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Myanmar’s Betel Chewers Swallowing Hard at High Prices (Photos)

In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo, a retail seller wraps "Kun-ya" at a market in Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

THANPHYUYONE, Myanmar  — It’s as vital to life in Myanmar as cheese is to France or tea to Britain. For millions of people in the Southeast Asian country, the day is incomplete without chewing the juicy, teeth-staining parcels of betel leaf wrapped around areca nut and a slake of lime.

But Myanmar’s dedicated legions of red-toothed betel nut chewers are now having to swallow hard — at the thought of paying double for what’s known as “kun-ya,” thanks to extreme weather that has caused a sharp spike in prices of the ingredients for the addictive stimulant.

A severe drought this summer wreaked havoc on betel leaf and areca nut farms, which rely heavily on irrigation. This was followed by violent rainstorms that debilitated the remaining crop.

In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo wholesale vendors sort and stack betel leafs at a market in suburban Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo wholesale vendors sort and stack betel leafs at a market in suburban Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

Nowhere is the poor harvest more greatly felt than in Thanphyuyone, a village where every morning farmers pick mature leaves that are lined inside bamboo baskets and sent to wholesale markets in nearby Yangon, the country’s commercial capital.

“Betel farmers usually rely on the water from the village reservoir to grow betel leaves, but as this year brought us drought, we lost a huge amount of betel leaves and there was nothing we could do,” said Kyi Lwin, a 42-year-old betel farmer.

The extreme weather variations have been blamed on El Nino, a warming of parts of the Pacific Ocean that changes weather worldwide.

In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo, a vender stacks betel leaves in a basket at a market in suburban Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo, a vender stacks betel leaves in a basket at a market in suburban Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

The bright green betel leaves, as large as an adult palm, normally cost USD$1.80 (60 baht) to USD$2.50 (90 baht) per kilogram. But because of the shortage, the price has gone up nearly four times to 11,000 kyat or USD$9 (300 baht) per kilogram. That’s as much as the daily wage of a construction worker.

“It has only happened this year,” said Myo Lin Tun, a seller in the Thirimingalar wholesale market in Yangon.

Chewing of kun-ya goes back centuries in Myanmar. Every village, town and city in the country has small kiosks that usually sell packs of four kun-ya portions for about 10 cents. In Yangon, 25-year-old construction worker Phyo They Paing grumbles that he now gets only half the usual bang for his buck.

“I used to get four packets for 100 kyats (3 baht) and I was happy with that,” he says. “But now I just get two. I’m pretty disappointed with that.”

The betel leaf is wrapped around a mixture of areca nuts, lime, spices and sometimes tobacco. Aficionados chew them throughout the day, filling their mouths with a red sludge of betel juice and saliva that they dispose of with abandon in the open. Great red streams of the juice line sidewalks, bus stops, walls, public restrooms and everywhere else.

What’s left are teeth and gums stained red.

 In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo, a habitual " kun-ya" eater with some betel leaves in his mouth smiles in Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
In this Friday, June 3, 2016 photo, a habitual ” kun-ya” eater with some betel leaves in his mouth smiles in Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

A recent Health Ministry and World Health Organization survey showed that 62 percent of men and 24 percent of women in Myanmar use smokeless tobacco products such as kun-ya, carrying a serious risk of oral cancer.

Many who sport the giveaway red teeth are bus, truck and taxi drivers who say its stimulant quality helps them stay alert.

Last month, the government issued an order instructing all employees not to chew betel during office hours and not to allow betel vendors inside government facilities.

Story: Min Kyi Thein and Esther Htusan

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Those Found in Brothel ‘Bribery List’ Say They Know Nothing

An official talks to some of the staff at Nataree Entertainment during the Tuesday raid.

BANGKOK — Individuals whose nicknames and phone numbers were found in an alleged bribery ledger during a raid on a large brothel where underage girls were rescued from said they had nothing to do with the illicit business.


Underage Girls, Police ‘Bribe Ledger’ Discovered in Raid on Ratchada Flesh Parlor


Some of them said they weren’t even aware that their names were in the booklet kept by the manager of Nataree Entertainment, where at least nine minors were found among more than 120 sex workers. The ledger purported to keep track of bribes the brothel pays to law enforcement officers each month.

Calls to eight numbers seen in the book were picked up by three men Thursday afternoon. None included figures of bribes with their names, and all disavowed any knowledge of the alleged bribes.

“I don’t know. I don’t know anything at all. I didn’t even know my name is in it,” said a policeman listed as “Uan,” who declined to provide his full name. He said the only connection he had with Nataree was that he raided the place “five or six years ago.”

“But I never received any bribe,” Uan said.

The other two, listed as “Pae” and “Corporal Chai,” said they are not police officers.

“I absolutely never took bribes from them. No bribe at all. You can check my background. I’m not even a cop,” Pae said. “How did my number get in there? I’m confused.”

Chai also expressed bemusement.

“I don’t know anything about this. I don’t know. I’m not a cop, too. I don’t know anything. That’s all,” he said.

Other names – “Sgt. Naem,” “Kung,” “Nuum CSD,” “Auan Police,” “Maj. Buekbin,” and “Nuum CSD 2” – either did not answer their phones or had them turned off.

Investigation Launched

The raid on Nataree, one of the so-called “massage parlors” which line the red light district of Ratchadapisek Road, was conducted not by police but officials from the Ministry of Interior Affairs, who said they were tipped off by a foreign NGO the brothel engaged in human trafficking.

In Wednesday’s raid, they found 121 sex workers, mostly from neighboring countries. Nine were girls under 18, police said after the raid.

Also found was the ledger, filled with what appeared to be names of different police units and individuals, along with how much they were paid in bribes.

“Tourism Police, 10,000; 191 Emergency Police, 25,000; Special Branch Police, 30,000; Huai Khwang Detective Police, 24,000; Immigration, 76,000,” read a portion of the list.

The head of the local Huai Khwang Police Station and his deputies have been transferred from active duty as punishment for not taking action against Nataree sooner. The Metropolitan Police Bureau said they would investigation the ledger.

“Every police station must be strict,” interim metro police chief Sanit Mahatavorn said at a Wednesday news conference. “They shouldn’t think they don’t have to be strict on places that have licenses. They must see whether there’s any prostitution at those places, especially if there’s any people under 18. If there’s wrongdoing, they must take action.”

That portion of Ratchadapisek Road is one of Bangkok’s few areas zoned by the government as an “entertainment district,” along with Royal City Avenue and Patpong.

Related stories:

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Fake Cop Busted for Extorting Bribes in Pattaya

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Owner of Alleged Tiger Butchery Denies Links to Tiger Temple, Trafficking

Thawat Kajornchaikul, also known as Sia Tong, in blue cap, speaks to officers and the media Wednesday afternoon outside his house in Kanchanaburi city.

KANCHANABURI — The owner of a home where authorities suspect tigers linked to the now shuttered Tiger Temple were slaughtered went public Wednesday afternoon to deny the allegations.

Thawat Kajornchaikul, aka Sia Tong, appeared at 2:30pm on Wednesday at the residence he owns in Kanchanaburi city, where four tigers were found locked in cages. The 60-year-old man showed documents he said showed he was authorized to possess the four protected animals and has the property rights to his residence.

On Tuesday, the widening investigation into the so-called Tiger Temple’s links to international wildlife tracking brought authorities to Thawat’s home, where they suspect tigers were killed for their meat, pelts and other parts. Thawat told police he was given two big cats from an acquaintance over a decade ago, and said the two younger tigers were their offspring.

“Sia Tong said he got the tigers innocently without any malicious intentions,” Pol. Lt. Col. Sansern Siripan of the Economic Crime Suppression Division. “He was cooperative with us, which helped us investigate more easily”

According to Sansern, all four tigers were DNA-tested to see if they are related to those from the temple, which was raided and had all its 137 tigers removed last week. No microchips were found in those held by Thawat, Sansern said.

Officers are investigating whether Sia Tong’s documents are legitimate and waiting for the DNA results, Sansern said.

Tigers on Wednesday afternoon at Sia Tong’s house
Tigers on Wednesday afternoon at Sia Tong’s house

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Related stories:

Suspected Tiger Meat Slaughterhouse Found Near Tiger Temple

 

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Tourist Safety Pattaya’s No. 1 Priority, New Police Chief Says

Apichai Klobpetch (middle) speaks to reporters Wednesday night during the inspection of a massage parlor in Pattaya.

PATTAYA — The new commander of Pattaya police said preventing crime and keeping tourists safe are his top priorities.

Formerly police commander in the southern province of Trang, Col. Apichai Klobpetch made the pledge on the fourth day on the job in the coastal resort town renowned for its checkered nightlife, high criminality and endless stories of scams and fraud.

In a phone interview, Apichai outlined three policies Pattaya police will pursue under his command: better roads, policing and safety.

“First, we will manage the traffic, to provide convenience to tourists and reduce accidents. Second, we will decrease crimes. We will put a control on crimes, to make them happen as rarely as possible,” Apichai said. “Third, and this is the most important one, taking care of tourists’ safety. We will provide security for their lives and possessions.”

Apichai said he is undaunted by Pattaya’s reputation as a place where tourists are assaulted and scammed almost on a daily basis.

“I’m not troubled,” Apichai said. “We will develop our police force to work with strength. We will keep their morale high.”

On Wednesday night Apichai led an inspection of five massage parlors in Pattaya’s red light district to look for any wrongdoing. He said he found none but instructed the owners to strictly respect the law.

Apichai talks to the owner of one of the massage parlors in Pattaya on Wednesday.
Apichai talks to the owner of one of the massage parlors in Pattaya on Wednesday.

Apichai’s appointment is a part of a massive shakeup in the national police force, which has seen hundreds of officers reshuffled around the country.

Apichai replaced Col. Sukthat Pumpanmuang, who had been the head of Pattaya Police Station since early 2015. Sukthat, now the commander of a police station in the relatively more peaceful province of Chachoengsao, said he has full confidence in in his successor.

“I went to the same class in the police academy with him,” Sukthat said. “I believe he’s ready to tackle the challenges. He used to work in the southern border provinces, so he can handle it.”

Asked to reflect on his past job, Sukthat said he’s “satisfied, to a certain degree.”

“I wouldn’t say the situation in Pattaya got better under my watch,” Sukthat said. “It’s not exactly ‘better.’ We managed to hold the line. Pattaya is a tourist city, so we certainly faced many issues.”

His advice for Apichai? Be prepared.

“Prepare your mind well to face any issue, because it’s a tourist city,” Sukthat said. “Each day, so many issues happen. So many issues. It’s not really serious, but they are mostly about money. I want him to be prepared.”

Related stories:

Pattaya Baht Bus Driver Beaten by Tourists

Sex Worker Arrested for Attacking Italian Tourist in Pattaya 

Young Recidivist Arrested for Snatching Tourist’s Bag in Pattaya

Russian Tourist Beaten Bloody on Pattaya Walking Street

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Ja New Challenges Facebook to Restore His Lost Account

A March 5 post on the defunct Facebook page of Sirawith Seritiwat recovered from Google's cache.

BANGKOK — Pro-democracy activist Sirawith Seritiwat, aka Ja New, is calling on Facebook to help him recover his account lost about a month ago.

A month after authorities seized his computers from his home, Sirawith suspects they were able to access his account and has publicly called on Facebook to take action because he has had no success in getting any response from the California-based social media giant that maintains a hidden presence in Bangkok.

“I have been trying over a month but still can’t access my old Facebook account,” said Sirawith, who said he’s exhausted normal channels to seek help.

In September, Facebook opened a Bangkok office at an undisclosed location and prefers to handle requests through its international PR firm, Hill & Knowlton. A Hill & Knowlton publicist said Thursday she would have to seek a reply from Facebook.

Meanwhile Sirawith is threatening to issue a public letter in hope Facebook does something to help.

“I may need to issue a public letter in order to verify my identity and seek explanations from Facebook Thailand in order to rectify this error,” he wrote in a message.

Hill & Knowlton’s Kanokwan Akkawaranukul confirmed that Facebook Thailand does exist in a undisclosed location and people wanting to contact Facebook Thailand should talk to Hill & Knowlton instead.

Just before noon Thursday, Sirawith said his calls to Kanokwan had gone unanswered.

 

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There have been several cases of anti-junta activists losing their Facebook accounts in recent months, but Sirawith presents the highest profile case, as he has become one of the most public faces of the pro-democracy movement.

Sirawith believes the junta played a role in something to do with it because it happened after his computers were taken from his resident a month after the National Council for Peace and Order in relations to the lese majeste charge against his mother.

Facebook has been regarded with distrust by activists since authorities said they accused two people of defaming the monarchy based on private messages sent over the service. Through Hill & Knowlton, Facebook denied providing any access to the authorities.

Last month Facebook took the seemingly unprecedented step of censoring a page that satirized the monarchy, making it unviewable from Thailand, where insulting the Royal Family is a criminal offense punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

Update: Sirawith said late Thursday afternoon he will go ahead with a public appeal to Facebook after being told by Hill & Knowlton rep Kanokwan there’s nothing the PR firm can do.

Related stories:

Facebook Blocks Thailand From Page Satirizing Monarchy

Facebook Denies Giving User Data to Thai Junta

Facebookers Panic Over Fears Junta ‘Hacking’ Accounts

Detained Facebookers Allege Chat Evidence Obtained Illegally

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Silom Walking Street Suspended for Rainy Season

Silom Walking Street Photo: National News Bureau of Thailand

BANGKOK — Silom Road’s biweekly walking street market has been indefinitely suspended for the rainy season.

The market held on alternating Sundays along both sides of Silom Road was canceled out of concern about convenience and public safety as vendors typically wire their stalls into the power grid for the open air market, said Bang Rak district chief Supawadee Sitthikornphaibul.

The market, which was most recently revived again in December, was established to give vendors displaced by the city an opportunity to sell. It’s usually held from 3pm to 9pm along the busy street from Sala Daeng intersection down to Naradhiwas Road.

Officials said it will resume after the end of the rainy season but did not give a date.

 

Related stories:

Silom Walking Street: Sunday Market is New Again

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Constitutional Court Agrees to Review Repressive Referendum Law

The Election Commission unveiled a mascot May 25 to encourage voters to turn out for the Aug. 7 referendum on the junta-backed constitution draft.

BANGKOK — The Constitutional Court agreed Wednesday to review the law which effectively banned any kind of campaigning for the upcoming vote on the new constitution.

The decision by the court means the fate of the Aug. 7 referendum is now uncertain, as junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha has also threatened the poll may be canceled altogether should the court void the law.

The Constitutional Court announced it will convene to determine whether the law, passed in April and known as the Constitution Referendum Act, violates freedom of expression as alleged by the activists which brought the challenge.

In contention is Section 61 of the Act, which forbids any dissemination of “text, images, sounds,” whether in print or online, that “deviates from the facts or contains manners that are violent, aggressive, rude, inciting or intimidating.” Violators face up to 10 years in prison and a 200,000 baht fine.

As the drafter and enforcer of the law, the interim parliament and the Election Commission were ordered to submit written testimony to the court by June 15.

On May 10, activists from Internet Law Reform Dialogue, a legal reform advocacy group, filed the complaint against the referendum law with the Office of Ombudsman, asking it to forward the case to the Constitutional Court. The Ombudsman did so June 1, leading to the court’s announcement Wednesday.

Critics of the junta-backed draft charter said the law has been aggressively enforced to silence their views. Some activists have said they will boycott the upcoming referendum to protest the restrictions.

If the court decides to strike down the referendum law, Gen. Prayuth told reporters June 2 he may just cancel the whole thing.

“Whatever the result says, we will accept it,” the junta chairman said. “If it violates [the interim constitution] we will have to postpone the vote. I don’t mind. But if it’s really postponed, don’t accuse me of ordering the postponement.”

 

Related stories:

Vote No’ Bloc Accuses ‘Don’t Vote’ Crowd of Being Junta Shills

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

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Axl Rose Demands Google Take Down Unflattering Pictures

Axl Rose performs with AC/DC at the Olympic Stadium in London, Saturday, June 4, 2016. Photo: Mark Allan / Invision / Associated Press

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Axl Rose is demanding Google take down several unflattering images of him that have been used as part of an internet meme mocking his physical appearance.

Harvard University’s Lumen Database lists at least 11 requests made on behalf of the Guns n’ Roses frontman citing copyright violations since May 31. The requests center on the “Fat Axl Rose” meme. One of the images Rose wants taken down includes the message, “Remember the 80s? He ate them.”

Google says it sends all such requests to the Lumen Database for publication. The database shows Rose used a British company, Web Sheriff, to make the requests.

Neither Rose nor Web Sheriff immediately responded to a request for comment.

Related stories: 

Former Guns N’ Roses Guitarist to Shred Silom 

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Roads to Close For Celebration of King’s 70 Years on Throne

Grand Palace Photo: IsabelleAcatauassu / Flickr

BANGKOK — Traffic around the Grand Palace will be closed tomorrow morning until noon to accommodate celebrations of His Majesty’s ascension to the throne.

On the occasion of 70th anniversary of King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s accession to the throne, roads will be closed as a merit-making ceremony led by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha is held at Wat Phra Kaew inside the Grand Palace on Thursday morning.

Connecting routes including Na Phra Lan and Sanam Chai roads will be closed from 5am to noon. Some roads such as Maha Rat and Thai Wang will allow one-way traffic, according to Phrarachawang and Chanasongkhram police.

The ceremony is set to begin at 7:39am when the acting Supreme Patriarch along with 770 monks gather to accept morning alms in front of the palace. They will then move inside the temple for a prayer ceremony.

Ceremonies for every faith will be simultaneously celebrated throughout the nation Thursday.

 

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EgyptAir Flight Lands in Uzbekistan After Bomb Threat

This August 21, 2015 file photo shows an EgyptAir Airbus A320 with the registration SU-GCC taking off from Vienna International Airport, Austria. Photo: Thomas Ranner / Associated Press

CAIRO  — Egyptians officials say a bomb threat has forced an EgyptAir plane en route to Beijing from Cairo to make an emergency landing in Uzbekistan.

The passengers have been evacuated and the aircraft is now being searched.

The plane, an Airbus A-330-220 with 135 passengers and crew on board, landed in Uzbekistan three hours after it took off from Cairo at around 11:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

The plane landed at the airport in the town of Urgench, about 840 kilometers west of the Uzbek capital, Tashkent.

The officials say said an anonymous caller telephoned security agents at the Cairo airport to say that a bomb was on board the flight. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Story: Hamza Hendawi

Related stories:

Forensic Official: EgyptAir 804 Human Remains Suggest Blast

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