32.2 C
Bangkok
Monday, June 29, 2026
Home Blog Page 2633

Looking at You: Candid Passions on Display at Neilson Hays Library

Photo: Celine Ludwig / Courtesy

BANGKOK — With a belief that although humans are alone inside, they can connect to others through mutual feelings, 20 portraits and 10 nudes by a German artist will show at a historic library in Silom.

“Looking at You” started when Celine Ludewig was seeking moments when people around her couldn’t hide their true feelings behind poised facades.

“There are many ways we use to hide the truth. So I was looking for moments when people didn’t hide their true emotions,” Celine said.

Celine started her project when she went to pubs to paint musicians lost in the moment without their knowledge.

“We are completely honest in the moments we do something we love,” the 20-year-old said. “That is when there are no walls to hide, in those moments we don’t worry about people’s opinions.”

Celine lived in Ratchaburi province with a Thai family for a year when she was a 16-year-old exchange student. She returned to Thailand again to find her voice as an artist after studying fine arts in Germany.

“Looking at You” opens at 5pm on Sept. 7 and runs through Oct. 3 at the Neilson Hays Library on Surawong Road. The home of thousands English-language books is located about one kilometer from BTS Chong Nonsi.

Advertisement

Former Palace Employee Arrested in Connection With Alleged Royal Impostors

Kamonthat ‘Kim Eng’ Thanathornkhositjira was arrested Saturday morning in Bangkok. Two days later, police arrested her alleged accomplice, Thaworn Puangprathim.

BANGKOK — A suspected accomplice in the case of an alleged royal impostor was arrested on a charge of insulting the monarch, police said Tuesday.

Thaworn Puangprathim, 66, was accused of impersonating a royal palace official and helping the other suspect, Kamonthat “Kim Eng” Thanathornkhositjira, solicit donations for what they said were for members of the Royal Family.

“The suspect … dressed himself to look similar to an official from the royal palace to fool victims into believing that Mrs. Kim Eng was someone close to people in the high circle,” said Police Maj. Gen. Sommai Kongwisaisuk, referring to an alias of Kamonthat. “As for other details, we cannot reveal them, because they concern a criminal investigation.”

Thaworn, who used to work for the Royal Household Bureau, was arrested at his home in Bangkok’s Huai Khwang district Monday night. He was charged with royal defamation and fraud. The former offense, also known as lese majeste, carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

Police are also looking for another suspect in the same case, a man called Somsak Siriyakhom.

Kamonthat, 62, was arrested Saturday morning on a charge of insulting the monarchy. She’s an older sister of another lese majeste suspect called Monta “Ying Kai” Yokrattanakan, who was arrested July 7.

Police said they both claimed false ties to the monarchy for their own personal gain, but added that their crimes were unrelated.

The sisters are currently held in a Bangkok women’s prison to await their trials for lese majeste.

Advertisement

Cambodia Nabs 64 Chinese in Alleged Internet scam

PHNOM PENH — Cambodian police arrested 64 people from mainland China and Taiwan on Tuesday, accusing them of taking part in an internet scam, officials said.

Initial information shows that at least 12 of the suspects are from Taiwan, while the rest are mainland Chinese, said Gen. Ouk Haiseila, chief of the Cambodian Interior Ministry’s Immigration Investigation Bureau.

The general said the suspects were arrested in a rented house in Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital. They are accused of defrauding victims in China using phone calls made over the internet, he said.

“These suspects are now detained by immigration police for questioning and then we will deport them back to China,” Gen. Ouk Haiseila said.

In June, Taiwan protested after Cambodia deported 25 Taiwanese internet scam suspects to rival China in the latest snub of the self-ruled island. Cambodia regards Taiwan to be part of China.

Although Taiwan’s constitution formally decrees that it and the mainland are part of a single Chinese nation, Taiwan functions like an independent country and does not acknowledge Beijing’s claim of authority over it.

Rights activists and Taiwanese authorities say such deportations reflect the great influence China exercises over Cambodia through aid and investment.

China is a key ally and economic partner of impoverished Cambodia. It has provided millions of dollars in aid and investment over the past decade, agreed to write off debts and granted it tariff-free status for hundreds of items.

Kenya and Malaysia have also deported Taiwanese internet scam suspects to China despite protests by Taiwanese officials.

Story: Sopheng Cheang

Advertisement

Voice TV Deepens Self-Censorship by Cutting Political Coverage

From left, hosts Chuwat Rerksirisuk, Nattakorn Devakula and Sirote Klampaiboon, in a 2015 promotional image for Voice TV's Wake Up News program.

BANGKOK — A major broadcaster confirmed Tuesday it will reduce and tone down its political commentary after government regulators suspended one of its popular news program for one week.

Voice TV’s news director confirmed the channel will voluntarily take such measures one day after the National Broadcasting and Telecommunication Commission, or NBTC, ordered Wake Up News off the air for allegedly affecting state security and the “good morale of society.”

“We’ll reduce political news and increase sections like society, economics and foreign news,” news director Prateep Kongsib said Tuesday of their revised editorial priorities. “We won’t be able to criticize intensely, fully.”

Read: Voice TV Pressured to Pull Pundits For Rattling Junta

The order to pull Wake Up News off the air, effective Thursday, came despite Voice TV’s own act of appeasement two weeks earlier, when it voluntarily suspended one of the show’s hosts and a frequent commentator from some or all appearances.

Some of six program hosts of Wake Up News, the program accused of breaching an agreement with the NBTC by showing bias, warned the junta is trying to curb press freedoms through an intermediary by making it a regulatory issue.

For its part, the NBTC said the show affected state security and the good morale of society in three news items this month.

Voice TV is a digital channel owned by Panthongtae Shinawatra, son of ousted and fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

Prateep said the station decided to accept the punishment instead of petitioning for relief in the Administrative Court because of the “widespread adverse business impact” it is already having on the station. “It’s about the confidence of the customers, who place commercials. This time we quickly informed our customers right away.”

Voice TV's popular Wake Up News program was removed from a revised programming schedule published Tuesday morning.
Voice TV’s popular Wake Up News program was removed from a revised programming schedule published Tuesday morning.

Prateep accused the junta of having a direct role in the punishment, citing a representative of the National Council for Peace and Order in the meeting.

“This time the punishment was heavy because there was someone from the media section of the NCPO present to give his views at the level of the NBTC sub-committee [meeting],” Prateep said. Prateep said the shows six hosts will return to the air after the week is up and a temporary news program will fill the slot during the period.

Here are the three matters called out by the NBTC:

First were comments on the attacks earlier this month in seven southern provinces. Second, the NBTC said sympathy was expressed an activist and junta critic being prosecuted in military court, Jatupat Boonpattaraksa, aka Pai Dao Din. Third, a segment on junta-appointed lawmakers’ attempt to reinterpret the second referendum question to allow the unelected senate to nominate a possibly unelected PM.

Free speech activist and NBTC board member Supinya Klangnarong tweeted Monday that she believes the station made no such damage as alleged. She added however that comments made by TV hosts could be deemed as taking sides.

“The weakness of the Wake Up News program is in presenting news that is infused with personal views, so it is seen as clearly taking sides. But it’s not against state security or good morale,” tweeted Supinya, who was the only board member to vote against the punishment in a 3-1 decision.

North Korean Model?

Chuwat Rerksirisuk, one of the six hosts of the program, which aired between 7am and 9am Monday through Friday, said the selling point of the program was news commentary based on critical thought.

Chuwat said he and the station has no choice but to be accommodating as a result, however.

“We will look at [the junta] in more sympathetic light, to see how we would think if we were in the NCPO’s shoes and on the basis that they have good intentions,” Chuwat said.

Virot Ali, another commentator on the program warned however that the junta is pushing Thailand toward a North Korean or Myanmar-of-the-past model.

“If the media is a mouthpiece of the government and supports the government, then there’s no need [for other stations]. Just shut them all down and only have state controlled-channels like in Myanmar or North Korea,” Virot said.

Virot added that it appears the junta is trying to be more restrictive in controlling the media. “They’re comfortable in exercising autocratic power.”

It was a second punishment for program host Nattakorn Devakula this month. One of Voice TV’s most recognizable talents, he was suspended from some programs including Wake Up News for 10 days by the station in a failed bid to stave off further action by the NBTC.

“There is not much that we can do but to comply since they have the upper hand,” Nattakorn said. “That includes self-censoring and adjustment in the mood and tone of the commentary programs. The reality of the situation is that the NBTC hold the implicit threat of shutting down any television network. In addition, we have a paranoid bully as prime minister who guides over the regulator.”

Sirote Klampaiboon, yet another host of the program, said a clear if troublesome signal was being sent.

“This is a worrying new standard in media control,” Sirote said.

Advertisement

Regime Moves to Ease Drug Laws Starting With Meth, Marijuana

Police commandos search the bedroom of a suspected drug dealer in Bangkok in a Nov. 10, 2015, file photo.

BANGKOK — The penalties and restrictions on marijuana and methamphetamines will be relaxed by year’s end, according the nation’s top drug enforcement official.

The plan, which would permit use of such drugs for medical benefit, is part of the military government’s newfound progressive approach to drug abuse in a break from long years of outright bans and harsh punishment.

Read: Short of an Armistice, Justice Minister Concedes Defeat in ‘War on Drugs’

Apart from marijuana and meth, known by Thais as ya ba, officials are also aiming to reclassify kratom and hemp, said Sirinya Sitdhichai, director of the Narcotics Control Board. Kratom, hemp and marijuana will undergo reclassification first, he said, followed by meth.

“I think we will see the result by the end of this year,” Sirinya said by telephone. “Within the next several months, it will be the three plants, and as for meth, it would be in December.”

If all four substances are listed as Category 2 drugs, they could be used for medical research and therapy, and health professionals with the proper permits could acquire or possess them. Ya ba is currently listed in Category 1, while hemp, kratom and marijuana are in Category 5. Substances in those two categories cannot be licensed for medical use.

Sirinya’s rationale sounds taken from the pages of those who’ve long called for decriminalization of certain narcotics.

“We want to reclassify them because hemp can be an economic crop; kratom is used by many people as an herb, especially people in the south, who like to chew it,” Sirinya said. “And as for marijuana, the international medical community say it can be used for medical benefits.”

Unauthorized use of hemp, kratom, marijuana and ya ba once they are reclassified as Category 2 drugs would still be illegal, he added.

Learning From the World
Sirinya said the policy came directly from Justice Minister Paiboon Khumchaya, who said Monday that Thailand’s stance on drugs should comply with international standards.

“I have told relevant agencies to study and draft reclassification of many types of drugs, for the sake of appropriateness and compliance with worldwide situation of narcotics,” Gen. Paiboon said.

He elaborated by telling officials in the audience that their efforts against drug addiction should focus on medical therapies, which would involve using some of the banned substances. Current laws don’t allow that, the general noted.

“Public health must step in to solve drug problems,” Paiboon said. “If we don’t amend the laws, there is no way for us to proceed in the way that we want. Medical and public health systems can’t do anything. As long as yaa baa is still in the Category 1 narcotic list, there’s no way we can change anything.”

Paiboon even suggested that junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha expedite the whole process of studies and legislative amendment by simply using his absolute power to affect the change.

“If we want swiftness in our enforcement [of the reclassification], officials can propose for the invocation of Section 44, which is something I don’t have a problem with,” Gen. Paiboon said, referring to a clause in the interim charter that allows the junta leader to enact any law deemed to benefit national security.

Pongniwat Yutthaphan-boriphan, director of a criminal justice think-tank, told Matichon he agreed with Paiboon’s plans and urged him to go further by reducing penalties for drug users.

“Sometimes users buy many pills for personal use, but when they are arrested … with over 15 pills, the law automatically considers them dealers,” said Pongniwat, of the Thailand Institute of Justice.

When Paiboon first announced his new policy on drugs in June, he said Thailand had lost the so-caled ‘War on Drugs’ and attributed his ideas to a U.N. conference he’d attended earlier this year in New York City.

Like his boss, Sirinya said his stance on drugs has evolved under the influence of trends in other countries.

“We are changing so that we comply with recommendations from the U.N.,” Sirinya said. “Many countries also think that waging a war on drugs doesn’t solve the problem. If we steer addicts toward therapy, it would solve the problem.”

Nareerat Ekpanyakul, director of a state-run rehab center for drug addicts in Bangkok, said it’s still too early to tell how her job would change if the reclassification effort goes through as planned.

“Right now it’s still not clear,” Nareerat of Winner House said by telephone. “The matter is still under discussion, after the Minister of Justice assigned the Public Health [Minister] to look into the issue. Situation about therapy will change, but at this time, we are still discussing about the change.”

Advertisement

Nativist Learns MahaNakhon Designed by Top Foreign Architect, Complains to Govt

MahaNakhon, located on Narathiwas Road, became Bangkok’s new tallest skyscraper.

BANGKOK — As Bangkok’s shiny new building currently wins attention and plaudits, there’s at least one person unhappy about it.

Seven years after MahaNakhon was announced, its showy debut Monday night brought it to the attention of Srisuwan Janya, a nativist activist who just learned foreign forces were behind its pixelated design.

Srisuwan, who campaigns for fierce native protectionism of industries and ownership, announced Tuesday he will file a complaint with the state ombudsman accusing authorities of negligence for allowing Ole Schereen, one of the world’s most relevant architects, to play a role in the building, because he is German.

Srisuwan cited a law forbidding foreigners to engage in certain professions, which includes architecture.

Schereen, who used to manage Asian projects for the legendary Rem Koolhaas, is the principal of Büro Ole Scheeren, which designed the 77-story spire on Naradhiwas Road.

Regulations first adopted in 1979 reserved 39 occupations for Thai nationals. It was later replaced by the 1999 law still in effect today. Most of them involve handicrafts, but some include labor, engineering and architectural work. Schereen and his firm were the named architects since the project was announced by Pace Development in 2009.

The high-rise complex is one of many iconic buildings comprising the Bangkok skyline which were designed by foreign architects, usually operating as “consultants.” Cosmopolitan architecture has been a borderless industry, with big firms from Europe, the United States and Asia designing buildings on each other’s turf.

But Srisuwan doesn’t see it that way. As head of his own group called the “Safeguarding the Constitution Organization,” Srisuwan said his next target is campaigning against entrepreneurial expats who might illegally own any businesses in the kingdom.

“Both case involve neglect by two government agencies, the Ministry of Labor and Ministry of Commerce,” he told Matichon.

His announcement quickly became a joke online since it spread Tuesday.

“Don’t forget that many important palaces were also design by hired foreigners,” wrote Facebook user Nitilak Chaipan on the popular Drama Addict page. “If you want to have an issue then wake the ghost of royal artisan Tamagno up and imprison him.”

Tamagno, born in Italy as Mario Tamagno, was an architect employed by the government in 1800s. He was one of two Italians to design many buildings deeply linked to the country’s modern identity, such as the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall and Hua Lamphong rail terminal.

Others were surprised by the news – not Srisuwan’s complaint, but that certain professions were off-limits to foreigners.

“I just learned today that architects are a controlled career in Thailand,” wrote Facebook user Hank JT. “Lucky enough they don’t have such laws in some other countries, otherwise Thai architects could not make their name known.”

While most netizens focused on Srisawan announcement, one of the top comments was more interested in his job title.

“Do we have a Safeguarding the Constitution Organization? I see we always tear it apart like a toy,” wrote user Ramil Pongkaitkong.

Clarification: The occupational protections enacted under a 1979 law were updated under a 1999 version still in effect today.

 

Related stories:

Sex, Drugs, Boredom Tattooed Under Skin of Bangkok’s New Spire (Photos)

Bangkok’s New Tallest Celebrates With Monday Light Shows

Advertisement

Sex, Drugs, Boredom Tattooed Under Skin of Bangkok’s New Spire (Photos)

Graffiti left on a wall of the wall of the then-unfinished MahaNakhon building in a photograph taken mid-2015. Photo: Dhyan Ho / Courtesy
Bangkok's new tallest building, MahaNakhon, is lit up in a Monday night light show. Photo: Chayanit Itthipongmaetee
Bangkok’s new tallest building, MahaNakhon, is lit up in a Monday night light show. Photo: Chayanit Itthipongmaetee

BANGKOK — When the VVIPs gathered to applaud Bangkok’s latest monument to achievement Monday night, it’s unlikely they gave thanks to the thousands of men and women who raised it 314 meters into the sky.

They were long gone before the MahaNakhon lit up to signal its place as the highest erection in the realm. But unknown to those looking on, some of the innermost thoughts of those who built it remain etched into its bones.

Under the paint and behind the marble, prolific graffiti accumulated during the years of its construction by workers who knew it would eventually be covered.

Most of it is predictably obscene – many, many rendering of penises among messages left by people toiling for a daily wage the building’s future inhabitants likely spend on a single meal or cup of coffee.

Some are sweet and sad philosophical laments about life. But need for sex and drugs are the most common themes.

Some capture a dialogue where workers, possibly working in different shifts, reply to each other’s messages. Conversations which often end with someone called an animal.

“Where do they sell ya ba, tell me! I know you guys have been taking it.”
“Did I take your parents’ money to buy drugs?”
“You animal!”

'A real man will die with penis beading.'
‘A real man will die with penis beading.’

Others are poetic, such as these drug verses:

“Crouch down and hold the pipe with both hands / Look at the color of your tablet. / Adjust the lighter / Heat the bottom of the pipe.”

Before the graffiti was covered, it was photographed in mid-2015 by Dhyan Ho, the 33-year-old proprietor of art bar Jam.

“I think it’s interesting because it’s something that’s never really documented. They know everything will be painted over or tiled over or finished, and it’s gonna be not there,” he said. “They’re not doing it to leave a lasting mark, more like a frivolous expression.”

Much space is given to the workers’ desire for sex. And like a lot of the graffiti, the racial politics come into play between workers that are largely drawn from Thailand, Cambodia and Myanmar.

“No wooing, but can fuck,” reads one. “Cambodians got big pussies!”

WOMANS FACE SKETCH

But most seem more teasing than hateful, with the kind of bored bravado born of monotony and hard labor.

“You Burmese, you watch out, I will exact revenge for Ayutthaya soon.”
“Thai people are only good at talking.”
“Be at peace, at peace.”

Some hint at class tension, such as this exchange in Khmer:

“If you want a lot of money, you must work hard.”
“Bullshit!”

Dhyan’s titled his series “The Stones of Krung Thep,” an allusion to John Ruskin’s 19th century treatise “The Stones of Venice,” to reflect that finished structures are not only determined by architects, but by the workers who express themselves in the ornamentation.

As such, the MahaNakhon graffiti – written in Thai, Isaan and Khmer – reflects the people who really build the foundations of places such as Bangkok but go uncelebrated and unheard.

'I have speed'
‘I have speed’

“We’re very obsessed with celebrity creators and artists. You can look up who the architect of the building is, but the people who built the landmark building get relatively unknown. No one cares about their creativities because they’re not necessarily beautiful, articulate, and don’t have that much meaning,” Dhyan said.

Although the amateur photographer isn’t trying to narrate the workers’ lives, he felt their spontaneous expression recorded onto the walls of a super-premium colony captured the dichotomy of Thai society.

“Here, I don’t think anyone becomes a construction worker by choice. It’s like they’re the lowest rung of people on the societal ladder, and that’s why it’s interesting to examine what their expression is,” he said. “Without asking them to draw something, this is just what they’re doing for themselves, or to show the other people there, or just to express themselves … It’s not going to be there for long, and I think that gave them freedom to say whatever they like.”

The photos will be featured in Dhyan Ho’s upcoming photo book “The Stones of Krung Thep” to be published in November by Khlong Press. They’ll also be featured in the second edition of urban literary journal Khlong, expected out by year’s end.

Additional writing Todd Ruiz

'A person's worth is that he is a good person.' - 'A person's worth depends on whom he belongs to.'
‘A person’s worth is that he is a good person.’ – ‘A person’s worth depends on whom he belongs to.’
'"Are you tired?" Is not a question, but a sentence expressing concern'
‘”Are you tired?” Is not a question, but a sentence expressing concern’
You Burmese, you watch out, I will exact revenge for Ayutthaya soon - Thai people are only good at talking - Be at peace, at peace
‘You Burmese, you watch out, I will exact revenge for Ayutthaya soon.’ – ‘Thai people are only good at talking.’ – ‘Be at peace, at peace.’
'Cambodians got big pussies.' - 'Nong Khai people are very considerate, people of Mekong river - Nb.' - 'Cambodians have got big pussies'
‘Cambodians got big pussies.’ – ‘Nong Khai people are very considerate, people of Mekong river – Nb.’ – ‘Cambodians have got big pussies’
'Peace monk' - 'Ar Lui's got a big dick' - 'Lemon scent fart 10 baht.'
‘Peace monk’ – ‘Ar Lui’s got a big dick’ – ‘Lemon scent fart 10 baht.’
'You have time to draw, you didn't think people were waiting? You piece of trash.'
‘You have time to draw, you didn’t think people were waiting? You piece of trash.’
No Stop
No Stop
'Nong Kuay United - Ta Kum Bor FC' 'No wooing, but can fuck. Cambodians got big pussies.'
‘Nong Kuay United – Ta Kum Bor FC’ ‘No wooing, but can fuck. Cambodians got big pussies.’
'None of your business!'
‘None of your business!’
'Make today the best you can and there will be no words of "wanting to turn back time"' - 'Make rice paddies' - 'I still love you'
‘Make today the best you can and there will be no words of “wanting to turn back time”‘ – ‘Make rice paddies’ – ‘I still love you’
'If you want a lot of money, you must work hard.' - 'Bullshit' (Khmer)
‘If you want a lot of money, you must work hard.’ – ‘Bullshit’ (Khmer)
'I like Thailand, I have been here many years, I like Thai girls'
‘I like Thailand, I have been here many years, I like Thai girls’

HAPPY FACE SKETCH Dan

'Fight on, bro'
‘Fight on, bro’

FACE SKETCH

'Cute, small penis' [pointing to penis], 'This is the hole to perv on pussy' [pointing to hole]
‘Cute, small penis’ [pointing to penis], ‘This is the hole to perv on pussy’ [pointing to hole]
COCK SKETCH1

COCK AND BALLS SKETCH

'Back to sell speed pills at home.' - 'Sell them to your dad!'
‘Back to sell speed pills at home.’ – ‘Sell them to your dad!’

All photographs courtesy Dhyan Ho

Advertisement

3 Hurt as Suicide Bomber Hits Chinese Embassy in Kyrgyzstan

In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, people gather near the site of an explosion in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2016. Kyrgyzstan's deputy prime minister says a suicide bomber has rammed his car into the gate of the Chinese embassy compound in the capital Bishkek, detonating a bomb and injuring three embassy employees.

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan — A suspected suicide bomber on Tuesday crashed a car through the entrance of the Chinese Embassy in the Kyrgyzstan capital of Bishkek, detonating a bomb that killed the attacker and wounded three embassy employees.

The Central Asian nation’s interior ministry says the person who drove the vehicle through the gate died when the bombdetonated. The three people injured are Kyrgyz nationals: two 17-year-old embassy gardeners and an unidentified woman.

The interior ministry described it as a terrorist attack. Deputy Prime Minister Zhenish Razakov in comments to the Interfax news agency called it a suicide bombing.

Kyrgyzstan, a landlocked former Soviet republic that borders China, has a predominantly Muslim population that is considered moderate in outlook.

Story: Leila Saralayeva

Advertisement

Mysterious Death Atop Bangkok’s Wat Saket Investigated

BANGKOK — Early on a Sunday morning, 26-year-old Narawut Puangkesorn walked atop the sacred mount that is Bangkok’s Wat Saket in meditation. It was after 3am on Aug. 21, and Narawut, who just graduated from university at the top of his class, circled the temple for more than an hour, according to security footage. Police said at one point he spread his arms like a bird.

At 5:30am, a caretaker heard a scream, followed by the ringing of a bell. It wasn’t until 6:30am that a monk found Narawut, who was still breathing but insensate with a fractured skull.

Narawut was later pronounced dead at Bangkok Metropolitan Administration General Hospital, and police are investigating his death.

The nun who takes care of the Golden Mountain, Warudee Pongprasat, told police she heard him screaming but was too scared to go look.

Traces of blood were found on a bell on the Golden Mount’s third level. There was also blood along on a walkway on the second level.

No security cameras were pointed at the area where he was found by the monk who was cleaning the grounds.

Bangkok Metropolitan Police commander Sanit Mahatavorn inspects the scene inside Wat Saket Sunday.
Bangkok Metropolitan Police commander Sanit Mahatavorn inspects the scene inside Wat Saket Sunday.

Fingerprints were collected from the bells. Bangkok metro police chief Sanit Mahatavorn said Monday they have yet to determine whether Narawut committed suicide or was murdered.

“I told every officer we must be inquisitive about it first and try to prove it,” Sanit said. “I lean both ways. Anyway, people inside the temple including the nun believe no one was there to hurt him.”

Aumphai Puangkesorn, Narawut’s 54 year-old mother, told police her son had just graduated at the top of his class from Bangkok University and was helping at the family-owned restaurant.

Aumphai said Narawut booked a flight to go to a friend’s wedding in Surat Thani earlier that day but later backed out. The mother said he asked her 500 baht before leaving home at 10pm.

Narawut’s friend, Rutthorn Piromporbhakdi, agreed with his mother that Narawut liked to make merit.

Rutthorn also showed police Narawut’s last Facebook update posted on Aug.14.

”If we know the last day of our life and can ask for anything, what would we wish for?” it read.

In January, Wat Saket’s former abbot Phra Phromsuthi was found dead by hanging inside the temple. It was ruled a suicide.

 

Related stories:

Disgraced Former ‘Golden Mount’ Abbot Found Hanged at Wat Saket

Advertisement

Elections Official Defends Indicted Charter Activists

Five defendants leave a Ratchaburi prison on July 11 after being granted release on bail. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — Four activists and a reporter accused of violating a law passed before the Aug. 7 charter referendum have found an unlikely ally in Election Commissioner Somchai Srisutthiyakorn, whose office is tasked with enforcing the law.

The five suspects were indicted Monday for distributing “Vote No” stickers in Ratchaburi province on July 10. The provincial prosecutor said their actions qualified as a crime under the Referendum Act, but Somchai said he disagreed.

Reporter Arrested While Reporting on Referendum in Ratchaburi

The law specifically banned dissemination of materials that were “false, rude or incite unrest,” Somchai said, which does not apply to the packs of stickers handed out by the activists.

“They were printed material, but were they false? Were they inciting unrest? Were they rude? No,” Somchai said by telephone Tuesday. “It was just a statement of their political stance.”

The election commissioner said he’d gladly take the stand and defend the activists in court.

“I’m willing to testify to the court that their actions were not wrong,” Somchai said.

Four of the suspects are members of the anti-junta New Democracy Movement, while the other is a reporter for Prachatai news agency. The reporter, Taweesak Kerdpoka, was arrested and later indicted despite his protest that he was merely covering the activists’ campaign.

They stand accused of violating Section 61 of the Referendum Act, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail.

According to a report published by Thai Lawyers for Human Rights group, the prosecutor also recommended that the court suspend the five defendants’ voting rights for 10 years if they are convicted.

Related stories:

No Amnesty For Those Charged Under Referendum Act

More Arrested in Connection to Referendum Letters

Boycott Camp Rejects Results of ‘Fake’ Referendum

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
32.2 ° C
32.2 °
32.2 °
97 %
4.3kmh
100 %
Sun
30 °
Mon
34 °
Tue
33 °
Wed
32 °
Thu
33 °