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Philippine’s Duterte Ready to Clash With Catholic Church on Birth Control

Philippines president Rodrigo Duterte, then mayor, gestures during a May 9 news conference in Davao city in the southern Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

DAVAO, Philippines — The Philippine president-elect said Monday he would aggressively promote artificial birth control in the country even at the risk of getting in a fight with the dominant Catholic church, which staunchly opposes the use of contraceptives.

Rodrigo Duterte, who is to be sworn to the presidency on Thursday, said having many children has driven families deeper into poverty, and he reiterated his recommendation for Filipinos to have three at most.

Known for his profanity-laden speeches, Duterte jokingly threatened to have penises of defiant men chopped off and cited his family planning program as a longtime mayor in southern Davao city, where he has offered cash rewards to villagers who volunteer to undergo free vasectomy or ligation and to doctors who perform the procedures.

“I will reinstall the program of family planning. Three’s enough,” Duterte said in a speech after a flag-raising ceremony in front of the Davao city hall. “I’ve also been colliding with the church because it’s no longer realistic.”

It was not clear if Duterte would replicate the reward system nationwide.

Duterte praised former President Fidel Ramos, who backed his presidential candidacy, for courageously promoting contraceptives as the country’s first Protestant leader starting in 1992.

Duterte’s predecessor, Benigno Aquino III, also figured in a high-profile spat with the Catholic church for signing a 2012 reproductive health law that allowed the government to finance the acquisition and distribution of contraceptives after overcoming a legal challenge by opponents.

Many politicians have tried to avoid colliding with influential Catholic bishops in the Philippines in the past by taking a vague position or not aggressively advocating contraceptives use.

Catholic leaders considered the law an attack on the church’s core values. Aquino’s government said it helped the poor manage their number of children in a country that has one of Asia’s fastest-growing populations.

Duterte has had an adversarial relation with the church. During the campaign, Duterte had a tiff with Catholic bishops after cursing Pope Francis due to a monstrous traffic jam during the papal visit in January last year.

Last month, Duterte blasted the local Catholic church as “the most hypocritical institution” and accused some of its bishops of asking for favors from politicians.

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No One Hurt as Fire Destroys Bangkok’s ‘Funky Villa’ Nightclub

Firefighters battle the flames at Funky Villa early Tuesday morning in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A popular nightclub in the heart of Bangkok’s entertainment district burned down early this morning, though there’s no report of any casualty.

Disaster was likely averted as the fire broke out at the usually packed Funky Villa at 2.30am, after the place had closed down, police said.

“No one was injured,” Lt. Col. Somsak Mongkolkunakorn said by telephone. “No tourists were there.”

Somsak said the fire appeared to start from the “roof section” of Funky Villa, which is located in Arena 10, and upscale nightlife complex on Soi Thonglor 10. Forensic police are still investigating the cause of the blaze. Firefighters took about 45 minutes to contain the fire.

The nightclub will remain closed for now, he added.

Fire codes are selectively enforced, and fires inside nightlife venues have led to loss of life before. Sixty-six people were killed not far from Funky Villa on New Year’s Day in 2009 at Zantika nightclub. Four people died in 2012 inside a nightclub on Phuket.

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All Six Floors of Overstay to Burst With Rock & Art on Saturday

BANGKOK — Hostel-at-the-end-of-the-world The Overstay will fill its six floors with underground music on Saturday.

Billed as the biggest underground music festival in town, The Doomed Oasis Fest promises all kind of alt-culture: from a visual assault to a full spectrum of music from easy-listening to hard-hardcore.

The ground floor of The Overstay, a Pinklao venue serving performance and crash space to the fringes of society, will rock-out louder than usual with local acts such as The Ginkz making some prog-rock noise, Born From Pain’s oldschool hardcore and Monument X’s punkcore.

Step up to the second floor for geek nostalgia via retro video game systems: Super Nintendo, Atari and the like. Mario Kart tournaments? Very likely.

Climb a little higher to find five bands from Newlights Production including post-rock Hope the Flowers and band-of-the-hour Spring Fall Sea.

Reach the fourth floor and discover muralists such as Hannah Theodorou, Stylo and Sweedx XAcid live-painting in a temporary graffiti space. DIY tattoos are part of the offerings, but it’s unclear if that means the temporary or Hep-C type (“Professionals” will be on hand to provide guidance).

Up-and-coming indie folk group Jenny & The Scallywags, solo artist John Will Sail and more will smooth the night out when the shophouse opens its rooftop for an acoustic stage and vegan barbecue.

The fifth floor is more likely to be left alone without any event for the sake of the residents’ peace. The one-day festival will take place on this Saturday.

Admission is 150 baht. All the money raised will go to the help Spring Fall Sea go on tour for a month in Europe.

The Overstay is located near Soi Charansanitwong 40, which is nearly two kilometers from Phra Pinklao pier. Take a motosai or taxi.

The Overstay posted in January, 2014. Photo: The Overstay / Facebook
The Overstay posted in January, 2014. Photo: The Overstay / Facebook

 

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Bangkok’s Crowded Riverfront Could See Yet Another Big Mall

Photo: Asiatique The Riverfront / Facebook

BANGKOK — In case you were concerned about Bangkok’s access to community shopping malls, worry not, for another has been floated for the rapidly transforming riverside.

A government agency left high and dry when the former civilian government’s rice subsidy ended will seek a developer to build a new mall to sprawl along the Chao Phraya River, similar to Asiatique The Riverfront.

If it happens, the mall will be located on 20 rai (3.2 hectares) of land owned by the Public Warehouse Organization, or PWO, near the Rama IX Bridge in the capital’s Rat Burana district.

“If the project moves forward, PWO will definitely have revenue to feed ourselves,” said its president, police Maj. Gen. Kraiboon Suadsong. “As now we can no longer make money from fee to manage the pledging scheme for rice and other agricultural products.”

The agency, which managed government rice stocks at the height of the Yingluck regime’s subsidy program, now leases the land as warehouse space, bringing in nearly 40 million baht annually.

Kraiboon said plans also call for a demonstration farm to illustrate the king’s economic philosophy of living within one’s means, which has been widely promoted by the government.

The plan was set to go before PWO’s board on Tuesday.

If the mall comes to fruition, it will join an increasingly crowded commercial space along the river. In addition to Asiatique, which opened in 2012, other river mega-developments include Icon Siam, Tha Maharaj and Yodpiman River Walk.

 

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River’s Friends Float Hope for Public Hearings on 14B-Baht ‘Promenade’

Radical Makeover of Chao Phraya River Delayed

Chao Phraya Promenade Should be Sent Back to Drawing Board, Architects Say

 

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Prayuth Rules Out Resigning If Public Rejects Charter

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks to reporters in 2016 at Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha today rejected calls from several prominent politicos that he resign if the public rejects the constitution prepared by his appointees when it goes to an August referendum.

The calls, most notably issued by former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, followed British Prime Minister David Cameron’s resignation after his country voted to leave the European Union in Thursday’s referendum, rejecting his plea to stay.

Bangkok Post reported on Sunday that three politicians – Abhisit, former Pheu Thai minister Pichai Naripthaphan and former Senate Speaker Nikom Wairatpanij – called upon Prayuth to follow Cameron’s example if his government loses the August referendum.

Prayuth said the comparison is illogical because Cameron was elected by popular vote, whereas he was not.

“How can they compare us? It’s different issue,” Gen. Prayuth said at Government House. “Why, do they want me to resign? Is that it? I won’t quit. I make my own rules. He didn’t come [to power] in the same way as me. His country didn’t have problems like ours.”

And if the constitution his regime wants the public to accept gets voted down? Everyone should be held responsible, Prayuth said, not just him.

“Won’t you take responsibility at all? Will no one take responsibility with me?” the general asked. “As for me, I already take responsibility for taking this job. What about other people, will they not take responsibility for future of Thailand with me?”

His deputy, Prawit Wongsuwan, split hairs to underscore the differences between the Thai and British referendums.

“They’re different issues,” Gen. Prawit said. “Because in the case of U.K., the government organized [the referendum], but in our case it’s the Constitution Drafting Committee who was assigned to organize referendum for the charter draft.”

The government has been urging the public to accept the charter draft when it’s put to vote on Aug. 7. If it is accepted, the regime promises, a new election will be held in 2017 and a new civilian government installed by the end of the year.

But critics of the junta are campaigning against it, on the grounds it will weaken democracy and electoral institutions, while establishing mechanisms that would prolong and formalize the military’s  hold on power.

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Thai Election Monitor Fumes Over Being Barred from Thai Referendum

No Thais Can Monitor Vote Because Law Didn’t Say They Can, Commission Reasons

Critics: Keeping Public in Dark About Draft Charter Rejection Unfair

Redshirts Alarmed by Vague Restrictions on Charter Campaigns

Campaign Guideline Bans Campaigning Before Charter Vote

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Thai Election Monitor Fumes Over Being Barred from Thai Referendum

Election Commissioner Somchai Srisutthiyakorn displays the fraud-proof features of ballots to be used in the forthcoming referendum on April 11.

BANGKOK — After waiting months for official accreditation, the head of a nonpartisan domestic election monitoring group said he was dismayed to learn Monday that no Thai organizations would be granted status for the upcoming charter referendum.

Pongsak Chan-on of We Watch said allowing foreign organizations but barring Thai groups such as his made no sense and amounted to discrimination.

“It’s perplexing. Last week they told us we could still apply. I am very disappointed and don’t understand the rationale. We Watch is not partisan. And if you give the accreditation to international observers, why not recognize Thai observers too? This is a discriminatory practice.”

Read: No Thais Can Monitor Vote Because Law Didn’t Say They Can, Commission Reasons

Election Commissioner Somchai Srisutthiyakorn said it might have been a misunderstanding that led We Watch to be believe it might win approval. He said commission officials might have seen its English-language name and mistaken it for an international organization.

But the fact remains no domestic organizations will be allowed to officially monitor the vote for fraud or irregularity because, as he said earlier this month, a law passed to ban campaigning before the referendum did not explicitly authorize Thai observers.

“They can only observe like any citizen. They won’t be accredited, and they must not obstruct officials [from carrying out its duties],” Somchai said of We Watch. “There will be no issuing of [observer cards] to Thai group and perhaps our staff though We Watch was a foreign group.”

Only one international observer group, the Asian Network for Free Elections, or ANFREL, has applied to observe the referendum set for Aug. 7.

We Watch’s Pongsak is also a member of ANFREL. But if the Bangkok-based international NGO wins approval, he won’t be allowed to join its monitoring mission because he is a Thai national.

Commissioner Somchai noted that only short-term observers, those flying in for three to four days prior to the plebiscite would be accredited, while those seeking to set up 15 days prior would not.

“That’s too long a period of time,” said Somchai, adding that the commission is ready to shoulder the costs of lodging, domestic travel, interpreters and other costs. He added that ANFREL was expected to field about 20 observers.

Pongsak, a veteran observer with 20 years experience, said We Watch would go ahead and observe the referendum without accreditation by training and dispatching about 300 observers to various parts of the kingdom.

But he doubts its ability to be effective without official sanction.

Such difficulties include officials and voters refusing to cooperate with their inquiries, he said, or harassment by military security forces.

“There would be legitimacy in questioning officials if we had accreditation cards, and if soldiers pressured us, there would be legitimacy [for us],” Pongsak said.

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Soldiers Arrest Activists For Handing Out Referendum Leaflets (Video)
Redshirts Take Grievance Over Voting Watchdog Campaign to UN
Singing, Dancing Activists Chased Off by Pro-Junta Counter-Protesters (Video)
UN Rights Chief Urges Thailand to Allow Debate of Draft Charter
Constitutional Court Agrees to Review Repressive Referendum Law

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Severe Weather Warning: Bangkok to be Rocked With Hurricane-Like Force (Canceled)

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

BANGKOK — To celebrate its 50 anniversary, legendary German rock act Scorpions will stop by to perform live in October.

Best known for 1984 rock anthem “Rock You Like A Hurricane” and ballad “Wind of Change,” the rock predators will show Bangkok if they can still put the sex in “sexagenarian” Oct. 26 at BITEC in Bang Na.

Tickets run from 1,200 baht to 5,200 baht and will go on sale online July 11.

Formed in Hanover in 1965, the rockers have visited the kingdom a few times, such as 2004’s The Unbreakable World Tour and the less-than-accurately billed “farewell tour” of 2011.

Regardless of its previously announced retirement, the band, now 50, released its 18th album “Return to Forever” in February 2015.

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Junta Forces Officials From Posts, Plays Down Link to Abuse of Migrants

A crowd of Burmese migrant workers on Thursday await Aung San Suu Kyi’s arrival in Samut Sakhon province.

BANGKOK — Twenty-three high-ranking officials who reportedly failed to protect the welfare of migrant workers welfare lost their jobs Friday by emergency decree, but the junta is not rushing to take credit.

Although the mass transfer of officials including a provincial governor appeared a goodwill gesture one day after Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi raised migrants’ rights with junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha, officials are playing down any connection.

“I haven’t heard of any connection between the two,” junta spokesman Winthai Suvaree said by telephone Monday.

Asked whether human trafficking and abuses of migrant workers were a factor behind the transfers, Col. Winthai said he did not know. Another spokesman, Piyapong Klinpan, also declined to comment on why the 23 officials were transferred. Instead, he referred to comments made over the weekend.

“Relevant agencies have already explained this issue,” Col. Piyapong said. “The details are as stated by those agencies.”

Though those remarks were no less vague, the positions of those forced from their jobs was telling.

Five held top positions in Samut Sakhon, a major fishing port city and home to more than 100,000 Myanmar workers that Suu Kyi visited Thursday. Also transferred were its governor, deputy attorney-general, labor inspector, industry inspector and provincial police commander.

Failure to take action on abuses of migrant laborers has been a reason for the transfers cited in media reports.

Another five were in charge of the investigation into slave camps run by human traffickers in the Deep South, over which 88 people have been arrested and charged with trafficking, though the case has been criticized as moving at a slow pace.

Those five were the attorney-general of Na Thawi Provincial Court; his deputy; chief of Sadao Police Station; commander of Songkhla provincial police; and commissioner of the southern region police force.

The remainder transferred by Prayuth were 13 police officers who appear linked to a recent raid of a large brothel in Bangkok, where authorities found underage and trafficked sex workers.

They included police commanders from the human trafficking, immigration, and metro police units.

Halting Progress

The military government, which came to power in May 2014, says combating human trafficking and improving migrant rights are among its top priorities.

Under the junta, Thailand saw an unprecedented crackdown on trafficking networks and an effort to document migrant workers. It also seeks to comply with Western governments’ regulatory demands for its seafood industry, a business long fraught with overfishing and use of slave labor.

But the other hand, the junta has asked the media to self-censor its reporting about trafficking and other rights violations, insisting they risk harming Thailand’s reputation.

“The media should consider the impact the news will have on the country,” Prayuth chided the media in March 2015, when they reported an instance of Thais being duped into slavery on fishing boats in Indonesian waters. “It may cause problems and affect national security.”

Andy Hall, a prominent Western migrant rights activist, said the junta’s self-proclaimed effort to combat human trafficking is hindered by this lack of transparency.

“This is an exercise of dictatorial power, whereas it should be transparent,” Andy said of the transfers. “This is not so transparent. The government should tell the public why these officials were transferred. I want them to be fair to all sides … this issue must be handled with transparency, otherwise the problems would never end.”

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For Trumpers and Brexiters, Same Frustrations Echo

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks Friday as he arrives to his revamped Trump Turnberry golf course in Turnberry Scotland. Photo: Andrew Milligan / PA / Associated Press

MAYBOLE, Scotland — At the heart of the campaign that led Britain to vote to leave the European Union was a desire to regain independence lost amid a globalized world. It’s the same kind of feeling that Donald Trump rode to become the presumptive Republican nominee in the U.S., where he campaigns to put “America first” and “make America great again.”

“I love to see people take their country back. And that’s really what’s happening in the United States,” Trump told reporters this weekend during a visit to his golf resort in western Scotland.

The anxiety that drove the stunning “Brexit” decision has been brewing for at least a decade in the United Kingdom, as waves of immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe arrived as the global economy plunged into recession. In the years since, right-leaning leaders have stoked populist concerns about their impact on wages, as well as fears about the loss of ethnic identity, which runs deep in parts of largely white rural England and Wales.

“There’s a real feeling things have changed and they’ve changed too fast,” said Muriel MacGregor, filling up her car at a BP station on her way to work as a clerk at a hotel in Aberdeen, Scotland.

MacGregor, 52, said that, unlike many of her friends, she proudly voted for “leave.” ”This isn’t the country I remember from growing up. I don’t know exactly what happens next. I don’t think anybody does. But I really feel like we needed something different, because this isn’t working,” she said.

Britain’s vote shattered the stability of continental unity forged after World War II and sent markets across the globe tumbling.

Presumed Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton said on Sunday the vote was a sobering reminder that “what happens around the world has consequences that can hit home quickly.”

“Our priority now must be to protect American families and businesses from the negative effects of this kind of tumult and uncertainty,” Clinton said at the annual gathering of the U.S. Conference of Mayors in Indianapolis.

She also took a thinly veiled dig at Trump saying “steady experienced leadership” is what the U.S. needs to avoid the kinds of troubles Britain now faces.

“We need leaders … who understand how to work with other leaders to manage risks, who understand that bombastic comments in turbulent times can actually cause more turbulence and who put the interest of the American people ahead of their personal business interests,” Clinton said.

But the move to divorce the U.K. from the 28-nation bloc and its government in Brussels was celebrated by those who felt the changing country has lost its way since linking up with the rest of Europe. Their voices echo the millions of American voters who have flocked to support Trump. The billionaire businessman has tapped into the same concerns about a too-quickly-changing country that has left too many behind, and he’s pledged to halt illegal immigration and bring back manufacturing jobs lost to factories overseas.

Many see his “Make America Great Again” slogan as a vow to return the country to a time when they believe America was the undisputed world leader. In President Barack Obama, they see an American leader too quick to apologize for his country.

“I want us to take America back,” Shirley Sharpe, a Trump supporter from Greensboro, North Carolina, said this month. Sharpe, 61, who works as a caregiver to her elderly father-in-law, said that she’s been dismayed by the country’s direction under Obama.

“We have all been just wiping up the dirt. And it’s like – we need to take our country back for us,” she said. “We’ve got to take care of ourselves before we take care of immigrants or somebody else.”

For Chad Benson of Dallas, Georgia, it’s time for America to reassert its greatness.

“I think what separates Donald Trump from the other candidates is this: He is pro-American,” said Benson, 40, who works in the power industry. “He’s proud to be an American. He wants Americans to be proud to be Americans again.”

Benson complained that Obama “seems to put other countries before the American people.”

Of particular resonance in the U.S. has been Trump’s approach to immigration. Voters across the country frequently cite Trump’s plan to build a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico and his pledged to deport all of the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally as the reasons why they were first drawn to the candidate.

For Jose Portillo, 55, of Los Lunas, New Mexico, Trump’s immigration plan is central to his appeal. A union member who works in the freight business, Portillo was a lifelong Democrat until he changed his registration this year to vote for Trump. He said he’s fed up with people who are in the country illegally, and argues that they take advantage of the system as he works hard to play by the rules.

“There’s too many deadbeats living off the system,” said Portillo, who works an overnight shift. “I wish I could start building a broom with steel bristles so he could start cleaning house.”

Lanhee Chen, who served as a policy adviser to 2012 GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney, said there were undeniable similarities between the sentiments in both countries, including deep concerns about the impact of foreign workers. But he cautioned that key differences remain.

“The U.K. election was ultimately a referendum on policy and on that sentiment,” he said. The U.S. election is a personality contest right now.”

For Trump, however, the parallels are clear.

“People want to take their country back,” he said. “They want to have independence in a sense. And you see it with Europe, all over Europe, you’re going to have more than just, in my opinion, more than just what happened last night.”

Story: Jonathan Lemire, Jill Colvin

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Fake Thai Monks Fool Tourists in New York City

A man who says he is a Buddhist monk hands a medallion to a woman as he solicits donations Thursday in New York City's Times Square. Photo: Michael Balsamo / Associated Press

NEW YORK — New York City Buddhist leaders are sounding the alarm to tourists: Beware the “fake monks.”

Men in orange robes claiming to be Buddhist monks are approaching visitors to some of the city’s most popular attractions, handing them shiny medallions and offering greetings of peace. They then hit them up for donations to help them build a temple in Thailand, and are persistent if their demands are refused.

“The problem seems to be increasing,” said the Rev. TK Nakagaki, president of the Buddhist Council of New York, a group that represents nearly two dozen Buddhist temples. “They are very aggressive and hostile if you don’t give them money.”

Pedestrians pass a warning sign about panhandlers dressed as monks at The High Line, one of New York City's most visited attractions. They wear orange robes and carry shiny medallions, stopping people in New York City to offer greetings of peace. The men identify themselves as Buddhist monks and solicit donations for a temple in Thailand. Photo: Frank Franklin II / Associated Press
Pedestrians pass a warning sign about panhandlers dressed as monks at The High Line, one of New York City’s most visited attractions. They wear orange robes and carry shiny medallions, stopping people in New York City to offer greetings of peace. The men identify themselves as Buddhist monks and solicit donations for a temple in Thailand. Photo: Frank Franklin II / Associated Press

His group has taken to the streets and social media to warn people that the men appear to have no affiliation to any Buddhist temple. “Please be aware,” read one Facebook post, “this is a scam.”

Along the popular High Line elevated park, one of the robed men handed a couple a shiny, gold-colored medallion and a plastic beaded bracelet. He then showed them photos of a planned temple and barked, “Ten dollars! Twenty dollars!” When they wouldn’t give up cash, he snatched the trinkets back.

Other brightly robed men have been spotted pulling the same routine, albeit more successfully, in Times Square, not far from where costumed characters such as Elmo, Minnie Mouse and the Naked Cowboy take pictures with tourists for tips. Some of the monks were later seen handing wads of cash to another man waiting nearby.

The Associated Press tried to ask more than half-dozen of the men about their background and the temple they said the donations were being used to support. Each claimed to be a Buddhist monk collecting money for a temple in Thailand, but none could give its name or say where exactly it is located. All the men refused to give their names and ran off when pressed for answers.

The men first started appearing at the High Line, a New York City public park that’s maintained by a private nonprofit group, about three years ago, said Robert Hammond, executive director of Friends of the High Line. But it “became excessive” in the past year, he said, with up to a dozen of the men accosting tourists at once and sometimes grabbing them to demand cash.

Panhandling on city streets isn’t illegal in New York, as long as the person isn’t acting aggressively. But the city’s parks department has a rule that says it is unlawful to solicit money without a permit from the parks commissioner.

When asked about the men, New York City Parks Commissioner Mitchell Silver initially said, “I have no idea what you’re talking about.” He later said that if the men aren’t abiding by the law, “the parks enforcement patrol will take care of it.”

But parks department spokeswoman Crystal Howard said parks enforcement officers hadn’t issued any summonses and the men’s actions were “aggressive panhandling,” a violation of state law that would be enforced by police. New York City police say that in the rare cases when someone has called 911 against the men, they were usually gone by the time officers arrived.

A few days after the AP inquired about the men on the High Line, several signs were posted there with photos of them, warning visitors not to give money to panhandlers.

Similarly robed men have been spotted in San Francisco, asking tourists to sign their “peace petition” before demanding cash. In China, authorities said the problem of “fake” monks begging in the streets prompted them to create an online registry of all actual Buddhist and Taoist sites.

In Times Square, the warnings came too late for tourist Rob Cardillo, of Pennsylvania. He gave a robed man USD$10 to help out with his temple, without ever asking anything about the temple or what the money would be used for.

“He might be fake, but it’s the thought and I feel it,” Cardillo said as he gripped the gold medallion.

Story: Michael Balsamo

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