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Elderly Thai Elephant Dies in Depressing Japanese Zoo

Photo: Thai Embassy in Tokyo / Facebook

TOKYO — An elderly Thai elephant that set off a petition drive to move her out of a small concrete pen in Japan died this morning.

Hanako, or “flower child,” was a gift from Bangkok to Tokyo in 1949 and lived in Inokashira Park Zoo in Tokyo since she was 2. She was Japan’s oldest elephant, and her life of 69 years was long for captive Asian elephants.

Zoo spokesman Naoya Ohashi said Hanako was discovered lying on her side Thursday morning and repeated efforts to raise her upright were not successful. She died peacefully in the afternoon. He said an autopsy would be done to determine the cause.

A petition sought Hanako’s move to a Thai sanctuary, but the zoo said she was too old to move.

Story: Associated Press

 

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Did GrabBike Really Go Dark? These Motosai Say No.

Dozens of traditional motorcycle taxi drivers visit Government Complex in Chaengwattana Thursday to file a complaint against GrabBike and UberMoto.

BANGKOK — Fans of motorcycle taxi alternative GrabBike were disappointed when it shut down last week. But has it?

On the same morning junta chief Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha spoke of developing a digital economy, a group of traditional motorcycle taxi drivers Thursday called for the arrest of taxi operators they say are still out there giving rides illegally.

Vichien Chumchuen, 52, led a group of around 50 drivers on a tour of the capital to file complaints at the Department of Land Transport, Government House and the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology.

A representative at the ICT Ministry told Vichien and his group it cannot shut the application since it does not violate the Computer Crime Act.

Last week the two services said they would suspend operations after transportation officials demanded they do so a second time because they were not compliant with regulations.

On Thursday, GrabBike’s application still showed drivers and appeared to function, and people claimed to have used the service on social media.

Customer inquiries on GrabBike’s Facebook page were referred to its package delivery service, adding to speculation that passengers are still getting rides by booking themselves as a “package” to be delivered.

A spokeswoman with the firm representing Grab said she did not know whether it was still possible to use the service. But, Nattianan Vanichchanant said, the company was in a “transition period.”

The government’s campaign against services such as Uber and Grab has been criticized as inconsistent with its calls for developing a more tech-savvy economy of digital creators.

Earlier Thursday, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha called for developing Thailand to be the center of a digital ASEAN at a government fair called Digital Thailand 2016. He said every sector of the country must embrace technology.

On Tuesday, the head of the Department of Land Transport said it fully supports technology, so long as it’s used legally.

“If there is a law that was not really supportive of them, we are willing to amend it,” Sanit Promwong said.

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‘You Wanna Fight?’ Bangkok Moto Taxis Confront GrabBike

UberMoto Ignores Same Ban Ignored by GrabBike

GrabBike Responds to Govt Ban With Big Discount and Apathy

Military, Police to Monitor GrabBike Shutdown

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Snowden and Info Vigilantes on Screen This Weekend

Promotional posters of ‘Citizenfour’ (left) and ‘1971’ (right)

BANGKOK — When Laura Poitras turned the story of her reporting on Edward Snowden into a documentary, she and her fellow filmmakers were sued by a retired military officer for causing “irreparable damage to the safety of the American people.” Worse for Snowden, who’s been unable to return home for fear of imprisonment.

That same year, a number of activists chose to finally go public with their identities 43 years after who 43 years after stealing classified files from an FBI office they later sent to the media.

Both stories about the tension between governments who want to hold secrets, and the whistleblowers who bring light to them through the media, will be told through documentaries showing free Saturday afternoon in Thonglor.

“Citizenfour” (2014) focuses on American tech contractor Edward Snowden and his exposure of the National Security Agency’s massive, global information gathering. It’s directed by Poitras and relies heavily on interviews of Snowden conducted in Hong Kong and Moscow along with reporter Glenn Greenwald. After the film won an Academy Award for best documentary in 2015, a bizarre lawsuit filed by a retired navy officer was dropped.

Showing next is “1971” (2014), which tells the story of eight activists who broke into an FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania, to steal classified files they then mailed to the media. Among the programs exposed by the vigilante whistleblowers was an illegal domestic spying program operated by bureau director J. Edgar Hoover.

“Citizenfour” starts at 2pm and “1971” at 4:30pm in the auditorium of the Pridi Banomyong Institute.

Admission is free. The movies are in English with Thai subtitles. The institute is on Soi Sukhumvit 55, a short walk from BTS Thong Lo.
 


 

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After Show of Yielding, Powerful Dhammakaya Abbot Defies Authorities Again

Monks line up outside a Pathum Thani police station Thursday afternoon.

BANGKOK — Hundreds of monks lined up along a road this afternoon where the supreme leader of a powerful Buddhist sect was to turn himself in to answer charges of fraud. To the surprise of few, he didn’t.

News that Dhammachayo, abbot of Dhammakaya, would surrender came after weeks of confrontation pitting some of Thailand’s most powerful institutions in an epic tug-of-war, with the Department of Special Investigation accusing the head of the controversial megatemple of embezzling billions, charges the latter rejects as a politically motivated smear campaign.

According to the statement released by Dhammakaya’s press office to the media, Dhammachayo was to arrive at the Khlong Luang Police Station in northern metro Bangkok at around 2:30pm – nine days after a court approved an arrest warrant for the 72-year-old abbot.

At about 3pm, the abbot’s aides said he had passed out and was being revived by paramedics. DSI officials asked they take him to Thammasat University Hospital. His aides replied that although he was too unwell to meet with police, he did not want to go to the hospital either. Illness has been cited by the abbot every time he has failed to appear.

But the stage – or stagecraft – was set Thursday afternooon. Throngs of Dhammakaya monks and reporters had gathered earlier at the station in anticipation of what was about to unfold; Dhammachayo had previously refused to meet with police and rejected their arrest warrant as illegitimate. He’s claimed illness a number of times for failing to appear or even leave his headquarters, a massive UFO-like facility north of Bangkok in Pathum Thani province.

The Department of Special Investigation, or DSI, had set Thursday as the deadline for Dhammachayo to surrender. After he failed to do so, DSI prosecutor Kachornsak Putthanuparb said they might apply for a search warrant that would enable them to enter the temple grounds and take Dhammachayo into custody.

Investigators identified Dhammachayo as among those who were directly sent hundreds of checks worth 11 billion baht by the former president of a credit union since convicted of embezzlement.

But Dhammachayo, who is regarded by his followers as a mystic saint, has steadfastly denied the allegations. His ecclesiastical office has said he and other monks were not aware the donations were tainted.

A Power Among the Powerful

Founded as a small retreat for spiritual-minded intellectuals while much of the academia was caught in the Communist insurgency of 1970s, the Dhammakaya Movement has grown into a massive organization with its own TV station and overseas chapters.

Today it enjoys tremendous organizational power and funding from the Bangkok middle class that serve as its power base, including many influential politicians, businesspeople and law enforcement officials. Tens of thousands of followers, who are known for strict loyalty to the movement and its leader, pour into its enormous arena for mass ordinations held every year.

Due to their esoteric teachings that focus on wealth, afterlife and spectacular rituals, Dhammakaya is viewed by many mainstream Buddhists as a heretical cult.

The megatemple is also perceived to have close ties with the Pheu Thai Party, and its the power it wields has put it at odds with the military government in a number of contexts, most notably, the selection of a new Supreme Patriarch to lead Thai Buddhism.

Phra Maha Ratchamangalacharn, who has long been considered as a successor to the late patriarch, is yet to be formally appointed to his holy office, partly due to uproar from hardline Buddhists who take offense at his past stint as the personal mentor of Dhammachayo.

Mounting Prosecution

Efforts to prosecute Dhammachayo can be traced back to the 2013 implosion of the Klongchan Credit Union Cooperative, which was embroiled in a massive embezzlement scandal running in the billions of baht.

From 2009 to 2011, credit union President Supachai Srisupa-suksorn sent 878 checks with a combined worth of 11 billion baht.

Investigators said they had evidence showing Dhammachayo and another Dhammakhaya monk were among those who received many such checks amounting to millions of baht.

Supachai was convicted of fraud and is now serving his 16-year sentence in the maximum security prison of Bang Kwang.

The abbot was ordered to meet with DSI officers back in March 2015, but he didn’t show up.

Correction: An earlier version of this story misidentified the Department of Special Investigations as the Division of Special Investigations.

Related stories:

Hundreds of Monks Clash with Military West of Bangkok (Video)

Politics, Corruption in Battle for Naming New ‘Supreme Patriarch’

Protest Prompts Officials to Postpone Dhammakaya Monks March

Thai Religious Authority Denies Acquitting Controversial Monk

Dhammakaya Abbot Allowed to Continue Monkhood

 

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Democracy Helps Fulfill Long-Dead Myanmar Teen's Last Wish

In this Aug. 1, 2013 file photo, Win Kyu, left, and his wife Khin Htay Win hold a portrait of their 16-year-old daughter Win Maw Oo, who was killed during pro-democracy protests brutally crushed by Myanmar's military 28 years ago, in their house in Yangon, Myanmar. Photo: Khin Maung Win / Associated Press

YANGON, Myanmar — Dying from soldiers' bullets, the young protester told her father not to lay her soul to rest until democracy reigned in her homeland, Myanmar. It has taken 28 years, but it is done.

The time was finally right to perform a funeral ceremony for 16-year-old Win Maw Oo when the National League for Democracy party of Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi came to power this year, after decades of bitter struggle.

Her former classmates joined her parents Sunday for the rites, led by Buddhist monks. A doctor who tried to save her life was also there. On display was a famous photo of Win Maw Oo taken just after she was shot; it made the cover of Newsweek.

The ceremony is intended to free the souls of the dead. Participants chanted along with the monks, spoke Win Maw Oo's name and sprinkled holy water.

Her parents did not have her remains, which is unusual in a ceremony such as this. But in Buddhism, the more important thing is to call the name of the deceased while dripping holy water and chanting with the monks. Buddhists believe that unless this happens, a soul cannot rest.

Win Maw Oo was among an estimated 3,000 people killed in 1988 during the student-led pro-democracy protests in Yangon and other parts of the country in which Suu Kyi emerged as a pro-democracy figure and her NLD party was born. Myanmar was known as Burma at the time, and Yangon, then called Rangoon, was its capital.

Win Maw Oo's parents had warned her that joining her fellow students during the uprising on the streets of the city was dangerous. Student unions were leading demonstrations against socialist dictator Gen. Ne Win, demanding a multi-party democratic system.

They asked her not to go.

"If they dare shoot, I am ready to die," she told them.

On September 19th, the day after a military takeover, soldiers sprayed bullets into a throng of students. The crowd scattered, and Win Maw Oo collapsed. One bullet hit her right shin, another her left thigh, and a third tore through her chest, collapsing a lung.

Two doctors looking for wounded protesters spotted the teen on the street. Blood gushing from her wounds drenched the white blouse of her school uniform red.

American photographer Steve Lehman snapped a picture of the tragic scene: the young schoolgirl wilting in the arms of two fear-stricken doctors, also soaked in her blood, trying to carry her to an ambulance. On the street behind them, another doctor attended to a corpse.

The girl's father, Win Kyu, rushed to Yangon General Hospital. He raced up and down the wards, through rows of injured or dead protesters, bodies so numerous they were lining the hallways. In the emergency room, he found his daughter, eyes closed, drawing her final breaths.

She could barely speak, Win Kyu recalled this week.

"She slowly opened her eyes and looked at me, weakly." Win Kyu said. Then she motioned for him to come closer.

She apologized for not heeding her parents' warning, then mustered the strength to say one last thing:

"Promise me you won't hold a funeral, call my name and share merit for my soul, until this country has achieved democracy."

"I didn't know what to say, because it was a bad sign already, so I was quiet for a bit," said Win Kyu.

The request was painful for him. He believed her soul would wander until they performed the ritual.

"Then I thought, 'Why not grant her the wish?' She wasn't asking for herself, or for her family, but for her country. So I promised her."

Moments later, Win Maw Oo, the eldest of his six children, died.

In an attempt to conceal the true scale of the day's casualties, authorities forbade doctors from allowing protesters' families to claim their bodies. Death certificates left the cause of death blank.

The day after his daughter died, Win Kyu pleaded with the surgeon who operated on her, who in turn lied to authorities that she had died of bone cancer so the body could be claimed. He retrieved his daughter's body to be cremated. But the crematoriums were so busy that unclaimed bodies were being cremated four or five at a time, and in the chaos, Win Kyu never got his daughter's ashes back.

Following the crackdown in which Win Maw Oo was killed, the country was thrust into more than two decades of harsh military rule. So Win Kyu waited.

When in 2010 the country held the first elections in 20 years, Win Kyu felt the time was not yet right, because the party sponsored by the military remained in power; the NLD boycotted those elections, saying they were unfair. When Suu Kyi was elected to parliament in 2012, he still did not feel his daughter's wish had been achieved.

Even when Suu Kyi's party scored a landslide victory in the November 2015 general election, Win Kyu said he still wasn't ready because so many of Win Maw Oo's comrades were still locked away as political prisoners.

It wasn't until the new government took office in April and released all political prisoners in a general amnesty that Win Maw Oo's family finally decided that it was time.

Story: Esther Htusan / Associated Press

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Engineer Stabbed to Death on Busy Lat Phrao Roadside (Video)

The crime scene where Narate Wangthangmee, 32, was stabbed to death in front of the Baan Klang Muang community in Bangkok’s  Lat Phrao district Wednesday evening

BANGKOK — Narate Wangthangmee was sitting on his parked motorcycle at the side of a road when a man suddenly walked up and stabbed him to death Wednesday evening.

Security camera footage from 6:30pm on Wednesday shows a man approach Narate, stab him in the chest and push him off his motorcycle, which was parked in front of the Baan Klang Muang community in the Lat Phrao district between sois Lat Phrao 23 and 25.

The attacker then attempted to flee the scene by riding away on Narate’s red Honda Click, but he was stopped by a passer-by who intervened by grabbing the bike. The unidentified perpetrator then fled on foot.

Though the Good Samaritan helped save the motorbike, it was too late to help the 32-year-old engineer. He died on the scene next to his motorcycle.

Searching in the direction he was seen running away, police Col. Phanudech Sukwong of Phahonyothin Police Station said police found a denim jacket similar to what the murderer appeared to wear in the footage inside Soi Lat Phrao 36, only a few hundred meters from the scene.

Police had not determined any motive for the crime by Thursday morning.

 

Warning: This is a video of a man being stabbed.

 

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Investigators recovered a denim jacket Wednesday night they believe was dumped by the unidentified assailant as he fled on Soi Lat Phrao 36 in Bangkok.

 

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Police: 4 Shot Inside NYC Concert Venue

In this Feb. 12, 2015, file photo, rapper T.I. performs at HOT 97's "The Tip Off" at Madison Square Garden in New York. Photo:  Scott Roth / Invision / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Police say four people have been shot inside a concert venue in New York City, where hip-hop artist T.I. was performing.

It happened around 10:15 p.m. Wednesday at Irving Plaza, near Manhattan's Union Square.

Police say a 34-year-old man was shot in the chest and a 33-year-old man was shot in the stomach. They're hospitalized in critical condition. A 26-year-old woman was shot in the leg. Police say a fourth person walked into a hospital on their own.

No arrests have been made.

Representatives for T.I., whose real name is Clifford Joseph Harris Jr., say they're referring all questions about the shooting to police.

No other information was immediately available.

Irving Plaza is a 1,025-person ballroom-style music venue.

Story: Associated Press

 

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Red Bull Heir Fails to Appear, Again. Given Another Chance, Again.

Vorayuth Yoovidhya was arrested at his family home in Bangkok on Sept. 3, 2012. He later left the country for Singapore and repeatedly ignored summonses from the prosecutors.

BANGKOK — A deadline passed at 4pm today for Red Bull heir Vorayuth “Boss” Yoovidhya to meet with prosecutors four years after he killed a Thonglor cop, but the 31-year-old fugitive will be given yet another chance before a warrant is sought for his arrest.

Prosecutor Suthi Kittisupaporn said Vorayuth’s failure to appear Wednesday afternoon without providing a reason will be met with a second request for Thonglor police, who are responsible for the case, to summon him.

He was ordered to appear Wednesday in regard to a charge of reckless driving from when Vorayuth killed Sgt. Maj. Wichian Klanprasert with his Ferrari at high speed before fleeing the scene to hide at his nearby family home in 2012.

After an initial surge of public interest and vows Vorayuth would be prosecuted, the case petered out in 2014 and was effectively dropped for nearly two years. It returned to public and media interest again in March when wealthy businessman Jenphop Veeraporn killed two students, providing yet another example of a dual-track justice system in which the wealthy and well-connected avoid punishment.

Attorney General Vows to Prosecute Stalled Case Against Red Bull Heir

Should Vorayuth fail to report in person in the next 30 days without a valid excuse, then authorities said they will seek a warrant for his arrest. Authorities made no mention of his whereabouts. Although Vorayuth has kept a low profile, a number of sightings in Bangkok have been reported over the years. There has been no warrant for his arrest.

It’s not the first time the grandson of billionaire Red Bull founder Chaleo Yoovidhya failed to appear. He didn’t show up a number of times in 2013 before eventually absconding to Singapore. His family said he was ill.

Two previous misdemeanor charges filed against him – speeding and property damage – already expired. A charge of not reporting the incident to police will expire next year.

The most serious charge – reckless driving resulting in death – won’t expire until 2027.

Suthi said the Vorayuth’s lawyer could ask prosecutors to postpone the legal process but only by citing a demonstrably serious reason such as an imminent, emergency medical procedure.

Meanwhile Sgt. Maj. Wichian’s family, who privately settled with the Yoovidhyas for 3 million baht, recently filed a letter asking prosecutors to consider further charges against Vorayuth, Suthi said.

Related stories:

Fatal Benz Crash Case Reaches Prosecutor’s Office

Attorney General Vows to Prosecute Stalled Case Against Red Bull Heir

Fresh Charge Against Jenphop as Model Student Victims Laid to Rest

Businessman Charged for Fatal Collision Amid Mounting Criticism

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To Stream or Not to Stream: Online Piracy Goes ‘Live’

BANGKOK — Thanks to Facebook Live, audiences can watch a Texas mom try out her Chewbacca mask, Leicester City FC parade through Bangkok and Chompoo-Araya apply makeup before walking the red carpet at Cannes.

According to a map of where people are using Facebook Live, Thailand has really taken to livestreaming. So what are we “live-ing?” Mostly the same things we do on Instagram: eating, posing, dancing and selling products. But also one thing Mr. Zuckerberg probably didn’t expect? It turns out we’re also streaming entire movies, from “Captain America: Civil War” to “Angry Birds.”

On Sunday, the popular Facebook outrage forum that is Drama Addict pointed out how another page called “Movie&Clip” had streamed “Angry Birds.” A search of similar pages found a number of newly released films available to watch.

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Thailand is one of the most popular places in the world for Facebook Live. Image: Facebook

“It is normal for some people to find the latest features on Facebook as a new way to publish pirated movies, just like posting them on YouTube or other websites. Still, it is copyright infringement,” said Suparp Rimtheparthip, founder of film monthly Bioscope Magazine.

As for streaming movies live from inside the cinema, Suparp said it was unlikely to be common because theater staff check for such things, not to mention the presence of other audience members. It’s more likely people are just streaming low quality “cam” recordings made by others and traded online.

But there are social forces at work which would explain why someone might watch low quality video instead of the real deal. In the immediacy of our networked culture, plotlines are spoiled online as soon as they spool out – pity to any Thrones fan who wasn’t already sharing “Hold the Door” memes by Monday evening.

This creates a kind of internet peer pressure: If you haven’t seen it yet, you are on the outside of cool. Doesn’t matter if there’s no theater nearby, or the cost of a ticket is too high.

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“The pirated content online fills in those gaps, as recent movies can be watched anywhere at any time. Also, they can be reached easily and do not require much effort,” Suparp said.

What’s in it for those streaming pirated content live on Facebook? Messages to admins of a number of such pages went unreturned.

It’s left those who feel their work is robbed by pirates shaking their heads.

One mainstream director whose films are often pirated said he’s baffled by what could motivate pirates to livestream them on Facebook.

“They invest nothing and circulate our movies for nothing. I could never understand why they are pirating others’ intellectual property, for more ‘likes’ or fans,” Poj Arnon said.

The prolific director, best known for mainstream comedies such as “Hor Taew Tak” and “Mor 6/5 (Make Me Shudder),” said cam rips were quickly available of his latest film “Luang Pee Jazz 4G,” which still went on to earn 300 million baht.

“The quality of illegal, zoomed or livestreamed movies can never be as good as what is shown in the theater,” he said. “The audience should support filmmakers who work hard behind all those movies, so that we can keep on making films.”

Poj sounded hopeless of anything changing rampant piracy.

“No one can save us, since the law is weak and ineffective,” he said. “Also, it is up to common sense whether to use new technology in a constructive or destructive way.”

Copyright infringement is punishable by fines between 20,000 baht and 200,000 baht. The punishment rises to upward of 800,000 baht fines and a maximum of four years in prison for piracy done for commercial purposes.

According to the Department of Intellectual Property, movies streamed over Facebook Live tend to be quickly deleted. However people can report them to the department by sending screenshots and information about the post to the authorities, who will report it to the copyright owner.

It has received 1,072 reports of copyright infringement from 24 Facebook pages and five users. None has made it to court, according to the department, as copyright claims can be settled privately.

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Man Wins Desperate Struggle to Free Penis From Toilet Python

Photo: Karunakar Rayker / Flickr

CHACHOENGSAO — It was less than a good morning for Atthaporn Boonmakchuay today. Not after a python slithered out of his squat toilet, bit his penis and refused to let go.

Atthaporn, who just regained consciousness, spoke from his hospital bed Wednesday afternoon to recount the ordeal he experienced in the bathroom of his home east of Bangkok in Chachoengsao province, which he’d entered for his morning routine of a shower and protracted bowel movement.

Atthaporn said he had just squatted over his toilet for his usual 30 minutes of morning business, according to Khon Khao Bang Pakong, when the python rose from the depths to fasten its jaws around the end of his penis.

As his wife Sawittree Shooyoung would tell Thairath, that’s when she heard him scream for help and call for a rope. Entering the bathroom, Sawittree found her bleeding husband fighting with the nearly 4-meter long python. She gave him the rope as requested.

Just before he passed out from loss of blood, Atthaporn grasped the serpent by its head and managed to use the rope to tie it to the bathroom door.

The 38-year-old man was taken to a nearby hospital, while rescue workers were left to deal with the rampaging reptile, whose body was still mostly stuck in the squat  toilet.

Workers removed the toilet from the house, at which point they took a hammer to it to free the body of the beast.

Atthaporn is in stable condition. Flanked by grinning doctors, he told reporters that he was careful to unhinge the reptile’s jaws rather than forcing it free and risking permanent damage to his self.

Authorities suspect the python entered the home through a pipe that led it into the toilet. It will be released back to nature, Thairath reported.

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Photo: Khon Khao Bang Pakong / Facebook

 

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