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Vitit Muntarbhorn Appointed First UN Expert on LGBT Violence and Discrimination

Vitit Muntarbhorn. Photo: United Nations

UNITED NATIONS — The Human Rights Council has appointed international human rights expert Vitit Muntarbhorn as the first U.N. independent expert charged with investigating violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

John Fisher, Geneva director of Human Rights Watch, said his appointment on Friday “made history” and “will bring much-needed attention to human rights violations against LGBT people in all regions of the world.”

Muntarbhorn, a Chulalongkorn University law professor, has been on the council’s Commission of Inquiry on Syria and previously served as U.N. special investigator on North Korea and on child prostitution and child pornography.

He co-chaired a meeting of experts that adopted the Yogyakarta Principles on the application of international human rights law in relation to violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

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Report: Trump Losses May Mean He Didn’t Pay Taxes for Years

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in July. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s business losses in 1995 were so large that they could have allowed him to avoid paying federal income taxes for as many as 18 years, according to records obtained by The New York Times.

In a story published online late Saturday, the Times said it anonymously received the first pages of Trump’s 1995 state income tax filings in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. The filings show a net loss of USD$915,729,293 in federal taxable income for the year.

That Trump was losing money during the early to mid-1990s — a period marked by bankruptcies and poor business decisions — was already well established. But the records obtained by the Times show losses of such a magnitude that they potentially allowed Trump to avoid paying taxes for years, possibly until the end of the last decade.

Trump’s campaign released a statement on Saturday lashing out at the Times for publishing the records and accused the newspaper of working to benefit the Republican nominee’s presidential rival, Democrat Hillary Clinton.

“The New York Times, like establishment media in general, is an extension of the Clinton campaign, the Democratic Party and their global special interests,” the campaign said, calling Trump “a highly skilled businessman who has a fiduciary responsibility to his business, his family and his employees to pay no more tax than legally required.”

The statement added that Trump had paid “hundreds of millions” of dollars in other kinds of taxes over the years.

Clinton’s campaign manager, Robby Mook, used the Times story to needle Trump about not releasing his tax returns and contending during his first debate with Clinton that not paying federal income taxes would show he was “smart.”

Mook said in a statement that Trump apparently avoided paying taxes for two decades “while tens of millions of working families paid theirs. He calls that ‘smart.'” Mook added: “Now that the gig is up, why doesn’t he go ahead and release his returns to show us all how ‘smart’ he really is?”

Since 1976, every major party presidential nominee has released tax returns. Clinton has publicly released nearly 40 years’ worth, and Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, has released 10 years of his tax returns.

But after initially saying that he would make his returns public during the course of his campaign, Trump switched course, citing what he said were years of ongoing IRS audits and the advice of his attorneys to keep them private as those audits proceed.

Former IRS officials have expressed skepticism that anyone would be audited so frequently, and they and other tax experts say there’s no prohibition on Trump releasing his returns even if he is.

In its story, the Times said the three pages of documents were mailed last month to a Times reporter who had written about Trump’s finances. A postmark indicated they had been sent from New York City and the return address claimed the envelope had been sent from Trump Tower, the newspaper said.

Trump’s campaign did not directly address the authenticity of the excerpts from Trump’s tax filings. Former Trumpaccountant Jack Mitnick, whose name appears as Trump’s tax preparer of the filings, confirmed their authenticity, the newspaper reported.

“This is legit,” Mitnick told the newspaper.

The Times said a lawyer for Trump argued that publication of the records would be illegal because Trump had not authorized their disclosure.

Because of provisions in the tax code that allow wealthy individuals to offset their personal income with losses in various partnerships and business ventures, Trump could have used his losses in 1995 to avoid incurring tax liabilities on as many as three years of prior and 15 years of future profits.

The $916 million in losses reported by the Times would not include previous years of losses incurred by Trump while his New Jersey casino empire slid into bankruptcy.

In an interview, Mitnick told the Times he had sometimes found it odd that the tax code allowed Trump to live in such luxury without paying income taxes.

“Here the guy was building incredible net worth and not paying tax on it,” he said.

Story: Jeff Horwitz

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Fate of Boy Up to 12 Angry, Diverse Men in Bangkok

Promotional image for Culture Collective Studio's production of '12 Angry Men.' Photo: Suphasit Tanprasertsupa / Courtesy

Update Oct. 31: The event has been rescheduled to Nov. 18 until Nov. 27

BANGKOK — A close-quarters drama about 12 people forced to find consensus on whether a boy from the slums is guilty of killing his father will be staged for seven days in Bangkok.

Set in present day in New York City, the Culture Collective Studio production of “12 Angry Men” features a multinational cast from Argentina, England, India, Italy, Nepal, Puerto Rico, Russia, Switzerland, Thailand and the United States.

Based on the 1957 film of the same name, the play opens and unfolds in a jury room where 12 male jurors are deliberating the guilt of an 18-year-old suspect tried on a charge of murdering his father.

The play is directed by Loni Berry. The theater troupe is an English-speaking production company in Bangkok.

“12 Angry Men” will be performed in English.

Ticket is 800 baht and is available online. The 90-minute play starts Nov. 18 and runs through Nov. 27 at the Culture Collective Studio. The boutique-style performance venue is located on the third floor of the Chatrium Residence Riverside on Soi Charoen Krung 70.

 

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Techno for the End of the World Tonight at Studio Lam

Notes from the Underground - Mongkorn 'DJ Dragon' Timkul“Detroit is such a desolate city that you almost have to dream of the future to escape the reality of your surroundings,” DJ Juan Atkins once said of the techno scene which emerged there amid the desolation of hard times which struck the Motor City.

While house raged in New York and Chicago, Atkins and the likes of Derrick May came up with their own spin, fusing the funk of George Clinton with future-bot sounds of Kraftwerk.

Championing these dark edgy sounds in the kingdom is Thai techno producer Rutha “Mai” Rungsang, aka Nolens.Volens.

Since the mid-1990s, the producer’s main claim to fame is remixing tracks from prominent Thai artists such as DJ Suharit, Modern Dog and Groove Riders.

His work has appeared on many compilations, the most recent being “The Future Sound of Bangkok” on Yaak Records and most notably his track “Por Sea T” featured in The Matrix Revisited documentary.

Photo: Rutha “Mai” Rungsang / Courtesy
Photo: Rutha “Mai” Rungsang / Courtesy

His fascination with techno started in the late ‘80s. Introducing him to the genre was an an early dance music show on Bangkok’s FM88, Smile FM.

“I heard tracks from artists like Rhythim Is Rhythim, Inner City, Lil’ Louis; on a local dance radio program called ’88 BPM’ by DJ Pop and DJ Pom Alisara, and I became passionate and obsessed with techno’s rhythms and sounds,” said the self-professed die-hard fan of Detroit Techno, namely “banging techno … of the 90s-techno era, ghettotech, and hard, edgy, experimental, industrial sounds.”

Those cities’ music must have rubbed off on him, because while studying commerce in 2000 at the University of Illinois he started to take a career in music more seriously.

“The idea started when I heard music by the likes of Mr. Z, Kidnappers, Crub, and a few other Thai electronic music-related artists in the early ‘90s,” he said. “Back then I always told myself I wanted to do something like they did, and all I could do was to beatbox on top of my favorite tracks.”

He said it was just a pipe dream until a college friend, Tang, encouraged him to make music and they formed Nolens.Volens together in 1995. (Not to be confused with Nolens Volens, an act out of Brooklyn.)

“We were not musically trained except for some few tips from our mentors like Zomkiat (Zmix) and his musical partner Raywat; other than that we learned from scratch and from watching electronic music artists live shows,” he said.

The producer’s latest project is an event called _Cosm that aims to bring the best in dark and banging techno, or music for a post-apocalyptic world. The event already hosted techno royalty with DJ Ben Sims and Kirk Degorgio.

To hear the music of the end of the world, check out the crew tonight at Studio Lam and hear UK Techno legend Ben Long, one half of UK Techno duo Space DJz.

Doors open at 10pm, entry is 350 baht.

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1AM Nightlife Curfew Killing Mor Lam, Musicians Plead For More Time

Mor Lam petitioners on Friday perform a dance at the 23rd Army Circle base in Khon Kaen after submitting a request for a closing time exemption.

KHON KAEN —Folk musicians in the northeast petitioned the junta Friday to exempt them from its mandatory closing time of 1am, saying it’s hurting business and killing tradition.

Representatives of mor lam groups in Khon Kaen province told reporters the closing times run contrary to the long-held tradition of lively performances that go till dawn. A military commander said he’ll submit their request to the junta in Bangkok.

“If we stop performing at 1am, it upsets the audience, because they don’t understand that security officers requested us to stop the performance,” Pramual Seti, chairman of Isaan Mor Lam Artists Group, said Friday at the headquarters of the 23rd Army Circle. “So it causes a problem of fewer and fewer booking of mor lam shows.”

He said if the situation continues, mor lam, a name which refers both the music and its singers, will disappear from Isaan.

“Many mor lams in Isaan have already quit,  and the number has grown much smaller … mor lam may disappear for good in the near future,” Pramual warned.

Lt. Col. Phitakphon Chusri, commander of the junta’s security wing in Khon Kaen, said the 1am closing time was part of the regime’s policy of maintaining “orderliness” in society.

Phitakphon also said he will inform his supervisors about the musicians’ request so they can deliberate on an appropriate policy for Mor Lam.

After seizing power in May 2014, the junta has implemented a series of policies with the stated aim of restoring peace and order, including the enforcement of a 1am closing time for entertainment venues in many parts of the country.

Although 1am closing time has been in the law since 2004, authorities rarely enforced it in many entertainment and red-light districts.

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Thai Press Must Try to Speak Truth to Military Power

On the same day junta leader and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha boasted outrageously about his regime's successes, reporters joined him to karaoke a classic pop song Sept. 15 at Government House in Bangkok.

 

Retention

On Sept. 20 I was honored to be chosen to deliver the sixth annual Thailand@Harvard Lecture at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

The series started in 2011 with the launch of a Thai studies program in the university’s Asia Center with seed money of USD$6 million, mostly raised from large Thai companies.

Part of my hour-long lecture, “Holding Governments and Journalists Accountable: Rights and Responsibilities of a Free Press in Thailand,” touched on how the Thai press should be accountable to the public in the context of the continued militarization of society under the junta which staged the coup in 2014.

Following is a portion of the lecture:
The press cannot be truly accountable to the public if it does not try to analyze and question the current militarization of Thai society because a militarized society is antithetical to a democratic and pluralistic society.

We must try to hold the junta accountable even though it’s very difficult, given the junta’s absolute power.

Pravit RojanaphrukIf media organizations refuse to question the militarization of Thai society and censorship, individual journalists who care about freedom and democracy should strive to do what they can on their own.

A militarized view is an attitude where those who think differently are seen as a threat that must be contained if not suppressed or even eliminated, not a source of social and political enrichment.

It is about national security over human security. A militarized society is where voices of millions of citizens are less important than that of one army general.

On a personal note, the arbitrary nature of unaccountable absolute power by the junta leader under Article 44 of the provisional charter is such that I decided not to announce that I am coming to Harvard on social media prior to the flight from Bangkok taking off, for fear that the junta would forbid me from being here today. This despite the junta lifting a ban on its critics travelling abroad in June. The question is: What will, in the long run, become of a society addicted if not jaded to the repeated use of unaccountable absolute power?

The military way is top-down command and about control – not a horizontal participatory decision making process through public debate and deliberation.

The military way sees those who disagree as disobeying, as a threat and potential enemy if not an enemy, instead of a source of diverse views enriching society. Without a genuine ability for the press and society to debate and deliberate, society can neither be democratic nor free. This is what, in my view, the Thai press must be responsible for at present.

praviteventIn a militarized society, obeying and not questioning unaccountable and illegitimate orders is a norm. It’s the opposite of a democratic society where people can debate and deliberate freely on what is best for society.

The military expects citizens to behave like soldiers, holding unquestioning loyalty to the commander and obeying his command without second thought. This despite the fact that junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha was never elected by the people and in fact robbed people of their electoral right when he staged the coup.

It is in such a context, which will at least last for another 15 months if not longer, that the Thai press must try to be responsible to the public and hold the military government accountable, no matter how daunting, by defending the little press freedom we still have left and continuing to resist the militarization of Thai society.

Allow me to be fair to Gen. Prayuth. He is not the worst of Thai military dictators.Thailand has seen worse. Military dictators like Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat, supported by America during the Cold War, ordered political opponents executed and threw journalists to rot in jail for years.

Prayuth holds absolute and arbitrary power like Sarit, however. But times have changed and along with it, people’s expectations of what a military can and should not do.

The same can be said of the press, which has become accustomed to relative freedom (minus the lese majeste law which forbids any critical reporting or analysis about the monarchy, that is). The Thai press has accrued sufficient social and political capital to act as a relatively free press over the past few decades, and in the end, they are unlikely to totally surrender to Prayuth’s dictum; a number continue to scrutinize and criticize the general.

Absolute power is no longer absolute, for the world is increasingly borderless, particularly when it comes to information flow, and social media increasingly bypass mainstream mass media’s self-censorship and state censorship.

A good journalist is a permanent critic, ever inquisitive, skeptical and committed to unraveling the complexity that is truth, freedom and equality.

Journalists must speak truth to power or risk becoming irrelevant, and that includes speaking truth to not just political power but military power as well.

In societies under repression such as Thailand, the true calling of journalism is in not just reporting on what is happening but in playing a role in making society more free, reasonable and equal.

It falls upon committed journalists to not just call a spade a spade when it comes to the limits of press freedom but also to confront innate structural constraints of the press in presenting the complexity of reality.

The sixth Thailand@Harvard Lecture was delivered in the Allison Dining Room in the Taubman Building at the Harvard Kennedy School on Sept. 20. The writer would like to thank the Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University Asia Center and its Thai Studies Program. The writer is also grateful to Prof. Jay Rosengard, chairman of the Thai Studies Program Committee and its program director, Prof. Michael Herzfeld.

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Twitter, ‘Lies’ and Videotape: Trump Shames Beauty Queen in Pre-Dawn Tweets

Former Miss Universe Alicia Machado speaks at a news June 15 conference at a Latino restaurant in Arlington, Virgina, to criticize Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. Photo: Luis Alonso Lugo / Associated Press

RAND RAPIDS, Michigan — Plunging deeper into campaign controversy, Donald Trump publicly shamed a former beauty queen on Friday for her “disgusting” sexual past and then – in one of presidential history’s more bizarre moments – encouraged Americans to watch a “sex tape” he said would support his case.

The tweet-storm that Trump launched into at 3:20 a.m. started a day of did-that-just-happen moments that ended with Clinton’s campaign calling Trump an adult film star. Even many of Trump’s supporters shook their heads at their candidate’s latest outburst, worried it could further hurt him among the nation’s women, many of them already skeptical, whose votes he’ll badly need to win election.

“Did Crooked Hillary help disgusting (check out sex tape and past) Alicia M become a U.S. citizen so she could use her in the debate?” read a missive from Trump posted on Twitter at 5:30 a.m. That referred to 1996 Miss Universe Alicia Machado, a Venezuela-born woman whose weight gain he has said created terrible problems for the pageant he formerly owned.

Unsurprisingly, Trump’s pre-dawn Twitter tirade ricocheted across the campaign trail.

Trump’s campaign accused the media and Hillary Clinton of colluding to set him up for fresh condemnation, to which Clinton retorted, “His latest twitter meltdown is unhinged, even for him.”

Machado took to Facebook to say his tweets were part of a pattern of “demoralizing women,” calling them “cheap lies with bad intentions.” Planned Parenthood said it showed that Trump’s “misogyny knows no bounds.” And Clinton said they showed anew why someone with Trump’s temperament “should not be anywhere near the nuclear codes.”

With less than 40 days left in the election, Trump’s broadside threw his campaign into a fresh round of second-guessing the candidate’s instincts and confusion about what to do next. To believers in traditional political norms, it seemed like the opposite of what was needed to win over females, Hispanics and young Americans whose support could well determine the election.

Shaming Machado over intimate details from her past could be particularly risky as Trump tries to win over more female voters, many of whom are turned away by such personal attacks. It also risks calling further attention to the thrice-marriedTrump’s own history with women.

What kind of a man, Clinton asked, “stays up all night to smear a woman with lies and conspiracy theories?”

Even Trump’s most vocal allies seemed at a loss for words.

“He’s being Trump. I don’t have any comment beyond that,” said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a top supporter. Generally chatty and occasionally critical of Trump, Gingrich said tersely that Trump sometimes does “strange things,” but that Clinton lies. “I’ll let you decide which is worse for America.”

But Trump’s inner circle followed his lead by refusing to concede any missteps. Trump didn’t mention the tweets Friday evening as he rallied supporters in Michigan. Instead, he returned to Twitter to invoke Clinton’s famous ad from her 2008 campaign portraying her as the best candidate to pick up an urgent call at the White House at 3 a.m.

“For those few people knocking me for tweeting at three o’clock in the morning, at least you know I will be there, awake, to answer the call!” Trump wrote.

Machado has been thrust to center stage in the campaign since Clinton noted Monday in the first debate that Trump had mocked her publicly for gaining weight after she won Miss Universe. If that was a trap laid by Clinton, the irrepressibleTrump dug himself deeper the next day by saying Machado’s “massive” weight gain had been “a real problem.”

That gave Clinton’s campaign the opening it wanted. Her team circulated videos featuring Machado accusing Trump of destroying her self-confidence and arranged for reporters to interview her, just as many voters were starting to cast early ballots. Clinton’s spokesman said she called Machado Friday to thank her for her courage.

Said Trump spokeswoman Jessica Ditto, “This is the single biggest coordinated media attack in history.”

His Twitter taunts referred to footage from a Spanish reality show in 2005 in which Machado was a contestant and appeared on camera in bed with a male contestant. The images are grainy and do not include nudity, though Machado later acknowledged in the Hispanic media that she was having sex in the video.

Muddying the waters: an explicit 2000 Playboy video with a cameo by Trump. In a short clip posted on the website BuzzFeed, Trump pours a bottle of champagne on a Playboy-branded limo on a New York street, surrounded by a gaggle of women.

“There’s been a lot of talk about sex tapes today and in a strange turn of events only one adult film has emerged today, and its star is Donald Trump,” said Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill, adding he hadn’t seen the film.

Clinton’s campaign has highlighted Machado’s status as a new U.S. citizen and her plans to cast her first vote for the former secretary of state. But spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri said Clinton did not help Machado become a citizen.

For Republicans, the outburst seemed to foreclose any possibility that Trump, in the campaign’s final weeks, might reinvent himself as someone with the discipline and restraint that many voters want in their commander in chief. Trump’s allies have implored him to stick to attacks on Clinton’s family foundation, her emails or her long history as a political insider, critiques that fall further out of view whenever he sparks a new controversy.

In another risky move, Trump warned voters this week that a Clinton victory would bring former President Bill Clinton’s sex scandal back to the White House. The fresh rehash of the 1990s Monica Lewinsky scandal came despite Trump’s insistence that he’s been courageously restrained in not bringing it up.

Story: Josh Lederman, Steve Peoples

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Prosecutors Want Crackdown on Websites Selling Illegal Sex

Prosecutors from Thailand, Japan and other countries talk at a summit on sex trafficking Wednesday in Honolulu. They're calling the scourge of sex trafficking a form of modern-day slavery that touches every state in the nation, and they're working to draw connections between active investigations around the globe at a summit in the Waikiki neighborhood in Honolulu, Hawaii. Photo: Cathy Bussewitz / Associated Press

HONOLULU — Prosecutors from around the world say the fight against sex trafficking is moving online as traffickers use popular websites to advertise sexual services.

They talked Friday about how they can crack down on the problem at an international sex trafficking summit in Waikiki that drew prosecutors from Asia, the U.S. and Canada.

The challenges each nation faces are similar, and victims are often unwilling to cooperate with investigators because they’ve endured a history of abuse, said Jackie Lacey, Los Angeles County’s district attorney.

“Most of this is underground,” Lacey said. “It’s not like in the ’80s and ’90s where women were on the street. It’s all done by social media, cellphones, emails, text messages.”

Michael Ramos, president of the National District Attorneys Association, said he plans to push for legislation in the United States to make it illegal to use websites to solicit illegal sex and to hold internet companies accountable for sex trafficking that occurs on their platforms.

“There should be some place that says you need to do a better job with the content that’s on your promotional site,” Ramos said. “It’s just so easy right now … Instead of having prostitutes out on the corner like they used to in a red light district, now they just go online, they hit a button, and it’s like ordering a pizza.”

Other law enforcement officers, such as Honolulu Prosecutor Keith Kaneshiro, said websites that allow sex ads have helped officers catch traffickers by identifying locations where there’s a problem.

Sonia Paquet, a Canadian prosecutor, talked about how prostitution is illegal but there’s little enforcement. She said online reviews of establishments are out in the open, and she pulled up one on her phone.

“If we go on the internet site, we see the girls naked,” Paquet said. “They are from everywhere around the world.”

Prosecutors form Canada, China, Japan, Palau, the Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand attended the summit. American prosecutors attended from more than a dozen states including Arkansas, California, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nebraska, New York, Nevada, Oregon, Virginia, Washington and Washington D.C.

Story: Cathy Bussewitz

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Police Say American Admits Cutting Up Victim, Denies Killing Him

Herbert La Fon, 63 of the United States, is led from an interrogation session Friday in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — An American man under arrest for keeping a cut-up frozen corpse of an unidentified man said he dismembered the body, but was not involved in the actual killing – an assertion dismissed Saturday by police.

Herbert La Fon, who allegedly shot a police officer during a Sept. 23 raid on his passport forgery den in the Phra Khanong district, initially denied any knowledge of the body but reversed his stance during police questioning on Friday, said Maj. Gen. Somprasong Yenthuam of Bangkok police.

The Americans: Head Forgery Ring Suspect Ran From FBI

“He admitted that he cut up the body,” said Somprasong, whose unit has jurisdiction over Phra Khanong, said today. “He said his friend did the killing. But his friend is no longer with him.”

Somprasong said he didn’t buy La Fon’s story because of its inconsistencies.

“His words can’t be trusted. On the first day he said one thing, on [Friday] he said another thing,” the police major general said. “If he didn’t kill the victim, why would he carry around the corpse for so long?”

La Fon, originally from Baltimore, Maryland, was accused of credit card fraud back in 1979 at which time he became a fugitive. In 2001, FBI bulletin wanted poster was distributed internationally seeking his capture, which listed him as armed and dangerous. It included an extensive list of aliases.

Samprasong is convinced of La Fon’s guilt in the murder.

Police search the shophouse on Bangkok’s Soi Sukhumvit 56 Tuesday where the dismembered body was found inside a cold storage.
Police search the shophouse on Bangkok’s Soi Sukhumvit 56 Tuesday where the dismembered body was found inside a cold storage.

“Judging from his behavior, I believe this man is the real perpetrator,” he said.

Two other American men, Aaron Gabel and James Eger, were arrested alongside La Fon at a shophouse in Phra Khanong after police raided it on suspicion they were running a passport forgery operation there. Following a shootout in which one policeman was wounded, officers found a cut up dead body in the freezer.

The body remains unidentified.

Somprasong said police are collecting more forensic evidence to tie La Fon to the killing. All three suspects are currently held at a Bangkok prison.

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7-Eleven Apologizes for Sign Taunting Poser Vegetarians

Image: @Jamsri100 / Twitter

BANGKOK — The Vegetarian Festival kicks off today with an apology from the conglomerate that owns Thailand’s ubiquitous 7-Eleven stores for a sign telling customers to stay away from meat-free food unless their hearts are truly pure.

A photograph of the sign was tweeted Thursday by a user who said he spotted it in a store near MRT Sukhumvit . It was supposed to advertise vegetarian food for the annual Vegetarian Festival, or kin jae, the Sino-Thai lent in which observers refrain from animal-based products and certain “emotional” foods for a week in order to purify their souls.

“If your hearts are unclean, don’t dare eat jae,” read the sign over a fridge full of such food. The photo went viral and offended many on social media.

In an online statement, CP All said Friday the sign was made and placed there by a new employee out of good intentions to invite customers to join the festival, but the idea was poorly thought out. The company said it did not terminate the staff member, who was not identified.

“The company would like to apologize for the incident,” the statement said.

This year’s festival begins Saturday and continues through Oct. 9.

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