Police and wildlife officials hold back traffic while approximately 40 elephants emerge from the jungle in 2016 in Chanthaburi province’s Kaeng Hang Meao district.
CHANTHABURI — Cherry bombs and angry bees are the tools of human resistance in a growing and sometimes deadly conflict with wild elephants in eastern Thailand.
In the Kaeng Hang Meao district of Chanthaburi province – population 36,000 – humans are having more frequent run-ins with wild Asian elephants as development creeps further into territory that was once safe ground for the approximately 150 animals.
The majority of people here are rubber farmers, and recent development has meant clearing more land. Due to high temperatures during the day, the elephants are most active from early evening to dawn. That makes it particularly dangerous for plantation workers who go out to harvest at night when lower temperatures make for more fluid latex. Three people here have been killed this year. Six died in 2015.
In an effort to reduce the danger, parks and wildlife officials and volunteers regularly patrol and monitor areas where encounters are likely, such as the corridors regularly used by elephants in their daily wanderings. Their search for food brings them into areas adjacent to community members’ homes and farmlands.
People say the increasing number of animals has made their lives more difficult, as they don’t feel safe going outside after dark. That prevents them from keeping the elephants out of their crops, some of which the pachyderms are happy to make a meal of. In response, they’re experimenting with replacing crude methods such as large caltrops made by hammering large nails through wood with less harmful methods.
For many, the only elephant deterrent is going out at night to bang pots and pans. Others use small, but loud firecrackers to drive off the elephants if they find themselves in a dangerous situation.
One notable method imported from use in Africa has been linking beehives with ropes to form a fence of irritable bees ready to sting if the rope is disturbed.
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Frustrated Humans Face Off With Hungry Elephants
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A man steps over puddles in earth pitted by elephant feet near a community in the Kaeng Hang Meao district of Chanthaburi province in eastern Thailand.
Some locals have begun using a new method to keep the elephants away from their homes: ‘fences’ made by connecting a number of suspended beehives with ropes. When the elephants wander into the ropes, the bees are upset and emerge from their hives. Experience has shown elephants are quite afraid of bees, and it is thought this method will help keep them out of residential and agricultural areas and out of conflict with humans and possible harm.
In rubber harvesting, the latex is more easily drawn from trees in the cooler hours of the early morning. This means workers must venture out in darkness, which puts them at danger as those are also the hours the elephants are most active.
In rubber harvesting, the latex is more easily drawn from trees in the cooler hours of the early morning. This means workers must venture out in darkness, which puts them at danger as those are also the hours the elephants are most active.
A wildlife volunteer displays the small but extremely loud fireworks used to scare off elephants in the event of an encounter. Many villagers in Kaeng Hang Meao choose instead to use pots and pans to disperse the animals.
A rubber farmer tends her crop of trees in the early morning. The vast majority of people here own rubber plantations and need to harvest the trees’ latex at a time when elephants are most active.
Police and wildlife officials hold back traffic while approximately 40 elephants emerge from the jungle in the early hours of a recent evening. It is thought approximately 150 elephants live in and around Chanthaburi province’s Kaeng Hang Meao district, an area home to about 36,000 human residents.
It is estimated that some 150 elephants live in the area. Meanwhile more land is being cleared for development which reduces the habitable space for the animals and making it more likely encounters between elephants and people will increase.
A wildlife official scans the forest on the edge of town after being alerted that wild elephants may be in the area. During the cooler nighttime hours, the elephants are more active and emerge from the dense jungle to look for food and water.
Young wildlife volunteers arrive at an area on the outskirts of town to stand vigil in case elephants approach. Various teams are positioned throughout the district and stay in radio contact with one another.
Elephants are highly respected and celebrated in Thailand, appearing on royal and government seals and emblems. Asian elephants such as those found here are considered endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Together these factors make finding a solution to deal with the increasing number of elephants and the danger they pose a difficult situation.
A man steps over puddles in earth pitted by elephant feet near a community in the Kaeng Hang Meao district of Chanthaburi province in eastern Thailand.Some locals have begun using a new method to keep the elephants away from their homes: ‘fences’ made by connecting a number of suspended beehives with ropes. When the elephants wander into the ropes, the bees are upset and emerge from their hives. Experience has shown elephants are quite afraid of bees, and it is thought this method will help keep them out of residential and agricultural areas and out of conflict with humans and possible harm.In rubber harvesting, the latex is more easily drawn from trees in the cooler hours of the early morning. This means workers must venture out in darkness, which puts them at danger as those are also the hours the elephants are most active.In rubber harvesting, the latex is more easily drawn from trees in the cooler hours of the early morning. This means workers must venture out in darkness, which puts them at danger as those are also the hours the elephants are most active.A wildlife volunteer displays the small but extremely loud fireworks used to scare off elephants in the event of an encounter. Many villagers in Kaeng Hang Meao choose instead to use pots and pans to disperse the animals.Elephants are highly respected and celebrated in Thailand, appearing on royal and government seals and emblems. Asian elephants such as those found here are considered endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Together these factors make finding a solution to deal with the increasing number of elephants and the danger they pose a difficult situation.Young wildlife volunteers arrive at an area on the outskirts of town to stand vigil in case elephants approach. Various teams are positioned throughout the district and stay in radio contact with one another.A wildlife official scans the forest on the edge of town after being alerted that wild elephants may be in the area. During the cooler nighttime hours, the elephants are more active and emerge from the dense jungle to look for food and water.It is estimated that some 150 elephants live in the area. Meanwhile more land is being cleared for development which reduces the habitable space for the animals and making it more likely encounters between elephants and people will increase.Police and wildlife officials hold back traffic while approximately 40 elephants emerge from the jungle in the early hours of a recent evening. It is thought approximately 150 elephants live in and around Chanthaburi province’s Kaeng Hang Meao district, an area home to about 36,000 human residents.A rubber farmer tends her crop of trees in the early morning. The vast majority of people here own rubber plantations and need to harvest the trees’ latex at a time when elephants are most active.
Alexander Martin with his Don Kuson Community Bike Shop
BANGKOK — On a recent Tuesday afternoon, a small group of expat bikers showed up at a shophouse down Soi Charoen Krung 57 for a serious session of “wheel truing.”
The Don Kuson Community Bike Shop is not exactly a shop selling pedal-powered, two-wheel vehicles. In fact, the space located down a small alley in Charoen Krung 57, locally called Soi Don Kuson, is more like a place to hang out, learn how to fix things and steep in bike geek lore, like the importance of tuning one’s spokes, aka truing.
It’s what they call a bike cooperative, and it’s run by a group of avid farang cyclists.
Alexander Martin had just left the U.S. Navy when he came to Thailand about three years ago. Although he found Bangkok an ideal place to pursue a Bachelor’s degree, the Nebraska native found very little of the bike shop culture he enjoyed.
“When I first moved to Bangkok, getting a bicycle was my first priority,” Martin said. “But my choices seemed to be either a cheap Turbo from a big-block store or a nice new bike from one of the boutique bike shops.”
Martin ended up digging deeper and eventually got a bike he liked from what was the Khlong Thom night market in Chinatown.
Seeing other voids in the city’s cycling community from limited access to bike gears to absence of space for the local bikers, Martin decided to fill the four shophouses he and his friends rented together with an idea of building the first bike co-op in town, modeling it after a place he used to volunteer at in Seattle, Washington.
“The Bikery was the coolest bike shop I had been to. The fact that it’s a free place to hang out, and it builds bikes for other people to buy makes it a worthy place to be,” Martin said. “Since then, I look for a co-op whenever I go to a new city, even if I don’t need a bike, I just want to see what they’re up to.”
Martin’s sought crowdfunding for his project earlier this year through Generosity.
Some months passed with just a little over USD$1,000 (35,000 baht) raised in the campaign, and the shop finally got off to a small start. It’s got basic tools, a workbench, repair stand, some donated bicycles and such. The plan is to expand it as an ongoing project, bit by bit.
Although sitting in a small soi, the shop is quite recognizable since a friend named Ting painted a mural outside showing local scenes of life from stray furry dogs to an ice delivery man.
Mural painting by ‘Ting’ in front of the Don Kuson Community Bike Shop
Apart from hosting workshops on things like truing and maintenance, Martin said the shop also helps provide bike tools and a space to fix them up. How does this work? Martin said all of the transactions are supported by donation.
“[We] aren’t a for-profit venture,” he said. “So [the shop] relies on donations of complete and incomplete bikes, bike parts and tools. It also needs volunteers to man the space and teach workshops.”
Asked what’s next for his shop, the 35-year-old said he plans to cooperate more with Thai bikers to host regular workshops and organize cycling events including night rides.
“I’d like to alternate workshops in English with workshops in Thai,” Martin said. “I think we can have a greater impact if knowledge is transferred in Thai language, at least with people in our neighborhood.”
The Don Kuson Community Bike Shopnow opens on Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. The shophouse-bike cooperative is located on Soi Charoen Krung 57 (Soi Don Kuson), and can be reached by motorbike or a 15-minute walk from BTS Saphan Taksin.
Men on Wheels: Gearheads Open Bangkok’s First Bike Co-Op
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Alexander Martin with his Don Kuson Community Bike Shop
New York bike messenger Bryan Boor showing how to true a bike wheel at Don Kuson Community Bike Shop
“Bike Shop” wrote in Thai above the shop’s front door
New York bike messenger Bryan Boor showing how to true a bike wheel at Don Kuson Community Bike Shop
“Bike Shop” wrote in Thai above the shop’s front door
Apple CEO Tim Cook announces the new iPhone 7 on Wednesday during an event to announce new products in San Francisco, United States. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO, United States — At Apple’s iPhone 7 unveiling in San Francisco on Wednesday, the tech powerhouse revealed a host of new and updated hardware and software, including a new type of headphone jack and souped-up camera. Here’s a rundown of the biggest announcements.
Apple Airpods
As expected, iPhone is removing the standard analog headphone jack and forcing headphones to use its “Lightning” connector, which plugs into the phone’s charging port. The iPhone 7 will come with an adapter so older earphones can still be used.
But Apple is pushing Apple AirPods, which CEO Tim Cook says are a “breakthrough design,” wireless headphones that sync across all Apple devices and respond to touch that can access Siri. The AirPods are shipping in late October and cost $160.
iPhone 7 and 7 Plus
Apple’s new iPhone is getting a faster processor, an updated home button and water and dust protection. Apple says theiPhone 7’s home button is now force sensitive. It will provide “haptic” feedback — that “pushing back” feeling — when you press it, but the button itself doesn’t move. It’s similar to what Apple has done with a trackpad in a slimmer MacBook model last year.
The iPhone 7 will have stereo speakers for the first time, with twice the volume of iPhone 6S speakers. The phone’s battery life is improved, too; Apple estimates that the new iPhones will have one or two hours of additional battery life over last year’s models.
Camera
Other camera improvements include a new flash with four LEDs rather than two for greater brightness. As with previous models, the flash will adjust its color to match ambient light. High-end photographers can get images in RAW format, which allows for more versatile editing, matching what many leading cameras now have.
Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide marketing, talks about the features on the new iPhone 7 earphone options on Wednesday during an event to announce new products in San Francisco, United States. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press
The iPhone 7 Plus will have two lenses to boost the zoom capabilities of the camera. The camera can now zoom in twice as much without losing sharpness. Both cameras take 12 megapixel photos. The two lenses will also sense depth and allow users to blur backgrounds in images, mimicking an effect that typically requires changing the lens aperture in stand-alone cameras. That feature won’t be out until later this year.
Other smartphone makers such as LG and Motorola are also starting to offer models with dual lenses to improve picture quality. The difference is the wide angle on LG G5 has lower resolution with 8 megapixels.
Pricing and Storage
The iPhone 7 will start at $650, the same as the 6S it replaces. The larger Plus model is increasing to $770, instead of $750. They come in silver, gold, rose gold, black and the new jet-black finish. Storage has been doubled, so Apple joins rival phone makers in making the starter model 32 gigabytes, rather than 16 gigabytes before. Apple is doubling storage in higher-priced models, too — to 128 and 256 gigabytes.
The new phones will ship Sept. 16, with orders to start this Friday. Older iPhones will get price reductions, and last year’s models are also getting double the storage.
iOS 10
The latest software update, available on Tuesday, will add more intelligence to Apple services like Maps, Photos, the iPhonekeyboard and Siri, the voice-activated digital assistant. There’s a new Home app to control appliances. In a big change for Apple, the company is also opening Siri and its iMessage service to work with apps created by independent developers.
Apple is also allowing developers to build apps for iMessage, although the options so far appear to mostly involve sending payments or ordering food. It’s also adding bigger emoji and other visual effects for iMessage, including what it calls “Invisible Ink,” which blurs an image in a message until a recipient swipes a finger across the screen. Apple announced many of the features in June.
Apple Watch Series 2
Apple introduced a “swim-proof” watch, the Apple Watch Series 2. The new watch has built-in GPS, a brighter display and faster processor than the previous Apple Watch. There’s also new ceramic watch-face. The price starts at $370. The original model will get a faster processor price cut to $270, down from $300. The updates are coming Sept. 16.
Existing watches can get new operating software on Sept. 13. In addition, there’s a new Apple Watch Nike Plus, a Nike-branded Apple Watch in four colors that’s designed for runners. It is also priced at $369 and is available late October. The Nike version gets a special strap and custom watch faces, though the Nike app will be available for all Apple Watch models. Battery life, which has been a weak spot of the watch, was not mentioned.
Apple is phasing out smartwatch models made with 18-karat gold. The “Series 2” watches will use ceramic instead of gold for the luxury “Edition” version. The ceramic versions will start at $1,250, just a tad cheaper than the gold model, which started at $10,000.
Jeff Williams, Apple’s chief operating officer, speaks on Wednesday during an event to announce new products in San Francisco, United States. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez / Associated Press
Pokemon Go
A Pokemon Go app is coming to Apple Watch. The app lets you collect items from Pokestops, hatch eggs and alert you to nearby Pokemon (you still need your phone to catch actual Pokemon). It will be shipping before the end of the year.
New Mario Game
Nintendo debuted a new Super Mario game for iOS called Super Mario Run. It’s the first iOS game featuring Nintendo’s Mario characters. Nintendo has long resisted bringing Mario to mobile phones, relying on it instead to sell its hand-held DS gaming systems. The new game, which can be played one handed, will be released in time for the holidays. The game will have a fixed price which is being kept under wraps for now. The news sent Nintendo shares soaring on Wednesday.
Apple Bay
Apple Pay will come to Japan in October with a new wireless technology called Felica to be included in iPhones and Apple Watches there. Apple Pay will also come to New Zealand in October and Russia in the fall.
In the U.S. and elsewhere, mobile payments use a wireless technology called NFC. A transit feature in Apple Maps will also launch in Japan.
iWork in Real Time
Apple iWork suite of software, including word processing, processing, spreadsheet and presentation programs, will include real-time collaboration features for the first time. It’s something Google and Microsoft already offer in some form. Although Apple’s iWork package allows syncing through iCloud, it’s has been primarily for one person to work on documents at a time. The software is available for iPhones, iPads and Mac computers, with a web version for Windows users.
Investigators work at the scene of an explosion in the resort town of Hua Hin on Aug.12. Photo: Jerry Harmer / AP
PHETCHABURI — A man accused of being behind the recent deadly bombing of a Pattani railway and other attacks in the Deep South was named as the sixth suspect in last month’s spree of bombings in southern region.
A military court Thursday approved an arrest warrant for Seri Waemamu, 31 of Songkhla, who was identified as a third suspect in the explosions which struck the resort town Hua Hin on Mother’s Day.
Police said they found evidence linking Seri to a power bank bomb which caught fire but failed to explode at the Chat Chai Market several days later on Aug. 14. Police believe it was meant to be part of the coordinated attacks which killed four people in seven provinces on Aug. 11 and 12.
He is now charged with possessing explosives and attempted arson.
Seri was recently named by the authorities as being behind a bomb placed on the tracks in Pattani that killed a railway worker when it exploded Saturday evening.
He also had an outstanding warrant for a 2012 explosion in a Hat Yai hotel which killed five people. Another suspect named in the Hua Hin bombings, Ruslan Baima, was also implicated in that attack.
Photo of Seri Waemamu provided by police
A news agency reported Tuesday that a source inside the separatist group behind a bloody campaign for independence in the southernmost provinces took credit for the Mother’s Day attacks as well as the railway bomb and another attack which killed a father and his young daughter in front of Narathiwat school.
According to the report from BenarNews, the National Revolution Front, or BRN, said the escalation in violence was in response to Bangkok’s insincerity in peace talks.
Despite evidence consistently pointing blame at the insurgency movement, police investigators have declined to say there is a link, a position taken by the military government almost as soon as the attacks happened.
Police Gen. Srivara Ransibrahmanakul said today his team has yet to find anything linking the attacks to the BRN.
Just as the BRN has never taken credit for attacks in the past, Thai authorities regularly blame them on undefined people with bad intentions.
On Thursday, Srivara said he believed the bomb at the school Tuesday in Narathiwat’s Tak Bai district was committed by the “ill-intentioned people” and was not aimed to worsen the situation with the insurgency.
The warrant issued Thursday morning for Seri was the sixth granted in connection to the Mother’s Day attacks.
Only one suspect, Abdulkadir Saleah, has reportedly been detained on a military base in Pattani province. The rest remain at large.
US President Barack Obama waves to the media on Wednesday as he arrives for the gala dinner of ASEAN leaders and its Dialogue Partners in Vientiane, Laos. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press
VIENTIANE — President Barack Obama and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte met informally on Wednesday in a holding room before attending a gala dinner at a regional summit, Philippine officials said.
The brief meeting took a little sting out of the soured relations caused by Duterte’s intemperate language in referring to Obama earlier this week. That had caused Obama to cancel a formal meeting scheduled for Tuesday.
Philippine Foreign Secretary Perfecto Yasay told The Associated Press that the leaders had met.
“They met at the holding room and they were the last persons to leave the holding room. I can’t say how long they met. It all springs from the fact the relationship between the Philippines and the United States is firm, very strong. The basis for this relationship is historical and both leaders realize this. And I’m very happy that it happened.”
Obama and Duterte are in the Laotian capital along with other regional leaders for the summit. All of them made their way through the holding room before heading to the banquet hall.
According to a White House official who would not be named discussing the private meeting: Obama had a brief discussion with Duterte before the ASEAN Gala Dinner in the leaders’ holding space. The exchange consisted of pleasantries between the two.
On Monday, hours before arriving in Laos, Duterte told Philippine reporters he wouldn’t accept questions from Obama about extrajudicial killings that have occurred during his crackdown on suspected drug dealers and users. More than 2,000 people have been killed in the crackdown since he took office on June 30.
“I do not have any master except the Filipino people, nobody but nobody. You must be respectful. Do not just throw questions. Putang ina, I will swear at you in that forum,” Duterte said, using the Tagalog phrase for “son of a bitch.”
On Tuesday, Duterte expressed regret over the remarks, but the damage was done.
A Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs spokesman, Charles Joe, also said Obama and Duterte met in the holding room. He said it was a mutually agreed meeting, but that he had no details of what was discussed.
Obama and Duterte entered the dinner venue separately, and were seated far apart and did not interact with each other during the dinner that lasted an hour and 20 minutes.
BANGKOK — Residents were briefly trapped inside a building in the Chatuchak district after 12 shophouses suddenly collapsed there Wednesday evening.
The outer wall of a row of shophouses near the Prachaniwet 1 Market came crashing down at about 6pm, trapping several people inside. No one was reported injured, but at least seven cars and two motorbikes were damaged.
The incident caused a power outage in the area. Police said officers were eventually able to free the people stuck inside.
Pol. Col. Samard Promchat said the three-story, government-owned shophouses were built in 1982 and condemned two years ago due to flood damage from 2011. The residents were asked to move out several times, he said, but many refused to leave.
“They had a deep bond. They didn’t want to move out because they lived there for a long time,” the chief of Prachachuen police said.
Samard said police are investigating the cause of the collapse.
Muslim women bathe last Friday in the Mediterranean sea in Tel Aviv, Israel. Photo: Ariel Schalit / Associated Press
LONDON, United Kingdom – There has been a lot of fuss lately about the handful of Muslim women who choose to bathe on French beaches wearing a special garment that covers the head (not the face), and much of the body. That garment – the so-called burkini – was invented in 2004 by an Australian-Lebanese woman named Aheda Zanetti, with the goal of enabling even the strictest Muslim women to swim or play sports in public. Little did Zanetti know that her creation would generate a national controversy.
The imbroglio started when mayors in several southern French seaside towns banned burkinis on their beaches. A grotesque photograph soon appeared in newspapers around the world of three armed French policemen forcing a woman to undress on a beach in Nice. Though the ban has now been invalidated by France’s highest court, it is still enforced in several seaside resorts.
And, indeed, the controversy is far from over. Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is now running for a new term, recently called the burkini a “provocation,” while Lionnel Luca, the mayor of Villeneuve-Loubet, spoke of “rampant Islamization.” The equally outraged Prime Minister Manuel Valls has called bare breasts a symbol of French republican liberty. After all, he concluded, wasn’t Marianne, the female symbol of the French Republic, usually depicted with her breasts exposed?
There is little doubt that Sarkozy’s opposition to the burkini is entirely opportunistic. The controversy represents yet another opportunity to stoke prejudice against an unpopular minority, in the hope of siphoning votes from the far-right National Front’s Marine Le Pen in the 2017 election. But, in a tradition that spans centuries of European missionary zeal, his opportunism has been cloaked in moral terms: “We don’t imprison women behind fabric.”
Sarkozy would have us believe that the ban on burkinis is really meant to liberate Muslim women from primitive restrictions imposed by authoritarian Muslim men, just as British colonial rulers once liberated Indian Hindu widows from being burned alive to accompany their spouses in death. This reflects a broader tendency, which has been gaining traction since the end of the last century, to couch anti-Muslim rhetoric in the language of human rights, as though equal rights for women or gays were ancient Western customs that must be defended against alien religious bigotry.
In Valls’s version of history, public nudity is a cherished French tradition and a sign of freedom. To be fully French, it seems, women must, like Marianne, bare their breasts.
Yet, in the nineteenth century, when Marianne became a symbol of the French Republic, nudity was acceptable only in an idealized form, in paintings or sculptures of Greek deities and other mythical heroines. It was fine to gaze at the breasts of a painted nude Marianne or Venus; but for a real, living woman to expose even part of her ankle was considered highly improper.
Of course, nowadays, these attitudes are rare in the Western world. So even though Valls’s version of history is skewed, one might argue that European Muslims who insist that women of their faith should be covered up are out of step – especially given that women sometimes have little choice in the matter.
Indeed, in some immigrant areas, Muslim women feel obliged to cover their heads, lest Muslim men see them as prostitutes, who may be molested with impunity. But this is not always the case. Some Muslim women actually choose to wear a hijab and, in rare cases, a burkini.
The question is whether the state should be determining what citizens should or should not wear. The French republican answer is that people may wear whatever they like in private, but must conform to secular rules in public.
In recent years, however, those rules have been applied more strictly to Muslims than to members of any other faith. I have not heard of policemen forcing orthodox Jewish women to bare their heads by ripping off their wigs.
Well, some might argue, orthodox Jews are not responsible for massacres in the name of their religion. And that is true. But the assumption that women in burkinis are all potential terrorists is farfetched. A woman lying on a beach in a body-covering swimsuit is probably the least likely person to start shooting or bombing.
As for the argument that Muslim women need the state to free them from Muslim men who force them to wrap their heads in scarves or cover up their bodies, the question is whether this is worth depriving other women of their choice to appear in public in these ways.
I am inclined to doubt that it is. The best way to help women escape from domestic authoritarianism is to encourage them to lead public lives as well, in schools, in offices, and on beaches. It is better for a woman to be educated in a headscarf than not to be educated at all.
For certain public functions, it is perfectly legitimate to ask people to show their faces. Some jobs come with certain dress codes. Private companies can insist on their own rules; there is no need for national legislation. The excessive imposition of conformity by the state can actually have the opposite effect than what is intended. Forcing people to adhere to a common identity fosters a rebellious insistence on difference.
It is no good telling people named Fatima or Mohammed that they are French and must adhere to the norms laid down by Sarkozy or Valls, if they are not treated as equals by people called Nicolas or Marianne. Wearing a headscarf, beard, or bodysuit can be a harmless way for humiliated people to defend their pride. Take away that pride, and defensiveness can swiftly become less harmless.
Ian Buruma is Professor of Democracy, Human Rights, and Journalism at Bard College, and the author of Year Zero: A History of 1945.
Sondhi Limthongkul consoles one of his co-defendants Tuesday as they were taken to prison to begin serving 20-year jail terms for fraud.
BANGKOK — Former media tycoon and political activist Sondhi Limthongkul is alive and serving his 20-year jail for fraud conviction, despite online rumors suggesting otherwise, director of the Klong Prem Central Prison said today.
He was responding to a rumor circulated on social media Wednesday morning that Sondhi, who’s credited with helping topple two governments and surviving attempted assassination, died of stroke in prison Tuesday night, hours after losing his final appeal of a conviction for fraud amounting to more than a billion baht.
“I confirm that Mr. Sondhi is in normal condition. He is not suffering from any illness, as circulated in the online communities,” prison director Thawatchai Chaiywat told reporters.
Thawatchai said Sondhi did show some signs of stress but could sleep and eat normally.
The claim, shared by many Redshirts, said Sondhi had a stroke and was sent to prison hospital, where he later died.
According to Thawatchai, the former firebrand Yellowshirt activist even wrote him a letter expressing concern about the rumor, because many of his relatives mentioned it to him during today’s visiting hours.
“Mr. Sondhi wrote in his letter that he’s not sick. Everything is fine,” Thawatchai said.
On Tuesday the Supreme Court upheld a lower court’s 2012 conviction of Sondhi and three other executives of Manager Media Group for forging a company report to guarantee a 1.02 billion baht loan from Krung Thai Bank in 1997. Sondhi was immediately returned to prison to serve out a 20 year sentence, without it being suspended as is sometimes the case for well-connected or wealthy defendants.
It was a dramatic downfall for one of the most prominent activists in Thailand’s recent history.
In 2005 Sondhi founded the royalist Yellowshirt movement and campaigned for the overthrow of then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, whom he accused of corruption, nepotism and disloyalty to the monarchy. The military staged a coup against Thaksin a year later, amidst the escalating street protests at the time.
Again in 2008, Sondhi and his resurrected Yellowshirt campaign successfully brought about the end of a pro-Thaksin government following months of protests, in which his supporters occupied government buildings and airports in Bangkok.
Sondhi receded from public view after a group of gunmen attempted to assassinate him in April 2009. His attackers were never caught.
Under The Shadow. Photo: Vertical Entertainment / Courtesy
BANGKOK — A fearsome Djinn terrorizes a family in Iran’s first psychological horror film, an American drama details a woman’s transition to man, and a poignant Japanese drama about imperfect lives are among films ready to make audiences cry next week.
After a decade hiatus, a project begun 17 years to bring independent films to Bangkok is back with a roster of four acclaimed features.
Discontinued in 2006 because independent films had more venues to screen, the Little Big Films Project returns next week to tug at the heart strings.
Premiering earlier this year at Sundance, “Under the Shadow” is a 2016 Iranian horror film portraying the terrors a mother and her daughter have to cope with in revolution-torn Tehran in the 80s, as they are haunted by Djinn, the evil Middle-Eastern spirit.
“About Ray” follows Elle Fanning’s Ray who seeks to transition fully to male as her family struggles to accept Ray’s new identity. Also stars Naomi Watts and Susan Sarandon.
In period film “From The Land of the Moon,” Gabrielle (Marion Cotillard), a woman who settled for a marriage of convenience, is recovering from illness when she falls in love with a veteran recently returned from Southeast Asia. The 2016 French film competed for the Palme d’Or at Cannes.
“After the Storm” revolves around an award-winning author turned private detective who is trying to turn around his life as a deadbeat dad while trying to reconnect with his ex-wife. The 2016 film written and directed Hirokazu Koreeda competed at Cannes.
Koreeda will be in Bangkok to launch the project and will hold a cinematography workshop at 10am on Sept. 7 at House Rama RCA.
“After the Storm” shows Sept. 15, “About Ray” on Sept. 29, “Under The Shadow” on Oct. 13 and “From The Land of the Moon” on Oct. 27. The films will show at House Rama RCA, Lido, Paragon Cineplex, CentralWorld’s SFW Cinema and Esplanade Ratchada.
Limestone cliffs of Krabi Bay in 2014. Photo: Aleksandr Zykov / Flickr
BANGKOK — An American tourist was recovering Wednesday in a hospital in Thailand after breaking her spine while tumbling down a cliff trying to escape from a man who allegedly was molesting her.
The 23-year-old woman was attacked last Thursday in the southern seaside province of Krabi, a popular tourist destination, police said.
The woman, whom The Associated Press is not naming to protect her privacy, told police that a man who offered to help guide her back to her hotel at night took her down a remote path and tried to remove her clothes. She said she fought back, biting his ear before running away, only to plunge down a 45-meter (150-foot) cliff.
The woman was found by rescuers the next morning and is now recovering after surgery.
According to Krabi Tourist Police Inspector Attapong Sanjaiwut, the alleged attacker said that the account of sexual assault was a misunderstanding, and that he stayed by the woman’s side part of the night and called rescuers in the morning.
Police have detained the alleged attacker, who faces 5 to 20 years in prison if convicted of causing serious injury and obscene behavior toward another person. Attapong said police sent an initial report Wednesday to prosecutors, who are waiting to take testimony from the victim before she leaves Thailand. He suggested the woman might be able to leave for the United States in about 10 days.
Thailand welcomed almost 30 million foreign visitors last year, and tourism is one of the country’s important revenue earners.