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Deadly Octopus Spotted During Family Dinner-Prep

RANONG — A family had sliced up the octopus and was about to cook it for dinner when they noticed blue spots on the meat

Fortunately one of them was familiar with the poisonous and deadly seafood featured in recent news as a blue-ringed octopus due to the strange blue blemishes.

Supanon Suksai said she bought the cephalopod from a vendor at the Tung Maprao market in Ranong province on Sunday and her family would have eaten it for dinner had her sister not warned that the meat looked like a venomous octopus show in the news.

 

Supanon immediately called fishery officers.

 

Montri Sumonta, a biologist at the Ranong Sea Fishery Station, said that the octopus Supanon bought was a blue-ringed octopus, which is found in the Gulf of Thailand and Andaman Sea. The species is known as one of the most toxic marine animals. A single bite can be fatal within minutes.

 

Montri said that even if the blue-ringed octopus is cooked at high temperature, its poison remains toxic. Consuming it can cause serious poisoning or death.

 

The octopus has found its way onto store shelves as well.

 

Yesterday a Makro store in Yasothon province announced it had determined a suspicious octopus found there Feb. 22 turned out to be a blue-ringed octopus. The wholesale retailer has checked back through the supply chain, Makro said Monday, and canceled business with the partner who sold the octopuses.

 
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Soldiers Stalk Yingluck Because She’s Pretty: Deputy Junta Chief

Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra greets crowds of supporters Friday outside the Supreme Court in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A leader of the ruling junta said that soldiers have been dispatched to monitor Yingluck Shinawatra not to harass her as alleged by a colleague of the former prime minister, but to protect her.

Responding to a claim that uniformed soldiers trailed Yingluck and took photos of her without her permission, deputy junta chief Prawit Wongsuwan suggested that they probably did so because she is attractive.

“The soldiers took photos of Ms. Yingluck probably she was pretty,” Gen. Prawit told reporters at Government House today. “It’s not a big deal. Don’t think too much about it or be anxious about it.”

The claim about alleged harassment of Yingluck was raised by former Pheu Thai MP Worachai Hema, who said the former prime minister was upset at the soldiers’ actions.

But Prawit said Worachai misread the situation, as the soldiers were sent to provide security for Yingluck, not intimidate her.

\“The NCPO didn’t do anything,” said the general, referring the formal name of the junta, the National Council for Peace and Order. “We provided security to her. Even the media understands. There’s probably only Mr. Worachai who doesn’t understand. If Ms. Yingluck doesn’t like it, next time I will change it. I will tell soldiers not to wear the uniform, because she doesn’t like it.”

Prawit also denied reports of soldiers intimidating the family of fugitive academic and activist Pavin Chachavalpongpun.

“I insist there was no intimidation. I never ordered it,” Prawit said. “Why would I do it?”

Yingluck headed the elected government prior to the May 2014 coup. She is a sister of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the influential politician who is the de facto leader of Pheu Thai Party and its supporters, the Redshirts.

Since the 2014 military takeover, the military has extensively curtailed her activity, forbidding her from participating in politics and sending security officers to monitor many of her public appearances. For her part, Yingluck insists her days in politics are over.

However, her brother Thaksin granted interviews to a number of prominent foreign news agencies last week, in which he criticized the junta and called for a speedy return to democratic rule in Thailand.

Related Stories:

Soldiers ‘Politely’ Stalk Pheu Thai Politician

Soldiers Disrupt Pheu Thai's Legal Defense Meetings

Critic’s Passport Revoked as Junta Reaffirms Ban on Criticism

 

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

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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Striking Images of Disparity in ‘All That Glitters’ at Jam

BANGKOK — A girl throws a temper tantrum in a shopping mall. An inattentive construction worker looks to the sky.

Scenes reflecting the economic inequality in Bangkok and other Southeast Asian cities as caught by the eye of a U.S. street photographer will show in an exhibition opening Saturday in Bangkok.

Adam Birkan will exhibit a series of photos under the name “All That Glitters,” which narrates the gap between the rich and poor in Bangkok, Hong Kong and Singapore through minimal-style square snapshots.

“We live in a time when the absurd has become so normalised, we often stop questioning it. Using the everyday urban landscape to show something is not quite right, Birkan has captured scenes that are so ordinary and yet post-apocalyptic at the same time,” Jam owner Dhyan Ho said.

The event’s opening party starts at 7pm on Saturday at bar and gallery Jam. Free wine is available only from 7pm until 9pm.

Birkan’s photos will be hanging on the walls of the second floor gallery through March 26.

Birkan, 25, is described as an emerging photographer currently living in Bangkok. He is interested in the cultural dynamics of wealth-versus-poverty, prompting him to travel to many countries in Southeast Asia to shoot objects that portray class disparities.

Birkan’s works are typically square photos, which he said is the prefered format for visual consistency.

Birkan was named among 30 photojournalists of Magnum Photo’s 30 Under 30 in 2015. His photos also won a Photo District News’ Emerging Photographer award in 2015 and Honorable Mention in a National Geographic contest in 2014.

All That Glitters, 7pm March 5 through March 26, Jam, BTS Surasak

 

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Study: Zika May Cause Temporary Paralysis

In this Saturday, Feb. 13, 2016 file photo, army soldiers set up a sign that reads in Portuguese "A mosquito is not stronger than an entire country" at the Central station in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo: Silvia Izquierdo / Associated Press.

LONDON — Scientists may have the first evidence that Zika can cause temporary paralysis, according to a new study of patients who developed the rare condition during an outbreak of the virus in Tahiti two years ago.

Zika is currently spreading with alarming speed across the Americas. The World Health Organization declared the epidemic to be a global emergency several weeks ago based on suspicions it may be behind a surge in disturbing birth defects and in Guillain-Barre syndrome, a neurological illness that mostly lasts a few weeks.

Before reaching South America last year, the mosquito-spread Zika had triggered outbreaks in the South Pacific on Yap island in Micronesia and in French Polynesia, including its largest island, Tahiti.

Researchers in Tahiti, France and elsewhere went back and analyzed blood samples from all 42 adults diagnosed with Guillain-Barre syndrome from the 2013-14 outbreak; nearly everyone showed signs of a previous Zika infection.

They were compared with patients who did not have the condition and did not have any Zika symptoms but were treated at the same hospital for other illnesses. Tests showed only half of that group of 98 had apparently been infected with the normally mild virus.

The research was published online Monday in the journal Lancet.

"The evidence that links Zika virus with Guillain-Barre syndrome is now substantially more compelling," said Peter Barlow, an infectious diseases expert at Edinburgh Napier University who was not part of the study. But he noted in a statement that more research was needed before reaching the same conclusion about the outbreak in the Americas, where local factors may be playing a role.

Zika is mostly spread by mosquito bites and in most people causes symptoms including fever, muscle pain and a rash. About 80 percent of people who catch the disease don't report any illness.

Guillain-Barre syndrome is typically seen after a viral or bacterial infection so a possible connection to Zika isn't entirely unexpected. It occurs when the body's immune system attacks the nervous system, often for unknown reasons. It can cause muscle weakness and breathing problems; about 5 percent of patients die from the disorder. Of the patients observed in Tahiti, none died and three months after leaving the hospital, about 40 percent could walk unaided.

The study also considered whether Guillain-Barre was the result of people being infected with both Zika and a related tropical disease, dengue, by comparing them with people who had Zika but no neurological symptoms. It found no hint that having dengue upped the risk.

Based on their findings, the scientists estimated that of 100,000 people with Zika, about 24 would develop Guillain-Barre syndrome. In Europe and North America, the average rate of the syndrome after infections like flu and dengue is about one to two people per 100,000.

David Smith of Australia's Curtin University said it was difficult to know exactly how often Zika causes Guillain-Barre syndrome. Smith co-authored an accompanying commentary in the Lancet.

He said in an email that because the Zika virus disappears from the body by the time patients develop neurological complications, there was only indirect evidence — via infection-fighting antibodies — that Zika caused Guillain-Barre syndrome. Zika is thought to be gone from the bloodstream after a week or so. Smith said not all of the Guillain-Barre cases in Tahiti could be blamed on Zika and that the researchers' estimate of the syndrome's incidence was probably inflated.

Still, experts predicted cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome would jump as Zika explodes in the Americas and WHO has warned the disease is likely to spread everywhere in the region except for Canada and Chile.

The study doesn't shed any light on whether Zika is also responsible for the spike in the number of babies born in Brazil with abnormally small heads, or microcephaly.

"That remains a mystery but our suspicions are very strong," said Jimmy Whitworth, a professor of infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

"Both Guillain-Barre syndrome and microcephaly are neurological conditions, but I don't think it would be the same mechanism that's causing both," he said. "There may be something slightly different happening with microcephaly."

Since the Zika outbreak in the Americas began last year, it has sparked epidemics in about 40 countries, of which eight have reported cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome possibly connected to Zika.

Story: Maria Cheng / Associated Press

Related Stories:

Zika Virus in Thailand but Not Epidemic, Health Officials Assure

Second Zika Case of 2016 Found, Treated

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Street Man Beaten to Death, Dumped in Canal by Drunks

Khlong Phadung Krung Kasem Photo: Heinrich Damm

BANGKOK — Pankacha Khlonkrata and three of his friends, all drunk, were walking near Hua Lamphong Railway Station when they found Teera Phromkot lying in the street.

Pankacha believed the man laughed at his group, he would later tell police, so he approached and ordered him to do push-ups for their amusement.

It was Teera’s badly beaten found floating Friday in a canal between the century-old station and Chinatown, where Pankacha told police they dumped him after savagely beating him for failing to do as requested.

Police arrested four men on suspicion of the crime Sunday and later said they confessed to beating Teera. They dragged him into a dark area where police said they kicked him in the head and stomach until he lost consciousness. Then they dumped him in Khlong Phadung Krung Kasem.

Somehow, they told police they were surprised to learn he had died.

Pankacha, 42, was just released from prison in April and had a rap sheet including fraud, gambling, gun possession and more. Suspect Kwanchai Yamtoe, 39, had priors for drug-related crimes, robbery, interfering with a peace officer and escaping detention. He had been free since October 2014.

The other two suspects are Somkiat Phakheekao, 20 and Kiattisak Sattharattanatrai, 18.

All of them will be charged with murder, police said.

 

 

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Private SAR Boat Underway to Andaman and Boat People

MOAS’s newly refitted search and rescue ship M.Y. Phoenix at a port in Samut Prakan on Friday.

BANGKOK — Long-range recon drones will fly from what’s billed as the world’s only private search and rescue ship to scour the Andaman Sea for boat people beginning Thursday.

A Malta-based charity credited with rescuing more than 12,000 refugees in the Mediterranean has set course for the Andaman Sea, where it will spend at least four weeks offering aid to the seasonal tide of humans who set out in search of better lives but often wind up abandoned or worse at sea.

One challenge in the mission for the Migrant Offshore Aid Station, or MOAS, will be coordinating with the Royal Thai Navy, whose policy is to push migrant boats back out to sea. The project’s director said Friday their contact so far has been “positive.”

“I had discussions with Thai and Malaysian authorities. They were very positive discussions,” said MOAS director, Martin Xuereb. “We open the channel of communication and that is a very, very important step.”

Their ship, the Phoenix, was refitted in Thailand prior to charting a course to the Andaman Sea. The Phoenix should is expected to arrive Thursday and operate in the area for at least four weeks.

Founder Christopher Catrambone, an American businessman, said their goal is not to step on anyone’s toes but to support local efforts for the same purpose of saving lives.

With its pair of long-distance drones, the Phoenix and its crew will be able to find and locate vessels that may be transporting migrants in the sea. The project’s director said they will then coordinate with authorities on shore while providing medical service on board.

Since the sailing season started in September, the UNHCR estimates more than 1,000 Rohingya have fled Myanmar by sea to escape systematic abuse and discrimination perpetrated there. The president of the New York-based World Rohingya Organization believes 200,000 Rohingya may depart Rakhine state in 2016, according to The Straits Times.

The exodus of Rohingya, Bangladeshi and others reached a crisis point in 2015, with hundreds thought to have died as migrants made their way south toward Malaysia and Indonesia.

Right groups believe the number of Rohingya refugees in the Andaman has dropped considerably compared to the same period last year due to a crackdown on human smuggling in Thailand and Bangladesh.

In May 2015, authorities discovered slave camps and graves near the border with Malaysia, prompting an investigation that saw nearly 200 suspects identified, including several high-ranking officials implicated. It was later suspended, and the chief investigator fled the country citing death threats.

MOAS director Xuereb said Thai authorities will be kept aware of the ship’s whereabouts at all times and notified of any migrants encountered.

The primary mission is to provide assistance. In events where an emergency requires rescuing refugees from the sea, Xuereb said deciding to allow any to disembark from the ship is not “something that happens in two minutes.” Though, he said, Thailand has a legal responsibility as a member of the International Organization for Migration.

The Phoenix is supported on board by Malta-based NGO Migrant Report and Fortify Rights, a human rights advocacy group in Southeast Asia.

Catrambone has kept MOAS afloat with millions of dollars of his own money.

 

Related stories:

Navy, Army Officers Charged with Human Trafficking

Death Camps: Police Arrest 12, Seek 56 Others in Trafficking Probe

Thai Navy Denies Threatening Rohingya Boat With Guns

Thai Govt: Ship of Abandoned Myanmar Migrants Will Not Land in Thailand

Four Arrested Over Rohingya Mass Grave at Thai-Malay Border

 

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TV Celebrity Sorayuth Gets 13 Years for Embezzling Ad Revenue

Sorayuth Suthassanachinda at the court Monday.

BANGKOK — One of the nation’s most recognizable television personalities today was sentenced to 13 years in prison for cheating a state-owned channel of more than 138 million baht in advertisement revenue a decade ago.

The Criminal Court convicted TV news host Sorayuth Suthassanachinda, whose daily news talk show is watched by millions, of embezzling 138 million baht by selling more commercial airtime than allowed over a 14-month period and bribing another employee to hide it.

Sorayuth was present in court Monday for sentencing, with three other members of his media advertising firm receiving the same jail term. Sorayuth is seeking bail that if granted would keep him free while his case is appealed.

In 2005 and 2006, Sorayuth’s company Rai Som hid the extra revenues by paying MCOT employee Pichapa Iamsa-ard more than 600,000 baht to conceal it, according to the prosecutor. Pichapa remains on the run and was sentenced to 20 years in absentia.

The court declined to suspend their sentences, a legal mechanism which often sees high-profile figures convicted without serving any jail time. Sorayuth this afternoon was granted bail on a 1 million baht bond under the condition he cannot leave the country and must report to the court every 30 days.

The scandal dates back to February 2005 when prosecutors said Sorayuth began to run ads on his daily popular news show Khui Kui Khao (Talking and Digging Into the News) which exceeded the allotment given by Channel 9, which is state enterprise MCOT’s flagship channel.

Prosecutors convinced the court this fraud continued until April 2006. The case came to light when officials at Channel 9 determined that Sorayuth owed the state enterprise more than 138 million baht in lost revenue plus interest of 14 million baht.

Investigators also reportedly found that Sorayuth paid Pichapa, who was in charge of ad revenues, about 700,000 baht to hide the overage.

Sorayuth’s firm Rai Som eventually paid 152 million baht in compensation to the channel, but that didn’t get investigators to drop the case.

Sorayuth declined to answer reporters’ questions when he arrived at the court Monday morning.

A former journalist, Sorayuth shot to national fame in 2005 when he started Khui Kui Khao. On the show, he went over the top news of the day in a more casual, human format that gave his national audience more clarity.

The show’s popularity was cemented during Yellowshirt protests against then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra; Sorayuth regularly interviewed political leaders from both sides and extensively covered the unfolding crisis.

Since 2007, Sorayuth has worked exclusively for Channel 3, running several prime-time news shows, such as Reung Den Yen Nee (Top Story This Evening).

Sorayuth’s popularity is so immense that the phrase “this story is going on Sorayuth’s show,” is frequently used on social media to describe potentially controversial issues.

 

Correction: An earlier version of this story mistakenly reported Pichapa was bribed with more than 600 million baht, in fact it was more than 600,000 baht. 

Update: Story updated to with information that bail was granted.

 

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

 

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TV Celebrity Sorayuth Gets 13 Years for Embezzling Ad Revenue

Sorayuth Suthassanachinda appears in court Nov. 12, 2014, in Bangkok. Photo: Matichon

BANGKOK — One of the nation’s most recognizable television personalities today was sentenced to 13 years in prison for cheating a state-owned channel of more than 138 million baht in advertisement revenue a decade ago.

The Criminal Court convicted TV news host Sorayuth Suthassanachinda, whose daily news talk show is watched by millions, of embezzling 138 million baht by selling more commercial airtime than allowed over a 14-month period and bribing another employee to hide it.

Sorayuth was present in court Monday for sentencing, with three other members of his media advertising firm receiving the same jail term. Sorayuth is seeking bail that if granted would keep him free while his case is appealed.

In 2005 and 2006, Sorayuth’s company Rai Som hid the extra revenues by paying MCOT employee Pichapa Iamsa-ard more than 600,000 baht to conceal it, according to the prosecutor. Pichapa remains on the run and was sentenced to 20 years in absentia.

The court declined to suspend their sentences, a legal mechanism which often sees high-profile figures convicted without serving any jail time. Sorayuth this afternoon was granted bail on a 1 million baht bond under the condition he cannot leave the country and must report to the court every 30 days.

The scandal dates back to February 2005 when prosecutors said Sorayuth began to run ads on his daily popular news show Khui Kui Khao (Talking and Digging Into the News) which exceeded the allotment given by Channel 9, which is state enterprise MCOT’s flagship channel.

Prosecutors convinced the court this fraud continued until April 2006. The case came to light when officials at Channel 9 determined that Sorayuth owed the state enterprise more than 138 million baht in lost revenue plus interest of 14 million baht.

Investigators also reportedly found that Sorayuth paid Pichapa, who was in charge of ad revenues, about 700,000 baht to hide the overage.

Sorayuth’s firm Rai Som eventually paid 152 million baht in compensation to the channel, but that didn’t get investigators to drop the case.

Sorayuth declined to answer reporters’ questions when he arrived at the court Monday morning.

A former journalist, Sorayuth shot to national fame in 2005 when he started Khui Kui Khao. On the show, he went over the top news of the day in a more casual, human format that gave his national audience more clarity.

The show’s popularity was cemented during Yellowshirt protests against then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra; Sorayuth regularly interviewed political leaders from both sides and extensively covered the unfolding crisis.

Since 2007, Sorayuth has worked exclusively for Channel 3, running several prime-time news shows, such as Reung Den Yen Nee (Top Story This Evening).

Sorayuth’s popularity is so immense that the phrase “this story is going on Sorayuth’s show,” is frequently used on social media to describe potentially controversial issues.

 

Correction: An earlier version of this story mistakenly reported Pichapa was bribed with more than 600 million baht, in fact it was more than 600,000 baht. 

Update: Story updated to with information that bail was granted.

 

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

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].

 

Follow @KhaosodEnglish

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Bangkok Discovers Charming Field in Lat Phrao, Immediately Trashes it

Hundreds of visitors tromped through an empty field in Bangkok’s Lat Phrao during the weekend to take selfies and, it would seem, casually litter.

BANGKOK — It took only one weekend to transform a lovely field of rolling foxtails in the capital’s Lat Phrao district into a wasteland.

The empty field located on Kaset-Nawamin Road went viral online twice during the weekend: first when it was “discovered” and again after it fell victim to its sudden popularity.

It began Friday when someone on Pantip posted about driving past the field to find it was blooming with flowers and a hot spot for shots after reportedly being burned last month.

“If you love taking pictures, please come before the flowers are blown away by the wind. The field is located behind the mall called Nawamin City Avenue,” Pantip user 2134791 wrote.

That led the grassland to being featured in the mass media and spreading on social networks over the weekend, prompting an outpouring of Bangkokians, and even visitors from nearby provinces, to pay a visit.

While many left with cameras full of photos, they also left some things behind, such as plastic cups and plastic bags.

That caused the field to go viral again Sunday evening, this time with netizens criticizing those who ruined the site with litter.

“No one wants to come to this field to take a selfie with trash. Please preserve this field to stay with us,” photographer Sasidit Sasisakulporn, who had visited the field, wrote on Facebook.

 

Photo: Sasidit Sasisakulporn / Facebook

 

Someone also reportedly damaged the field by driving a vehicle atop it.

“I went there on Sunday and left within 10 minutes because it wasn’t pretty anymore. I even saw someone taking a motorbike in to take a picture,” Pantip userLussuria Rei wrote.
 

Photo: Lussuria Rei / Pantip

 

 

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

 

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Bangkok Discovers Charming Field in Lat Phrao, Immediately Trashes it

Hundreds of visitors tromped through an empty field in Bangkok’s Lat Phrao during the weekend to take selfies and, it would seem, casually litter.

BANGKOK — It took only one weekend to transform a lovely field of rolling foxtails in the capital’s Lat Phrao district into a wasteland.

The empty field located on Kaset-Nawamin Road went viral online twice during the weekend: first when it was “discovered” and again after it fell victim to its sudden popularity.

It began Friday when someone on Pantip posted about driving past the field to find it was blooming with flowers and a hot spot for shots after reportedly being burned last month.

“If you love taking pictures, please come before the flowers are blown away by the wind. The field is located behind the mall called Nawamin City Avenue,” Pantip user 2134791 wrote.

That led the grassland to being featured in the mass media and spreading on social networks over the weekend, prompting an outpouring of Bangkokians, and even visitors from nearby provinces, to pay a visit.

While many left with cameras full of photos, they also left some things behind, such as plastic cups and plastic bags.

That caused the field to go viral again Sunday evening, this time with netizens criticizing those who ruined the site with litter.

“No one wants to come to this field to take a selfie with trash. Please preserve this field to stay with us,” photographer Sasidit Sasisakulporn, who had visited the field, wrote on Facebook.

 

Photo: Sasidit Sasisakulporn / Facebook

 

Someone also reportedly damaged the field by driving a vehicle atop it.

“I went there on Sunday and left within 10 minutes because it wasn’t pretty anymore. I even saw someone taking a motorbike in to take a picture,” Pantip user Lussuria Rei wrote.
 

Photo: Lussuria Rei / Pantip

 

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