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Powerful Quake Hits Myanmar North of Capital

Residents who rushed outdoors following tremors stand on a road outside their houses in Kolkata, India, Wednesday, April 13, 2016. Photo: Bikas Das / Associated Press

YANGON — A strong earthquake struck Myanmar on Wednesday night and was felt in parts of eastern India and Bangladesh, causing residents to rush out of their homes in panic.

The magnitude-6.9 quake struck at a depth of 135 kilometers, 396 kilometers north of Myanmar's capital, Naypyidaw, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage.

Residents in Myanmar's main city of Yangon panicked after the quake struck, but authorities there said there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage.

An Associated Press journalist who was in a hospital in Yangon at the time of the quake said the six-story building shook strongly twice, for at least a minute. Many people in the hospital, including patients, staff and visitors, ran out of the building and began calling their loved ones.

"I was sleeping on my bed when suddenly I felt the ground shaking. The first time it was intense, but the second time it was lighter," said Aung Thu, 25, who has been spending nights at the hospital to take care of his elder brother. "I had experienced this kind of earthquakes before, so I was not that scared. But I was concerned because my brother is ill, and I need to take care of him."

He said he was on the third floor of the Shwegonedine Specialist Center hospital, and as soon as he felt the quake he called his wife and son to tell them to be "prepared for the worst."

The quake was centered in the jungle and hills around 220 kilometers northwest of Mandalay, Myanmar's second-biggest city. While the area is prone to earthquakes, it is generally sparsely populated, and most houses are low-rise structures.

The tremors were felt in the eastern Indian states of Assam and West Bengal, including in the area of Assam's Kaziranga National Park, where the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are visiting during their royal tour of India.

"We felt the tremor very strongly, but all is fine," said British Deputy High Commissioner Scott Furssedonn-Wood, who was staying in the same 12-cottage jungle resort as the royal couple.

The royal couple are spending the night in the park area, and are scheduled to leave for neighboring Bhutan on Thursday.

A failure at a power station in eastern Assam caused outages in several parts of the state.

In Assam's capital, Gauhati, people rushed outdoors as they felt strong tremors and buildings swaying. Cellphone services were disrupted, and wall-mounted television sets crashed to the ground at a local TV station. Police said they were still assessing the situation.

Residents in Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal state, ran out of their homes in panic as the earthquake hit the region, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage.

People also reported feeling the quake in Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka, 484 kilometers from the epicenter.

Story: Associated Press

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Prayuth: Read Chinese Governance Book Because It Suits Thailand

In this March 3, 2016 photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping, attends the opening session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) in Beijing's Great Hall of the People.  Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — To get a glimpse of the future of governance of Thailand under junta-leader-cum-prime-minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, see what Prayuth recommends his cabinet to read.

At yesterday’s cabinet meeting, Prayuth recommended that ministers, who include many generals, read Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s book “The Governance of China”.

Prayuth was quoted as saying that the book should be read because it is suited to the governing situation of Thailand as the kingdom is also undergoing reform.

The revelation was made by Tourism and Sports Minister Kobkarn Wattanavrangkul after the cabinet meeting yesterday on Tuesday.

The book contains a collection of Xi’s 79 speeches and is described in detail by Foreign Policy assistant editor in an online article “We Read Xi Jinping’s Book So You Don’t Have To”.

The article describes it as “a mix of stilted Communist Party argot, peasant-sounding generalizations, and ‘Father Knows Best’-style advice to the world; and authenticity isn’t its strength.”

The article continues by saying that China has cracked down on dissent and press freedom has worsened under Xi’s leadership, but his book, “casts him as a wise and innovative reformer.”

Human Rights Watch in a 2015 report described China under Xi as follows: “China remains an authoritarian state, one that systematically curbs fundamental rights, including freedom of expression, association, assembly, and religion, when their exercise is perceived to threaten one-party rule.”

Another reviewer, Yang Hengjun, a Chinese independent scholar who once worked with the foreign ministry wrote on thediplomat.com, saying the book is essential in understanding China under Xi:

 “Whether you like his views or not, if you want to understand China under Xi, the easiest way is to read this book… In this one book he not only speaks in detail about everything from anti-corruption and cleaning up the Party to economic reform, caring for lower classes, and foreign policy, he also has acted on almost everything he talked about.”

Follow Khaosod English on Facebook and Twitter for news, politics and more from Thailand. To reach Khaosod English about this article or another matter, please contact us by e-mail at [email protected].

 

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Topless Farang Fined 100 Baht in Chiang Mai

An unidentified foreign man stands with a police officer Wednesday morning at Chiang Mai police station.

CHIANG MAI — A foreign man was arrested and fined 100 baht today in Chiang Mai for violating the junta’s ban on indecent dress while splashing water during the first day of Songkran.

At the time of arrest the man was shirtless and carrying a water gun. The temperature was expected to reach 41C in Chiang Mai today according to the Thai Meteorological Department.

Update: The shirtless man has been identified as a 28-year-old British man known as “Jimmy” according to police.

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Related stories:

Women Will Be Arrested For Indecency During Songkran, Prayuth Says

40-Degree Plus Songkran Expected

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116 Die in Songkran Traffic Accidents

A van crash Monday in Prachinburi's Ban Sang District that killed four including the driver and injured six. Photo: Prachinonline / Facebook

BANGKOK — Threats to confiscate vehicles from motorists caught drunk have failed to stop road accidents occurring during Songkran this year.

116 people were killed and 981 injured in 907 road accidents on Monday and Tuesday, according to the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation on Wednesday morning.

Chiang Mai is the reportedly the province with the most accidents — 45 — and Buriram province suffered the most fatalities, with eight people dying in road accidents over the two days.

By Wednesday morning Samut Prakan was the only province free from serious accidents this week, according to the Disaster Prevention Department today.

52 people were killed and 431 people injured in 387 road accidents across Thailand on Monday, the first of the so-called “Seven Dangerous Days”, while 64 were reportedly killed and 550 injured in 520 accidents on Tuesday.

The Seven Dangerous Days runs from April 11 until April 17 this year.

During the Seven Dangerous Days last year, there were reportedly 3,373 accidents that resulted in 364 deaths and 3,559 injuries, which was an increase from the 2014 when there were 2,992 accidents with 322 deaths and 3,225 injuries during Songkran week.

The main causes of road accidents during April 9 to April 15, 2015, were drink driving (39.31 percent) and speeding (24.35 percent), according to the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation.

In December the junta approached and launched a scheme to confiscate the vehicles of drunk drivers during New Year vacation. However, DUI was still the main cause behind fatalities during the January New Year holiday throughout the country with a total of 3,379 accidents, 380 deaths and 3,505 injuries.

Related stories:

Drunk Driving Blamed for Rise in New Year Traffic Deaths

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Security Scare at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport

Hooded military police officers guard a part of Schiphol Aiport in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Wednesday, April 13, 2016. Photo: Peter Dejong / Associated Press

AMSTERDAM — Heavily armed military police sealed off part of Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport for hours Tuesday night after arresting a man for unspecified suspicious behavior and summoning explosives experts to check his luggage.

Police in body armor and ski masks brandishing machine guns patrolled the airport for four hours while the investigation was under way, stranding scores of passengers who could not get to their parked cars because parts of the airport were sealed off.

Flights at the busy aviation hub appeared largely unaffected by the security scare and trains to the airport's station continued running throughout the security scare.

In the early hours of Wednesday, military police spokesman Alfred Ellwanger told The Associated Press in a telephone interview that "no dangerous materials were found" in the arrested suspect's luggage and the tight security measures were lifted.

Ellwanger said the man who was arrested remained in custody and under investigation. He had no details on the man's identity. He said the arrest followed "a report of a suspicious situation," but didn't elaborate.

The Netherlands has been on high alert since the deadly suicide bombing attacks on Brussels airport and subway last month in neighboring Belgium.

Story: Associated Press

 

To reach us about this article or another matter, please contact us by e-mail at: [email protected].

Follow Khaosod English on Facebook and Twitter for news, politics and more from Thailand.

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Prayuth Says Women in Skimpy Dress Are Like Unwrapped Candy

In this Friday, Sept. 12, 2014, file photo, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha delivers his government's policy statement at parliament in Bangkok.  Photo: Sakchai Lalit

BANGKOK — Thailand’s blunt-speaking prime minister had some advice Tuesday for his country’s young women: Don’t dress too revealingly, or you will be shunned like a piece of toffee without its wrapper.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha offered the observation to reporters as Thais prepared to kick off their traditional New Year celebration, known as Songkran. The holiday comes at the hottest time of the year and is best known for the enthusiastic splashing of water upon friends and strangers alike, a practice that sometimes takes on a sexual edge, including the molestation of women.

The junta previously announced that it would try to discourage lewd behavior and dress as inappropriate for the country’s culture.

“During Songkran, I ask that women wear proper clothes, Thai style, so they would look good and civilized,” said Prayuth, who has two grown daughters. He said that in his opinion, women “are like toffee or candy,” which people would not like to eat if already unwrapped.

Prayuth went on to qualify his own advice, saying that some nicely wrapped candy will stay on the shelf for years no matter what.

The prime minister, a former army commander, is best known for blasting his political opponents, but has controversially commented before about what he thinks is appropriate attire for women.

Shortly after two young British tourists were murdered on a beach on the resort island of Koh Tao — the woman was also raped — Prayuth wondered aloud whether tourists wearing bikinis were courting danger.

“This has always been a problem … they think our country is beautiful and safe and they can do whatever they want, wear bikinis wherever they like. I’m asking if they wear bikinis in Thailand, will they be safe? Only if they are not beautiful,” he said in September 2014, after the deaths of David Miller and Hannah Witheridge. He apologized shortly afterward, saying he only meant to warn tourists to be careful.

Prayuth’s latest remarks drew criticism from Usa Lertsrisantat, director of the Foundation for Women, who said he should use his influential position to speak in a more helpful way.

“He should be sending a message to people who do not respect women’s rights as well,” she said. “He warns women not to wear revealing clothes, and he should warn men to respect women’s rights, too. Women are not toffees or candies, we are human beings.”

“When something bad happens, you can’t just say that it happened because of how women dress,” she said.

Related stories:

Women Will Be Arrested For Indecency During Songkran, Prayuth Says

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Turbulence Injures 6 on Thai Airways Flight

The scene when Thai Airways Flight TG434 landed at Suvarnabhumi airport Monday afternoon. Photo: Kru P'Birth / Facebook

BANGKOK — Air turbulence was blamed for six injuries Monday on a Thai Airways flight from Jakarta to Bangkok.

The Boeing 777-200 was carrying 86 people — two pilots, 12 flight attendants and 72 passengers. Flight TG434 was reportedly traveling through Singaporean airspace at around 12:35pm on Monday (local time) when the turbulence occurred, according to a Thai Airways press release.

Facebook user Kru P'Birth, claiming to be one of the cabin crew, later posted to Facebook that a man described as Middle Eastern-looking didn’t fasten his seatbelt during the incident.

That passenger was allegedly flown into the air and hit his head, resulting in an injury.

Kru P’Birth’s Facebook post was deleted Tuesday afternoon, shortly before Thai Airways made an official announcement.

1460446490_13006629_981563018594089_2631441063273386429_n.jpg

A screengrab of Facebook user Kru P’Birth
 

Charamporn Jotikasthira, president of Thai Airways, said that the incident was caused by air turbulence which injured one passenger and five crew members.

The six were reportedly being treated at a nearby hospital after the plane landed at around 3:40pm on Monday at Suvarnabhumi Airport. Their medical expenses would be covered by Thai Airways, Charamporn said.

 

 

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Critics: Keeping Public in Dark About Draft Charter Rejection Unfair

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha splashes water on the media on April 12 to mark Thai New Year at Government House

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — It’s unfair for the junta not to tell the public what Thailand will get if the draft charter gets voted down, say critics. Some add that this is a psychological tactic to persuade the public to opt for the known quantity, which is the charter draft. Critics differ on whether this constitutes as a shrewd move by the junta or not.

The reactions come after junta-leader-cum-Prime-Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha declined on Monday to spell out what will happen if the charter is rejected in the Aug. 7 referendum. Prayuth said he has the power to decide what to do.

“Do you understand the word ‘power’? It’s I who will decide what to do,” Prayuth was quoted as saying as calls grow for the self-styled National Council for Peace and Order to reveal what will happen if the charter fails to win public support.

 Former election commissioner Gothom Arya calls such a condition unjust.

“It’s not fair,” said Gothom. “Prayuth cited his right [to invoke his power] but I can cite my democratic right too.”

Gothom said Prayuth wins whether the charter draft is endorsed or rejected because he holds the power to decide what to do afterward. “It’s a win-win game for him. Doing it this way is not fair and all I can do is to plead [Prayuth to rethink]”.

Rangsiman Rome, a key member of the New Democracy Movement, said the referendum is never going to be free and fair and called the condition a psychological tactic employed to convince voters to stick to the draft charter instead of something unknown that could be even worse and less democratic.

“They don’t tell us [what we will get] because they want us to Vote Yes,” said Rangsiman, whose group continued to push for a “Vote No” campaign.

Rangsiman warned however that given this unfair process, the junta risked losing “legitimacy” if the draft charter gets rejected in a landslide. “What legitimacy will they have left?”

Election observer Pongsak Chanon, chairman of We Watch, a group of Thai election observers, also said it’s unfair for Prayuth not to come clean on the matter.

“It’s not fair. It affects voters psychologically and there’s a tendency that they will just accept what they can see.”

Anti-junta activist and Red Sunday Group leader Sombat Boonngam-anong concurred with others, saying it’s unfair and not transparent.

“This is not a personal matter but a public affair so it should be made transparent,” Sombat said.

Sombat said the junta wishes to maintain a political edge by not telling the public what will happen next.

Related stories:

‘Vote No’ Campaigners Stopped by Pattaya Police

Draft Charter Opponents Perplexed by Abhisit’s Stance

NDM Launches Campaign to Reject Charter at Crowded Book Fair

 

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Thailand to Face Three Middle Eastern Nations in World Cup Qualifiers

Asian Football Confederation (AFC) General Secretary Windsor John holds the country name card of Japan in the draw for 2018 FIFA World Cup Asian qualifiers final round in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Tuesday, April 12, 2016. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

By Simon Duncan
Deputy Editor

KUALA LUMPUR — The draw for the the final qualifying round of the 2018 World Cup in Russia was made this afternoon at the Mandarin Oriental hotel in Kuala Lumpur.

Thailand has been drawn in Group B along with Australia, Iraq, Japan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

The top two teams of each of the six-team groups will automatically qualify for the next football World Cup which will be hosted by Russia in 2018.

The third placed teams from the groups will play an additional game against each other. The victor then plays against the fourth-place team from the CONCACAF region for a place at the World Cup.

The other group, known as ‘Group A’ is comprised of China, Iran, Qatar, South Korea, Syria and Uzbekistan.

The first qualifying games will take place in September. Details of the forthcoming fixtures have yet to be confirmed. All teams in the group will face each other both home and away.

This means that the war elephants will need to make three trips to the middle east as well as travelling to Australia and Japan.

Thailand has never qualified for the World Cup. The only appearance by a Southeast Asian nation at the footballing event was Indonesia, playing as the Dutch East Indies, who qualified in 1938.
Related stories:

Thailand Edges Closer to Qualifying for FIFA 2018 World Cup

Thailand Among 4 Countries Hoping to Host 2023 Asian Cup

 

Simon Duncan can be reached at [email protected] and @donuts2000.

 

 

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Thailand Among 4 Countries Hoping to Host 2023 Asian Cup

Somyot Poompunmuang, in a polo shirt, center left, is congratulated by an official from the Asian Football Confederation, in Bangkok, Feb. 11.

KUALA LUMPUR — Indonesia is bidding to host the 2023 Asian Cup despite being under a FIFA-imposed ban from international competition because of government interference in the running of the national football federation.

The Asian Football Confederation issued a statement Tuesday saying its competition committee had received expressions of interest from China, South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia for the continental championship.

Indonesia's clubs and national teams have been barred from international competition since last May, including World Cup qualifiers for Russia 2018 which also doubled as qualifiers for the 2019 Asian Cup in the United Arab Emirates.

The AFC said it planned to send the bidding agreement and host candidate questionnaire to Indonesia, China, Thailand and South Korea and seek government guarantees and legal opinion on the bids.

Thailand hosted the tournament in 1972 and also co-hosted the competition with Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam in 2007. 

Story: Associated Press

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