27.7 C
Bangkok
Friday, June 26, 2026
Home Blog Page 2658

13 Injured When Isuzu Showroom Collapses

NAKHON PATHOM — Thirteen workers were injured when Isuzu showroom being built west of Bangkok collapsed Wednesday morning.

The three-story building on Putthamonthon Sai 4 fell as structural cement was being poured on the third floor, according to Pol. Col. Saksri Kaew-iam of the Pokaew Police Station. One worker was said to be in serious condition.

The project reportedly began in February and was expected to finish in February 2017.

The failure was blamed on too much weight, according to Saksri, who said that Pattanawan Construction Co., Ltd. would be held responsible for the injured workers.

201607271523401-20021028190504

 

Advertisement

US Marine Corps Horse Honored For Korean War Valor

Horse Haldalgo, representing life-saving US Marine horse Sergeant Reckless who served with the US Marine Corps during the Korean War, is awarded with the PDSA Dickin Medal beside Sergeant Mark Gostling, right, and Lieutenant Colonel Michael Skaggs in London, Wednesday, July 27, 2016. Photo: Frank Augstein

LONDON — A U.S. Marine Corps horse who served during some of the bloodiest fighting of the Korean War has been posthumously decorated for bravery.

Sgt. Reckless was awarded the Dickin Medal during a ceremony at the Korean War Memorial in London on Wednesday, the 63rd anniversary of the end of the war.

A serving British Army horse stood in for the late Reckless at the ceremony.

The chestnut Mongolian mare served as an ammunition carrier for the marines’ anti-tank division. She made repeated trips to supply ammunition and retrieve wounded troops under heavy bombardment during the battle for Outpost Vegas in March 1953.

Horse Haldalgo, representing life-saving US Marine horse Sergeant Reckless who served with the US Marine Corps during the Korean War, is awarded with the PDSA Dickin Medal watched by Sergeant Mark Gostling in London, Wednesday, July 27, 2016. Photo: Frank Augstein
Horse Haldalgo, representing life-saving US Marine horse Sergeant Reckless who served with the US Marine Corps during the Korean War, is awarded with the PDSA Dickin Medal watched by Sergeant Mark Gostling in London, Wednesday, July 27, 2016. Photo: Frank Augstein

After the war, Reckless retired to the United States and died in 1968 at age 20. She was nominated by a historian who wrote a biography about her.

Reckless is the 68th recipient of the medal, awarded by the PDSA veterinary charity and billed as the animal equivalent of the Victoria Cross — Britain’s top award for military valor.

Since 1943, the medal has recognized gallantry by animals serving with the military, police or rescue services.

Almost half the recipients have been dogs, including a World War II commando collie who made more than 20 parachute jumps. The medal has also gone to police horses, carrier pigeons and, once, to a cat — a Royal Navy ship’s mascot who carried on rat-catching while the vessel was shelled and besieged in China in 1949.

 

Advertisement

Witnesses Say South Sudan Soldiers Raped Dozens Near UN Camp

In this photo taken Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016, displaced people walk next to a razor wire fence at the United Nations base in the capital Juba, South Sudan. Photo: Jason Patinkin

JUBA, South Sudan — South Sudanese government soldiers raped dozens of ethnic Nuer women and girls last week just outside a United Nations camp where they had sought protection from renewed fighting, and at least two died from their injuries, witnesses and civilian leaders said.

The rapes in the capital of Juba highlighted two persistent problems in the chaotic country engulfed by civil war: targeted ethnic violence and the reluctance by U.N. peacekeepers to protect civilians.

At least one assault occurred as peacekeepers watched, witnesses told The Associated Press during a visit to the camp.

On July 17, two armed soldiers in uniform dragged away a woman who was less than a few hundred meters (yards) from the U.N. camp’s western gate while armed peacekeepers on foot, in an armored vehicle and in a watchtower looked on. One witness estimated that 30 peacekeepers from Nepalese and Chinese battalions saw the incident.

“They were seeing it. Everyone was seeing it,” he said. “The woman was seriously screaming, quarreling and crying also, but there was no help. She was crying for help.” He and other witnesses interviewed insisted on speaking on condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals by soldiers if identified.

A spokeswoman for the U.N. mission, Shantal Persaud, did not dispute that rapes took place close to the camp. She did not immediately address why peacekeepers didn’t act to prevent the rapes, saying she was looking into the issue.

The reported assaults occurred about a week after rival government forces clashed in Juba, forcing opposition leader Riek Machar from the city and killing hundreds of people. As a cease-fire took hold, women and girls began venturing outside the U.N. camp for food.

The camp houses over 30,000 civilians who are nearly all ethnic Nuer, the same ethnicity as Machar. They fear attacks by government forces who are mostly ethnic Dinka, the same as Machar’s rival, President Salva Kiir.

As the women and girls walked out of the U.N. camp, they entered an area called Checkpoint, in the shadow of a mountain on Juba’s western outskirts. That stretch of road along one side of the camp saw some of the heaviest fighting and is lined with wrecked shops and burned tanks. It is now inhabited by armed men in and out of uniform.

In interviews with the AP, women described soldiers in Checkpoint allowing them to leave to buy food but attacking them as they returned.

“When we reached Checkpoint, the soldiers come out and called the women and said, ‘Stop, please, and sit down,’ so we stopped and sat down, and they took one woman inside a shop,” a woman said. “Four men went inside the shop and they raped the woman while we three stayed outside.”

In another incident, one woman said a group of soldiers pulled two women and two underage girls from their group and gang-raped them in a shop, with more than 10 men to each victim. One girl later died, she said.

“I saw the men taking their trousers off and the ladies crying inside,” said a middle-aged woman. As she spoke, she began to cry. “They said, ‘This one belongs to me, this one belongs to me,'” she added.

Multiple Nuer women said soldiers threatened them because of their ethnicity or accused them of being allied with Machar. The women identified the soldiers as ethnic Dinka because of the language they spoke.

“One soldier came and he turned the gun to us. He said, ‘If I kill you now, you Nuer woman, do you think there is anything that can happen to me?'” one woman said. She said the soldier slapped her before another soldier intervened, allowing her to escape.

The number of rapes that took place outside the U.N. camp was unclear. The AP interviewed more than a dozen witnesses of rapes or people who spoke with victims, both one-on-one and in small groups.

The Protection Cluster, a group of aid workers that monitors violence against civilians in South Sudan, noted a “significant spike in reported cases was observed on 18 July when large numbers of women began leaving (the camp) to travel to markets in town in search of food.”

The Protection Cluster said at least two victims are known to have died as a result of their injuries.

Civilian leaders in the U.N. camp have given estimates ranging from 27 to over 70 rapes from the time that women started venturing out for food. The United Nations says it received reports of dozens of cases. A South Sudanese rights group, the Community Empowerment for Progress Organization, said it is investigating 36 reported rapes.

Hospitals inside the camp received four rape cases last week, including an underage girl who said she had been gang-raped by five men and a woman who said she had been gang-raped by five men and beaten, according to medical staff who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The number of victims reporting to clinics is believed to be lower than the actual total because of the stigma in Nuer culture attached to rape.

The rape of civilians has been a near-constant in South Sudan’s civil war which began in 2013, with both sides accused of using sexual assault, based on ethnicity, as a weapon of war.

Army spokesman Lul Ruai Koang did not deny that rapes occurred after the latest fighting but said the military has yet to receive any formal complaints from victims.

Witnesses and aid workers accuse the armed U.N. peacekeepers, who are mandated to protect civilians with lethal force if necessary, of failing to act.

The U.N. spokeswoman, Persaud, said the recent rapes were not limited to Checkpoint.

“For a fact, uniformed soldiers were involved, heavily involved, in horrific acts of violence against civilians,” Persaud said.

This is not the first time that U.N. peacekeepers have been accused of failing to act.

Last year, over 1,300 women and girls were raped by government forces and allied militias during a scorched-earth campaign in Unity state, according to the Protection Cluster. Doctors Without Borders accused the U.N. mission of “complete and utter failure” to protect civilians there. The medical aid organization also blamed the peacekeeping mission over a government attack on the U.N. camp in the town of Malakal in February that killed about two dozen civilians. A U.N. investigation found confusion in command and control by U.N. forces.

In the latest clashes in Juba, residents of the U.N. camp accused peacekeepers of running away when the camp was shelled. Two Chinese peacekeepers were killed.

Aid workers said they asked the U.N. to increase patrols July 17-18 along the camp where women were most vulnerable, but that patrols in the area did not begin until July 21.

The U.N. said in a statement it had increased patrols outside the camp in response to reported rapes.

One local woman, Christmas David, who said she was beaten by government soldiers but not raped, said the limited patrols were not enough.

“When the U.N. is moving, (the government soldiers) just stop the women and tell them to sit down,” she said. “When the peacekeepers leave the road, then they do the things.”

Story by: Jason Patinkin 

Advertisement

Anxious Tourism Officials Respond to Veiled Threat With Chinese Charm Campaign

Part of the graphics created by Thai CCTV communicating that Chinese people recognize Thais as friends or relatives. Photo: TCCTV / Facebook

BANGKOK — Thailand is pulling out the stops to tell Chinese tourists they are wholeheartedly welcome in the kingdom out of fear cultural friction could jeopardize the billions of baht in revenue they bring with them.

Tourism officials, responding to fear Chinese might be rethinking Thailand, announced Tuesday they had invited that country’s biggest news agencies in to clear up any misunderstandings stemming from Thai complaints about Chinese behavior.

“Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has ordered the country to prepare for Chinese tourists to increase to 20 to 25 million people in the next few years,” said Tourism Authority of Thailand Gov.  Yuthasak Supasorn. “They bring money for Thais, so Thais could never be disgusted by them.”

Eight million Chinese nationals visited Thailand in 2015. Yuthasak said he had invited invited media representatives from China Central Television (CCTV), Xinhua News Agency, People’s Daily and @Mangu magazine.

The move came after CCTV reposted a Thai-language graphic Sunday asking Thais to understand that Chinese people come from diverse backgrounds and that applying stereotypes about them is hurtful.

The graphic went on to make a thinly veiled threat by mentioning the economic pain felt by countries such as Japan and Philippines after conflict led to boycotts by Chinese consumers.

Visits from China are up overall by about one-fifth so far this year, according to the Ministry of Tourism and Sports, with 5.5 million Chinese arrivals. Those tourists are credited with bringing 250 billion baht into the economy.

Thailand isn’t reluctant to call out behavior considered shameful, and the explosion in recent years of visits from mainland Chinese has come with frequent media reports and social media rants relating to their behavior.

In Chiang Mai, one of the top destinations for Chinese travelers, the Chiang Mai Tourism Business Association frets what it says has been a 30 percent drop in Chinese visits.

Yuthasak clarified that a drop in Chinese arriving by land border stems from a new rule requiring motorists to apply 10 days in advance to drive into Thailand. The new regulation also banned ongoing travel into provinces other than that entered. He said the policy was not discriminatory and applied to vehicles from all nations.

Kitti Thitsakul, the president of a Chiang Rai tourism club said they were considering ways to make Chinese tourists feel more loved, such as printing stickers which say “We Love Chinese Tourists.”

 

Related stories:

Internet Erupts in Rage After Thai Volleyball Team’s Narrow Loss to Japan

Advertisement

Glasgow Trio ‘Chvrches’ to Tickle Bangkok in Synth Keys

BANGKOK — Three Scottish musical sweethearts will take wing to Bangkok to offer temporary synthpop sanctuary to their fans.

This September at BITECH Bangna, hear “The Mother We Share” and “Lies” from Glasgow band Chvrches. (Less medievally, they would be “Churches,” but lore has it the band wanted Google to return results unrelated to religion.)

Warming the stage are fresh faces from the local music scene such as up-and-comers Polycat, Somkiat (aka “Thailand’s Arctic Monkeys”) and pop-gaze act Jelly Rocket.

Visual artist slash Dudesweet founder Pongsuang “Note” Kunprasop, Eyedropper Fill and illustrator Tuna Dunn will weave visual wonders for the stage.

Read: Visual Artists Harness VR For a Better Bangkok

Formed in 2011, the Scottish trio of Lauren Mayberry, Iain Cook and Martin Doherty in 2013 became beloved to realms of geek for footage of them playing the theme to “Games of Thrones,” HBO’s fantasy TV series.

Their geek bonafides bear out with music for games such as FIFA 14, Grand Theft Auto V and Mirror’s Edge Catalyst.

The show is 20 and up. Tickets are available online now for 700 baht, but will go up to 1,000 baht after the first 500 are sold. It’s 1,500 baht at the door. The concert is set for Sept. 3.

Advertisement

Think Trump And Clinton Fall Flat? Vote For Cat in The Hat

A character portraying the Cat in the Hat announces Tuesday, July 26, 2016, he is running for President outside the childhood home of their creator Theodor Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, on Fairfield Street in Springfield, Mass. Photo: Dave Roback

SPRINGFIELD, Massachusetts — Voters who think presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton fall flat can now choose the Cat in the Hat.

The Cat announced his candidacy Tuesday in Springfield, Massachusetts, outside the childhood home of Dr. Seuss.

He also announced his running mates —Thing 1 and Thing 2.

The Republican newspaper (http://bit.ly/2aeKMUy ) reports the Cat said through a spokeswoman that he would be willing to release his tax returns.

The Cat’s platform includes working with Red Fish and Blue Fish to address ocean conservation, working with the Lorax on the environment and working with Sam I Am to address hunger.

The event served as the official launch for the new Random House book “One Vote, Two Votes, I Vote, You Vote.”

Advertisement

Restored ‘Santi-Vina’ Offers Refreshing Window to ‘Thainess’ Past

BANGKOK — Vina is fearless and outspoken about what she wants, and has the agency to defy society and her family to go after it.

What she wants is Santi, and in the restored 1954 classic bearing their names, “Santi-Vina,” she presents a stark contrast to today’s reimagined notions of “how women were” in the past.

Among eight fresh flicks hitting theaters Thursday is a chance to see Thais and Thailand of past and as they really were in the beautifully restored version of the once-lost film which showed again for the first time in six decades earlier this month at Scala Theater.

Directed by Tawee Na Bangchang, aka Marut, the film was the first Thai feature shot in color on 35mm film with sound, a project championed by producer and studio head Rattana Pestonji, who wanted to elevate Thai film standards at a time most were still shot on 16mm film.

As a result, it became the first Thai film to win international recognition including best cinematography, best art direction and a special award for portraying Asian culture at the 1954 Southeast Asian Film Festival in Tokyo. After the film was rediscovered, restored and premiered at Cannes in May, it showed to a packed Scala Theater on July 15.

Poonpan Rangkuan and Rewadee Sriwilai in a scene from ‘Santi-Vina.’ Photo: Thai Film Archive / Courtesy
Poonpan Rangkuan and Rewadee Sriwilai in a scene from ‘Santi-Vina.’ Photo: Thai Film Archive / Courtesy

One of the most remarkable traits in Rattana’s features were what today seem ultramodern portrayals of women. These weren’t cloying kittens or passive maidens of chaste virtue. In Rattana’s third feature, 1957’s “Rongraem Narok (Country Hotel),” the mysterious Riam is far from shy in employing her sexuality to get what she desires. A few years later, he would portray a poor widow who’s taken a new lover in Thailand’s first noir film, “Phrae Dum (Black Silk),” in 1961.

“Santi-Vina” is a stock love-triangle story entwining the poor, visually impaired Santi (Poonpan Rangkuan) who lives in a cave temple; Vina (Rewadee Sriwilai), the strong woman who loves and stands up for him, and of course, Santi’s competition embodied by Krai (Paichit Putiyos), who’s got his sights on Vina and is her parents’ preferred suitor.

Vina isn’t afraid to show how she feels by touching and kissing Santi, and voicing flirtatious lines such as telling him that “before long, Santi is going to be my husband, and I’m going to be your wife.” She’s even prepared to elope with him despite parents’ disapproval – but not until she’s gotten the dowry money from Krai’s family.

The daring Vina isn’t afraid to show her love for Santi. Photo: Thai Film Archive / Courtesy
The daring Vina isn’t afraid to show her love for Santi. Photo: Thai Film Archive / Courtesy

Despite her love and attempts to be with Santi, Vina faces disappointment in the end. But even then she shows strength as she calmly accepts her love’s decision and moves on with her life, keeping her love alive within.

The movie is melodramatic and predictable but a fun watch, especially for its surprisingly sarcastic dialogue. Weirdly dubbed scenes of the characters as children are bound to get some laughs.

Culture and country lives are beautifully portrayed in the film. Simple yet spectacular scenes show students in a classroom; pretty paddy fields; and villagers celebrating the the Loi Krathong festival in song and dance. It also captures the structures of relationships in the community, and the rites of passage from birth to death that connect the community to Buddhism.

Rattana’s cinematography is excellent, and when combined with Urai Sirisombat’s art direction all presented in ultra-hi-def 4K, the restored film remains a highly watchable crowd-pleaser today.

Rewadee Sriwilai as Vina. Photo: Thai Film Archive / Courtesy
Rewadee Sriwilai as Vina. Photo: Thai Film Archive / Courtesy

The actors in the film offer very natural performances. Poonpan is calm and charming as the visually impaired Santi, while Rewadee stuns as the daring Vina, walking the role confidently between mischief and misery.

Those who missed the the restored classic’s premiere earlier this month have another chance.

The newly restored “Santi-Vina” will show in Thai with English subtitles twice a day at 2pm and 7pm from Thursday to Sunday only at SF World Cinema, CentralWorld. Tickets range from 190 baht to 580 baht and can be booked online.

Advertisement

Morrissey to Play Bangkok (Canceled)

Update: This event has been canceled in light of the death of His Late Majesty King Bhumibol

BANGKOK — Before emo there was Morrissey, and today word comes the one-time frontman for The Smiths man will play Bangkok later this year.

Among announced dates for a two-month world tour by the Moz, is an appearance Oct. 18 at Bangkok’s Moonstar Studio, according to a Morrissey fanzine and confirmed Wednesday by Moonstar.

Morrissey, known for his Elvis-esque pompadour and vegetarianism, managed to transition to a successful solo career following the brief but bright run enjoyed by The Smiths from 1982 to 1987.  He’s now 57.

Moonstar Studio is in Soi Ladprao 80.

morrissey.head

Advertisement

Mayor Accused of Stripping Reporter Files Charges Against Reporters

Premsak Piayura poses in a photo for his Dec. 2013 mayoral election campaign. Photo: Dr. Premsak Piayura / Facebook

BANGKOK — The news that a mayor in northeastern Thailand forced a reporter to strip to his underwear as revenge for his coverage has led taken the next step to legal action.

On Wednesday, it wasn’t the reporter filing charges against his alleged abuser, but mayor Premsak Piayura who accused Korsith Kongchom and his colleagues of intruding into his office and hounding him to confirm the 51-year-old politician had indeed gotten engaged to a teenage schoolgirl. Korsith’s criminal complaint against the mayor will follow soon after.

Premsak, whose political career started with the powerful Thai Rak Thai Party over a decade ago, announced on Facebook this morning he had filed charges against five reporters at Ban Phai Police Station.

Mayor Accused of Stripping Reporter For Reporting His Engagement to Teen

“They detained, coerced and harassed me for a news story that did not benefit the public in any way,” Premsak wrote. “Their behavior violates an individual’s rights and liberties, instead of giving me the chance to work for the public benefit and service of the people.”

Ban Phai Police Station chief Chamras Chandaeng confirmed the charges have been filed, though he said Premsak stressed to the officers that he only did so symbolically for the record, and that he did not want the officers to actually prosecute the reporters.

“He only pressed charges as an evidence,” Col. Chamras said by telephone. “He did not wish for any prosecution.”

Korsith, the Daily News reporter who wrote the original story about Premsak, also planned to file charges against the mayor, according to a bulletin on the newspaper’s website.

An aide for Premsak said the mayor would not answer questions about the matter.

This unusual skirmish between Premsak and local media started when a rumor spread online that the mayor had gotten engaged to a teen schoolgirl, paying a dowry of 400,000 baht and a Toyota Vios. On Monday, Daily News, the second largest newspaper in Thailand, published the story.

Premsak Piayura poses in a photo for his Dec. 2013 mayoral election campaign. Photo: Dr. Premsak Piayura / Facebook
Premsak Piayura poses in a photo for his Dec. 2013 mayoral election campaign. Photo: Dr. Premsak Piayura / Facebook

On Tuesday, Premsak summoned five reporters to his office where he allegedly locked them in a room and berated them for insulting him with the coverage. The reporters were from Daily News, Matichon Group, Channel 3, Nation TV and a local TV station called KKC.

After four of the reporters were released, Korsith, the journalist for Daily News, was held back, and Premsak allegedly ordered five of his staff to strip the man naked to his underwear in retaliation for the story.

The incident prompted the Thai Journalist Association to condemn Premsak in a statement.

“We’d like to ask the police to take legal action in this case in order to set an example against further violations of reporters’ liberty,” the statement said, urging all reporters involved in the incident to file charges against Premsak.

Advertisement

Indian Activist to End Her Nearly 16-Year Hunger Strike

In this August 18, 2009 photo Irom Sharmila Chanu also known as the Iron Lady of Manipur is interviewed on her political struggle. Photo: Jinendra Maibam/ Flickr

NEW DELHI — A frail 44-year-old activist who has been on a hunger strike for nearly 16 years to protest alleged brutality by India’s military says she’ll end her fast and run in state elections.

Irom Sharmila told a court in the northeastern state of Manipur on Tuesday that she’ll give up her fast on Aug. 9 and stand as an independent candidate in elections early next year.

Sharmila has not eaten voluntarily since November 2000, when she began her protest against an Indian law that suspends many human rights protections in areas of conflict.

She was arrested three days after starting her fast on charges of attempting suicide — a crime in India — and has since been force fed through a tube in her nose.

 

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
27.7 ° C
31.1 °
27.7 °
77 %
2.8kmh
99 %
Thu
28 °
Fri
37 °
Sat
36 °
Sun
37 °
Mon
37 °