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Police Seeking Arrest of Masturbating Cabbie

A censored version of the photo posted on Facebook by Nawarat Punyaratchatapreeda

BANGKOK — Police said Thursday they are looking for a taxi driver who reportedly masturbated in front of a woman passenger in Bangkok.

Nawarat Punyaratchatapreeda, 26, posted on her Facebook that she was taking a cab to Red Cross Fair on Ratchadamnoen Avenue on Wednesday afternoon when she noticed that the driver exposed himself and started stroking his penis. 

Nawarat then photographed the incident and sought help from police, but after she exited the taxi the driver got away, she said in a public Facebook post. Her Facebook profile appears to have been deactivated by Thursday afternoon.

The driver did not have display a name plate so she only photographed the license plate, said Nawarat, who identified herself as a nurse.  

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Cpt. Chawalit Chanken, an officer at Dusit Police Station, said his unit has issued a summons warrant for the car owner based on the license plate.

“We know the identity of the car owner now, but we’re not sure if it’s the same person,” Chawalit said. “He hasn’t shown up to give his testimony yet … if he still ignores our summons warrant we will apply for an arrest warrant.” 

Chawalit declined to name the car owner, saying that the person is still being treated as a witness. 

Speaking to Daily News, Nawarat said she will take legal action against the driver to the utmost degree in order to teach him a lesson.

“He’s a danger to society. He may do it with other people. I want him to learn and remember not to do bad things,” Nawarat was quoted as saying. 

 

Related stories:

Airport Taxi Loses License for Gouging Swiss Traveler

Police to Combat Bad Airport Taxis With Lecture and Sticker

Taxi Driver Ex-Con Accused of Robbing Chinese Tourists

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Student Leader: No One Paid Me to Oppose Draft Charter

Parit Chiwarak today at a coffee shop in Bangkok.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — No one is manipulating or funding high school students who protest against the abolition of state funding for full high school education under the junta-sponsored draft charter, said Parit Chiwarak, a student leader who led a protest on Tuesday.

“I didn’t take anyone’s money to protest,” insisted 17-year-old Parit Chiwarak, secretary general of a group made up of around 50 high school student activists who call themselves Education for the Liberation of Siam.


Student Protesters Crash Speech of Head Charter Drafter


Parit, who is perhaps better known by his nickname “Penguin” told Khaosod English today that money for activities is raised through the selling of T-shirts, books and also by accepting small donations.

“There’s nobody behind us except those providing moral support. It doesn’t make sense that we would risk our future for loose change. It’s not worth it,” said Parit who will enter the Twelfth Grade later this year, known as Mathayom 6 in Thailand, at Triam Udom Suksa school. The prestigious school is currently funded by the state but the situation will change if the new draft charter is endorsed in the August 7 referendum.

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University staff seize a banner from student activists protesting against the head of the junta-appointed charter drafting committee Tuesday at Thammasat University’s Rangsit campus. Photo: Matichon

Article 54 of the charter cuts mandatory funding for the last three years of secondary education.

Parit today denied receiving money or support after junta-leader-cum-Prime-Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said the military government would look into the groups who staged the protests on Tuesday at Thammasat University. Three groups of students protested while junta-sponsored charter drafting committee chairman Meechai Ruchupan was speaking on the occasion of a memorial day for former Prime Minister Sanya Dharmasakti. Prayuth suspects some politicians may be backing the youths.  

Parit and two friends unfurled a banner reading “Don’t hurt the youth” and began reading their statement calling for the reinstatement of free education through Grade 12 before he and his friends were escorted out of the hall by university staff.   

Parit said the choice is clear, if voters want to see the continuation of state-funded education up to Mathayom 6, they will have to reject the charter draft in the referendum. The teenager added that full state-funded high school education is a right for all Thais to enjoy and not something people should beg for from the state.

While Meechai said a fund will be set up to ensure that poor students can access the necessary money to complete high school education, Parit said such a scheme, even if successful, would discriminate against students from low-income families as they would be marked as being underprivileged.


Charter Opponent Unbowed by Alleged Harassment


Parit said many poor students are now at risk of not being able to complete their high school or vocational school education as a result of the charter drafting committee misunderstanding the real cost of funding three years of senior high school education, known in Thai as Mathayom 4 to 6, which is relatively modest.

“The charter drafting committee doesn’t understand that it’s the duty of the state to provide education and improve the lives of people.”

Parit said if there’s not enough money, it’s the duty of the state to find the money or re-allocate the budget from other less-necessary expenditures. He and his friends are now trying to come up with stats comparing the modest budget required for funding three-years of senior high school education for all and the money the state splurges on other ministries, including the purchase of arms.

Some have speculated that the decision not to fund the last three years of high school education under the new charter draft might be the desire of the junta, who appointed all the charter drafters, to create less-educated and more governable citizens.

Parit said there’s no way to ascertain that for sure although it’s a frightening prospect.

“It’s possible but I can’t confirm it. If this is the real rationale behind, it means the attitude of the charter drafting committee is scary and they must be a long-term threat [to society].”    

Related stories: 

Junta Bans Bookstore Talk on Draft Charter

NDM Launches Campaign to Reject Charter at Crowded Book Fair

Junta Threatens to Summon Critics of Charter Draft

 

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Line Sorry for Satirical Monarchy Stickers

LINE’s official sticker characters. Image: LINE Thailand / Facebook

By Teeranai Charuvastra
Staff Reporter

BANGKOK — The Japanese company behind the chat application used by millions of Thais today apologized for briefly selling a set of cartoon ‘stickers’ that lampoon the Thai Royal Family.

The apology came a day after Line Corporation pulled the ‘stickers’ from its online store, and on the same day that police announced an investigation into the persons responsible for the artwork on a charge of insulting the monarchy. 


30 Years In Prison For Facebooker Who ‘Insulted’ Monarchy


“LINE Corporation is aware of the culturally sensitive sticker set that may have caused discomfort among our users in Thailand. The sticker set in question has been pulled from the LINE Sticker Shop,” the Tokyo-based company posted on Facebook Thursday. “As we take our users concerns seriously and consider cultural aspects of each country, we will continue to improve our LINE Creators Market.”

It added, “We regret any inconvenience this may have caused and appreciate your understanding.”

Line stickers fall into two categories: official ones created by Line, and others created by independent parties and then submitted to Line store. 

The offending stickers, which fell into the latter category, went on sale for 30 baht on Line store Wednesday evening. Although Line vets stickers before publishing them, the set apparently managed to slip through the censor because of its innocuous-looking cartoon theme and subtle references only known by those among the Thai anti-monarchy faction.

To avoid potential legal action, Khaosod English is withholding other information about the stickers. 

After word about the stickers spread on social media shortly after the set was released, Line removed it from the store later on the same night. By morning, Line also removed the set from from the devices of users who had bought it, without offering any refund. 

Thai police launched a criminal inquiry into the incident today, Reuters reported. "We are investigating where the stickers came from and who did this," Col. Somporn Daengdee, deputy chief of the police's Technology Crime Suppression Division, was quoted as saying

Any remark deemed critical of the monarchy is punishable by up to 15 years in prison per offense according to Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Code, a law also known as lese majeste. Republishing the offending remarks also counts as a lese majeste. 

Enforcement of the law has grown increasingly harsh since the royalist junta seized power in the May 2014 coup. The junta’s call for a tougher crackdown on discussion about the monarchy led to several attempts to put greater control on the nation’s free-wheeling social media communities. 

Several weeks after the coup, Thai authorities asked Line to share records of the application users with them, only to be snubbed by the corporation. In late 2015, the junta mounted an ambitious plan to create a “single gateway” that controls all internet traffic in the Kingdom, citing the need to catch online criminals and monitor inappropriate comments on social media. 

 

Related stories:

Redshirt 'Mascot' Removed From LINE Sticker Store

Thai Govt Releases LINE 'Twelve Values' Stickers

Social Media Surveillance System Planned

Record Sentences Today For Facebook Lese Majeste Offenses

 

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Student Activist Hacked, Shot to Death in Bangladesh

Vehicles move through a road in the morning during a nationwide general strike called by Bangladesh's largest Islamist political party, Jamaat-e-Islami, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Monday, March 28, 2016. Photo: A.M. Ahad / Associated Press

NEW DELHI — Three motorcycle-riding assailants hacked and shot a student activist to death as he was walking with a friend in Bangladesh's capital, police said Thursday.

The killing on Wednesday night follows a string of similar attacks last year, when at least five secular bloggers and publishers were killed, allegedly by radical Islamists.

Police suspect 28-year-old Nazimuddin Samad was targeted for his outspoken atheism in the Muslim-majority country and for supporting a 2013 movement to demand capital punishment for war crimes involving the country's independence war against Pakistan in 1971, according to Dhaka Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Nurul Amin.

No group immediately claimed responsibility.

The assailants, who had been riding a single motorcycle, escaped after the assault while shouting, "Allahu Akbar," or "Allah is great."

Fellow students and friends of Samad rallied Thursday at the state-run Jagannath University, where Samad was studying law and had attended class the evening of the attack.

"This is very sad for us. We are trying whatever we can do to support the family during such difficult time," university proctor Nur Mohammad said.

People also flooded Samad's Facebook page with messages to their late friend. "Friend, please pardon us. You were, you are, you will be (with us)," wrote one friend called Rahat Chowdhury.

Many of Samad's posts criticized radical Islam and promoted secularism. A supporter of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's secular Awami League party, Samad also took part in the movement that successfully pushed for prosecutors to have more scope for going after suspected war criminals.

Hasina's government has been cracking down on radical Islamist groups, which it blames for the deadly attacks last year on secular bloggers, minority Shiites, Christians and two foreigners. It accuses the opposition of supporting religious radicals in seeking to retaliate against the government for prosecuting suspected war crimes.

Some of the attacks were claimed by the Islamic State group, but the government dismisses those claims and says the Sunni extremist group has no presence in the country.

Two international groups promoting freedom of expression said the ongoing attacks showed Hasina's government was failing to protect people.

"We urge the Bangladeshi police and other authorities to do everything in their power to investigate and prosecute this vicious attack on free speech and thought, and halt this terrible pattern of murders," said Karin Deutsch Karlekar of PEN America, a group of 4,400 U.S. writers.

She also called on the U.S. and other countries to provide refuge to writers and secularists being targeted in Bangladesh. Samad's killing "is a cruel illustration of the costs of inaction," she said.

The Center for Inquiry also expressed concern. The center's public policy director, Michael De Dora, said the Bangladeshi government "must do much more to protect its own people from marauding Islamist killers."

"These murders keep happening because they are allowed to happen," Dora said.

Story: Associated Press

 

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No, We Still Don’t Know Thai Names in Panama Papers

BANGKOK — Despite breathless reports referencing hundreds of Thai nationals caught up in the latest global offshoring scandal, none of those names is known yet.

That didn’t stop numerous news agencies from reporting that hundreds of Thai citizens have been “named” in the massive “Panama Papers” leak, apparently confusing it with a similar leak from three years ago called “Offshore Leaks.” 

Both leaks were disseminated by the same organization, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalism, whose 3-year-old database of what the 2013 leak has been widely cited and linked to. It identified 780 individuals in Thailand with ties to offshore shell companies in tax havens like the British Virgin Islands and Cayman Islands. 


Panama Papers: Authorities Seek Names of 21 Thai Clients of Offshoring Company


Until the leaked information is released in its entirety – possibly early May –  neither the domestic media nor law enforcement will know who is among the 21 Thais linked to Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca, along with 963 companies, 40 beneficiaries and 757 shareholders in Thailand.

While it’s possible some of the same names from the 2013 leak are also implicated in the Panama Papers, there is no guarantee of that until the full set is released.

Meanwhile media agencies caught up in the frenzy include Bangkok Post, Thailand’s largest English-language newspaper; Daily News, the nation’s second biggest Thai-language daily, state-owned Thai PBS; and even a Thai partner of ICIJ, Isra News.

Soonruth Bunyamanee, a news editor for Bangkok Post, said his paper later spotted the mistake after publishing the online article and corrected the news before it went to print. He said the staff are now aware of the difference between Offshore Leaks and the Panama Papers. 

The error wasn’t exclusive to newspeople. Many social media sites also repeat the mix-up, such as CSI LA, a prominent Facebooker known for crowd-sourced campaigns on social justice issues. 


Panama Papers: Iceland PM Resigns Under Scrutiny of Officials Worldwide


As for the official response, junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha has promised his military government will look into the 21 Thai clients named in the Panama Papers. 

Gen. Prayuth said Tuesday the government has no information about the 21 clients at the time, but said anti-money laundering agencies are following the issue. He also hailed the leak as an opportunity to clamp down on corruption.

“This is good. If they are really guilty, we will put many people in prison,” Prayuth said. 

Once the actual names are made public, seeing them reported by the media is no sure thing – Justice Minister Gen. Paiboon Koomchaya said they should not be reported as their financial arrangements were a “personal matter.”

“I want [reporters] to be respectful and positive at this time, in order to be fair,” Gen. Paiboon said Tuesday. “They shouldn’t see all of it as corruption. Some cases could just be international investments. Therefore, inquiry should be done in secrecy. They shouldn’t mention any names, because right now we don’t know what is true and what is not.” 

 

Related stories:

No, Disneyland is Not Coming to Laos 

Nation TV Fooled By Satirical Article, Blames Internet

Nation TV Airs Fake 'Suicide Vest' Image in Arrest Report

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Xi Seen as Easily Surviving Revelations in Panama Papers

In this March 5, 2016 photo, Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives for the opening session of the annual National People's Congress in Beijing's Great Hall of the People.Photo: Ng Han Guan / Associated Press

BEIJING — For graft-busting Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping, the Panama Papers revelations that show his brother-in-law and relatives of two other members of the party's elite inner circle owned offshore companies, often referred to as tax havens, might have been highly damaging.

Instead, Xi will likely emerge unscathed as a result of his personal hold on political power, controls over free speech and the media, and a sense both among the public and potential rivals that all leading families are tainted to some degree, analysts say.

With the latest reports still just days old, however, lingering impacts can't be ruled out entirely. Damage to Xi's reputation might show up in unexpected difficulties in putting in place a new team for when he assumes a second five-year term as leader of the ruling Communist Party next year and for setting in place a succession plan for 2022. Challenges to his leadership of a bevy of offices and committees, or to his sweeping anti-corruption campaign, might also be signs of weakness.

The latest report by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, known as the ICIJ, says Xi's brother-in-law Deng Jiagui purchased one offshore company through Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca in 2004 and two more in 2009. All three had been dissolved or become dormant by the time Xi became party leader in 2012, the ICIJ says citing a stash of 11.5 million leaked Mossack Fonseca documents — dubbed the Panama Papers — that discuss cases involving politicians, celebrities and business people from around the world.

Analysts say the revelations shed little new light on the Xi family's financial doings, further limiting their impact. Xi's case is also helped by the fact that he has shown no fear in taking on high-profile targets in his anti-corruption campaign and has been seen in past as reining in his family's illicit activities by having them sell off their interests and by telling provincial leaders personally that they did not act in his name, they say.

"I would have suspected that many of those who follow elite politics already believe that Xi's extended family is like many — if not most — elite families in that some of them have managed to cash in on China's economic boom. I think, however, he still gets credit for cracking down on high-level corruption," said Georgia State University political scientist Andrew Wedeman, who has extensively researched corruption in China.

The investigation does however provide new information about how members of the Chinese elite use international law firms and shell companies registered overseas in ways that could facilitate the concealment and protection of fortunes whose provenance may be unknown.

The other two current Politburo Standing Committee members named in the ICIJ report are Zhang Gaoli, whose son-in-law was named as a shareholder of three companies incorporated in the British Virgin Islands, and Liu Yunshan, whose daughter-in-law was the director and shareholder of a company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands in 2009.

Having such accounts is not illegal, and no specific functions, asset amounts or allegations of wrongdoing were made in any of the cases. Like Xi, none have responded directly to the reports.

While the leaked documents also revealed hidden dealings by politicians in Western-style democracies, Xi is shielded from the kinds of scrutiny his Western counterparts must contend with. Along with its muzzled press, China permits its national legislature to meet in full session just once a year and then only to debate and approve proposals sent them by the government.

Nor does China permit public protests of the type that confronted Iceland's leader Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson before he stepped aside Tuesday amid outrage over revelations he had used a shell company to shelter large sums while Iceland's economy was in crisis.

While the personal lives and finances of Chinese leaders are strictly off-limits to Chinese media, international outlets have frequently sought to plumb the truth of perceptions that the country's opaque politics and booming economic growth provide a rich environment for corruption. Previous reports, particularly one by Bloomberg News in 2012, have not implicated Xi, his wife or their daughter and have had no discernable impact on his political fortunes.

They do show, however, that Xi's extended family accumulated investments and stakes in companies worth millions of dollars at a time when he was rising in the party and government.

As the children of famed communist revolutionary Xi Zhongxun, he and his siblings enjoy privileged status as members of what is sometimes called China's "red aristocracy," with unique access to circles of power and inside information that can be leveraged for personal gain.

China's censors have blocked, deleted or heavily edited all reports about the ICIJ reports to prevent any mention of Xi, or the relatives of seven other current or former members of the party's all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee reported to have owned overseas tax havens. On Tuesday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei described the reports as "groundless" and said he would refuse to comment on them further.

Even that brief exchange was struck from the transcript of Tuesday's briefing posted on the ministry's website.

Behind the party's habitual secrecy and reflexive desire to control, lies the recognition that corruption remains a volatile issue. Anti-graft sentiments were a driver behind student-led pro-democracy protests in 1989 and since then, more than a half-a-dozen serving or retired members of the party's elite inner circle have been brought down over corruption allegations

However, the perception that all leading families are corrupt to some degree also acts as a form of "MAD (mutually assured destruction) deterrence," said Steve Tsang, senior fellow at the University of Nottingham's China Policy Institute. Criticism, if it comes, is more likely to emerge from "outside the top echelon of the leadership in China," Tsang said.

Chinese officials are also sheltered by public disclosure rules that require only that they declare their assets internally. The public in most cases never knows what is in such declarations, nor how carefully they are audited. Calls for changes have fallen on deaf ears or in some cases met with reprisals.

Wealth among members of the legislature, the National People's Congress, is even easier to hide, one reason why the body is known as the richest parliament in the world.

Despite the political obstacles, some Chinese continue to complain about the public's inability to supervise and push for greater transparency in their leaders' financial dealings.

"If well implemented, asset declaration should be a good way to fight corruption and ensure the integrity of public officials," the official newspaper Ningbo Daily said in a March 31 article.

Story: Christopher Bodeen / Associated Press

 

Related stories:

Panama Papers: Authorities Seek Names of 21 Thai Clients of Offshoring Company

Panama Papers: Massive Leak Exposes Where World Leaders Hide Money

 

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Ferry Captains Lose License for Racing to Phangan Island

Screenshot of video of the near-collision filmed by Facebook user Kanchit Boonmak. Image: Facebook.

SURAT THANI — Marine authorities yesterday suspended two ferry captains for engaging in a race on their way to Phangan island last weekend.

A captain for Seatran company has his  license to operate commerical ships suspended for two years for starting the race with a boat from a rival firm called Raja Ferry, while the latter ship’s captain also lost the license for six months for taking up the challenge, an official said. 

“They were both wrong, but their wrongdoing carries different weight,” Prawate Suphachai, head of the provincial marine department, said Thursday. 


Prayuth Promises Punishment for Not Maintaining Transport Safety


The incident took place on Saturday when Seatran ferry captain Wattanapong Srisaiyapetch tried to overtake and race off a Raja Ferry ship, piloted by Niran Yenraksa, and almost came to a collision. Instead of swerving away, Niran stayed on course and attempted to race with Wattanapong, according to Prawate. 

“The law says that in event of another ship blocking your way, or if there’s reason to believe that the ship will block your way, it’s your responsibility to avoid it, so they were both wrong,” Prawate said. He added that Wattanapong and Niran can appeal the decision within 30 days. 

The two ships, which carried people and vehicles, were en route to Koh Phangan, famous for its monthly Full Moon Party. 

The near-collision was filmed by Facebook user Kanchit Boonmak, who posted it online, drawing many comments that criticize the Seatran captain. He wrote that the Raja Ferry captain eventually stopped the ship and averted a potential disaster. 

“Seatran 8, you’re such a genius,” Kanchit wrote. “If Raja didn’t stop the engine, it would have been a wreck. I guess you forgot how many people on his ship want to be safe.”

Surat Thani has some of the busiest ferry routes in the country, connecting the mainland with popular tourist destinations like Koh Samui, Koh Phangan and Koh Tao. 

In the light of April 2 incident, Prawate, the marine official, said he’s planning to summon all ferry captains in the province for a lecture on safety and manner. 

“Every captain is knowledgeable and able, but we will summon them to stress [about values],” Prawate said. “We will tighten the screws. We want them to have a service mind. Every captain is skilled, but they must also be courteous.” 

Like most of other modes of transportation in Thailand, sea travel is fraught with a history of frequent accidents, mostly involving speed boats.

 

Related stories:

Deadly Ferry Fire 'Unprecedented,' Says Krabi Governor 

'Navigation Error' Leads To Pattaya Deadly Ferry Sinking

Speedboat Propeller Severs Tourist’s Leg

5 Chinese Tourists Injured in Speedboat Collision

Indian Tourist Decapitated By Pattaya Speedboat

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

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Vietnam Elects Prime Minister Amid Big Challenges

Nguyen Xuan Phuc, center, takes oath after being elected as prime minister in Hanoi, Vietnam Thursday April, 7, 2016. Photo: Thong Nhat / Vietnam News Agency / Associated Press

HANOI, Vietnam — Vietnam's rubber-stamp parliament on Thursday elected Nguyen Xuan Phuc as prime minister, and he takes office at a time of soaring public debt, a worrying budget deficit and China's growing assertiveness in nearby seas.

In a formal vote, 446 of the 490 members in the National Assembly voted to install Phuc, 61, as the head of government.

The appointment of Phuc, who rose from governor of the central province of Quang Nam to deputy prime minister five years ago, was a mere formality after he was picked at the Communist Party's congress in January as the sole candidate to replace Nguyen Tan Dung, who was removed from office Wednesday.

Phuc took the oath of office and vowed "absolute loyalty to the country, people and the Constitution."

In a televised inaugural speech, Phuc vowed to continue with reforms and fight corruption.

He raised his voice when pledged to "firmly defend the country's independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity."

Phuc takes office at a time when the country is crippled with soaring public debt, a serious budget deficit, China's territorial assertiveness in the South China Sea, as well as an unprecedented drought and salt intrusion in the country's main rice-growing region of the southern Mekong Delta.

"Mr. Phuc will begin his tenure when the economy has been in big trouble," Le Hong Hiep, a visiting fellow at Singapore's Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, said in an email.

"He will have to overcome major challenges to reform the state-owned sector and banking system, improve the country's fiscal position, and strengthen the private sector to make the economy less dependent on foreign investments," Hiep said.

Phuc's appointment completes the triumvirate of power, which includes General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong who was re-elected at the party congress in January and President Tran Dai Quang who was elected by the assembly last week.

Nguyen Quang A, an economist and political analyst, said the trend of reforms and international integration in Vietnam will not be stopped regardless of who is in power.

"No one can delay or derail the international integration, that is the only way for the country's survival."

International rights groups and U.S. government have often criticized Vietnam for jailing people who peacefully express their views, by using vaguely worded security laws. Hanoi says that only law breakers are punished.

The sentencing of seven bloggers and activists in March for "abusing democratic freedoms" and "spreading anti-state propaganda" drew strong opposition from the U.S. government and international rights groups.

"I don't think that Mr. Nguyen Xuan Phuc as the new prime minister will have a big role in improving Vietnam's human rights record," Quang A said, noting the country is ruled by collective leadership.

Story: Yves Damvan / Associated Press

 

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NDM Launches Campaign to Reject Charter at Crowded Book Fair

New Democracy Movement member Rangsiman Rome, in white, hands out bookmarks as part of their campaign against the draft charter launched Wednesday at the Queen Sirikit Convention Center in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Student activist group New Democracy Movement chose a crowded public event on a national holiday today in the capital to open their campaign urging the public to reject the draft charter.

The group chose the popular National Book Fair held at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center, which was packed with visitors Wednesday on Chakri Day, to kick off their “Vote No, Don’t Accept an Unchosen Future” campaign, which will continue until the referendum is held.

“The constitution is the law that everyone in the country will be committed to for a long time. Fundamentally everyone should have the right to express opinions about it,” said 23-year-old activist Chanoknan Ruamsap. “If the junta prohibits us to talk, that means they did not fulfill their own promise.”

Chanoknan said they designed a special bookmark for the book fair featuring famous writers and thinkers weighing in on the charter written by a group of junta appointees.

 

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Bookmarks created by members of the New Democracy Movement to distribute Wednesday at the National Book Fair in Bangkok. Graphic: New Democracy Movement / Facebook

 

The group highlighted what they see as seven flaws of the charter in literature they distributed: permitting a non-MP prime minister, an appointed senate, ongoing use of the junta’s absolute power, reduced social benefits, an unelected committee empowered to seize control from a civilian government, placing civil servants above citizens and a less representative district MP election process.

Members of the junta-appointed Constitution Drafting Committee have said the proposed constitution was written to end decades of cyclical violence and root out corruption. Its civilian critics from both side of that political divide say it is anti-democratic and deepens the military’s hold on power.

Dissent and debate have effectively been quashed outside of state-sanctioned, controlled televised forums to be held some time before the vote, which is currently expected to go forward Aug. 7

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said Tuesday he would order an investigation into who is supporting groups campaigning against the charter after three separate groups of student activists interrupted head of constitution drafter Meechai Ruchupan while he spoke at Thammast University’s Rangsit campus.

“There must be someone [behind the students]. Everyone knows, why do you want me to answer who they are?” he said in indirect reference to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, whose political dynasty the military has attempted to dismantle. 

Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan Wednesday morning stressed all public actions regarding the draft constitution, whether in support or opposition, were strictly prohibited.

During the New Democracy Movement’s hour-long march around the book fair, they were briefly interrupted and told to stop campaigning by venue staff. The activists explained their intentions and continued.

They insisted they will continue their campaign to raise awareness about the draft charter so people can make informed decisions.

“If we accept it, we have to live with it for a long time,” Chanoknan said.

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Student activists and members of the New Democracy Movement announce their campaign to oppose the draft charter on Wednesday at the Queen Sirikit Convention Center in Bangkok

 

Related stories:

Public Can Register for Right to Speak Out on Draft Charter

Charter Draft First Look: When Will the Junta be Really Gone? (Analysis)

Junta Bans Bookstore Talk on Draft Charter

‘Vote No’ Campaigners Stopped by Pattaya Police

Student Protesters Crash Speech of Head Charter Drafter

 

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‘Baitoey RSiam’ Falls Off Renegade Buffalo

Suteewan ‘Baitoey RSiam’ Taveesin falls from a buffalo while co-star Martin Midal clings to the animal’s back

SUPHAN BURI — A romantic scene turned frightening for two actors – and amusing for the internet – when they became trapped atop a runaway buffalo yesterday while shooting a soap opera.

Suteewan “Baitoey RSiam” Taveesin and Martin Midal were filming yet another remake of “Mae Nak” for Channel 8 in a Suphan Buri province field when the buffalo they were riding suddenly galloped away, throwing Baitoey and Martin. Neither was seriously injured.

The 29-year-old singer-actress best known for her 2013 hit “Splash Out,” was taken to a local hospital to be treated for “shock” before being transferred Bangkok’s Vejthani International Hospital.

The Danish-Thai actor Martin, 24, was cut on the chin by one of the buffalo’s horns.

The production crew reportedly believe the accident occurred because they didn’t pray to local guardian spirits in the area before beginning the shoot.
 

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Suteewan “Baitoey RSiam” Taveesin and Martin Midal during the shooting on Tuesday
 

Mae Nak Phra Khanong” is one of Thailand’s best-known and oft-told stories. Part ghost story and part romance, it tells the story of Thailand’s most famous spirit Mae Nak, who died while giving birth.
 

Photo: Channel 8 / Facebook

 

 

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34 °
Wed
30 °
Thu
34 °
Fri
33 °