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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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40-Degree Plus Songkran Expected

Tourists splashing water with elephants on Monday at Ayutthaya Historical Park in Ayutthaya province

By Simon Duncan
Deputy Editor

BANGKOK — The mercury is predicted to peak at 39C in parts of the capital today. If that is not hot enough for you, don’t worry, during Songkran Bangkok and large swathes of the country are expected to experience temperatures that fly into the forties.

According to the Thai Meteorological Department, Sukothai experienced a sweltering high of 44C yesterday and endured another sweaty day today.

In many parts of the north and northeast temperatures are set to exceed 40C from today until at least Monday.

Bangkok and much of central and eastern Thailand is slightly cooler by comparison today, but from Thursday to Saturday the capital and many surrounding provinces are predicted to reach a punishing 40C or more.

Things are set to be comparatively cooler in southern and coastal regions where daytime highs are predicted to be around 35-38C during Songkran according to the Meteorological Department.

During Songkran southerly winds are set to bring humidity from the South China Sea and the Gulf of Thailand to cover the north, northeast and the central region with occasional respites from gusts of wind and some hail in some areas, according to the weather bureau.

Bangkok can expect haze during the day throughout out the New Year period. There is also the possibility of isolated thunderstorms throughout the country.

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Residents and tourists eating lunch today in in Yala province  

 

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Hot, Hot, Hot: Prepare for 39C in Bangkok

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Kalasin is the Richest Place on Earth, Interior Ministry Site Claims

Kalasin province is located in the northeast of Thailand. Photo: Google Map

BANGKOK — Government databases are being discussed online again since last night. This time, however, rather than leaking personal data or being breached by hackers they were being mocked by netizens for tables and charts showing statistics that simply didn’t make sense.

A 2015 statistics report conducted by the Ministry of Interior’s Information and Communications Technology Center was shared and mocked online Monday night. Netizens were bemused by the potentially false or flawed information, including income figures for households in Thailand that might make many Wall Street bankers look poor by comparison.  

According to the figures in the since withdrawn government database, there were over nine billion households in southern Thailand in 2012 before the number dramatically drops to around 920,000 households in 2013 and falls again in 2014 to leave around 580,000 households.

Nearly 3,800 senior citizens in southern Thailand in 2013 skyrocketed to 330 million people in 2014, according to data that was seen on the website last night.

Kalasin province, according to the since removed data, was the richest province in the country — with an average monthly income per household of over 24 million baht (USD685,000).

If true, this statistic would make households in Kalasin more than one thousand times richer than those in Luxembourg which has the highest median household income in the world.

According to a member of staff at the interior ministry, the director of the ICT Center was unavailable at the moment while attempts to reach the director of the ministry’s Monitoring and Evaluation Division were not returned.

The flawed data from 2015's third quarter report was shared online by Facebook user Ananda “Aof” Amataya on Monday. Aof, who works as a dentist, said that he was looking for data on household income for his research, but he did not trust the numbers in the data.

“At first I thought the decimal point was just in the wrong place. But later I realized that the numbers in the data were just scattered all over the place,” Aof told Khaosod English on Tuesday afternoon.

The section of the government homepage that contained the report is currently blank, except for a message from the ministry, “[We] apologize, statistical information is now being examined.”
 

25768109314_d5d22a736c.jpg

Table on top ten provinces with the highest average monthly income per household per  in 2014 on page 142.
 

12973369_1595536210761850_2174280656611752763_o.jpg

Table on number of households in different regions of Thailand on page 135
 

STATS.jpg

Table and chart on senior people in different parts of the country on page 120
 

Related stories:

Vast Trove of Travelers’ Personal Info Posted on Govt Website

Expat Personal Records Posted to Govt Site

Anonymous Releases Court Data as Police Vow to Catch Hackers

 

Chayanit Itthipongmaetee can be reached at[email protected] and @chayaniti92.

 

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Kalasin is the Richest Place on Earth, Interior Ministry Site Claims

Kalasin province is located in the northeast of Thailand. Photo: Google Map

BANGKOK — Government databases are being discussed online again since last night. This time, however, rather than leaking personal data or being breached by hackers they were being mocked by netizens for tables and charts showing statistics that simply didn’t make sense.

A 2015 statistics report conducted by the Ministry of Interior’s Information and Communications Technology Center was shared and mocked online Monday night. Netizens were bemused by the potentially false or flawed information, including income figures for households in Thailand that might make many Wall Street bankers look poor by comparison.  

According to the figures in the since withdrawn government database, there were over nine billion households in southern Thailand in 2012 before the number dramatically drops to around 920,000 households in 2013 and falls again in 2014 to leave around 580,000 households.

Nearly 3,800 senior citizens in southern Thailand in 2013 skyrocketed to 330 million people in 2014, according to data that was seen on the website last night.

Kalasin province, according to the since removed data, was the richest province in the country — with an average monthly income per household of over 24 million baht (USD685,000).

If true, this statistic would make households in Kalasin more than one thousand times richer than those in Luxembourg which has the highest median household income in the world.

According to a member of staff at the interior ministry, the director of the ICT Center was unavailable at the moment while attempts to reach the director of the ministry’s Monitoring and Evaluation Division were not returned.

The flawed data in the third-quarter (April to June) 2015 report was shared online by Facebook user Ananda “Aof” Amataya on Monday. Aof, who works as a dentist, said that he was looking for data on household income for his research, but he did not trust the numbers in the data.

“At first I thought the decimal point was just in the wrong place. But later I realized that the numbers in the data were just scattered all over the place,” Aof told Khaosod English on Tuesday afternoon.

The section of the government homepage that contained the report is currently blank, except for a message from the ministry, “[We] apologize, statistical information is now being examined.”
 

25768109314_d5d22a736c.jpg

Table on top ten provinces with the highest average monthly income per household per  in 2014 on page 142.
 

12973369_1595536210761850_2174280656611752763_o.jpg

Table on number of households in different regions of Thailand on page 135
 

STATS.jpg

Table and chart on senior people in different parts of the country on page 120
 

Related stories:

Vast Trove of Travelers’ Personal Info Posted on Govt Website

Expat Personal Records Posted to Govt Site

Anonymous Releases Court Data as Police Vow to Catch Hackers

 

Chayanit Itthipongmaetee can be reached at [email protected] and @chayaniti92.

 

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China Football Development Plan Envisions 50 Million Players

In this March 18, 2015 file photo, students take part in a soccer class at a middle school in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang province. Photo: Associated Press

BEIJING — Seeking to close a glaring gap in its international sporting prowess, China has announced an ambitious football development plan that envisions 50 million players joining in the game by the end of the decade and the transformation of the country into a "first-rate major footballing power" by the middle of the century.

To achieve those goals, China will put into service 70,000 football pitches, including those newly built and others refurbished, according to a lengthy document released late Monday by the Chinese Football Association.

The initiative especially targets long-neglected youth programs, with more than 30 million primary and secondary schools to play regularly, and the training of 10,000 coaches. It would also more than double the number of specialized academies to 20,000.

The plan is to be rolled out in three stages, with the short term goals set for 2020, midterm for 2030 and long-term for 2050. No figures were given on how much the government plans to spend on the project.

The aim, the document says, is to "strive to realize the goal of becoming a first-rate major footballing power, realize the all-around development of Chinese football, fulfill the football dream of the sons and daughters of China, and fulfill our obligations to world football."

Despite its success in other sports at the Olympics and other global competitions, China has been a perennial underperformer in international football. Its men's team has qualified for only one World Cup finals competition, in 2002, and is given poor odds of making it to Russia in 2018.

A recent USD$300 million (10.5 billion baht) splurge to bring big-name foreign talent to the Chinese Premier League has raised the level of play among top-flight domestic clubs. It's far from clear though, whether their skills will rub-off on local talent. Of the 16 goals scored in the league's opening round, not one could be attributed to a homegrown Chinese player and the influx of overseas goal-scoring talent could further reduce local players' chances to shine.

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In this March 18, 2015 file photo, students take part in soccer class at a middle school in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang province. Photo: Associated Press

Despite that, President Xi Jinping has made boosting Chinese football's fortunes a top sporting priority, ordering the cabinet to help guide the plan announced Monday and demanding results.

As befits a document produced by a Communist Party-led government accustomed to dictating top-down solutions, the plan comes laden with political jargon and patriotic exhortations.

Football "is an important vessel of the national spirit. Football has an important education function that benefits the propagation of socialist core values," the document said.

Despite the government's encouragement, analysts questioned whether parents would be willing to allow what is often their only child to spend more time on sports programs that take time away from their studies. While football is hugely popular in China, participation in the sport is not as deeply embedded in the culture as in European nations, they said.

"It is very hard to buy such success in a team sport, not only football, because such sports are deeply anchored in popular culture and have everything to do with little kids playing them from when they start to walk," wrote Andrei Markovits, a professor of comparative politics at the University of Michigan and author of "Gaming the World: How Sports Are Reshaping Global Politics and Culture."

"In other words, one cannot 'plan' these things from above like one can individual sports," Markovits wrote in a comment on the Chinese football plan.

Story: Christopher Bodeen / Associated Press

 

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Thailand Edges Closer to Qualifying for FIFA 2018 World Cup 

Ex-Top Cop Appoints Top Cop to Run Premier League

Worawi Influence Wanes as Former Police Chief Elected Football President

 

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Drunk Drivers May Serve Stint as Morgue Helpers

In this April 13, 2015 file photo, people riding on a motorbike react as a boy splashes water on them during the traditional Thai New Year celebrations or Songkran water festival in Bangkok. Photo: Sakchai Lalit  / Associated Press

BANGKOK — To try to combat the carnage on the country's roads during the annual weeklong Songkran celebration, authorities are going gory: Drunk drivers and repeat traffic offenders may be sent to work in hospital morgues to see the fruits of their irresponsibility.

The Songkran holiday puts untold thousands on the road, returning to their home villages from the big cities to reunite with families and cut loose, with alcohol usually fueling the festivities. Much of the joyriding takes place on motorbikes, with little observance of helmet laws. The government's safety campaign appropriately calls the period — during which it is estimated 2.3 people die and 160 are injured every hour — "The Seven Days of Danger."

Casual attitudes toward road safety give Thailand the second worst record in the world for traffic fatalities, and health and safety experts fear the situation may be getting worse. The government, which earlier this year said drunk drivers could have their cars impounded for the duration of the holiday, last week approved the morgue shock treatment plan.

"Traffic offenders who are found guilty by courts will be sent to do public service work at morgues in hospitals," said Police Col. Kriangdej Jantarawong, deputy director of the Special Task Planning Division. "It is a strategy used to make traffic offenders afraid of driving recklessly and driving while they are drunk because they could end up in the same condition. It is aimed to be a deterrent, a way to discourage people."

Anurak Amornpetchsathaporn, director of the emergency response for the Bureau of Public Health, said Monday that a stint of working in hospital morgues may bring home the problem to reckless drivers in a way that community service such as tidying up parks and libraries has failed to do.

"They should see the actual physical and mental damage," he said. "In the morgue, they will have to be cleaning up and transporting bodies, so that hopefully they would feel the pain, so that they may understand and attain a good conscience, so that it could be safer on the roads."

Story: Associated Press

 

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Draft Charter Opponents Perplexed by Abhisit’s Stance

Former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, head of the Democrat Party speaks to reporters Feb. 17, 2016, at the Appeals Court in Bangkok.
Former Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, head of the Democrat Party speaks to reporters Feb. 17, 2016, at the Appeals Court in Bangkok.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — Some opponents to the junta-sponsored draft charter want the Democrat Party to clearly state whether the party plans to endorse or reject the charter draft.

The calls come after Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva held a press conference on Sunday to say the draft charter would bring about a retreat in democracy. However, Abhisit stopped short of committing whether he and the party would resolve to vote to reject the charter draft during the referendum on August 7 or not.

“It’s not clear whether the party will reject it or not,” said Sirawith Seritiwat, aka Ja New, a key member of New Democracy Movement who is campaigning against the charter draft. “This could lead to their supporters becoming confused.”

Weng Tojirakarn, a former Pheu Thai MP and Redshirt co-leader, accused Abhisit and the party of being insincere as one week before Abhisit spoke, Juti Krairiksh, secretary general of the Democrat Party said on April 2 that he accepted the charter draft. Juti added that those who don’t should not become politicians.

“This a like a soap opera fooling Thailand. It’s ridiculous. The party’s secretary general said those who do not accept this charter draft should not become politicians. To put it politely, Abhisit was very careful in expressing his views. In layman’s term, he wasn’t being insincere and sneaky, however. When reporters asked if this means Abhisit will reject the charter draft,  he refuses to commit himself. Well, if one is against gambling then one should not gamble, should they?”

Sirote Klampaiboon an independent political scientist who opposes of the charter draft, thinks Abhisit has already committed himself on Sunday beyond reproach.

“I don’t think it was an attempt not to commit [himself]. Saying he disagrees with the charter draft should be a clear enough [statement],” said Sirote. “Eventually this will lead the party into rejecting the draft.”

Asked if he thinks Abhisit and the party could still do a U-turn and eventually endorse the controversial draft charter, Sirote said “it’s going to be difficult”.
 

Related stories:

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

Final Draft of Charter Out, Critics Resolute on Rejection

Public Can Register for Right to Speak Out on Draft Charter

 

 

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Fanart Fiction Cover Censored for Parodying Politics

A cover design entitled “A Coup of the Heart with Mr. Ocha” featured on Ookbeecomics website was blocked on Monday

BANGKOK — A book cover submitted to a design competition was blocked on Monday after appearing to mimic Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha and ex-Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

“A Coup of the Heart with Mr. Ocha” was submitted to compete for the best book cover in the Jamsai Fanart competition by Wachirapan Chuesaard, an admin for the Facebook page Hoidok on Sunday.

The drawing depicts a military man with his arm around a woman whose wrists are shackled together while the background appears to depict Democracy Monument in Bangkok.

The cover displayed on comic community Ookbeecomics remains available online. However, clicking on the cover today leads to a message from the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology saying that the link is blocked.

“A girl was controlled by her megalomaniac brother, so the general has to step in and revolutionize her life,” reads the tease on the book jacket.

With a plot featuring an army hero named Ocha and a heroine called Proo, some could be reminded of the junta chief’s last name and former Prime Minister Yingluck’s nickname, “Poo” (crab).

“Ocha, a hot-tempered general is ordered to keep his eyes on a girl with a pretty, pimple-free face called Proo, whose mind is controlled by her brother. Their family are billionaires. Proo is depressed because her brother keeps bossing her around to be the leader of the country. Ocha investigates the story and has to [save the situation],” states the synopsis on the Facebook page Hoidok.

The fanart page explained that the cover was inspired by a soap opera “Kiattiyot Kabot Rak” (Honor, Love Rebel) which was broadcast on Channel 3 in 1999. The story centers around two soldiers who are enemies competing both at work and for the heart of the same woman.

“I was in shock [when I learned that the website was blocked,]” Wachirapan, the creator of the drawing told Khaosod English Monday evening. “I guess my artwork won’t be eligible for the competition because it violated the criteria that artwork should not involve any institutions, politics or religion.”

The additional criteria was posted online Sunday after Wachirapan posted his work to the public.

At the time of publication “A Coup of the Heart with Mr. Ocha” has received the most votes on the website.

Organized by Jamsai, a company known for publishing romantic fiction aimed at teenagers, Jamsai Fanart competition was open to submission from March 10 until yesterday, April 10. The three winners announced on April 22 will receive 10,000 baht, 8,000 baht and 5,000 baht respectively.

 

Related stories:

Libel Unclear in ‘Illegal’ Video Mocking Prayuth

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Canada Joins Growing Call to Repeal Police Powers Granted to Soldiers

Soldiers posted outside an army auditorium where civilians were being brought in for ‘attitude adjustment’ one day after the coup on May 23, 2014, in Bangkok.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — The Canadian Embassy in Bangkok said it is concerned by National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) Order 13/2016 which grants expanded policing powers to the Thai military, saying the order threatens to undermine the rule of law and due process and increases the potential for human rights abuses in Thailand.

“Canada also wishes to reiterate our significant concerns regarding the military government’s restrictions on basic civil and political rights, including the Thai government’s stated intention to expand its used of attitude adjustment as a means to intimidate political opponents and activists,” the statement issued Monday afternoon read.

“Canada is also closely following developments regarding the referendum law and urges Thai authorities to ensure Thai citizens are able to engage in a free and inclusive debate regarding the merits of the draft constitution.”

The statement concluded by saying that Canada calls on Thailand to respect its international human rights obligations, including those related to freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, and the rule of law.

The statement comes after the US, member states of the European Union and international NGOs expressed similar concerns last week.

Related stories:

Rights Groups Unite to Decry Sweeping Police Powers Granted to Soldiers

 

Pravit Rojanaphruk can be reached at [email protected] and @PravitR.

 

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Canada Joins Growing Call to Repeal Police Powers Granted to Soldiers

Soldiers posted outside an army auditorium where civilians were being brought in for ‘attitude adjustment’ one day after the coup on May 23, 2014, in Bangkok.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — The Canadian Embassy in Bangkok said it is concerned by National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) Order 13/2016 which grants expanded policing powers to the Thai military, saying the order threatens to undermine the rule of law and due process and increases the potential for human rights abuses in Thailand.

“Canada also wishes to reiterate our significant concerns regarding the military government’s restrictions on basic civil and political rights, including the Thai government’s stated intention to expand its used of attitude adjustment as a means to intimidate political opponents and activists,” the statement issued Monday afternoon read.

“Canada is also closely following developments regarding the referendum law and urges Thai authorities to ensure Thai citizens are able to engage in a free and inclusive debate regarding the merits of the draft constitution.”

The statement concluded by saying that Canada calls on Thailand to respect its international human rights obligations, including those related to freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, and the rule of law.

The statement comes after the US, member states of the European Union and international NGOs expressed similar concerns last week.

Related stories:

Rights Groups Unite to Decry Sweeping Police Powers Granted to Soldiers

 

Pravit Rojanaphruk can be reached at [email protected] and @PravitR.

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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