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From Pilot to (Little) Prince, Saint-Exupery’s Flights of Fancy in Photos

BANGKOK — What is essential will be visible to the eye later this month at an exhibition of photographs featuring the author of “The Little Prince.”

To celebrate the 116th birthday of author Antoine de Saint-Exupery, Alliance Française Bangkok is launching Passions & Inspirations, a photo exhibition featuring scenes from his days flying for the first French airmail company which inspired his beloved literary works.

Saint-Exupery was a French aviation pioneer, poet and writer whose notable works include “Night Flight,” “Wind, Sand and Stars.” But it’s “The Little Prince” which has has been translated into around 250 languages and dialects to become the world’s No. 3 best-steller of all time.

Saint-Exupéry traveled widely in Europe, Africa and the United States before mysteriously disappearing in 1944 off the coast of France during an aerial reconnaissance mission. The pilot-author was later commemorated at the Panthéon in Paris in 1967.

A sculpture of “The Little Prince” by Bangkok-based visual artist Arnaud Nazare-Aga will also be on display.

The opening reception of Passions & Inspirations begins at 7pm on June 28, where there will be a screening of BBC documentary “Saint-Exupery, Le Dernier Chevalier du Ciel,” in French with English subtitles.

The exhibition runs through Aug. 28. Admission is free. Alliance Française Bangkok is located on Wireless Road, just a few minutes walk from MRT Lumpini Exit No. 3.

 

 

 

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Accusations Woman Harbors Ghost Escalate Into Forced Exorcism and Libel Complaint

Nattanida Saengsawang, in black, talks to police officers Monday at Buriram City Police Station.

BURIRAM — For spreading rumors a woman was possessed by a ghost, two residents in the northeast were accused of libel Monday.

For years, rumors that Buriram resident Phan Saengsawang was possessed by a pop brought the 52-year-old woman years of hatred and even physical abuse from superstitious neighbors, her daughter alleges in a criminal complaint.

“Lately I learned that my mother was accused of being a phi pop and she was often assaulted,” said Nattanida Saengsawang, who said she only recently learned of her mother’s predicament. “So I took days off from work to take care of my mother and brought her to file a complaint with police.”

About three years ago, 30-year-old Nattanida said, some people in her village started a rumor Phan was possessed by a pop, a type of “hungry ghost” known for feasting on human and animal entrails.

Recently, Nattanida said, the rumor intensified and Phan was blamed for the deaths of several people.

She said some villagers went so far as to forcefully conduct an exorcism of Phan in which a necromancer slapped her to drive away the ghost.

“I’d like to ask the villagers to stop accusing my mother already because she has been humiliated and living unhappily for three years now,” Nattanida said.

Capt. Ekkapong Dechprom of Buriram police said two people from the same village have been charged with defamation for spreading the rumor. He did not name the individuals. They will be brought to court Wednesday, he said.

According to Ekkapong, the two suspects had no known history of personal disputes with Phan.

“They never had a fight,” he said. “It’s like, that’s their belief. I don’t know what makes them believe in that kind of thing.”

Related stories:

Coup Soldiers Evacuate Post Because of ‘Ghost’

‘Possessed by Ghosts,’ Villagers Force Neighbors to Strip

Hotel Sues Singer Over Alleged Ghost Sightings

Buriram Villagers Use Red Shirts To Ward Off Ghost

Watch more videos from Bangkok and check out our YouTube channel!

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‘Jack Dekfarang’ Apologizes For Taxi Rant Which Riled Phuket

Jack Brown offers a wai offscreen to a taxi driver Monday at the Phuket Tourist Police station. Photo: Phuket Times Newspaper / Facebook

PHUKET — An expat and online personality whose rant about a Phuket tuk-tuk grabbed wide attention was called in by the authorities Monday to deliver a Thai-language mea culpa for getting it wrong.

Jack Brown, a Briton known online as Jack Dekfarang, apologized in front of the press at the Phuket Tourist Police station after authorities said there was nothing wrong with the 200 baht fare he complained about paying to travel one kilometer in a viral video posted Saturday.

“It is the maximum rate which can be bargained down,” said an unidentified official from the Phuket Land Transport Office after explaining the fare was approved by provincial authorities.

In the video posted Saturday, Brown documented his two-minute journey to Kata beach for which he was charged 200 baht.

“This is not a farang price, it’s for Thais as well,” Brown said in the video, speaking in Thai. “I don’t understand why the fare is so different from in Bangkok.”

Asking social media to help raise the issue, Brown’s video was shared more than 4,500 times, prompting Phuket authorities to call him in Monday.

Gouging by abusive taxi drivers ranks high among tourist complaints on Phuket, where transportation, organized crime and graft have been long intertwined.

Phuket Gov. Chamroen Tipayapongtada on Monday said the fare Brown paid was approved in 2013 and therefore not illegal and not something that should be complained about.

After the widely shared video caused massive distress in Phuket’s tourism sector, Brown went on tape again Monday before a throng of reporters to publicly apologize to the taxi driver and say he did not mean to defame Phuket tourism.

“I didn’t know we could bargain,” he said. “I think if taxi fares were cheaper, passengers would use them more, and drivers would have more jobs.”

Authorities said they would discuss adjusting the fares with drivers. They said they would also order warning signs installed in four languages for tourists saying that fares must be agreed to in advance.

Related stories:

Axe-Wielding Phuket Taxi Driver Arrested (Video)

Phuket Struggling To Battle Taxi And Nightclub ‘Mafia’

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Art/Music/Booze: Speedy Grandma Reborn to Host Saturday Party

Unchalee Anatawat presides over the ‘Unity Management Course’ in November at Speedy Grandma. Photo: Graham Meyer

BANGKOK — After four months in hibernation, the white-haired lady behind a Charoen Krung shophouse-bar-gallery will open her doors again Saturday night.

Regulars, newbies and artists local and international are invited to celebrate the return of Speedy Grandma at its Resurrection party, where they can satisfy their high-culture needs for music, booze and art.

“We closed it around the end of February, and now we wanna see everyone again,” cofounder Unchalee “Lee” Anantawat said. “The new direction will be something like a zine workshop, where people come to get more involved in some way, not just stop by to take a brief look at artwork and go.”

Read: Zines Reborn: Inky Fingers Keep DIY Publishing Alive in Bangkok

Hear the fresh-faced punk aspirants of Radical Rat, a six-piece electronic mini-orchestra from Melbourne called Tek Tek ensemble, as well as the exp-tending sounds of Natchanol Vatanakuljaras. You don’t go to a party without DJs? Well, DJs Target-C and Krit Morton will have you covered.

Apart from the full spectrum of alt-music, Makha Sanewong Na Ayuthaya and Sirasith Poopatanapong will present a visual arts installation.

Admission is 250 baht and includes one drink. The party starts at 7pm on Saturday and goes until 1am at Speedy Grandma, which is located about a kilometer from MRT Hua Lamphong.

Speedy Grandma Soi Charoen Krung 28 Si Phraya Pier

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84th Birthday of Thai Democracy to be Marked Friday

Activists place flowers and garlands around a small plaque memorializing the 1932 Revolution on June 24, 2015 in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Though democracy may not be restored for at least another year, some people will commemorate its very beginning later this week.

At least four events are already planned across Bangkok on June 24, the 84th anniversary of the revolt that replaced absolute monarchy with parliamentary democracy.

First, there’s an annual vigil at a tiny plaque marking the very spot where revolutionaries announced the beginning of democracy that day. It’s located several meters east of the Rama V Statue in the Royal Plaza in the capital’s Dusit district.

This year’s 6am candlelight vigil will be led by Sirawith “Ja New” Seritiwat, the outspoken pro-democracy activist who faces numerous charges for defying the junta’s ban on protests.

“No group has announced it will host one yet, so this year I will host it myself,” Sirawith wrote on his Facebook.

At 9am, a Kasetsart University student activist group called Free Kasetsart is will commemorate the 1932 Revolution at the Defense of the Constitution Monument in the northern district of Laksi.

The obelisk memorializes the crushing of the royalist rebellion that sought to topple the new democratic regime in 1933. The Free Kasetsart group announced via Facebook that participants will “dust off” the monument to pay tribute to the revolutionary victory over the pro-palace insurgency staged by Prince Boworadet.

“We’ll clean the monument [that marked] victory by the democratic side over the Boworadet Rebellion, which aimed to destroy Thai democracy,” it said.

Two panel discussions are set for that afternoon. The first one, titled “A Democratic Society: Values and Hopes,” will be held at 2.00pm on Soi Sukhumvit 55 at the Pridi Banomyong Institute, an organization that bears the namesake of statesman Pridi Banomyong, one of the leaders of the 1932 Revolution.

The panel will feature political scientists and economists including Thammasat University lecturer Vannapar Tirasangka.

A second panel discussion will be held at Thammasat University’s Tha Prachan campus at 5pm. It will be organized by New Democracy Movement, an activist group opposed to military rule.

Rangsiman Rome, a leader of the group, said the discussion will be about the revolution’s legacy. He said the speakers and specific location would be named later Monday on the group’s Facebook page.

Rome said he informed police about the event.

Watch a video of last year’s commemoration of the revolution:

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UN Says 65 Million People Displaced in 2015, a New Record

In this Monday, May 30, 2016 file photo, an Afghan boy shepherd walks his sheep near a temporary housing in Kabul, Afghanistan. Photo: Rahmat Gul / Associated Press

GENEVA  — The U.N. refugee agency says persecution and conflict in places like Syria and Afghanistan raised the total number of refugees and internally displaced people worldwide to a record 65.3 million at the end of last year.

The previous year, 2014, had already seen the highest number of refugees worldwide since World War II, with 60 million displaced people. But last year — when Europe staggered under the arrival of large numbers of migrants — topped that record by nearly 10 percent, the UNHCR said Monday in unveiling its annual Global Trends Report.

The Geneva-based agency urged leaders from Europe and elsewhere to do more to end the wars that are fanning the exodus of people from their homelands.

“I hope that the message carried by those forcibly displaced reaches the leaderships: We need action, political action, to stop conflicts,” said Filippo Grandi, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. “The message that they have carried is: ‘If you don’t solve problems, problems will come to you.'”

With stark detail, UNHCR said that on average, 24 people had been displaced every minute of every day last year — or 34,000 people a day — up from 6 every minutes in 2005. Global displacement has roughly doubled since 1997, and risen by 50 percent since 2011 alone — when the Syria war began.

More than half of all refugees came from three countries: Syria, Afghanistan and Somalia.

Turkey was the “top host” country for the second year running, taking in 2.5 million people — nearly all from neighboring Syria. Afghan neighbor Pakistan had 1.6 million, while Lebanon, next to Syria, hosted 1.1 million.

Grandi said policymakers and advocacy groups admittedly face daunting challenges helping the largest subset of displaced people: Some 40.8 million internally displaced in countries in conflict. Another 21.3 million were refugees and some 3.2 million more were seeking asylum.

More than a million people fled to Europe last year, causing a political crisis in the EU.

Grandi called on countries to work to fight the xenophobia that has accompanied the rise in refugee populations, and decried both physical barriers — like fences erected by some European countries — as well as legislative ones that limit access to richer, more peaceful EU states.

Such European policies were “spreading a negative example around the world,” he said.

“There is no plan B for Europe in the long run,” Grandi said. “Europe will continue to receive people seeking asylum. Their numbers may vary … but it is inevitable.”

 

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Auditor-General Revives Probe on Bogus Bomb Detectors

Minister of Interior Affairs Chaovarat Chanweerakul, center, on Dec. 3, 2009, demonstrates the so-called "Alpha 6" narcotics detectors that were later exposed to be bogus.

BANGKOK — The Office of Auditor-General said he wanted to give it another try in the effort to hold the authorities accountable for wasting millions of baht on bogus bomb detectors sold by a British conman.

Five years since it came to light that more than one billion baht was spent on fake devices, a renewed call to hold someone accountable has come days after a British court seized assets belonging to the Briton behind the international scam.

The government’s auditor in chief says he has asked officials to look into the multi-million baht purchases again and see what can be done about it.

“I will also present this issue to the meeting at the Office of Public Sector Anti-Corruption Commission,” Auditor-General Pisit Leelavachiropas told Isra News on Sunday.

From 2005 to 2009, British businessman James McCormick sold Thailand what he claimed were hand-held bomb detectors, devices called GT200. He also sold similar devices said to sniff out narcotics called Alpha 6.

The devices, which were later discovered to do nothing, for 900,000 baht to 1.2 million baht each. A total of 772 devices were purchased. When the deals were done, Thailand had spent more than 1 billion baht.

It later emerged that the “detectors” were nothing more than metal cylinders attached to a radio antennae that McCormick bought at USD$20 per device. A test staged by the government in 2011 found the devices as inaccurate, and security forces were ordered to stop using the equipment.

A British court in 2013 sent McCormick to prison for 10 years and this past Wednesday ordered his property seized. No one in Thailand was ever held accountable for using state funds to buy the bogus bomb detectors, and some officials continued to insist they were useful.

A 2013 inquiry by the Department of Special Investigation went nowhere, and just today deputy Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwan insisted that the detectors indeed work “sometimes.” He also welcomed the call for a new inquiry by the auditor-general, as he believes the military did nothing wrong.

“They’re welcome to inspect it, because we sought out and bought the devices transparently,” Gen. Prawit said.

Related stories:

Defender of Fake Bomb Detector Appointed Top Forensic Science Job

Army’s 350 Mil Baht Airship Breaks Down Again After Re-launch

Fake Bomb Detectors in Attacked Pakistani Airport Used By Thai Army

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Blaze Tears Through Famous Border Market, Again

At least six shops at Rong Kluea Market near the Cambodian border are destroyed by fire early Monday morning.

SA KAEO — A large fire burned through a famous sprawling border market near a popular land crossing into Cambodia in the early hours of Monday.

Police said they were still investigating the cause of the fire which burned down two blocks of shops in the Rong Kluea Market at about 1am. It took 90 minutes to get the blaze under control.

“The goods inside were those which can be fuel for a fire, such as clothes, electronics and umbrellas,” said local police Col. Seksan Wattanapong.

The market, known for selling counterfeit products at bargain prices, was nearly destroyed by fires twice in 2014.

 

Related stories:

Vendors Shut Down Police Counterfeit Crackdown

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‘I’m Capt. Joe’ Road Rager Wasn’t Cop But Gun Was Real

BANGKOK — A man who claimed to be a policeman and pulled a handgun on another motorist in Bangkok was arrested Sunday.

Although Udomsap Lomkaew, 40, was not a police officer as claimed in the now-viral video, the gun he used was definitely real, and he’s now charged with several offenses including possessing a firearm, police said.

“He acted in rage,” Col. Sompot Suwancharas, chief of Bang Pong Pang Police Station, said of Udomsap’s actions. “He’s now under custody.”

Udomsap was arrested in Korat.

Police serve an arrest warrant to Udomsap Lomkaew, in white, Sunday in Korat
Police serve an arrest warrant to Udomsap Lomkaew, in white, Sunday in Korat

Police identified Udomsap as the man seen in a dashcam video stopping another motorist on Rama III Road on Thursday before threatening him with a gun. The video was later widely shared online.

“You think you’re such a badass?” the man was heard shouting in the video. “Do you know who I am? I’m sarawat [police captain] Joe. I’m gonna smash your face. Don’t you think about messing with me you bastard!”

Col. Sompot said Udomsap, who turned out to be a civilian, has been charged with illegal possession of a firearm, carrying a firearm in a residential area without a permit and causing other individuals to fear for their life or liberty.

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‘Star Trek’ Actor Anton Yelchin Killed in Freak Accident

Anton Yelchin as Pavel Chekov in a promotional image for 2009's 'Star Trek' reboot.

LOS ANGELES — Anton Yelchin, a rising actor best known for playing Chekov in the new “Star Trek” films, was killed by his own car as it rolled down his driveway early Sunday, police and his publicist said.

The car pinned Yelchin, 27, against a brick mailbox pillar and a security fence at his home in Los Angeles, Officer Jenny Hosier said. He had gotten out of the vehicle momentarily, but police did not say why he was behind it when it started rolling.

Yelchin was on his way to meet friends for a rehearsal, Hosier said. When he didn’t show up, the group came to his home and found him dead.

The freak accident tragically cuts short the promising career of an actor whom audiences were still getting to know, and who had great artistic ambition. “Star Trek Beyond,” the third film in the rebooted series, comes out in July.

Director J.J. Abrams, who cast Yelchin in the franchise, wrote in a statement that he was “brilliant … kind … funny as hell, and supremely talented.”

His death was felt throughout the industry.

“What a rare and beautiful soul with his unstoppable passion for life,” Jodie Foster said. “He was equal parts serious thinker and the most fun little brother you could ever dream of.”

Yelchin co-starred in Foster’s 2011 film “The Beaver.”

“He was a ferocious movie buff who put us all to shame,” said Gabe Klinger, who directed Yelchin in the upcoming film “Porto,” likely to be released this fall. “He was watching four or five movies every night.”

Klinger said Yelchin had a particular affinity for silent films.

Yelchin began acting as a child, taking small roles in independent films and various television shows, such as “ER,” ”The Practice,” and “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” His breakout big-screen role came opposite Anthony Hopkins in 2001’s “Hearts in Atlantis.”

He transitioned into teen roles in films such as the crime thriller “Alpha Dog” and the comedy “Charlie Bartlett.” He also played a young Kyle Reese in 2009’s “Terminator Salvation.”

Yelchin, an only child, was born in Russia. His parents were professional figure skaters who moved the family to the United States when Yelchin was a baby. He briefly flirted with skating lessons, too, before discovering that he wasn’t very skilled on the ice. That led him to acting class.

“I loved the improvisation part of it the most, because it was a lot like just playing around with stuff. There was something about it that I just felt completely comfortable doing and happy doing,” Yelchin told The Associated Press in 2011 while promoting the romantic drama “Like Crazy.” He starred opposite Felicity Jones.

“(My father) still wanted me to apply to college and stuff, and I did,” Yelchin said. “But this is what I wanted.”

The discipline that Yelchin learned from his athlete parents translated into his work as an actor, which he treated with seriousness and professionalism, said Klinger, the director.

He drew on his Russian roots for his role as the heavily accented navigator Chekov in the “Star Trek” films, his most high-profile to date.

“What’s great about him is he can do anything. He’s a chameleon. He can do bigger movies or smaller, more intimate ones,” ”Like Crazy” director Drake Doremus told the AP in 2011. “There are a lot of people who can’t, who can only do one or the other. … That’s what blows my mind.”

Yelchin seemed to fit in anywhere in Hollywood. He could do big sci-fi franchises and vocal work in “The Smurfs,” while also appearing in more eccentric and artier fare, like Jim Jarmusch’s vampire film “Only Lovers Left Alive” and Jeremy Saulnier’s horror thriller “Green Room,” a cult favorite that came out earlier this year.

Klinger recalled a conversation with Jarmusch about Yelchin before Klinger cast him in “Porto.”

“Jim was like, ‘Watch out. Anton read Dostoyevsky when he was like 11 years old!'” Klinger said.

The director said that for Yelchin, every film was an opportunity to learn and study more. He admired Nicolas Cage’s laser-focus on the Paul Schrader film “Dying of the Light” and also got to work with one of his acting heroes, Willem Dafoe, on the film “Odd Thomas.”

“He used to refer to Willem as an artist, not an actor,” Klinger said. “That’s the kind of actor he aspired to be, where people didn’t regard him as an actor, they regarded him as an artist.”

Yelchin’s publicist, Jennifer Allen, confirmed his death and said his family requests privacy.

Story: Lindsey Bahr, Sandy Cohen

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