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New York Museum Invites Public to Use Golden Toilet

An 18-karat gold toilet is shown in the museum's 14th floor restroom in this undated photograph at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. Photo: Kristopher McKay / Associated Press

NEW YORK — A New York City museum is offering visitors a chance to sit on a golden throne, but only in private.

As part of his “America” exhibit at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan replaced the toilet in the museum’s fourth-floor restroom with a fully functional replica cast in 18-karat gold.

Viewers are invited to use the solid gold toilet just as they would any other facility.

It’s the first piece Cattelan has exhibited since his 2011 retrospective at the Guggenheim. It opens on Friday.

The museum says on its website that the exhibit “offers a wink to the excesses of the art market but also evokes the American dream of opportunity for all.”

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Foreigners Arrested in Raid on Nana ‘Ethiopian Restaurant’

BANGKOK — More than 100 police, military, and anti-narcotics officers raided a six-story entertainment establishment on Soi Sukhumvit 3 early Friday morning where they detained 55 foreign nationals for questioning.

The raid included officers from the Narcotics Suppression Bureau who found 12 people who tested positive for drugs, while another 15 were not carrying passports. One was found to have overstayed their visa.

“There were 55 foreigners, mostly black people doing drugs,” said the bureau’s Col. Worawit Waithanomsak.

The raid, the latest in an escalating crackdown involving members of the military, resulted in arrests and the confiscation of 62 shisha pipes, which are illegal to import into Thailand.

The building, called Ornchira Fashion Backs, held an entertainment venue called “Ethiopian Restaurant” on the third and fifth floors, along with a pub, Middle Eastern-themed dance bar, massage parlor and restaurant.

It’s located near a part of downtown known as “Soi Africa” for its concentration of foreign nationals from Africa and the Middle East.

Arrested foreign nationals early Friday morning in Bangkok.
Arrested foreign nationals early Friday morning in Bangkok.

Officers said the building did not have enough entrances and exits and its restaurant operated beyond permitted hours.

Worawit said those arrested included 26 men of African descent along with several from Canada, the United States, Nepal and Uzbekistan.

Police said they were looking for two men behind the establishment: Ethiopian national Mekuriya Hailegebrel and another unidentified man said to be out of the country.

Police said they are investigating the immigration status of the foreigners without passports and sent the confiscated hookahs to the Lumpini Police Station.

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Hippie Out Under the Sky at Khon Kaen ‘Woodstock’ (Postponed)

Photo from previous E-San Music Festival. Photo: Isaan Keaw / Facebook.

Update: This event has been postponed in light of the death of His Late Majesty King Bhumibol

KHON KAEN — Old hippies or those with old hippie souls should get up to Khon Kaen this November for some rock and roll, reggae and blues out in nature with the mountains, rivers, meadows and open sky.

Billed as Thailand’s Woodstock, the E-San Music Festival returns for free spirits to reach back to those vibes at Isaan Keaw Island, a new outdoor tourist attraction in Isaan.

“The festival brings back the ‘70s hippy atmosphere to Isaan,” festival founder Pavich Srihatub wrote. “Those who love hippie songs, fashion and classic cars will enjoy a two-day and one-night getaway from confusion in the big cities.”

There will be a big stage with nearly 40 independent Thai bands and some guests from neighboring countries.

The founder expects to welcome approximately 8,000 attendees this year, saying about 4,500 came in 2015.

Tickets are 300 baht and can be purchased by contacting organizers in Thai or English via the E-San Keaw Facebook page for instructions on transferring payment.

The festival runs all night from 2pm on Nov. 12 until 10am on Nov. 13, on the 120 rai (3.2 hectares) of land at Isaan Keaw Island, which is situated in the east of the Ubol Ratana Dam in Khon Kaen. Bus fare is 50 baht to the venue from downtown Khon Kaen, which is a six- to seven-hour drive from Bangkok.

 

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23 Underground Thai Shorts Back-to-Back at Jam’s WTF Fest

‘Time Actually Passes Slower in Dream’ by Alwa Ritsila, Lucy Day and Watcharapong Narongphine

BANGKOK — A man searches for meaning in a prostitute. Two girls in a world where any form of self-expression is punishable by death. Four friends share ghost stories with one condition: There must be 10 listening or “uninvited guests” show up.

Those are a few of the moments among 23 short films which will run back-to-back later this month at the What the Film WTF Short Film Festival.

How short? They range from a 45-second narcissist’s tale called “I’d Fuck Me” to 45 minutes of rom-com drama in which a girl returns home to confront memories of a boy.

All films are made by independent, amateur or pro Thai filmmakers.

Admission is free. All films will be screened with English subtitles.

The festival runs from 6pm to midnight on Sept. 30 at Jam. The art bar is located on Soi Charoen Rat 1, a five-minute walk from BTS Surasak’s exit No. 2.

‘10 Audiences’ by Jakkrapan Sriwichai
‘10 Audiences’ by Jakkrapan Sriwichai
‘4.4’ by Rungroj Rojanachotikul
‘4.4’ by Rungroj Rojanachotikul
‘I’d Fuck Me’ by Prempapan Plittapolkranpim
‘I’d Fuck Me’ by Prempapan Plittapolkranpim
‘Undercovered Memory’ by Kritsada Nakagate
‘Undercovered Memory’ by Kritsada Nakagate
‘My Diary : 3811316’ by Pailin Chainakul
‘My Diary : 3811316’ by Pailin Chainakul
‘The Last Zombie’ by Bowornlak Somroob
‘The Last Zombie’ by Bowornlak Somroob

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Duterte Ordered 1,000 Executions, Witness Says

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte gestures while addressing the Philippine Army Scout Rangers at their headquarters at Camp Tecson in San Miguel township, north of Manila. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

MANILA — A former Filipino militiaman testified before the country’s Senate on Thursday that President Rodrigo Duterte, when he was still a city mayor, ordered him and other members of a liquidation squad to kill criminals and opponents in gangland-style assaults that left about 1,000 dead.

Edgar Matobato, 57, told the nationally televised Senate committee hearing that he heard Duterte order some of the killings, and acknowledged that he himself carried out about 50 deadly assaults as an assassin, including a suspected kidnapper fed to a crocodile in 2007 in southern Davao del Sur province.

Rights groups have long accused Duterte of involvement in death squads, claims he has denied, even while engaging in tough talk in which he stated his approach to criminals was to “kill them all.” Matobato is the first person to admit any role in such killings and directly implicate Duterte under oath in a public hearing.

Human Rights Watch urged the Philippine government to order an independent investigation into the “very serious allegations” of direct involvement by Duterte “in extrajudicial killings.”

Brad Adams, the rights group’s Asia director, said: “President Duterte can’t be expected to investigate himself, so it is crucial that the United Nations is called in to lead such an effort. Otherwise, Filipinos may never know if the president was directly responsible for extrajudicial killings.”

The Senate committee inquiry was led by Sen. Leila de Lima, a staunch critic of Duterte’s anti-drug campaign that has left more than 3,000 suspected drug users and dealers dead since he assumed the presidency in June. Duterte has accused de Lima of involvement in illegal drugs, alleging that she used to have a driver who took money from detained drug lords. She has denied the allegations.

Matobato said Duterte had once even issued an order to kill de Lima, when she chaired the Commission on Human Rights and was investigating the mayor’s possible role in extrajudicial killings in 2009 in Davao. He said he and others were waiting to ambush de Lima but she did not go to a part of a hilly area — a suspected mass grave — where they were waiting to open fire.

“If you went inside the upper portion, we were already in ambush position,” Matobato told de Lima. “It’s good that you left.”

The recent killings of suspected drug dealers have sparked concerns in the Philippines and among U.N. and U.S. officials, including President Barack Obama, who have urged Duterte’s government to take steps to rapidly stop the killings and ensure his anti-drug war complies with human rights laws and the rule of law.

Duterte has rejected the criticisms, questioning the right of the U.N., the U.S. and Obama to raise human rights issues, when U.S. forces, for example, had massacred Muslims in the country’s south in the early 1900s as part of a pacification campaign.

Matobato said under oath that the killings went on from 1988, when Duterte first became Davao city mayor, to 2013, when Matobato said he expressed his desire to leave the death squad. He said that prompted his colleagues to implicate him criminally in one killing to silence him.

“Our job was to kill criminals like drug pushers, rapists, snatchers. These are the kind we killed every day,” Matobato said. But he said their targets were not only criminals but also opponents of Duterte and one of his sons, Paolo Duterte, who is now the vice mayor of Davao.

Presidential spokesman Martin Andanar rejected the allegations, saying government investigations into Duterte’s time as mayor of Davao had already gone nowhere because of a lack of evidence and witnesses.

Philippine human rights officials and advocates have previously said potential witnesses refused to testify against Dutertewhen he was still mayor out of fear of being killed.

There was no immediate reaction from Duterte. Another Duterte spokesman, Ernesto Abella, said at a news conference that while Matobato “may sound credible, it is imperative that each and every one of us properly weigh whatever he said and respond right.”

Matobato said the victims in Davao allegedly ranged from petty criminals to a wealthy businessman from central Cebu province who was killed in 2014 in his office in Davao city, allegedly because of a feud with Paolo Duterte over a woman. The president’s son said the allegations were without proof and “are mere hearsay,” telling reporters he would “not dignify the accusations of a mad man.”

Other victims were a suspected foreign militant whom Matobato said he strangled, then chopped into pieces and buried in a quarry in 2002. Another was a radio commentator, Jun Pala, who was critical of Duterte and was killed by motorcycle-riding gunmen while walking home in 2003.

After a 1993 bombing of a Roman Catholic cathedral in Davao city, Matobato said Duterte ordered him and his colleagues to launch attacks on mosques in an apparent retaliation. He testified he hurled a grenade at one mosque but there were no casualties because the attacks were carried out when no one was praying.

Matobato said some of the squad’s victims were shot and dumped on Davao streets or buried in three secret pits, while others were disposed of at sea with their stomachs cut open and their bodies tied to concrete blocks.

“They were killed like chickens,” said Matobato, who added he that backed away from the killings after feeling guilty and entered a government witness-protection program.

He left the protection program when Duterte became president, fearing he would be killed, and said he decided to surface now “so the killings will stop.”

Matobato’s testimony set off a tense exchange between pro-Duterte and opposition senators.

Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano accused Matobato of being part of a plot to unseat Duterte. “I’m testing to see if you were brought here to bring down this government,” he said.

De Lima eventually declared Cayetano “out of order” and ordered Senate security personnel to restrain him.

Another senator, former national police chief Panfilo Lacson, warned Matobato that his admissions that he was involved in killings could land him in jail.

“You can be jailed with your revelations,” Lacson said. “You have no immunity.”

Duterte has immunity from lawsuits as a president, but de Lima said that principle may have to be revisited now. “What if a leader is elected and turns out to be a mass murderer?” de Lima asked in a news conference after the tense Senate hearing.

Story: Jim Gomez / Teresa Cerojano

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New Digital Ministry Launches With Logo That Sends Heads Shaking

New logo of the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society which formally launched Thursday.

BANGKOK — Thailand officially welcomed its new Ministry of Digital Economy and Society on Thursday and the internet immediately went crazy about its logo.

Thursday saw the 13-year-old Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, which was mainly focused on infrastructure, scrapped and relaunched with an emphasis on social and economic development.

The new ministry is a key part of the military government’s digital economy policy it has been promoting since seizing power in May 2014. Authorities say it’s about building out a future economy; digital freedom advocates contend it is part of gaining control over the internet.

A number of new agencies will be established including the “National Committee of Cyber Security.”

What has grabbed Thai netizens’ immediate attention is the new ministry’s logo, which many faulted as backward and not quite in the spirit of innovation.

The redesigned logo, a version of the former updated by the Fine Arts Department, looks like a divine being whose finger is a Wi-Fi hotspot.

Authorities said the god, the Hindu equivalent of the Roman god Mercury, holds a book in his left hand, representing wisdom. The signal emanating from his finger is the digital wave.

“The logo is nothing near digital and says nothing about ‘for economy and society,’” philosophy professor Soraj Hongladarom of Chulalongkorn University wrote on Facebook.

The image doesn’t quite capture “high tech,” someone wrote on Facebook page Drama Pantip.

“They change the name to ‘Digital Ministry’ but the logo still can’t get past ‘ghost and angel,’” the page quoted.

The new ministry won’t see a change at the top.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha on Wednesday said there was no need to change the minister as ICT Minister Uttama Savanayana had been part of the ministry’s transformation since the start.

The Meteorological Department and the National Statistical Office were also moved under the new ministry.

A series of other bills regarding the digital economy, cyber security and digital intercepts are being deliberated by the National Legislative Assembly and are being closely watched by rights groups.

Related stories:

Thailand to Welcome New Digital Ministry

Online Freedom to Slide Further, Online Activists Predict

No Shock, Awe from ‘Cyber War’ as ‘National’ Gateway Moves Forward

Cyber Activists Bring Down Govt Sites to Protest ‘Single Gateway’

Thai Internet Freedom Threatened by Junta’s New Bill, NGO Warns

 

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Full Recovery Expected for Hazing Victim Who Survived Drowning

The pond at Kasetsart University’s Si Racha campus as seen Sunday.

CHONBURI — A 19-year-old student who nearly died during a university hazing ritual last week is set to leave hospital in the next several days, though doctors will continue to monitor his brain activity for any sign of damage, his father said Thursday.

Chokchai Thongnuakao’s fate has prompted new calls for authorities and universities to be more vigilant in stamping out the widespread culture of hazing, or rub nong, which has resulted injury and even death in the past. Kasetsart University, where Chokchai is enrolled, denies the student was forced into participating.

Read: Student on Life Support After Near Drowning in Hazing

“He could be leaving this afternoon, but doctors haven’t set the time yet,” Amporn Thongnuekhao said by telephone Friday. “They are still monitoring him from time to time. They’re concerned about his brain. It’s normal so far, but they say they have to monitor it.”

Chokchai had to be rescued and taken to hospital Friday after senior students reportedly told him to swim in a pond at the university’s Si Racha campus as part of annual initiation ceremonies. Chokchai’s strength faltered along the way.

The student had his breathing tube removed earlier this week, and he could talk with visitors, according to Amporn.

“He’s not a weak man. He’s resolved to return to his studies soon,” his father said.

Speaking by telephone, Amporn said he’s satisfied with how the university has taken responsibility and paid his son’s medical bills. But he also wants Kasetsart administration to be more proactive when rub nong comes around next year.

Earlier this morning he sent a letter to junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha asking him to enact measures to prevent further violent or abusive rub nong activities. He told reporters that he wanted Chokechai’s case to be an example of how rub nong can go wrong.

Chokechai Thongnuekhao in an undated photo. Photo: Pook Sukonta Berthebaud / Facebook
Chokchai Thongnuekhao in an undated photo. Photo: Pook Sukonta Berthebaud / Facebook

“I have talked to the rector, I asked for his kind consideration to take care of things next time,” Amporn said. “And to clearly set boundaries for activities. Especially what involves water and fire. They should be banned. I want [the university] to be more vigilant than this.”

Kasetsart University interim rector Chongrak Wachrinrat previously told media that Chokchai was not forced to swim, contrary to eyewitness accounts reported online. Woraprach Sutma, one of the senior students who organized the ritual, also said Monday that he and his friends merely “teased” Chokchai into swimming in the pond.

Amporn said he has not yet talked to his son about what really happened. But he said he’s willing to drop the matter if Chokchai manages to return to class without any lasting damage.

“If he can returns to his studies normally, I’m willing to forgive them all, and I won’t press charges,” Amporn said.

Related stories:

Chiang Mai University to Probe Violent Hazing Rituals

Chula Freshman Says Classmates Threaten Him For Calling Out Hazing

 

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One-Man Band ‘My Empty Phantom’ Cancels Show

Image: Newlights Production / Facebook

BANGKOK — Organizers of a concert by Texan multi-instrumentalist My Empty Phantom canceled the event two days before it was due to take place.

Saturday’s My Empty Phantom performance at a live music venue in the On Nut area was canceled and will not be rescheduled, Newlights Production announced Thursday.

Read: One-Man Ambient Band To Perform Live in Bangkok

“Due to the venue and technical and flight booking issue, we deeply regret to announce the cancellation of ‘My Empty Phantom live in Bangkok,’”  the organizer wrote. “Thank you for your attention and support. We hope you still continue support our future works and events.”

The event was to feature performances by Austin-based My Empty Phantom aka Jesse Beaman and Bangkok-based ambient bands 17September1981 and Plern Pan Perth aka Thanart Rasanon.

Two years ago, My Empty Phantom canceled 12 performances in Indonesia, according to the organizer Indra Menus.

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UN Chief Slams Israeli PM’s ‘Ethnic Cleansing’ Comments

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon speaks on Sept. 9 during an interview at U.N. headquarters. Photo: Bebeto Matthews / Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s insistence that Palestinians want the “ethnic cleansing” of Jews in the West Bank “unacceptable and outrageous.”

Ban told the U.N. Security Council that he wanted to be absolutely clear: “Settlements are illegal under international law.”

In some of the strongest language he’s used on the Israeli-Palestinian issue, Ban said Israel’s “stifling and oppressive” occupation of Palestinian territory “must end.”

Israel’s decades-long policy that has settled more than 500,000 Israelis in Palestinian territory “is diametrically opposed to the creation of a Palestinian state,” he said. And the international community, including the Security Council, “views the expansion of settlements as an obstacle to peace.”

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power was also critical saying the United States, which is Israel’s closest ally, “strongly opposes continued Israeli settlement activity, which is corrosive to the cause of peace” and Israel’s desire for a two-state solution.

Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon criticized Ban’s “distorted view of the situation,” saying “the obstacle to peace starts and ends with Palestinian incitement to terrorism” and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas’s refusal to meet with Netanyahu.

Instead of condemning Hamas, which controls Gaza, for building “terror tunnels,” and ensuring that the Palestinians “end their incitement, the secretary-general chooses to condemn Israel on a regular basis,” Danon said in a statement.

Ban was also critical of the Palestinians, saying he continues “to be appalled that Palestinian parties choose to praise despicable acts, such as the 1972 terrorist attack against Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics.”

“The glorification of terror is disgraceful and the Palestinian leadership must put an end to it,” the secretary-general said.

He expressed particular concern at the Palestinian High Court’s decision last week to suspend all preparations for local elections in the West Bank and Gaza, which would be the first in over 10 years, to consider a petition to cancel the elections.

“Local elections in the West Bank and Gaza, if held in line with international standards, could provide an important renewal of Palestinian democracy and a first step towards advancing national unity,” Ban said.

As for Gaza, he said that while there has been progress in the two years since the 2014 cease-fire with Israel, “Gaza remains under closures and is a ticking time bomb.”

“Instability and the risk of violent escalation are ever-present,” he said. “The continued arms build-up and militant activities by Hamas and other radical groups keep both sides of the border in a constant state of alert.”

Ban said more than 1.3 million of Gaza’s 1.9 million people need humanitarian assistance, and their continued deprivations “smother dreams and ambitions, and feed instability and extremism.”

The secretary-general paid tribute again to Israel’s former president Shimon Peres expressing hope for his speedy recovery from a stroke and praising his tireless work “in seeking peace between Israelis and Palestinians.”

Power said the U.S. shares Ban’s views on rising Israeli-Palestinian tensions and urges all parties to “exercise restraint, refrain from provocative actions and rhetoric.”

Story: Matthew Pennington

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Grime Musician Skepta Wins Prestigious Mercury Music Prize

Singer Michael Kiwanuka poses for photographers upon arrival at the Mercury Prize Albums of the Year event in London. (Photo by Joel Ryan / AP)

LONDON — Grime musician Skepta won Britain’s prestigious Mercury Prize on Thursday for his fourth album, “Konnichiwa.”

The Londoner — a star of the edgy, distinctly British hip-hop genre — beat finalists including the late David Bowie. Bowie had been bookies’ favorite to take the 25,000 pound ($33,000) album-of-the-year prize for his final album, “Blackstar.”

Singer Jarvis Cocker, one of the judges, said the choice had come down to Bowie or Skepta — and the panel decided that “if Bowie was looking down” he would want Skepta to win.

The judging panel of musicians and music-industry figures called Skepta’s music “confident, funny, clever, scary, personal and political.”

Skepta, who released the album on his own Boy Better Know label, said he was thankful for the prize.

“We just did this for us, but the love is very appreciated,” he said.

The other finalists, whittled down from 12 contenders, were soulful singer Laura Mvula, soul singer-songwriter Michael Kiwanuka, indie darlings Radiohead and rockers The 1975.

Established in 1992 and open to acts from Britain and Ireland, the Mercury Prize often favors the eclectic and obscure over better-known performers.

 

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