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Zika Threatens Philippines, Indonesia And Vietnam

A pest control worker fumigates drains at a local housing estate in Singapore where the latest case of Zika infections were reported on Thursday. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

LONDON, United Kingdom — Scientists trying to predict the future path of Zika say that 2.6 billion people living in parts of Asia and Africa could be at risk of infection, based on a new analysis of travel, climate and mosquito patterns in those regions.

Some of the most vulnerable countries include India, China, the Philippines, Indonesia, Nigeria, Vietnam, Pakistan and Bangladesh, according to the research.

Experts caution that the study could overestimate the number of people at risk because they don’t know whether Zika had already landed in some of these countries in the past and allowed people to develop immunity. More than two-thirds of people infected with Zika never get sick, and symptoms are mild for those who do, so surveillance systems may have missed cases.

Although Zika was first identified in 1947, the virus wasn’t considered a major health threat until a major outbreak in Brazil last year revealed that Zika can lead to severe birth defects when pregnant women are infected.

In February, the World Health Organization declared the spread of Zika a global emergency, and epidemics have been sparked in at least 70 countries. In the last few weeks, it has sickened more than 100 people in Singapore and started spreading in Florida. Zika is mostly spread by a specific species of tropical mosquito, but it can also be spread by sex and through blood transfusions.

Researchers hope their new study will help officials plan ahead to possibly avoid some of the worst effects of Zika.

“For countries with a finite amount of resources, this may help them use those resources as efficiently as possible,” said Dr. Kamran Khan, an infectious diseases physician and scientist at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, the study’s senior author.

To figure out where Zika might gain a future foothold, researchers examined patterns of people traveling from infected regions in the Americas to Africa and Asia and combined that with an assessment of local conditions, including mosquito populations. They used the spread of a related virus, dengue, as a model for Zika since the same mosquito species transmits both diseases. Dengue is not spread by sex, like Zika, but mosquitoes are responsible for the vast majority of Zika cases globally.

The study was published Thursday by The Lancet.

Some experts pointed out that the expected impact of Zika will depend largely on whether people have any previous exposure to the virus – and that is unknown.

“No one has ever looked, so we don’t know if there is any pre-existing immunity to the virus,” said Dr. Abraham Goorhuis of the University of Amsterdam, an author of a commentary that accompanies the Lancet study. The virus in the Americas is an Asian strain that was responsible for a large outbreak in French Polynesia and other Pacific Islands in 2013 and 2014.

“If there was broad circulation of this virus in Asia, then it could be that the risk of Zika spreading to Asia won’t be as bad as we think,” Goorhuis said. He said another big unknown was whether people who might have been exposed to the African strain of Zika might be protected once the slightly different Asian version arrives. It’s unclear how widely the original 1947 strain found in Africa may have spread.

Goorhuis also noted it was possible Zika might eventually burn itself out after about a year or so of circulation, the way a related virus, chikungunya, recently did.

Others said scientists should seize the chance now to prevent Zika from becoming entrenched elsewhere.

Ben Neuman, a virology professor at the University of Reading, said that once the virus has started to spread by mosquitoes locally, and not just by travelers, it can become entrenched in animals as well as people and be extremely difficult to eradicate. “We have the opportunity right now to prevent (Zika’s) spread and by doing so, halting the spread of unnecessary suffering,” he said.

Story: Maria Cheng

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Playwright Takes Dark Turn in Puppet Production ‘Little Red’

‘Little Red in The Ruins.’ Photo: For What Theatre / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Three centuries after Charles Perrault committed fairy tale to page in “Little Red Riding Hood,” a Thai dramatist is adapting it to puppet theater with allusions the next month’s 40th anniversary of the 1976 Massacre.

There’s more to puppetry than children’s entertainment in “Little Red in The Ruins,” a production opening later this month by Ben Busarakamwong, co-founder of For What Theatre.

“I’m inspired by Perrault’s Little Red Riding Hood, as the story revolves around the worth of human beings while they treat an animal like an evil who shouldn’t be lived together,” said the 29-year-old.

Ben hinted the play; which mixes puppetry, shadow puppet and mask performance; will use visual imagery to make subtle reference to the massacre of students at Thammasat University which happened 40 years ago on Oct. 6, 1976.

“Some scenes are inspired by iconic images from 40 years ago to pose a question of whether Thais treat others equally. If they say they stick to dogma, well, they can’t even keep to the first Buddhist precept of not harming living things.”

Music is an important part of the play, which will be accompanied by piano trio The Headache Horse. Piazzolla’s “The Four Seasons” will be performed to mark the changing relationships within Little Red’s family.

Before staging a puppet production, Ben volunteered with the 15-year-old Grandma Puppet troupe which specializes in children’s puppetry and participated in several puppetry workshops.

The 40-minute performance, in Thai with English surtitles, shows at 7:30pm from Sept. 15 – 17 at the Democrazy Theatre Studio, which is a 10-minute walk from Exit No.1 of MRT Lumphini.

Tickets are 350 baht and 300 baht for students. A 50 baht discount is offered for those who transfer payments in advance. For children under 15, tickets are 100 baht. They can be reserved via phone at 09-0969-0065 or the play’s event page.

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Make Notoriously Vague Booze Laws More Clear, Trade Group Urges

Wichian Inkraidee poses for a photo at Kacha Kacha bar. He's facing 560,000 baht in fines and a court battle for images of beer in his restaurant menu.

BANGKOK — When booze law inspectors appeared outside Wichian Inkraidee’s bar on New Year’s Eve nearly two years ago, he didn’t pay much attention to them.

The first day of 2015 was only a half hour away, and it’s customary for enforcers of Thailand’s strict alcohol laws to patrol entertainment and party venues such as the Asiatique shopping complex, where Wichian’s bar is located, for possible violations.

But they paid attention to him and his Japanese-themed bar and restaurant, Kacha Kacha, as he found out six months later when he was told to pay a 50,000 baht fine for an image in his menu of a glass filled with what looked like beer.

“I was shocked, I thought, what is going on?” Wichian said. “They simply told me to pay the fine. But, come on! I didn’t do anything wrong! And there was no summons to appear at all in those six months.”

Although the Alcohol Control Act doesn’t explicitly ban pictures of beer, its vague wording and arbitrary enforcement has vexed business owners and led an industry trade group this month to plead for more clarity and consistency in the law.

According to Wichian, police charged him with violating Section 32 of the 2008 law, which bans “displaying names or symbols of alcoholic beverage that exaggerate its benefits or convince others to consume it, whether directly or indirectly.”

That has been broadly interpreted by officers who are allowed to apply the law at their discretion. In the past, they’ve also found fault with a tissue box stamped with a beer logo, photos of booze on social media and the beer gardens which appear everywhere during the cool season.

The Alcohol Control Board has said the section means any depiction of booze is subject to punishment. That’s why no beer advertisements can actually use photos of beer, and the media routinely censors any footage or image that involves alcohol.

Lawyer and talk show host Pramarn Laungwattanwanich scoffed at such interpretation at an Aug. 18 panel discussion held at Bangkok’s Cyber World Tower.

“Just by letting you see a bunch of beer bottles, they say that already counts as ‘convincing,’” Pramarn said. “Do people want to drink alcohol that much? Does it really work? … Humans are not buffaloes, you know. They can think for themselves.”

Wichian was fined because inspectors say this image in the menu encourages others to consume alcohol.
Wichian was fined because inspectors say this image in the menu encourages others to consume alcohol.

Wichian wasn’t alone in running afoul of the law. In 2010, a Korean-themed restaurant in Pathum Thani was fined for violating the same law. Their offense? Tissue paper boxes on some tables bore the logo of Chang beer.

In October, alcohol control board director Samarn Futrakul warned that anyone who posted photos of booze on social media may be prosecuted if those images were deemed attempts to convince others into drinking.

Samarn’s crusade against alcohol grabbed headlines for weeks until he overreached by going after the popular beer gardens. He was chastened from many quarters and withdrew from the spotlight.

Sobering Reality
Some may find the apparent moral crusade against alcohol in Thailand confusing. Although Buddhist authorities say the Five Precepts forbid alcohol and other intoxicants, drinking has been a common and socially acceptable activity among Thais for decades, if not centuries.

The 2008 Alcohol Act isn’t the only weapon in the arsenal of the anti-booze warriors either.

Other laws ban the sale of alcohol on Buddhist holy days, on election days and in parks and other places. One year ago, a series of confusing laws was passed banning alcohol sales either in the vicinity of school properties. Consensus was never reached over what that meant, and officials announced it would be arbitrarily enforced at the discretion of officers.

As the numerous bars and nightclubs which still operate despite those bans testify can testify, the the law has been mostly ignored except for select instances of enforcement.

The discretion at work when they are is a discrepancy highlighted by Wichian’s case, in which he said he didn’t do anything more than what is common at other bars and restaurants.

“If my menu really violated the law, all the bar owners should have been in my shoes, too,” Wichian said.

Security officers on Feb. 24 raid a bar in Bangkok to look for any violation of alcohol laws.
Security officers on Feb. 24 raid a bar in Bangkok to look for any violation of alcohol laws.

Thanakorn Kuptajit, chairman of the Thai Alcohol Beverage Business Association, said it is this kind of discretionary enforcement of law that is destroying businesses. He urged the authorities to set up a panel of impartial experts to set clear guidelines on enforcing the law.

“Our member companies have lawyers to interpret what can and cannot be done. The state also has its own lawyers to do the interpretation,” Thanakorn said said the panel discussion. “We disagree in our interpretations, that’s fine. But we want someone to act as an arbiter, to help set guidelines that we can adhere to. Laws enforcement officers should stop exercising their own judgment already.”

He suggested alcohol control officials invite the Council of State, the agency which interprets legal codes, to serve as the impartial moderator. He also urged the Alcohol Control Board to consult with business operators before enacting any measures that further restrict alcohol sales.

Nearly two weeks after he made his pleas, Thanakorn said Wednesday he has yet to hear back from the board or any other state agency.

“They didn’t give us any answer. Nothing at all. The state sector didn’t make any move at all,” said Thanakorn, whose organization was formed in 2009 in response to the booze laws enacted a year earlier.

Representatives of the Alcohol Control Board did not return calls seeking comment. A reporter was told Samarn was traveling and unavailable.

Undefinable Rules
While the military government seems to be taking a softer approach on narcotics, it is unlikely that the same leniency will be shown in alcohol regulations any time soon.

In fact, the trend seems to be going in the opposite direction, as evinced by junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha’s order which banned alcohol sales “near” educational institutions from kindergartens to universities.

That seemingly unenforceable language came after the business community went into uproar over a much more specific ban which set up 300-meter dry buffer zones around certain types of schools.

Wichian, whose Asiatique bar was fined for the beer image in the menu, said he’s hoping to put an end to such arbitrary law enforcement by taking his case all the way to the Supreme Court.

He wants to see a legal precedent set to settle the matter once and for all.

“Other people just paid the fines, but I’d like to fight, because I think it was very unfair,” he said.

He’s already lost two previous court battles, and the penalties on his unpaid fine have racked up to 560,000 baht.“I could have paid the 50,000 baht at the beginning. But there was no standard at all,” Wichian said. “No one wants to waste money or waste their time. I simply want to know what the standard is.”

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Insurgents Steal School’s Milk Delivery Truck, Convert Into Car Bomb

Police officers remove explosives and gasoline Friday from a stolen vehicle in Narathiwat province.

NARATHIWAT — A pick-up truck stolen earlier from a school in Pattani resurfaced today in the neighboring province of Narathiwat where it was used as a car bomb.

Police said an EOD team managed to defuse the explosives before they were detonated next to a police station. The truck had been commandeered Tuesday by a group of armed gunmen as it left the school where it was used to deliver milk for schoolchildren.

“The bomb was packed into a gas canister,” Capt. Songwuth Thongsom of Waeng Police Station said Friday. “Inside the truck, there were also some gallons of gasoline.”

Songwuth said the truck matched the description of the stolen vehicle, though its license plate was replaced with a forged one.

Police said they are looking for the perpetrators.

Six gunmen intercepted the truck as it was leaving Ban Chamao Sam Ton School on Tuesday afternoon, told its driver to get out and drove it away. Police later issued a warning that the car may be used as a car bomb.

On Aug. 23, a weaponized ambulance exploded in front of a hotel in Pattani, killing two people and wounding dozens. Police blamed the attack on the insurgents fighting for independence in the Muslim-majority region.

Related stories:

Govt Condemns ‘Barbaric’ Bomb Attack on Deep South Hotel

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Myanmar Group Dismisses Offensive ‘Coffee’ Annan Post

Photo: Ma Ba Tha-Mandalay-Tine / Facebook

YANGON — A Buddhist nationalist group in Myanmar says a Facebook post in which it appeared to criticize former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was fake.

Myanmar’s government announced last week that Annan will lead an advisory panel aimed at finding “lasting solutions” to the conflict in Rakhine state, where human rights groups have documented widespread abuses against minority Rohingya Muslims.

Rakhine Buddhist nationalists have denounced the commission. Annan was criticized Monday on a page that appeared to be from Ma Ba Tha, a national group led by Buddhist monks that has been accused of helping to incite violence in the region that left hundreds of Muslims dead in 2012.

On Thursday, however, Wirathu, a monk who is among Ma Ba Tha’s most prominent leaders, said on his Facebook page that the post was from a fake account. Many people in Myanmar social media pose as Buddhist nationalists and sometimes mock them. The owner of the account could not be reached.

The post called Annan “a funny-looking and disrespectful person cannot talk about our own issues in the country.” It also called Annan, who is from Ghana, a “kalar,” a slur used in Myanmar against Muslims and Indians.

The post, however, included a photo not of Annan but of Morgan Freeman, the Oscar-winning actor. Freeman was marked with a red “X” next to the words “We no need Coffee Annan he go away.”

Freeman has been confused previously elsewhere not only with Annan but also with late South African President Nelson Mandela.

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Fans Rage at Ref After Thailand Loses World Cup Qualifier

BANGKOK — Team Thailand was put down by Saudi Arabia in a 2018 World Cup qualifying match Thursday night, and many people decided to blame the refs.

Kicking off their first match in the final stage Asian qualifying round in Riyadh on Thursday night, Thailand ended up going home with a goose egg, losing 1-0 to the home team from a point scored by late penalty with less than 10 minutes on the clock.

The game-changing penalty point came Saudi Arabia’s way by of Chinese referee Fu Ming in the 81st minute. Fu Ming called out Thailand’s Sarach Yooyen for fouling Fahad Al-Muwallad.

Many fans watching on their televisions back home second-guessed the official, saying they saw no foul on Sarach’s part.

When it cost Thailand the match, Thai football fans were united in anger along with some supportive viewers in other countries to rally to the Facebook page of the Asian Football Confederation and register their grievances.

The most-liked comment showed the quality of discourse:

“Thailand already show a good game and this is not our luck,” wrote user Muhammad Masor from Colombia. “Arab just win by a dirty penalty. Loser.”

A Brazilian fan offered a more principled critique.

“I am completely angry with this. This penalty never existed,” wrote another user Rafael Saltori from Brazil. “The foul in Teerasil in the 1st half was inside the area, not out.”

A number of commentators said they saw at least two plays in which Thailand should have been awarded penalty kicks.

Thailand will have its next chance Tuesday in Bangkok against Japan, the previous nation to infuriate Thai sports fans by winning.

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SpaceX Rocket Explodes, Takes Out Facebook Satellite

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida — A massive fireball and explosion erupted Thursday at SpaceX’s main launch pad, destroying a rocket as well as a satellite that Facebook was counting on to spread internet service in Africa.

There were no injuries. The pad had been cleared of workers before what was supposed to be a routine pre-launch rocket engine test.

SpaceX chief Elon Musk said the accident occurred while the rocket was being fueled and originated around the upper-stage oxygen tank.

“Cause still unknown,” Musk said via Twitter. “More soon.”

The explosion – heard and felt for miles around – dealt a severe blow to SpaceX, still scrambling to catch up with satellite deliveries following a launch accident last year. It’s also a setback for NASA, which has been relying on the private space company to keep the International Space Station stocked with supplies and, ultimately, astronauts.

SpaceX was preparing for the test firing of its unmanned Falcon rocket when the blast happened shortly after 9 a.m. at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The test was in advance of Saturday’s planned launch of an Israeli-made communications satellite to provide home internet for parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and Europe.

A video of the explosion shows a fireball enveloping the top of the rocket. Moments later, the nose cone containing the satellite plunged to the ground, followed by more explosions.

Buildings four miles away shook from the blast, and a series of explosions continued for several minutes. Dark smoke filled the overcast sky. A half-hour later, a black cloud hung low across the eastern horizon.

Video cameras showed smoke coming from the restricted site well into late afternoon. Most of the rocket was still standing, although the top third or so was clearly bent over.

The explosion occurred at Launch Complex 40 at the Air Force station, right next door to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, where emergency staff went on standby and monitored the air for any toxic fumes. The initial blast sent NASA employees rushing outside to see what happened. The Air Force stressed there was no threat to public safety in the surrounding communities.

While the pad was still burning, it was off-limits. “We want to make sure we isolate any potential problem,” said Shawn Walleck, a spokesman for the Air Force’s 45th Space Wing, “because at this point, we’ve had no casualties, we’ve had no injuries, and we want to keep it that way.”

By evening the fire was out, but the pad was going to remain off-limits until Friday morning as a precaution, the Air Force said.

Facebook spokesman Chris Norton said the social media company was “disappointed by the loss, but remain committed to our mission of connecting people to the internet around the world.” Founder Mark Zuckerberg was in Kenya on Thursday, discussing internet access with government officials.

The satellite’s Israeli-based operator, Spacecom, said the loss will have “a significant impact” on the company. Just last November, ground controllers lost contact with the previous satellite in this so-called Amos series. The new satellite was supposed to provide services to television and internet operators and a number of clients, including Facebook.

The Falcon rocket destroyed Thursday is the same kind used to launch space station supplies. The last such flight took place in July. SpaceX, one of two companies making deliveries, is also working on a crew capsule to ferry station U.S. astronauts.

Two NASA astronauts were doing a spacewalk 250 miles up, outside the space station, when the explosion occurred. Mission Control did not tell them about the accident, saying all communication was focused on the spacewalk.

NASA later put out a statement, saying the space agency remains confident in its commercial partners, SpaceX included. The space station is well stocked and able to weather any potential delays to upcoming SpaceXdeliveries, NASA said.

At the same time, NASA said it remains on track for next Thursday’s launch of an asteroid-chasing and sampling spacecraft, the first of its kind for the U.S. The spacecraft and the Atlas rocket were inside their hangar at the time of the explosion, barely a mile away; preliminary inspections show both to be in good shape.

The California-based SpaceX had been ramping up with frequent launches to make up for a backlog created by a launch accident in June 2015. In that mishap, a support strut evidently snapped in the upper stage; the problem was fixed.

Until Thursday, the company had successfully carried out eight launches this year, with nine more in the wings by year’s end, including the debut flight of the so-called Falcon Heavy. Now that lineup is in jeopardy.

SpaceX is leasing the Cape Canaveral pad from the Air Force for unmanned Falcon launches. The company is also redoing a former shuttle pad at Kennedy for future manned flights for NASA. The first crewed flight was supposed to take place by the end of next year. Boeing also is developing a crew capsule for NASA.

Even before Thursday’s accident, NASA’s inspector general office was skeptical there would be astronaut flights by SpaceX or Boeing before late 2018. Technical challenges are piling up and threaten to cause delays, according to a report issued Thursday.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., whose single space shuttle flight ended 10 days before the Challenger disaster in 1986, said in a statement that the SpaceX accident “reminds us all that space flight is an inherently risky business.”

Others also rallied behind SpaceX, including Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee. “Despite the difficulties, commercial spaceflight will carry on with American drive and ingenuity,” he said in a statement.

Story: Marcia Dunn

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Czech Film Finds Nothing Fair in ‘Fair Play’

BANGKOK — The Rio Games last month showed drugs in competitive sports remain a problem four decades after doping became a matter of international brinkmanship during the Cold War.

Czech director Andrea Sedlackova’s went back to 1983 and the run-up to the Los Angeles Olympics to tell the story of a talented young sprinter whose own dreams are tainted when she is unwittingly doped by her mother.

In “Fair Play,” which opens the Contemporary World Film Series in Bangkok next week, young athlete Anna is under pressure to burnish East Germany’s prestige, but also to satisfy her political dissident mother’s ambitions to find freedom abroad.

When Anna refuses to take steroids, her mother is ordered to administer them in the guise of vitamins. Apart from the issues of doping, the film also explores questions of morality, politics and immigration.

Hosted its first nine years by the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand, the film festival celebrates its 10th year under the stewardship of TK Park at CentralWorld, with one Saturday show each month now through December.

Screening are free but there is a 20 baht entry fee for a TK Park day pass. Tickets can be reserved online.

“Fair Play” is suggested for audiences 15+ and will be screened in Czech with English and Thai subtitles at 4pm on Sept. 10 in the TK Park auditorium located on the eighth floor of CentralWorld.

For October, every mongrel and mutt dog will have its revenge on the human race in Hungarian film “White God,” which won the Cannes’ Un Certain Regard in 2014. It shows Oct. 22.

Correction: An earlier version of this story said the event was hosted by the FCCT. In fact this year it is hosted by TK Park.

 

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Chula Freshman Says Classmates Threaten Him For Calling Out Hazing

BANGKOK — A student activist in his first year at Chulalongkorn University said Thursday he was threatened with physical harm for calling attention to the hazing tactics used on freshmen in the university’s Faculty of Fine and Applied Arts.

Freshman Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal, 19, said he was threatened online by classmates after he posted an audio clip Saturday of seniors threatening to punish freshmen if they did not participate in the annual induction ceremony, which is famous for sometimes harsh or degrading hazing known as rub nong.

“They threatened to punch me if ever they see me around,” said Netiwit, a known pro-democracy studying in the university’s political science program. “When I heard [the audio] I couldn’t take it. That’s why I spread it.”

He said other freshmen who were unhappy about the situation gave him the recording.

In the audio, students are heard expressing concern about what will happen to them as what were said to be seniors issue orders to them.

As happens occasionally during similar hazing in the military, university students have died as a result of harsh hazing. Two years ago, the body of a 16-year-old student suffering from leukemia was dumped at a hospital by his classmates after an all night session in which students were kicked into the sea.

On Thursday, Netiwit said he was subjected to dirty looks from other students on campus.

Since raising the issue, he said the seniors in his faculty postponed the event, but he believes they will go ahead with it once attention shifts away.

Netiwit said his Political Science department is much less imperious about ritualistically forcing freshmen into submission to their elder classmates.

“It’s my last priority [to join],” he said.

Netiwit said didn’t file a complaint with the university, saying the public would be the ultimate judges.

Some students and sectors have over the years called for abolishing rub nong. As a result of his messages, Netiwit said he gained about 4,000 new followers on Facebook in a matter of days.

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Kiwi’s Fatal Balcony Fall Near Khaosan Road Ruled Accidental

Photo: Chillax Resort

BANGKOK — Police said today that a foreign national who plunged to his death from a hotel near Khaosan Road on Monday fell trying to climb between balconies.

Ross Anthony Mobbs, 30 of New Zealand, fell from the fourth floor of the Chillax Resort on Soi Samsen 2 after a wooden railing he was holding broke away, according to Chanasongkram Police Station chief Pitak Sitthikul.

“We inspected the scene, and there was no sign of a struggle,” Col. Pitak said.

Pitak said Mobbs was sharing the room with a mate, whose girlfriend was staying in the adjacent room. Police said Mobbs left his friend drinking in their room and went to visit the girlfriend. It was from her room that Mobbs was attempting to return via balcony late Monday night, police said, to impress his friend.

It was raining, and Mobbs was intoxicated at the time, the officer added.

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