 airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition that hit Syrian troops in the eastern province of Deir el-Zour. U.S. officials said the attack — its first direct hit on Syrian forces since the civil war began — was accidental and that the warplanes thought they were targeting Islamic State group positions. Russia said the strikes killed more than 60 Syrian troops, and afterward, IS militants briefly overran government positions in the area until they were beaten back.

Assad said he did not believe the American account and said that attack targeted a “huge” area constituting many hills.

“It wasn’t an accident by one airplane… It was four airplanes that kept attacking the position of the Syrian troops for nearly one hour, or a little bit more than one hour,” Assad said in the interview. “You don’t commit a mistake for more than one hour.”

“How could they (IS) know that the Americans are going to attack that position in order to gather their militants to attack right away and to capture it one hour after the strike?” Assad asked. “So it was definitely intentional, not unintentional as they claimed.”

A spokesman for the U.S. State Department dismissed Assad’s claims as “ridiculous,” adding that they underline that Assadhas lost his legitimacy to govern.

“It’s difficult to see how these ridiculous claims deserve a response, except to say they prove yet again the degree to whichAssad has lost his legitimacy to govern and how vital it remains for the international community to achieve a political solution that gives the Syrian people a voice in their future,” spokesman John Kirby said Thursday.

The strikes contributed to the collapse of the cease-fire, which had already been marred by numerous violations on both sides of the conflict. They also cast serious doubt on chances for implementing an unprecedented U.S.-Russian agreement to jointly target militants in the country.

Assad said the United States lacked the will to work with Russia against extremists in Syria. “I don’t believe the United States will be ready to join Russia in fighting terrorists in Syria,” he said.

Despite extensive evidence to the contrary, Assad repeatedly denied that his forces were besieging opposition-held eastern Aleppo, which has become a symbol both of resistance and also the high price civilians are paying in the war.

He flatly denied claims of malnutrition and a chronic lack of medical supplies.

“If there’s really a siege around the city of Aleppo, people would have been dead by now,” Assad said, asking how rebels were able to smuggle in arms but apparently not food or medicine.

The ancient city, now partly destroyed, has been carved out into rebel and government-controlled areas since 2012. Rebel reinforcements broke a hole in the blockade in August. But in heavy bombardment over the following weeks, more than 700 civilians were killed. Earlier this month, Syrian troops backed by Russian airstrikes retook the roads and the siege resumed.

Since then, the U.N. has accused Assad’s government of obstructing aid access to the city, despite an agreement to allow aid in during the weeklong cease-fire. During the brief cease-fire, trucks carrying aid sat idle by the nearby Turkish border, awaiting permits and safety guarantees.

Throughout the conflict, Assad’s forces have been accused of bombing hospitals and civilians and choking opposition cities. Millions have fled Syria, some of them drowning at sea in the Mediterranean.

The war has been defined by gruesome photos and video posted in the aftermath of bloody attacks or documenting the plight of children in particular. Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed, and once thriving cities have been ravaged, with entire blocks reduced to rubble. The images have galvanized public opinion worldwide — but Assad, while acknowledging that the war had been ‘savage,’ said eyewitness accounts should not be automatically believed.

“Those witnesses only appear when there’s an accusation against the Syrian army or the Russian (army), but when the terrorists commit a crime or massacre or anything, you don’t see any witnesses… So, what a coincidence,” he said.

Assad scoffed at the idea that Syria’s “White Helmets” — civil defense volunteers in opposition held areas seen by many as symbols of bravery and defiance — might be considered for a Nobel Peace Prize after a nomination earlier this year.

“What did they achieve in Syria?” he said. “I would only give a prize to whoever works for the peace in Syria.”

The group shared this year’s Right Livelihood Award, sometimes known as the “Alternative Nobel,” with activists from Egypt and Russia and a Turkish newspaper, the prize foundation announced Thursday.

Asked about his methods, including the use of indiscriminate weapons, Assad said “when you have terrorists, you don’t throw at them balloons, or you don’t use rubber sticks for example. You have to use armaments.”

Story: Ian Phillips, Zeina Karam

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Farang Wows Trang With Mad Treasure Hunting Skills

An unnamed foreigner later identified as Stefan Burford combs Pak Meng Beach with a heavy-duty metal detector Thursday morning in Trang province.

TRANG — Ever since a ship loaded with resort employees sank off the coast of Trang seven years ago, people have looked for the coins which still wash ashore.

Thursday morning, beach-goers were amazed when just after 10am a British man lugged a Minelab CTX 3030 metal detector into the surf and began turning up coins by the dozens.

Stefan Burford, 34, left after gathering more than 100 coins in about an hour.

A Matichon reporter said the man was extremely focused on his search.

Most of the unearthed treasures were 1 baht coins, although some were more rare as they were stamped 1965 by the mint. He also found a number of Buddha amulets and nine-sided 5 baht coins removed from circulation in 2008.

Stefan Burford shows off a fistful of coins he unearthed Thursday from Pak Meng Beach in Trang province.
Stefan Burford shows off a fistful of coins he unearthed Thursday from Pak Meng Beach in Trang province.

Burford appeared very pleased with his discoveries while onlookers appeared amused that he put so much effort into it.

Pak Meng Beach has been an attraction ever since the Andaman II sunk south of the coast in 2009, said Prathip Jongtong, a local tourism and trade official.

The Andaman II was carrying Burmese workers and Thai contractors back to shore from the Thanya Resort on nearby Koh Ngai.

Stefan Burford said he found this at the beach Thursday morning. Photo: Stefan Burford / Courtesy
Stefan Burford said he found this at the beach Thursday morning. Photo: Stefan Burford / Courtesy

When the boat sank, everyone made it to shore safely. However, their possessions ‒ including the Burmese resort workers’ tips and Thai contractors’ Buddha amulets ‒ sank and have been gradually washing to shore ever since.

Update: This story has been updated with Stefan Burford’s name after he reached out and identified himself to Khaosod English.

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Son of Suthep Convicted of Island-Damaging Land Development

Tan Thaugsuban at an anti-corruption protest led by his father Suthep Thaugsuban on Dec. 21, 2013, in Bangkok. Image: Tan Thaugsuban / Facebook

BANGKOK — The son of an anti-corruption crusader was sentenced to three years in jail Wednesday for extensively developing protected forest land on Koh Samui 16 years ago.

Tan Thaugsuban, whose father Suthep Thaugsuban helped pave the way for the 2014 coup, was granted bail the same day while his lawyers filed for appeal. He denied the allegations of land infringement.

Reached for comment Thursday, Tan said he could not speak about the ongoing case.

“I’d like to refrain from making any comments,” he said. “I will file an appeal within 30 days.”

In 2013, the Department of Special Investigation filed charges against Tan and three other accomplices at his construction company for developing land in a protected Koh Samui forest – in 2000.

The court Wednesday found all three guilty and sentenced them to three years in prison. The court said it did not grant any leniency by suspending the jail term because of the severity of their offenses and damaged caused to the island environment.

“The four defendants’ actions had direct and indirect impacts on the earth, water, air and forest, which caused droughts and flash floods,” part of the verdict reads. “The nature of their offense was therefore so severe that it did not warrant a suspension of their punishment.”

Though a businessman by profession, Tan took up political activism in late 2013 when his father Suthep led a protest against corruption and nepotism under the government at the time. Tan appeared at rallies and demonstrations until the army intervened and overthrew the government in May 2014.

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Rain Ticket: Dragon’s 4 Party Picks For Friday Night

Photo: Whiteline / Courtesy

We’re mid-monsoon season and that means lots and lots of rain. It makes traffic move at a snail’s pace and puts a real damper on beer gardens and patio barbecues.

Notes from the Underground - Mongkorn 'DJ Dragon' TimkulThose who like the nightlife may opt to stay instead of walking in ankle-deep street/sewer sludge to get to the club.

Unless you’re bored backpackers seeking a thrilling brush with hepatitis water on Khaosan as recently documented by Dickyman96.

Although holding events this time of the year can be a pain in the because of low attendance, a few promoters defy Mother Nature and keep it going rain or shine.

So this week I’m Kevin Costner to guide you through Bangkok’s Waterworld in search of salvation through a bangin’ club night or two.

Here are my picks for this weekend.

 

Friday: DJ Craze at Live RCA

Dragon

Decorated turntablist veteran DJ Craze made his mark on the scene at the turn of the millennium as one of the first to apply turntablist techniques to Drum ‘n Bass music. The Nicaraguan-American’s amazeballs technical performances saw him a three-time champion at DMC (the Olympics of DJing) and once a tour DJ for Kim K bootymaster Kanye West. That stuff ain’t small potatoes, especially when after two decades Craze still reigns supreme.  

Craze takes over Friday at Live RCA at event by newcomers Urban Take Over. The support line includes two-time Thai Red Bull Thre3style camp DJ Bomba Selecta. Cheapskates should come early for free bar 9pm to 10pm. Tickets are 650 baht at the door.

 

Friday: Giant Swing at Whiteline

Dragon 2
Photo: Giant Swing / Facebook

While not THAT giant swing in Chinatown or even a swingers party, find some rare house and techno beats, albeit on a Balearic trip, Friday night at Whiteline. Giant Swing has garnered a big following with trendy young Japanese expats in its six years. Its organizers, DJs Masa and NK Chan, have a reputation for their deep knowledge of dance music and serious vinyl collections. If you head to Whiteline to check it out, leave all expectations for club anthems at the door and expect to be immersed in rhythms you’ve never heard.

The party starts at everybody’s favorite late-night joint at 10pm. Entry is 150 baht. Do keep in mind party doesn’t get going until late into the night.

 

Friday: Motiva 29.0 featuring Lily (Ex-Ultrademon) – Jam

Dragon 1

In my first column, I promised all things weird and wonderful, which perfectly fits this next event. The crew over at Jam is set to host Lily, an artist once known as Ultra Demon and a pioneer of Sea Punk. What is Sea Punk? Sea Punk is a mashup of ‘90s house, RnB and Drum ‘n Bass. Lily said sayonara to that scene and has re-emerged with a new style and album. Think Autechre or Aphex Twin but with sparkles and lip gloss. It’s the kind of vibe you get from listening to her latest album “Psychic Jealousy.” Lily will share the stage at Jam with three Thai experimental acts: MILF, Beam Wong and HSH.

Tickets are 200 baht at the door. The bleeps and beats go 8pm to midnight.  

Friday: Dubway Sessions x Quay Records present DJ Vortex – Studio Lam

Dragon 4
Photo: DJ Pichy

Last thing for Friday could be the best, or it could be shameless self-promotion. Last week I made the case for the return of DJ Vortex to his old stomping grounds where he helped build Drum ‘n Bass into a thing. I’m honored to have Vortex on the decks in Bangkok again, and I do hope everyone can come and enjoy the vibe with us at Studio Lam.

The full lineup will be DJ Vortex, Dragon (yours truly), King Kong, Pichy and MC Sinnamon. Door is 200 baht and opens at 9pm.

 

So there it is. A few places to check out in this rainy weather.

Stay safe and dry, and until next time, Dub be good to you.

 

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