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Permanent Cease-Fire Takes Effect in Colombia

People celebrate the announcement Wednesday from Havana, Cuba, that delegates of Colombia's government and leaders of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia reached a peace accord to end their half-century civil war Colombia. Photo: Fernando Vergara / Associated Press

BOGOTA, Colombia — A permanent cease-fire is taking effect in Colombia on Monday, the latest step in bringing an end to 52 years of bloody combat between the government and the country’s biggest rebel group.

The commander of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia announced Sunday that his fighters would cease hostilities beginning at 12:01am as a result of the peace accord the two sides reached at midweek.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos made a similar announcement Friday, saying the military would halt attacks on the FARC beginning Monday.

FARC leader Rodrigo Londono, also known as Timochenko, made his announcement in Havana, where rebel and government negotiators talked for four years to reach the deal on ending one of the world’s longest-running conflicts.

“Never again will parents be burying their sons and daughters killed in the war,” Londono said. “All rivalries and grudges will remain in the past.”

Colombia is expected to hold a national referendum Oct. 2 to give voters the chance to approve the accord, which would end political violence that has claimed more than 220,000 lives and driven more than 5 million people from their homes over five decades. Polls say most Colombians loathe the rebel group but will likely endorse the deal anyway.

Top FARC commanders are planning to gather one final time in mid-September to ratify the deal.

Under the 297-page accord, FARC guerrillas are supposed to turn over their weapons within six months after the deal is formally signed. In return, the FARC’s still unnamed future political movement will be given a minimum 10 congressional seats — five in the lower house, five in the Senate — for two legislative periods.

In addition, 16 lower house seats will be created for grassroots activists in rural areas traditionally neglected by the state and in which existing political parties will be banned from running candidates. Critics of the peace process contend that will further boost the rebels’ post-conflict political power.

After 2026, both arrangements would end and the former rebels would have to demonstrate their political strength at the ballot box.

Not all hostilities are ending under the deal with the FARC. The much-smaller National Liberation Army remains active in Colombia, although it is pursuing its own peace deal with the government.

Story: Joshua Goodman

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Beyonce Slays at MTV VMAs, Drake Honors Rihanna

Beyonce arrives at the MTV Video Music Awards at Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Aug. 28, 2016, in New York. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

NEW YORK — Beyonce owned the MTV Video Music Awards by winning video of the year and giving a 16-minute performance featuring her recent hits from “Lemonade,” working various stages with strong, layered vocals, skilled dance moves and even an outfit change — all as the audience watched in awe and cheered her on.

Beyonce won the top prize for “Formation,” besting Adele, Kanye West, Justin Bieber and Drake.

“First of all I’d like to thank my beautiful daughter and my incredible husband for all of their support,” said Beyonce, who walked the carpet with Blue Ivy by her side. “I dedicate this award to the people of New Orleans.”

Queen B kicked of her strong set with “Pray You Catch Me” as blue lights beamed onstage. She was wearing white, but later stripped down to a black leotard with full sleeves as she sang “Hold Up” and “Sorry.” She grew angry and twerked while performing “Don’t Hurt Yourself” and ended with the anthemic “Formation.”

“If y’all came to slay, sing along with me,” she said.

The audience at Madison Square Garden watched intensely Sunday, at times recording the performance with their phones.

It was reminiscent of the 2014 VMAs, when Beyonce also performed for 16 minutes and accepted the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard award. This year it is being awarded to Rihanna, who split up her performances throughout the night, singing hits such as “Work,” ”We Found Love” and “Love on the Brain.”

But the biggest moment for Rihanna came when Drake — in a tuxedo — presented the award to his former girlfriend. He said he met Rihanna in 2005 on the set of her first music video for “Pon De Replay.”

“She’s someone I’ve been in love with her since I was 22 years old,” Drake said as Rihanna blushed and the audience cheered loudly. “She’s one of my best friends in the world. All of my adult life I’ve looked up to her even though she’s younger than me.”

Rihanna, 28, thanked her family, friends and hometown of Saint Michael, Barbados for helping her succeed in her 11-year-career.

“All I can think of is my country, they’re gonna be so proud, this is the first Vanguard to land anywhere near my country,” she said. “My success started as my dream, but now my success is not my own. It’s my family, my fans, my country … it’s women, it’s black women.”

Beyonce’s top-notch performance starkly contrasted with that of Britney Spears, who returned to the VMA stage after 10 years. Not only did she lip sync, in typical fashion, but she did so badly. Spears performed her hit “Make Me…” and danced slickly, but she didn’t actually sing a word of the song live. She was joined by rapper G-Eazy — and she lip synched the hook to his hit song, “Me, Myself and I.”

Beyonce won best female video for “Hold Up,” presented to her by four of the Final Five gymnasts, excluding Gabby Douglas, who is hospitalized for a mouth infection.

“Thank you to my fans. I love you,” Beyonce said. “Have a beautiful night.”

In typical and true Kanye West fashion, the rapper ranted onstage, touching on subjects from music to his beef with Taylor Swift to violence in his hometown Chicago before he debuted his music video for “Fade.” He talked about his “Famous” video which features what appear to be naked images of West, Swift, Kim Kardashian, Donald Trump and more. He even pointed to former girlfriend Amber Rose, who was in the audience and is also in the video.

“It was an expression of our now, our fame right now, us on the inside of the TV, you know, the audacity to put Anna Wintour right next to Donald Trump,” he said.

“I put Ray J in it bro,” he said, referring to Kardashian’s ex with whom she did a sex tape.

“But if you think about last week it was 22 people murdered in Chicago,” he continued. “You know, people come up to me like, ‘Man, that’s right! Take, tell Taylor this. Bro, like I love all y’all.”

“That’s why I called her,” he said with a laugh, referring to his recent drama with the pop star, who didn’t attend the VMAs and was not nominated.

Other performers including Ariana Grande, who brought spin class to the VMA stage when she sang the reggae-tinged “Side to Side” with Nicki Minaj. Grande cycled while singing and was backed by female dancers imitating her, while her male dancers lifted dumbbells and did other exercises. At the end of their performance, Grande and Minaj put their male dancers’ faces in front their crotches.

In another ode to the Olympic Games just past, Michael Phelps said he’s been inspired by hip-hop music before introducing Future, who Phelps said he listened to before swimming and making the grimace that went viral. The rapper-singer-producer performed his hit “(Expletive) Up Some Commas.”

Drake won the first award for the night — best hip hop video for “Hotline Bling.” Puff Daddy, who presented the award, said Drake was stuck in traffic. Calvin Harris won best male video — beating West’s “Famous” — for “This is What You Came For,” which featured Rihanna and was co-written with former girlfriend Swift. Harris accepted the award in a video message.

David Bowie — who died from cancer earlier this year — received four nominations for “Lazarus” and won best art direction. The music video, which shows him looking frail in bed with bandaged eyes, was released just days before the icon’s Jan. 10 death.

Fifth Harmony and Ty Dollar $ign won best collaboration video for “Work from Home.” The girl group also won song of the summer for “All In My Head (Flex).” The pop band DNCE, led by Joe Jonas, won best new artist.

Beyonce, was the top nominee with 11, arrived angel-winged and green-feathered with daughter Blue Ivy in tow along with Sybrina Fulton, Lezley McSpadden and Gwen Carr, the mothers of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Eric Garner, among others. They appeared in videos for Beyonce’s “Lemonade” visual album and also make up the Mothers of the Movement, women of color who lost children to violence.

Jimmy Fallon introduced the top nominees and dressed as Ryan Lochte, with platinum blonde hair. As Lochte, who is dealing with trouble after filing a false robbery report over an incident during the Rio Olympics, Fallon lied onstage about writing Justin Bieber’s “Sorry” and directing the videos nominated for video of the year.

Adele was behind Beyonce with eight nominations, but the British singer did not attend the show.

 

Story: Mesfin Fekadu

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Suicide Bomber Fails to Explode in Indonesian Church

Indonesian police officers guard a church compound following an attack during Sunday Mass in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Binsar Bakkara / Associated Press

JAKARTA — A would-be suicide bomber’s explosives failed to detonate in a packed church in western Indonesia during Sunday Mass, and he injured a priest with an axe before being restrained, police said.

The 18-year-old assailant left a bench and ran toward the priest at the altar, but a bomb in his backpack only burned without exploding, said national police spokesman Maj. Gen. Boy Rafli Amar.

Before he was restrained by members of the congregation, the man managed to take an axe from the backpack and attacked the Rev. Albert Pandiangan, causing a slight injury to the 60-year-old priest’s hand, Amar said.

The motive for the attack at the Roman Catholic St. Yoseph Church in Medan, the capital of North Sumatra province, was not clear, but the perpetrator carried a symbol indicating support for the Islamic State group.

Police were interrogating the man, who told them he was not working alone, Amar said, without providing details.

Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, has carried out a sustained crackdown on militant networks since the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people.

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Bangkok’s New Tallest Celebrates With Monday Light Shows

Photo: MahaNakhon / Facebook

UPDATE Monday 7:30pm: Light show pushed back to 8:15pm due to rain.

BANGKOK — Thailand’s tallest skyscraper will officially take its place among the skyline Monday night when it turns on its lights in a flashing, glowing ceremony.

Seven years after it was announced, the 77-floor MahaNakhon building will light up its “distressed cyberhelix” curtain wall with light shows at 7:30pm and 8:25pm on Monday.

It’s a show for all of Bangkok best seen more than a few hundred meters away, or several kilometers. The developer is offering prizes in a contest for people who post photos and videos to social media.

The mixed-use project by Pace Development consists of a hotel, retail businesses, bars, restaurants, and 200 units of the Ritz-Carlton Residences condominiums, which started at prices of about 40 million baht and went much, much higher.

MahaNakhon exceeds the Baiyoke II Tower by 10 meters to become the tallest building at a height of 314 meters. Its claim could be short-lived, however, depending on if and when the Rama IX Super Tower is completed, which would dwarf MahaNakhon at 615 meters.

The building is located on Narathiwas Road near BTS Chong Nonsi.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4yPrXJ_5o0

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Appeal of Authoritarianism Underscores Thailand’s Democratic Dilemma

A protest stage Jan. 28, 2014, in Bangkok. Photo: Johan Fantenberg / Flickr

BANGKOK — As anti-politician sentiments continue to spread, some warn the nation is becoming addicted to the military junta’s unchecked powers. This, they say is a proof that the debate over preferred political system for Thailand is far from settled.

We talked to an array of politicos from across the spectrum and political thinkers to get there measure of how we got here.

Addicted to Unaccountable Powers

Given the 12 “successful” coups during the past eight decades of modern Thai politics, deputy Democrat Party leader Nipit Intarasombat warned that Thais are at risk of growing accustomed to unchecked military powers.

“Hatred toward politicians will definitely have repercussions for the revival of a democratic system,” Nipit said, adding that when an elected government returns to power, it will invariably be compared to unelected regimes that employed absolute power to solve things.

“They may conclude that a dictatorial system is better than a democratic system,” he said. “This is worrying.”

‘Hatred toward politicians will definitely have repercussions for the revival of a democratic system’

Nipit added the public has been fed propaganda for over two years now about the virtues of unelected governance, while information critical of the junta is hard to find in the mainstream mass media.

“This information is penetrating deep. People believe the country is damaged because of politicians and prefer another system of governance. In the long run, people will realize that the current system is more damaging in the long run, however, because it cannot be scrutinized,” Nipit said.

A prominent coup supporter played down such fear, however.

“I wouldn’t have supported the National Council for Peace and Order if politicians weren’t extremely horrible,” said Tul Sittisomwong, a well-known leader of the now inactive “multi-color” movement, referring to the May 2014 coup makers who ousted the Pheu Thai government.

“The coup was a consequence,” Tul said, insisting that bad government induces coups, and not the other way around.

Tul said now that it’s expected that the future elected government will have to share power with the junta who will be appointing members of the senate, plus a possible PM coming not from elected MP, politicians will have 5 years to “improve” themselves.

Tul said he’s not naive to the point of believing that the junta, led by Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, who also made himself prime minister, is squeaky clean, but he will put up with them as long as they don’t turn too ugly.

 

The Disillusioned

Another former Democrat MP, Thankoon Jitissara, was partly responsible for paving the coup’s way yet is critical of the coup makers. He was among leaders of the People’s Committee for Absolute Democracy with the King as Head of State, aka PCAD or PDRC, who set the stage for the eventual May 2014 coup.

Claiming to have gone up on PCAD stages virtually every day, sometimes to address the crowd for up to two hours when the movement besieged Bangkok in a failed bid to directly take over the Yingluck Shinawatra administration from October 2013 to May 2014, Thankoon said his support for the ouster of Yingluck did not extend to unchecked power for Prayuth.

“No one can say whether the junta is corrupt or not because they cannot be scrutinized,” Thankoon said.

He worries people could become used to this.

“We Thais like instant goods,” he said. “Even our type of ‘democracy’ is now ready-made [by the junta].”

The now-unemployed former MP is well-aware of the rise of anti-politician sentiments, however. When Thankoon tried to join a group recording birthday wishes for Her Majesty the Queen earlier this month, an army-controlled TV channel told him he couldn’t – because he was a politician.

“Politicians are seen as self-serving and corrupt,” Thankoon said. “It’s highly likely that anti-politician sentiments have added immunity to the dictatorship,” he said.

In reality, those in power are now politicians as well, Thankoon said, and the belief by some that soldiers don’t engage in corruption is a new ideological “disease.”

 

Nation Stuck Forever ‘Developing?’

Thammasat University political scientist Kasian Tejapira warned that acceptance of dictatorship reflects Thai citizens’ inability to utilize democratic processes effectively. Kasian said such citizens instead become impotent and doomed to “self-inflicted immaturity.”

By accepting a system of governance by a supposedly morally superior class and not the people themselves, Kasian said the public becomes inactive in the political process.

“They have no role in the passing of legislation that’s prone to curb political freedom and allow others to draw a line as to how much freedom they ought to have,” Kasian said. “How then can these people scrutinize politicians who were not elected?”

 

Unsettled Debate

Chaturon Chaisang, a former Deputy PM and former Education Minister under the former Pheu Thai government said the whole phenomenon reflects a deeper question confronting Thai society.

He stressed that society has yet to achieve a genuine consensus on what political system it desires.

“There may be anti-politician sentiments in some countries and the denouncing of politicians, but they are settled when it comes to the system,” he said.

‘We should tackle this with more democracy, not with more authoritarianism’

Like Nipit and Thankoon, he agrees that politicians face unfair comparison with an unelected military regime, but says they need to embrace political reform from within.

“We have to make political parties more acceptable. There are some who believe that people are not capable of governing themselves,” Chaturon said.

Chulalongkorn University political scientist Naruemon Thabchumpon believes society’s current response to its problematic politician class is simply wrong.

“Yes, politicians have a low level of good governance and a winner-takes-all mentality. But the way society addresses the issue is wrong. We placed hope in autocratic powers and in the belief that good people can govern [without scrutiny],” Naruemon said.

She believes the solution is greater scrutiny of the powers that be, not less.

“And no matter how well-intended you claim to be, you have a problem when it comes to legitimacy, and how you obtained power. The solution is to make politics more inclusive, not less. We should tackle this with more democracy, not with more authoritarianism. The solution is in fostering political parties that are truly linked to the people.”

In the end, Democrat Party veteran Nipit said, Thais will have to decide whether they want a democratic system or an authoritarian system, as they can’t have it both ways.

“If we don’t want a democratic system,” he said. “We’ll need another to replace it.”

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Singapore Debuts World’s First Driverless Taxis

An autonomous vehicle is parked for its test drive in Singapore on Wednesday. Photo: Yong Teck Lim / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — The world’s first self-driving taxis began picking up passengers in Singapore starting Thursday.

Select members of the public can hail a free ride through their smartphones in taxis operated by nuTonomy, an autonomous vehicle software startup. While multiple companies, including Google and Volvo, have been testing self-driving cars on public roads for several years, nuTonomy says is the first to offer rides to the public.

Its launch in Singapore is beating ride-hailing service Uber, which plans to offer rides in autonomous cars in Pittsburgh, by a few weeks.

NuTonomy is starting small — six cars now, growing to a dozen by the end of the year. The ultimate goal, company executives say, is to have a fully self-driving taxi fleet in Singapore by 2018, to help cut the number of cars on Singapore’s congested roads. Eventually, the model could be adopted in cities around the world, nuTonomy hopes.

For now, the taxis only run in a 6.5 square kilometer business and residential district called “one-north,” and pick-ups and drop-offs are limited to specified locations. Riders must have an invitation from nuTonomy to use the service. The company says dozens have signed up for the launch, and it plans to expand that list to thousands of people within a few months.

The cars — modified Renault Zoe and Mitsubishi i-MiEV electrics — have a driver in front who is prepared to take back the wheel and a researcher in back who watches the car’s computers. Each car is fitted with six sets of Lidar — a detection system that uses lasers to operate like radar — including one that constantly spins on the roof. There are also two cameras on the dashboard to scan for obstacles and detect changes in traffic lights.

The testing time-frame is open-ended, said nuTonomy CEO Karl Iagnemma. Eventually, riders may start paying for the service, and more pick-up and drop-off points will be added. NuTonomy also is working on testing similar taxi services in other Asian cities, the U.S. and Europe, but he wouldn’t say when.

“I don’t expect there to be a time where we say, ‘We’ve learned enough,'” Iagnemma said.

Doug Parker, nuTonomy’s chief operating officer, said autonomous taxis could ultimately reduce the number of cars on Singapore’s roads from 900,000 to 300,000.

“When you are able to take that many cars off the road, it creates a lot of possibilities. You can create smaller roads, you can create much smaller car parks,” Parker said. “I think it will change how people interact with the city going forward.”

NuTonomy, a 50-person company with offices in Massachusetts and Singapore, was formed in 2013 by Iagnemma and Emilio Frazzoli, Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers who were studying robotics and developing autonomous vehicles for the Defense Department. Earlier this year, the company was the first to win approval from Singapore’s government to test self-driving cars in one-north. NuTonomy announced a research partnership with Singapore’s Land Transport Authority earlier this month.

Singapore is ideal because it has good weather, great infrastructure and drivers who tend to obey traffic rules, Iagnemma says. As a land-locked island, the city of 5.4 million people is seeking creative ways to grow its economy, so it’s been supportive of autonomous vehicle research.

Auto supplier Delphi Corp., which also is working on autonomous vehicle software, was recently selected to test autonomous vehicles on the island and plans to start next year.

“We face constraints in land and manpower. We want to take advantage of self-driving technology to overcome such constraints,” said Pang Kin Keong, Singapore’s Permanent Secretary for Transport and the chairman of its committee on autonomous driving.

Olivia Seow, 25, works in startup partnerships in one-north and is one of the riders nuTonomy selected, took a test ride of less than a mile on Monday. She said she was nervous when she got into the car, and then surprised as she watched the steering wheel turn by itself.

“It felt like there was a ghost or something,” she said.

But she quickly relaxed. The ride was smooth and controlled, she said, and she was relieved to see that the car recognized even small obstacles like birds and motorcycles parked in the distance.

“I couldn’t see them with my human eye, but the car could, so I knew that I could trust the car,” said Seow, who hopes to use the time freed up during her commute, thanks to the technology, or use the service to help her father get around town as he grows older.

An Associated Press reporter taking a ride Wednesday saw the safety driver step on the brakes once, when a car was obstructing the test car’s lane and another vehicle, which had appeared to be parked, suddenly began moving in the oncoming lane.

Iagnemma said the company is confident that its software can make good decisions. The company hopes its head start in autonomous driving will eventually lead to partnerships with automakers, tech companies, logistics companies and others.

“What we’re finding is the number of interested parties is really overwhelming,” he said.

Story: Annabelle Liang, Dee-Ann Durbin

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Malaysian Students Rally to Demand PM Najib’s Arrest

Student activists holds up caricatures of Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak during a rally calling for his arrest Saturday in Kuala Lumpur. Photo: Joshua Paul / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian student activists have rallied to demand the arrest of Prime Minister Najib Razak, who has been implicated in a U.S. government probe into a massive fraud in a Malaysian investment fund.

More than 1,000 people defied a police ban as they congregated at two locations in Kuala Lumpur on Saturday, holding posters and caricatures of Najib.

The U.S. Department of Justice said last month that at least USD$3.5 billion has been stolen from the Malaysian fund founded by Najib. It has initiated action to seize USD$1.3 billion it said was used to buy assets in the U.S.

It said in court filings that more than USD$700 million had landed in a Malaysian official’s accounts. It didn’t name the official, but appeared to be referring to Najib.

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Deep South Conflict Perpetuated by Willful Ignorance

Police officers on Wedneday morning inspect the site of the deadly twin car bomb that struck a hotel in Pattani province.

Retention

BANGKOK — A group often overlooked when considering the Deep South’s ongoing separatist conflict is the kingdom’s majority Thai Buddhists.

When I spoke recently to a senior human rights lawyer facing criminal charges over a report on alleged torture there, he said the Buddhist majority’s poor understanding of the conflict is a profound obstacle to finding solutions in Bangkok.

“They don’t really understand the conflict in the south. It’s a big obstacle to any government, even elected government to solve problems in the south,” Somchai Hom-laor said.

This is further complicated now as the nation’s attention is wrested by the insurgency suspected of unleashing a wave of attacks earlier this month which killed four outside their usual operational area of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat provinces.

“Everyone in the Deep South is being blamed although only a small group of people were involved,” Somchai said.

Pravit RojanaphrukIgnorance, bias, apathy, cultural chauvinism, you name it – a good number of Thais who aren’t Muslim or Malay harbor these.

One of the sickest attitudes among some Thai Buddhists is to declare or state on social media that if these Muslims people in the deep south are not happy, they should feel free to leave Thailand.

It shows a poor understanding of history. In the past, those provinces of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat and parts of Songkhla, were known as The Sultanate of Patani Darussalam and part of a Malay-Muslim heartland which was vassal state to the Ayutthaya kingdom. That is until Siamese conquest in 1785 and eventual annexation as part of Thailand. (Parts of it became northern Malaysia and Siamese rule was officially acknowledged as recently as 1909 under the Anglo-Siamese Treaty negotiated with the British Empire.)

These Thai-Malay Muslims are not occupiers, they lived there prior to Siamese subjugation, so it is sick and ignorant to tell these people “love it or leave it” when the former means accepting a militarized life where detention without charge for seven days was the norm long before it spread to the rest of the kingdom thanks to the 2014 coup makers.

And to label them Thai Muslims, as many mainstream Thai-language media outlets do, denies their Malay identity, which is still very alive in both language and culture. Why then not refer to them as Thai-Malay Muslims?

To make matters worse, some mainstream mass media continue obfuscating the issue, intentionally or not, by referring to separatist insurgents as “southern bandits” (โจรใต้), such as conservative paper Daily News did in a Thursday editorial. Such references mislead the public into thinking these are just bad folks with no ideology out to steal something, while in fact these “bandits” probably see themselves as freedom fighters. (These are the perceptions, and I don’t condone violence perpetrated by any party in the Deep South and consider Tuesday’s use of an ambulance as a car bomb by alleged separatists a new low.)

Bangkok seems so far away from the weekly violence in the Deep South. We watch it on TV from somewhere remote, and it appears like just another news item. This despite the fact that more than 6,500 people have been killed over the past dozen years and many families have lost loved ones.

It’s clear that a decade-plus of militarization has failed to provide any peaceful solutions, and the situation will likely not change unless a majority of the Thai people become more engaged in the issue instead of leaving it to a few experts and activists.

In a marriage, if one party is not happy, he or she should have the right to divorce. Unfortunately Pattani’s marriage to Thailand was a shotgun wedding, if not rape. People there deserve better.

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Oregon Fair Generates Buzz with 1st Legal Pot Display in US

Fairgoers look at marijuana plants at the Oregon State Fair during the first day of an exhibit of living pot plants on Friday in Salem, Oregon. Photo: Gillian Flaccus / Associated Press

SALEM, Ore. — Living marijuana plants went on display Friday at the Oregon State Fair, with organizers saying it’s the first state fair in the nation to allow cannabis for public viewing.

The state voted to legalize recreational marijuana in late 2014. Here are a few things to know about legal pot in Oregon and the display at the fair:

WHAT’S THE BUZZ?

The Oregon State Fair allowed a display about marijuana without any living plants last year and it generated no complaints. So this year, the organization took the next step and agreed to let marijuana growers display live plants.

The Oregon Cannabis Business Council, which is sponsoring the display, says it’s the first time living pot plants have been open for public viewing at any state fair nationwide.

The council is renting space in an exhibit hall for its tent and selected nine plants for the display at an industry event two weeks ago.

WILL FAIRGOERS GET HIGH?

No. While the tent holding the display smells strongly of weed, fair authorities are only allowing immature plants — that is, pot plants without flowers.

Marijuana leaves are much less potent than the flowers, or buds, and it’s not yet legal to transport flowering plants within the state anyway.

Donald Morse, director of the Oregon Cannabis Business Council, said his group hopes to get permission to display flowering pot plants next year, but the details aren’t finalized.

CAN ANYONE SEE THE PLANTS?

No. The exhibit is in a translucent tent and both the entrance and exit are monitored. Anyone entering must present identification proving they are 21 or over.

AREN’T STATE FAIRS FOR GIANT PUMPKINS, PIGS AND APPLE PIE?

The way people think about marijuana in Oregon is changing, and recreational grow sites are recognized under state law as farm crops.

The Oregon Liquor Control Commission is in the process of licensing recreational marijuana in much the same way it already controls the sale and use of alcohol.

Fair spokesman Dan Cox says the event must adapt to changing cultural and societal values and allowing the display is one part of that shift.

A CASH CROP

Oregonians voted to legalize marijuana in 2014 and the state allowed the sale of marijuana “edibles,” such as pot-infused candies and confections, earlier this year.

This week, the state said it had processed $25.5 million in taxes on recreational pot since January 2016.

Anticipated state revenue through June 2017 was recently quadrupled by Oregon’s Legislative Revenue Office, from $8.4 million to $35 million.

BUT IT’S ILLEGAL, RIGHT?

Recreational marijuana is still illegal in 46 states and is banned by the federal government.

Story: Gillian Flaccus

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Top French Court Rules Burkini Bans Violate Basic Freedoms

'No to Islamophobia, yes to Burkinis,' reads the blanket spread by activists outside the French embassy in London during the "wear what you want beach party" Thursday to protest the French authorities' clampdown on Muslim women wearing burkinis on the beach. Photo: Frank Augstein / Associated Press

PARIS — France’s top administrative court on Friday overturned a ban on burkinis in a Mediterranean beach resort, effectively meaning that towns can no longer issue bans on the swimsuits that have divided the country and brought world attention to its fraught relationship with Muslims.

The ruling by the Council of State specifically concerns a ban on the Muslim garment in the Riviera town of Villeneuve-Loubet, but the binding decision is expected to impact all the 30 or so French resort municipalities that have issued similar decrees.

The bans grew increasingly controversial as images circulated online of some Muslim women being ordered to remove body-concealing garments on French Riviera beaches.

Lawyers for a human rights group and a Muslim collective challenged the legality of the ban to the top court, saying the orders infringe on basic freedoms and that mayors have overstepped their powers by telling women what to wear on beaches.

Despite the court victory, the debate was unlikely to go away. Prime Minister Manual Valls, who supported the bans, called the debate “fundamental” for secular France, where religious displays are unwelcome in the public space.

Valls wrote on his Facebook page that denouncing the burkini “in no way puts into question individual freedom” and is really about denouncing “fatal, retrograde Islamism.” The burkini, he wrote, “is the affirmation of political Islam in the public space.”

Mayors had cited multiple reasons for the bans, including security after a string of Islamic extremist attacks, risk to public order, and France’s strict rules on secularism in public life.

The Council of State ruled that, “The emotion and concerns arising from the terrorist attacks, notably the one perpetrated in Nice on July 14, cannot suffice to justify in law the contested prohibition measure.”

It ruled that the mayor of Villeneuve-Loubet overstepped his powers by enacting measures that are not justified by “proven risks of disruptions to public order nor, moreover, on reasons of hygiene or decency.”

“The contested decree has thus brought a serious and manifestly illegal infringement on basic freedoms such as freedom to come and go, freedom of conscience and personal freedom,” the ruling read.

Lawyer Patrice Spinosi, representing the Human Rights League, said that women who have already received fines can protest them based on Friday’s decision. He told The Associated Press the group plans to ask all French mayors who bannedburkinis to withdraw their orders and, if they refuse to do so, he will systematically take each case to court.

“It is a decision that is meant to set legal precedent,” Spinosi said to reporters earlier outside the court. “Today all the ordinances taken should conform to the decision of the Council of State. Logically the mayors should withdraw these ordinances. If not, legal actions could be taken” against those towns.

The head of the Collective Against Islamophobia in France, the other group that appealed to the top court, hailed the decision but lamented that the crackdown “will remain engraved in the history of our country.”

“One cannot take back the harm which was caused, humiliations that were provoked,” Marwan Muhammad told reporters outside the court.

The bans have become a symbol of tensions around the place of Islam in secular France and the heated debate has brought about divisions even among cabinet ministers.

While Valls argued that burkinis oppress women, two ministers in his cabinet, Education Minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacem and Health Minister Marisol Touraine, have said banning burkinis is not a good option. Vallaud-Belkacem, a feminist with North African roots, argued that while she doesn’t like the burkini swimsuit, banning the garment amounted to a politically driven act that encouraged racism.

Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, who is also in charge of faiths, said that “it is now up to everyone to seek calm.”

The conservative mayor of Villeneuve-Loubet, Lionnel Luca, said that “far from calming, this decision can only heighten passions and tensions, with the risk of trouble we wanted to avoid.”

Luca, also a lawmaker, said that now only a law can stop troubles. He denounced a “rampant Islamization” in the country and said that, with Friday’s ruling, “they’ve gained a small additional step.”

While addressing only one local ban, the Council of State sets general principles in its ruling that any mayors will now have to abide by when using their powers in the future.

Technically, other local bans are still in effect until mayors revoke them or groups contest them in courts. But de facto the town decrees are hollow because burkini fines can be contested.

Nevertheless, the mayor of the Corsican town of Sisco said he wouldn’t lift the ban he imposed after an Aug. 13 clash on a beach. “Here the tension is very, very, very high and I won’t withdraw it,” Ange-Pierre Vivoni said on BFM-TV.

Former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who announced this week he’s seeking the conservative nomination for the 2017 race, said at a rally Thursday night in southern France that he wants a law banning the burkini “on the entire territory of the Republic.”

Far-right National Front leader Marine Le Pen said the battle is not over. She said in a statement that lawmakers must vote “as quickly as possible” to extend a 2004 law that bans Muslim headscarves and other ostentatious religious symbols in classrooms to include all public spaces.

“The burkini would obviously be part of it,” said Le Pen, who is running for president in the 2017 race.

President Francois Hollande has remained neutral on the issue, arguing that society “presumes that each person conforms to the rules, and that there is neither provocation nor stigmatization.”

But critics said the bans had been feeding a racist political agenda.

Amnesty International praised the court decision Friday, calling the local decrees “invasive and discriminatory” and saying their enforcement has led to “abuses and the degrading treatment of Muslim women and girls.”

Story: Philippe Sotto

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