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Facebook Backtracks on ‘Napalm Girl’ Censorship

'Napalm Girl', the Pulitzer Prize-winning image by Associated Press photographer Nick Ut, is at the center of a heated debate about freedom of speech in Norway after Facebook deleted it from a Norwegian author’s page last month. Photo: Nick Ut / Associated Press

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Facebook on Friday reversed its decision to remove postings of an iconic 1972 image of a naked, screaming girl running from a napalm attack in Vietnam, after a Norwegian revolt against the tech giant.

Protests in Norway started last month after Facebook deleted the Pulitzer Prize-winning image by Associated Press photographer Nick Ut from a Norwegian author’s page, saying it violated its rules on nudity.

The revolt escalated on Friday when Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg posted the image on her profile and Facebook deleted that too. The brouhaha is the latest instance in which Facebook’s often opaque process for deciding what stays and what goes on its network has spurred controversy.

“It’s an interesting dilemma because you’ve got a newsworthy historical image that has been published by traditional news media that was effectively censored by a social network,” said Steve Jones, University of Illinois at Chicago communications professor.

Initially, Facebook stood by the decision, saying it was difficult to create a distinction between allowing a photograph of a nude child in one instance and not others. But late Friday it said it would allow sharing of the photo.

“In this case, we recognize the history and global importance of this image in documenting a particular moment in time,” Facebook said in a statement. “Because of its status as an iconic image of historical importance, the value of permitting sharing outweighs the value of protecting the community by removal, so we have decided to reinstate the image on Facebook where we are aware it has been removed.”

… there is nothing about this picture that is prurient. How can we not publish this picture? It captures the horrors of war. It captures the terrible situation of innocents caught in the crossfire of the war.”

Politicians of all stripes, journalists and regular Norwegians had backed Solberg’s decision to share the image.

The prime minister told Norwegian broadcaster NRK she was pleased with Facebook’s change of heart and that it shows social media users’ opinions matter.

“To speak up and say we want change, it matters and it works. And that makes me happy,” she said.

The image shows screaming children running from a burning Vietnamese village. The little girl in in the center of the frame, Kim Phuc, is naked and crying as the napalm melts away layers of her skin.

“Today, pictures are such an important element in making an impression, that if you edit past events or people, you change history and you change reality,” Solberg told the AP earlier Friday, adding it was the first time one of her Facebook posts was deleted.

Solberg later reposted the image with a black box covering the girl from the thighs up. She also posted other iconic photos of historic events, such as the man standing in front of a tank in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989, with black boxes covering the protagonists.

Like its Scandinavian neighbors, Norway takes pride in its freedom of speech. It’s also a largely secular nation with relaxed attitudes about nudity.

Several members of the Norwegian government followed Solberg’s lead and posted the photo on their Facebook pages. One of them, Education Minister Torbjorn Roe Isaksen, said it was “an iconic photo, part of our history.”

Many of the posts were deleted but Isaksen’s was still up Friday afternoon. The photo was also left untouched on a number of Facebook accounts, including the AP’s.

It would be physically impossible for the company to comb through the hundreds of millions of photos posted each day, so it relies on user reports and algorithms to weed out pictures that go against its terms of service.

Photos are often automatically removed if enough people report them. Facebook usually does not proactively remove photos, with some exceptions, such as child pornography.

Because of this, what photos aren’t always treated consistently, and sometimes Facebook reinstates reported photos after removing them.

It can also adjust its standards depending on the response. Breastfeeding and mastectomy photos used to be deleted, but after much outcry the company adjusted its policy on nude photos to allow most of such photos. In another case, a court ruled Facebook could be sued after a man’s account was suspended after he posted “The Origin of the World,” by Gustave Courbet, an 1866 French painting of a nude model exposing her genitalia.

“illegal content should vanish from the Internet, not photos that move the whole world.”

The issue in Norway “points out there’s very little transparency,” Jones said. “We really don’t know how these decisions are made so there’s not a lot of accountability either necessarily.”

Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten published the Vietnam photo on its front page Friday and also wrote an open letter to Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in which chief editor Espen Egil Hansen accused the social media giant of abusing its power.

Hansen said he was “upset, disappointed – well, in fact even afraid – of what you are about to do to a mainstay of our democratic society.”

The uproar also spread outside of Norway, with the head of Denmark’s journalism union urging people to share Hansen’s open letter. Germany’s Justice Minister Heiko Maas, who has previously clashed with Facebook over its failure to remove hate speech deemed illegal in Germany, also weighed in, saying “illegal content should vanish from the Internet, not photos that move the whole world.”

Facebook’s statement said it will adjust its review mechanisms to permit sharing of the image going forward.

“We are always looking to improve our policies to make sure they both promote free expression and keep our community safe, and we will be engaging with publishers and other members of our global community on these important questions going forward,” it said.

Paul Colford, AP vice president and director of media relations, said: “The Associated Press is proud of Nick Ut’s photo and recognizes its historical impact. In addition, we reserve our rights to this powerful image.”

Before it was published 44 years ago, AP also had a discussion about the image because it violated the news agency’s policy on full-frontal nudity.

Hal Buell, then AP’s executive news photo editor in New York, said he received a message from Saigon photo editor Horst Faas saying a “controversial picture” was coming up.

“Maybe we discussed it on the desk for 10-15 minutes,” said Buell, who is now retired. “But there is nothing about this picture that is prurient. How can we not publish this picture? It captures the horrors of war. It captures the terrible situation of innocents caught in the crossfire of the war.”

AP published the image and media worldwide used it, though some chose not to, Buell said.

Story: Jan M. Olsen

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Revisit Japan’s Tortured Past in Postwar Photos

‘Barakei: Ordeal by Roses’ taken in 1961 by Eikoh Hosoe. Photo: The Japan Foundation / Courtesy

BANGKOK Japan’s World War II aftermath will be on display for a month in a rarely seen exposition of 123 monochromatic photographs in Bangkok.

“Metamorphosis of Japan After the War” features 123 images of postwar Japan from 1945 to 1964, in the period between the nuclear massacres of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the year of the Tokyo Olympic Games, the first of their kind in Asia.

The exhibition is divided into three sections: Aftermath of War, Between Tradition and Modernity and Towards a New Japan. All selected images were taken by 11 Japanese photographers.

The exhibition will take place Sept. 17 to Oct. 14 at the Ratchadamnoen Contemporary Art Center.

Admission is free. The museum on Ratchadamnoen Road opens from 10am to 7pm, Tuesday through Sunday.

The Hiroshima Peace Memorial, commonly known as Atomic Bomb Dome, and Ohta River taken by Kikuji Kawada. Photo: The Japan Foundation / Courtesy
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial, commonly known as Atomic Bomb Dome, and Ohta River taken by Kikuji Kawada. Photo: The Japan Foundation / Courtesy

 

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Uighur Militancy Changes Chinese Security Strategy

Uighurs rest near a food stalls and Beijing Olympic Games billboards in 2008 in China's western Xinjiang province. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

BEIJING, China — They have been praised by the leader of al-Qaida and wooed by the head of the Islamic State group. They have distinguished themselves on battlefields in Syria and are accused of carrying out a devastating bombing in Thailand.

In the past two years, militants belonging to the Uighur ethnic group native to the vast Xinjiang region in western China have shown signs of becoming a force in Islamic extremism globally, a development that is reshaping both the ground war in Syria and Chinese foreign policy.

The predominantly Muslim, Turkic-speaking people – ethnically distinct from China’s Han majority – have chafed for decades under Beijing’s heavy-handed rule. Uighur separatists belonging to the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a militant group based in the rugged tribal areas of nearby Afghanistan and Pakistan and allied with al-Qaeda, have been blamed for attacks in Chinese cities, often using crude but effective weapons such as knives, Molotov cocktails and speeding vehicles.

Their activities have taken on a transnational dimension in recent years as hundreds of Uighur fighters have flowed into Syria to participate in jihad. And instead of targeting China’s cities, militants have struck less guarded overseas targets.

The reach of ETIM, which seeks to establish an independent Islamic state called East Turkestan, was highlighted most recently when a man crashed a van packed with 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of TNT into the Chinese diplomatic compound in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, killing himself and wounding five people. Kyrgyz officials on Tuesday identified the bomber as Zoir Khalimov, an ethnic Uighur member of ETIM who carried out the attack with support from the Nusra Front, the al-Qaida affiliate in Syria.

A Uighur official stands near a picture of a dead separatist militant at an exhibition in 2003 China's western Xinjiang province. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press
A Uighur official stands near a picture of a dead separatist militant at an exhibition in 2003 China’s western Xinjiang province. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

In Thailand, a trial began last month for two Uighur men charged with an August 2015 bombing that killed 20 people at a busy Bangkok shrine. The attack came weeks after Thailand forcibly repatriated scores of Uighurs to China, where they faced persecution. Chinese officials said the Uighurs were on their way to fight in Syria when they were arrested.

Analysts see the broad outlines of metastasizing Uighur militancy that has prompted a response from China, which has traditionally abided by a foreign policy of non-interference.

“China’s calculus is shifting because the threat picture is shifting from one in which only the Americans and Europeans were targets,” said Raffaello Pantucci, director of international security studies at the Royal United Services Institute, a British think tank. “That’s why you’re seeing Beijing push out. It’s a combination of the new Chinese foreign policy assertiveness but also a real concern about what’s happening on the ground.”

In mid-August, China dispatched a senior People’s Liberation Army admiral, Guan Youfei, to meet with Syrian Defense Minister Fahad Jassim al-Freij and a senior Russian military official in Damascus to discuss expanding Chinese support for their war effort.

China has made similar moves closer to home. This year, it pledged equipment and counterterrorism training for Afghan police with the aim of containing ETIM. It has also expanded its role as a mediator, welcoming both President Ashraf Ghani and Taliban representatives to China on visits and brokering low-level talks between the sides.

In 2015, Uighur fighters from ETIM, also referred to as the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP), began flowing from Central Asia into Syria, according to propaganda videos from the group’s Islam Awazi media arm. They have won battles against loyalist forces in Idlib and Aleppo provinces, at times deploying suicide attackers to decisive effect. Although exact numbers are impossible to confirm, analysts believe there are hundreds, possibly more than a thousand, Uighurs fighting alongside the Nusra Front, said Beirut-based analyst Haytham Mouzahem.

“China should evaluate its own policies to find the source of Uighur discontent.”

Separately, the Islamic State group, which competes with the Nusra Front for recruits, has at least a hundred Uighur fighters, most of whom came directly from Xinjiang to escape religious persecution in China, according to leaked IS documents analyzed by the New America Foundation think tank.

Uighur groups in exile and international human rights monitors say China plays up the threat of Uighur militancy to justify abusive law-enforcement policies and religious restrictions in Xinjiang, which have fueled resentment among ordinary citizens. ETIM’s organization may also be overestimated, experts warn, because it is unclear to what extent they offered training or support to perpetrators of attacks.

“China should evaluate its own policies to find the source of Uighur discontent,” overseas Uighur spokesman Dilxat Raxit said in a statement this week following the Kyrgyzstan investigation. “The Kyrgyzstan incident could supply China with more excuses to oppress and expand its influence in Central Asia for its political purposes.”

China has been sensitive to international criticism of its policies in Xinjiang while casting itself as a target of terrorism similar to Western countries. It has successfully lobbied the United States, the European Union, Russia, Britain and other governments to recognize the Turkistan Islamic Party as a terrorist organization.

“The long-established conflict between China and Uighur opposition is getting more and more connected to regional and global currents of radical Islamism.”

“I would to stress that East Turkestan terrorist forces headed by the ETIM have plotted and undertaken terrorist attacks many times inside and outside China,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Wednesday, while vowing to “strike back” at the group.

Chinese anti-terrorism expert Li Wei said the extremist threats that China faces domestically and from abroad are now “inextricably linked, just like with other countries,” leading China to expand its dealings in Syria and Afghanistan.

“I think the international community would agree that Syria is a nexus of global jihad that does threaten the entire world,” said Li, director of the anti-terrorism research center at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, a think tank under the Ministry of State Security, China’s main intelligence agency.

Despite its shifting posture, Chinese observers say the likelihood of the People’s Liberation Army fighting directly in Syria and Afghanistan remains extremely low. Over the last decade, China has leaned on Pakistan to carry out drone strikes against TIP commanders in tribal Waziristan, pressured Central Asian allies for intelligence-gathering and sought help from Thailand — but never deployed troops.

Uighurs are seen outside a restaurant in 2008 in China's western Xinjiang province. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press
Uighurs are seen outside a restaurant in 2008 in China’s western Xinjiang province. Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

“China can participate in Syria in direct or indirect ways,” said Yue Gang, a retired PLA colonel and commentator on military affairs in Beijing. “Currently, the indirect path is better. In the future it can provide a variety of equipment or arms support for Russia and Syria but dressed up as something more pleasant-sounding, like humanitarian aid.”

China’s increasing willingness to confront Uighur militants abroad mirrors global jihadi networks’ growing interest in their cause.

In the 1990s, the Taliban – no strangers to fighting communists – sheltered Uighur separatists but forbade them from launching attacks on China from Afghanistan and Pakistan, fearing that would anger Beijing, according to writings by the jihadi Abu Musab al-Suri.

And in the years before the Sept. 11 attacks, published interview transcripts show Osama bin Laden downplaying the Uighurs’ plight or claiming ignorance of them altogether. Instead, he argued that Chinese leaders and Muslims should unite against what he considered to be common enemies like the United States and Israel.

His successor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, takes a starkly different approach, decrying China as an enemy. He opened a recorded message to his followers in July by praising Uighurs’ dedication to global jihad and lambasting “Chinese invaders” as “atheist occupiers” of Xinjiang.

Islamic State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has also prominently decried Chinese oppression of Muslims while laying out a vision of an Islamic caliphate stretching from Morocco to Xinjiang.

Michael Clarke, a researcher at Australian National University, said competition for Uighur recruits between al-Qaida and Islamic State explained the heightened rhetoric, but also underscored the more complicated landscape facing China.

“Since the 1990s the discourse has changed,” Clarke said. “The long-established conflict between China and Uighur opposition is getting more and more connected to regional and global currents of radical Islamism.”

Story: Gerry Shih

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Hundreds Join Colorful Rally for King on Auspicious 9/9

Photo: Kapook

KHON KAEN — Hundreds of people turned out for a mass performance in honor of His Majesty the King in Khon Kaen province on Friday, which marked the ninth day of the year’s ninth month, a date considered auspicious by many Thais.

Meant as a gesture of loyalty to King Bhumibol, the ninth monarch of his line whose health condition has worsened recently, hundreds gathered on a football field in the province’s Tha Pra district to arrange in a likeness of Thailand’s map with a Thai numeral nine in the middle.

King Reportedly Suffering From ‘Severe Infection’

Nine is seen as lucky in Thai culture.

A statement released by the Royal Household Bureau on Wednesday said King Bhumibol was undergoing continuous dialysis, a treatment for patients suffering kidney failure.

The king was also suffering a blood infection, though his condition is gradually improving, the statement said.

His Majesty the King has spent much of the last seven years at Siriraj Hospital. His fragile health is a cause of concern for many Thais, who see him as the spiritual leader of the nation.

The Stock Exchange of Thailand plunged sharply since the palace released word of his condition on Sept. 2 and posted losses Friday for the third day straight.

Related stories:

King Treated Again for Too Much Fluid in Brain

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When Flight Attendants Treated as Subservient, ‘Kowtow’ Happens

Flight attendants in an image posted by training school Skycoach Maam. Photo: Skycoach Mam / Facebook

BANGKOK — Suttinun Maneelorsawas is a former flight attendant of 13 years who now coaches women aspiring to the job. After a recent incident in which a senior flight attendant had to grovel at the feet of a passenger, she said she would warn her cadets to be prepared to do the same.

“I think I’m going to talk about it with my students, so that they can prepare themselves. It’s a study case,” Sutthinun said by telephone Friday.

She was referring to what has been obsessively discussed online this past week: reports that a Thai AirAsia stewardess was ordered by her supervisors to graab, or kowtow, in apology to an angry passenger. The airline insists she prostrated herself voluntarily.

Flight Attendant Kowtows on Floor to Irate Passenger

Whether or not the act of humility was forced, the incident and its response suggests a public expectation that airline crew provide subservient service whereas their role is actually about ensuring safety, according to several people who work in the industry.

“In fact, flight attendants are not there to provide service, but to ensure that everything runs smoothly in accordance with standards,” said Chula Sukmanop, the head of the Civil Aviation Authority. “The point isn’t servicing customers but to provide safety.”

Accounts of what happened indicate the chain of events that led to the flight attendant on her knees before the angry disgruntled passenger was when the stewardess, identified as Awatsara, inquired about the needs of the passenger’s developmentally disabled daughter.

The passenger, Jumpoon Chavasiri, took offense to either what Awatsara said or how she spoke.

Attempts to reach Jumpoon by a number listed for her were unsuccessful. Both women had deactivated their Facebook accounts as of Thursday.

‘Their jobs are much more than waiters and waitresses. But people like to think of it that way.’

Sutthinun, owner of Skycoach Mam, said she sympathized with Awatsara because it was her job to ask the question, so the crew could prepare appropriate measures. Based on her personal experience as a former stewardess, she said, most arguments and misunderstandings between cabin crew and passengers result from safety issues.

“For example, I told them not to place their bags in certain places, but they wanted to do it anyway,” Sutthinun said.

Damrong Waikanee, president of Thai Airway’s union, said he’s frustrated by the perception of air hostesses as “people in makeup.”

“When there’s no incident, you don’t feel that you have to listen to them,” Damrong said. “Sometimes passengers are too self-centered … some of them want to sit wherever they like, like in the aisles. But this is about safety. If something happens, you’d be the people who die.”

Yet passengers bring into the cabin a sense that they are there for service.

“Their jobs are much more than waiters and waitresses,” he said. “But people like to think of it that way.”

Sutthinun said if the public is better informed about roles and duties of airline crew such arguments would happen less often. Even airline advertisements sometimes focus too much on service, which may contribute to the misperception, she said.

“There needs to be more communication, but I do feel that it’s getting better these days,” Sutthinun said. “There are the media, and there many Facebook pages who talk about these issues … people are becoming more aware.”

To Graab Or Not to Graab
Damrong, the Thai Airways union president, said airlines should also support their employees and protect their dignity. He criticized AirAsia supervisors for allowing the graab incident to unfold.

“This is how I look at it. Apologizing to passengers is a good thing, but to graab? It’s overreaction. She shouldn’t have done it at all,” Damrong said. “It’s feudalistic. It’s inappropriate. In our culture, if we do something wrong, we just lift our hand and wai. That’s already okay.”

Chula of the aviation agency also disagreed groveling should be part of the job.

AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandes on Thursday holds a meeting with the airline's Thai staff in Bangkok in the wake of the kowtow incident. Photo: Tony Fernandes / Facebook
AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandes meets with the airline’s Thai staff Thursday in Bangkok in the wake of the kowtow incident. Photo: Tony Fernandes / Facebook

“It’s just too much,” Chula said.

Sutthinun said airlines investigate passengers’ complaints, and then question the flight attendants about the accusations before reaching any conclusions. Based from what she’s read in the media, AirAsia appears to have skipped this step, she noted.

“The air hostess didn’t get any chance to explain herself,” Sutthinun said.

And what should flight attendants do if they ever find themselves in Awatsara’s shoes?

Damrong said he would offer his apology even if he did nothing wrong, but he would not perform the graab because it is too humiliating. “Do executives ever graab in apology to employees when they do something wrong?” Damrong said.

Sutthinun said she would take a softer approach: she would perform the groveling act anyway.

“If I graab, and they feel better, if her daughter feels better, I would have done it,” Sutthinun said. “It’s job as a service provider. My graab wouldn’t cause trouble to anyone. I don’t think it would devalue my dignity as a human being in any way.”

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5 Month Jail Sentence for Cambodian Opposition Leader

Cambodia's main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party Deputy President Kem Sokha gestures in 2016 during a speech at the party headquarters in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press
Cambodia's main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party Deputy President Kem Sokha gestures in 2016 during a speech at the party headquarters in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — A Cambodian opposition leader was sentence to five months in jail Friday in the latest face off between the government and opposition as political tensions around challenges to Prime Minister Hun Sen’s long-standing autocratic rule show no signs of easing.

Sam Sokong, a defense lawyer for Kem Sokha, deputy leader of the Cambodia National Rescue Party, said they will appeal the verdict after the trial that lasted just several hours.

“The trial conducted today did not comply with procedures” he said.

Kem Sokha, who was not in court for the trial, was convicted of twice ignoring a summons to appear in court to answer questions related to a case involving his alleged mistress. He refused, saying the legal moves were part of the ruling party’s plan to cripple the opposition.

Riot police were outside the court, and nearly 1,000 opposition supporters had gathered in front of their party headquarters, with riot police watching them from about 500 meters away. There were no reports of violence.

The case was one of several hanging over leaders of the opposition in what is generally seen as an effort to disrupt their organizing efforts ahead of local elections next June. The next general election is not until the middle of 2018, but holding power at the local level is an advantage when the national polls are held.

“We urge the authorities to adhere strictly to international fair trial standards during the criminal proceedings.”

Before the verdict, Kem appeared before his supporters and accused the government of using the court system to stop him from speaking out and to prevent him from taking part in the elections.

A statement issued this week by the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights expressed concern “about the escalating atmosphere of intimidation of opposition politicians, their supporters, civil society, and peaceful demonstrators in Cambodia.”

It noted “a host of legal charges” faced by Kem Sokha and 29 other opposition supporters.

It said 14 of them had been given heavy prison sentences despite raise serious concerns about the fairness of the proceedings. “We urge the authorities to adhere strictly to international fair trial standards during the criminal proceedings.”

One victim of the legal moves on the opposition has been opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who did not return from a trip abroad last November when an old conviction for defamation was restored and his parliamentary immunity was stripped by the government’s legislative majority. It had been generally assumed that the conviction, carrying a two-year prison sentence, had been lifted by a 2013 pardon which allowed Sam Rainsy to return from a previous period of self-exile. He also faces a stack of separate charges that could put him away for 17 years.

Read: Hun Sen Regime Takes Opposition to Court

Activists and non-governmental organizations, which are generally critical of the government, have come in for similar kinds of legal pressures. Physical force has also been applied. Two opposition lawmakers were beaten up by a pro-government mob last year, and the murder of a prominent social critic, Kem Ley in July, allegedly by a man to whom he owed money, is widely regarded with suspicion.

The opposition has called on its followers to turn out to protest. It has strong support in the capital and street demonstrations have traditionally been an effective form of push-back. But recent efforts to take to the streets have been thwarted by a government show of force.

Hun Sen’s party was often accused of using violence or the threat of violence against opponents, but in recent years has stalked its foes mostly in the courts.

Hun Sen has been Cambodia’s leader for three decades. But in a general election in 2013, it seemed his grip on power was shaken when the Cambodia National Rescue Party mounted a strong challenge, winning 55 seats in the National Assembly and leaving Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party with 68. The opposition claimed they had been cheated, and staged a boycott of parliament. Seeking to shore up his legitimacy, Hun Sen reached a political truce with them in 2014, making some minor concessions over electoral and parliamentary procedure.

But relations between the government and the opposition deteriorated last year after the opposition tried to exploit a volatile issue by accusing neighboring Vietnam, with which Hun Sen’s government maintains good relations, of land encroachment. The move proved politically popular, and the government reacted by stepping up intimidation of the opposition party in the courts, which are seen as being under its influence.

Hun Sen’s party was often accused of using violence or the threat of violence against opponents, but in recent years has stalked its foes mostly in the courts.

Story: Sopheng Cheang

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Go on a 3D Digital Dance Journey Next Week

Akiko Kajihara performs ‘Hakanai’ in an undated photo file. Photo: Romain Etienne

BANGKOK — Meat and cyber spaces converge on stage for audiences at a dazzling dance performance combining the human body and technology next week.

At “Hakanai,” audiences sit around a performance space while an LED-powered cube of graphical projections envelope the dancer inside, blending choreography and art installation with graphics, sensors, electronic music and more.

Performed by Akiko Kajihara, the performance is staged by Adrien M & Claire B, a French theatre company known for digital art performances that explore the relationship between humans and dreams.

Hakanai is a Japanese term meaning a union of two elements: one alluding to the human and another to the dream. The word here is meant to capture something ephemeral, transitory and intangible.

The digital performance debuted in 2013 in France. The one-woman solo performance has traveled around the world.

Tickets are 1,000 baht and available online. Groups of four or more pay 500 baht per ticket, and students pay 400 baht.

“Hakanai” starts at 7:30pm on Sept. 13, 14 and 15 at the Sodsai Pantoomkomol Centre for Dramatic Arts. Those going are advised to pick up their tickets 30 minutes before the show.

The theatrical studio is located on the sixth floor of the Maha Chakri Sirindhorn building at Chulalongkorn University’s Faculty of Arts, can be reached by a few-minute walk from BTS Siam or MRT Samyan.

Akiko Kajihara performing in “Hakanai” in an undated photo file. Photo: Romain Etienne
Akiko Kajihara performing in “Hakanai” in an undated photo file. Photo: Romain Etienne

 

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Tireless Springsteen Bests Concert Record – Again

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band perform on Wednesday during The River Tour at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, United States. Photo: Elizabeth Robertson / Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA, United States — Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band just don’t want to leave the stage.

Wednesday night’s concert at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia lasted nearly four hours, four minutes, breaking the previous record for the group’s longest U.S. show set last week.

Philadelphia Daily News sports statistician and Springsteen fan Bob Vetrone Jr. clocked the show at four hours, three minutes, 46 seconds.

The band played four hours Aug. 30 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

The Boss’ longest show in the world was four hours, six minutes in Helsinki, Finland, in 2012.

Springsteen’s 75-show U.S. and European The River Tour wraps up with a show in Foxborough, Massachusetts, on Sept. 14.

Foxborough officials voted last week to extend its concert curfew by 15 minutes, to 11:30 p.m., for Springsteen.

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Kill a Sound With Reggae Appreciation Society

DJ K9 of the Reggae Appreciation Society. Photo: Mew / Courtesy

Ras (noun)
Someone who wears dreadlocks (may also practice Rastology)
– Jamaican Patois and Slang Dictionary

From Jamaica, the religion and music inspired by it. From Thailand and New Zealand, DJs K9 (Thanyapong Pirintarangkoon) and Be Woken (Ben Wickham) and the Bangkok Reggae Appreciation Society, or BKRAS.

Notes from the Underground - Mongkorn 'DJ Dragon' TimkulReggae in Thailand? Though its roots are in 1960s Jamaica, the music has found its way into the hearts of people around the world including Thailand, where a vibrant scene which has spawned homegrown artists, DJs and festivals.

It could be bands like T-Bone and their side project Gapi Dub Kitchen that helped the scene’s growth, or perhaps it’s as Zudrangma label boss DJ Maft Sai says, reggae’s local appeal can be explained by the similar basslines it shares with mor lam.

Bringing some of the best reggae to Bangkok for the past two years has been BKRAS, who’ve earned street cred for their self-titled monthly events and are throwing down an anniversary party on Saturday.

Though their streetwear look and cropped hair doesn’t fit the rasta cliche, have a look inside their record collection and it’s a whole different story.

As for their musc, forget about the Bob Marley cover band stuff you heard at the beach bar, because the duo play a more raw, edgier, bass-heavy sound like Dancehall, Dub or digital reggae.

For authenticity to the sound, the crew plays the latest tracks on vinyl. That means deep basslines and skanking beats with an added analog warmth. More so, with vinyl, most tracks tend to be very rare, so punters will be amazed by tunes they’ve never heard before. Some may say it’s one-upmanship, but in reggae culture, it’s a style of DJing that is hard to come by.

DJ Be Woken. Photo: Jacqueline Khoury / Courtesy
DJ Be Woken. Photo: Jacqueline Khoury / Courtesy

“Vinyl and reggae music go hand-in-hand,” K9 says. “When I heard reggae vinyl being played on a big sound system, I knew there was no other sound else like it.”

Reggae disciples and curious alike can check out BKRAS’ anniversary party Saturday at Studio Lam, which will feature guest DJs and performers from France, Phuket and Japan.

“The gig is a two-year anniversary to celebrate and to thank the people from around the world that have helped us build a sound: venue owners, local and travelling selectas and MCs,” Be Woken explains. “And most importantly, the community of people that have supported us along the way.”

bkrasIt’s all going at Studio Lam where the crew will host Dubwise from Phuket, U-Key and Minami from Japan, and French reggae vocalist  S’kaya. S’kaya will MC and perform tracks from his latest album, “Paris Ghetto Zoo.”

Door is 200 baht and the music is scheduled to start at 9pm and go till about 2am.

Come for the music, the DJs, records and bass bins all set to go. There’s even a food truck by Caribbean Cuisine for a taste of the land where this music comes from. Be sure to buy me some jerk chicken or roti if you see me there.

Until then, Dub be good to you.

Here’s some more local reggae to check out:

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North Korea Conducts its Biggest-Ever Nuke Test

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un salutes at a parade in October of last year in Pyongyang, North Korea. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Friday conducted its fifth nuclear test, producing its biggest-ever explosive yield, South Korean officials said, with the South’s president calling the atomic detonation an act of “fanatic recklessness.”

The North’s test, which comes eight months after its previous such detonation, defies both tough international sanctions and long-standing diplomatic pressure to curb its nuclear ambitions. It will raise serious worries in many world capitals that Pyongyang has moved another step closer to its goal of a nuclear-armed missile that could one day strike the U.S. mainland.

South Korean President Park Geun-hye strongly condemned the test, saying in a statement that it showed the “fanatic recklessness of the Kim Jong Un government as it clings to nuclear development.” Kim is the North Korean leader.

Park’s office said she spoke with U.S. President Barack Obama about the test Friday morning, during a regional summit inLaos. Park said South Korea will employ all available measures to put more pressure on North Korea, which has previously conducted nuclear tests every three to four years.

The explosion put the region on edge.

Chinese state media reported that the nation’s environmental protection agency started nuclear radiation monitoring. Japanese planes began to collect air samples from national air space to analyze possible radioactive materials. Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike said Japan’s capital city is also testing water samples and monitoring radiation levels in the air.

South Korean and international monitors detected unusual seismic activity Friday morning near the North’s northeastern nuclear test site. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement that “artificial seismic waves” from a quake measuring 5.0 were detected near the Punggye-ri test site.

The South’s Defense Ministry said it believed the North conducted a nuclear test, while European and U.S. monitoring services also detected similar seismic activity, with the U.S. Geological Survey calling it an “explosion” on its website.

A South Korean Defense Ministry official, who refused to be named because of office rules, said that Seoul detected an estimated explosive yield of 10 kilotons and assessed that it was from a nuclear test. After the North’s fourth test, in January, South Korean lawmaker Lee Cheol Woo said Seoul’s National Intelligence Service told him that an estimated explosive yield of six kilotons was detected.

The 5.0 magnitude earthquake Friday is the largest of the four past quakes associated with North Korean nuclear tests, according to South Korea’s weather agency. Artificial seismic waves measuring 3.9 were reported after North Korea’s first nuclear test in 2006; 4.8 was reported from its fourth test this January.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has overseen a robust increase in the number and kinds of missiles tested this year. Not only has the range of the weapons successfully tested jumped significantly, but the country is working to perfect new platforms for launching them — submarines and mobile launchers.

The longer ranges and mobile launchers give the North greater ability to threaten the tens of thousands of U.S. troops stationed throughout Asia.

The seismic activity comes on the 68th anniversary of the founding of North Korea’s government and just days after world leaders gathered in China for the G-20 economic summit.

Any test will lead to a strong push for new, tougher sanctions at the United Nations and further worsen already abysmal relations between Pyongyang and its neighbors. North Korea is already one of the most heavily sanctioned places on earth, and many question whether the penalties work.

China, the North’s economic lifeline and only major ally, has previously offered cover to Pyongyang, though Beijing has expressed growing frustration with what outsiders call provocations.

Pyongyang likely wanted to show the world that strong international sanctions following its fourth nuclear test and long-range rocket launch earlier this year haven’t discouraged its efforts to advance its nuclear weapons and missiles programs, according to Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea expert at Seoul’s Dongguk University.

“It seems that the North has decided to play an ‘end game’ where they push things to see how far they can go. It’s already being heavily sanctioned and there will be little room for any new sanctions that will meaningfully hurt them more,'” Koh said.

North Korea is thought to have a handful of rudimentary nuclear bombs and has spent decades trying to perfect a multistage, long-range missile to eventually carry smaller versions of those bombs.

After several failures, it put its first satellite into space with a long-range rocket launched in December 2012, and has since launched another such successful launch. Experts say that ballistic missiles and rockets in satellite launches share similar bodies, engines and other technology.

It’s unclear whether North Korea has achieved the technology needed to manufacture a miniaturized nuclear warhead that could fit on a long-range missile capable of hitting the United States. Some analysts believe that the country has the ability to arm shorter range missile with warheads.

In January, North Korea claimed to have conducted a hydrogen bomb test, but many foreign governments and experts were skeptical about the claim. After that test, some analysts said the country likely needed only a couple more test explosions before acquiring a miniaturized warhead that could be mounted on a long-range missile.

North Korea’s persistent pursuit of missiles and nuclear weapons has long been one of the most intractable foreign policy problems for U.S. administrations.

On Tuesday, North Korea fired three medium-range Rodong missiles that traveled about 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) and landed near Japan. And last month, a missile from a North Korean submarine flew about 500 kilometers (310 miles), the longest distance achieved by the North for such a weapon. This worried many South Koreans because submarine-based missiles are harder to detect before launch than land-based weapons.

Diplomacy has so far failed to stop North Korea’s progress. Six-nation negotiations on dismantling North Korea’s nuclear program in exchange for aid were last held in late 2008 and fell apart in early 2009, when North Korea was led by Kim Jong Un’s father, Kim Jong Il, who died in late 2011.

North Korea blames the United States and South Korea for its nuclear program, saying long-running “hostility” from Seoul and Washington to its government makes the development crucial for the small country’s survival.

Among Pyongyang’s regular demands are for Washington to withdraw its troops from the region and to sign a peace treaty formally ending the Korean War. It also wants recognition as a nuclear weapons state.

The Korean Peninsula remains technically at war, as the 1950-53 conflict ended in an armistice. Washington stations more than 28,000 troops in South Korea as a buttress against any North Korean aggression. Tens of thousands more are in nearby Japan.

Story: Foster Klung, Hyung-Jin Kim

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