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Buddhist Scholar Warns Against Establishing National Religion

Hundreds of monks scuffle with soldiers and try to forcibly remove vehicles blocking their way Feb.15 at a Buddhism park west of Bangkok.  

BANGKOK — A prominent Buddhist scholar warns that making Buddhism the national religion will do more harm than good and cause religious conflict in Thailand, where many profess other faiths including Islam and Christianity.

At at a time when loud calls are coming from some quarters for Buddhism to be legally enshrined as the official religion of the land, Sulak Sivaraksa predicts any serious consideration to the demand could cause religious turmoil like that experienced in countries such as Sri Lanka and Myanmar.

“Those who think like this are extremely nationalistic,” Sulak said.

His reaction came as some monks and Buddhist laymen are calling for a national religion to be written into the next constitution, most visibly on Feb. 15, when hundreds of monks clashed with soldiers west of Bangkok.

A spokesman for the junta-appointed drafters tasked with writing the next constitution, Amorn Wanichwiwatana, was noncommittal to the idea.

Sulak urged Thai Buddhists to think about fellow Thais of other faiths.

“It’s most inappropriate and will do more harm than good. Don’t we recognize the value of Muslims?” asked Sulak, adding, “A [Thai] female Christian told me being a woman is disadvantageous enough.”

Sulak attributes such yearning to a narrow understanding of Buddhism and ultra-nationalistic ethos.

“It’s because this country has taught people to be nationalistic, so they think we must have a national religion too,” he said, adding that the fact remains that Thailand has always been ethnically and religiously diverse. “Buddhism is also a religion which teaches people to reduce one’s ego and to nurture loving kindness. The Buddha taught people to love all mankind.”

Angkhana Neelapaijit, a national human rights commissioner who is Muslim, said for the sake of equality and respect for those professing other faiths and peaceful coexistence, no religion should be made national religion.

The subcommittee Angkhana chairs actually submitted a proposal to the Constitution Drafting Committee urging them to state in the draft constitution that while Thailand is a unitary state, it is also culturally a pluralistic society with diversity in religious belief.

Angkhana attributes the recurring attempt to make Buddhism a national religion to the controversial behavior of some well-known monks, and the belief that making it the national religion would strengthen Buddhism.

“Perhaps we should teach people about the essence of religion,” Angkhana said.

‘It Won’t End Nicely’

Former editor of a progressive journal Pacarayasara Magazine, Pipob Udomittipong, who himself is Buddhist, said Buddhism is being politicized by such demands.

“Making Buddhism the national religion will tie religion to the state and politicize it,” he said, adding that ordinary Buddhists in Chiang Mai province where he lives do not seem to care about the matter which is making headlines in Bangkok.

Pipob warned that if such a scheme were ever to succeed, it would have grave repercussions for Thailand. “The conflicts in the three [predominantly Malay Muslim] southern provinces will acutely exacerbate. [Separatists] will be able to recruit more people, and the issue would lead to more violence. The ending won’t be nice.”

Charter drafter spokesman Amorn meanwhile was circumspect about the proposal. He told Khaosod English that all faiths are already protected in the current draft charter, and he believes the current status quo is better than the proposal.

Asked if the charter drafters will ever give serious thought to the proposal, Amorn said people should wait to see the final draft, which is due by the end of March.

“You will know when the time comes,” he said.

Related stories:

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

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3 Russians Wanted for ‘Zombie Outbreak’ Prank (Video)

A still image captured from security camera footage shows the moment when a foreign man tries to bite a customer in Pattaya’s Surf Kitchen restaurant on Thursday night.

PATTAYA — Things turned spooky at Surf Kitchen restaurant in Pattaya on Thursday night when a zombie outbreak struck three farang customers.

Footage from a security camera showed the moment at around 10pm on Thursday when a man sitting at a table was attacked and bitten on his neck by another man who was acting like a zombie. The owner of the restaurant believed the unusual scene, like something from a horror movie, was a prank initiated by three men he thinks are Russian.

“I believe it was a prank,” said Krit Boonsawad, the restaurant owner. “But they scared other customers. One of them tried to bite a girlfriend of a separate Russian guest, so he punched him in his eye.”

 

 

Krit said three Russian men came into his restaurant separately and sat alone at different tables like they did not know one another. After paying for his meal, the first Russian man fell down to the floor, started to act like a zombie and ran to the second man and bit his neck. Upon being bitten, the second men acted in a similar manner and bit the third man.

The owner said he tried to call police but it took too long for them to arrive. The restaurant then restrained the three men with its own employees and asked them to apologize before letting them go.

“They appeared to be friends,” Krit said. “I didn’t do anything more than that, as I thought there might be a fourth person filming the scene.”

Krit said he did not want to file a complaint against them since it could be nothing more than just a public nuisance charge. Though he said Pattaya police are now trying to track down those three unnamed men.

 

Sasiwan Mokkhasen can be reached at [email protected] and @amsasiwan.

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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Missing Orangutan ‘Milo’ Found in Phuket Jungle

Milo, now a 13-year-old orangutan in an undated photo. Photo: Vicky Kiely / Change.org

PHUKET — An orangutan missing since Friday was found alive but inside a cage in the jungle on Phuket on Saturday night.

The search team, comprised of wildlife officers from Khao Phra Thaeo, was alerted by local residents who found the 13-year-old female orangutan “Milo” in the jungle. Milo was said to be in fair health according to the search team. Animal rights activists Edwin Wiek and Vicki Kiely, who last week called attention to her poor living conditions agreed the ape was healthy.

Milo was treated by wildlife officers at Khao Phra Thaeo national park last night before being sent to the Wildlife Conservation Office in Phang Nga province today.

 


Animal rights activist Vicki Kiely and Milo at Khao Phra Thaeo wildlife conservation office on Sunday morning. Photo: Edwin Wiek / Twitter
 

Milo was reportedly "released" by the owner of Phuket Zoo on Friday morning before police and officials arrived to inspect whether the ape was being kept illegally.

Preecha Tantaweewong, a consultant from Phuket Zoo, admitted that he didn’t have a permit for keeping Milo. “How could I have a permit? Someone left her at the zoo,” Preecha told Phuket News on Friday.

An online petition “Save Milo” sparked by concern about the orangutan’s condition in the zoo drew attention to the ape. The campaign which was created in January by Phuket-based animal activist Vicki Kiely and has now received over 11,000 signatures. Kiely was reunited with Milo on Sunday morning at the Khao Phra Thaeo wildlife conservation office.
 

Related stories

Wildlife Inspectors Find Orangutan ‘Disappeared’ from Phuket Zoo

 

 

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

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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20 More Nok Air Flights to be Canceled

Photo : Nok Air / Facebook

BANGKOK — Nok Air announced today that it will canceled 20 flights scheduled to fly Tuesday.

After hundreds of passengers were left stranded by canceled flights last week, Nok Air announced Saturday via their official social media accounts that 20 more domestic flights will be canceled on Tuesday. No reason was given, and Nok Air said affected passengers would be contacted directly by the airline.

Nok Air CEO Patee Sarasin said Nok Air has adequate arrangements with partner airlines to transport passengers affected by the canceled flights, Matichon Online reported.

A source from Nok Air said the cancellation is part of the adjustment the airline is trying to make in accordance to its current number of pilots, according to Matichon.

On Tuesday, Nok Air was warned by the Ministry of Transport that it could lose its operating license if it repeats the poor handling of the crisis that left hundreds of passengers stranded last weekend.

Patee said the strike that left more than 3,000 passengers stranded on Sunday was the result of some pilots not being able to pass its improved standards.

The pilot who was later fired, Sanit Kongpetch,  said Nok Air failed to deal with a pilot shortage and instead has been posing unqualified trainees as pilots.

Nok Air said passengers who apply for refund will receive a full refund in 4 to 6 weeks.

The 20 flights due to be canceled on Tuesday are listed below:

> DD7106 DMK-HDY

> DD7107 HDY-DMK

> DD7818 DMK-NST

> DD7819 NST-DMK

> DD7208 DMK-URT

> DD7209 URT-DMK

> DD7406 DMK-TST

> DD7407 TST-DMK

> DD8414 DMK-PHS

> DD8415 PHS-DMK

> DD8718 DMK-CEI

> DD8719 CEI-DMK

> DD9214 DMK-UTH

> DD9215 UTH-DMK

> DD9314 DMK-UBP

> DD9315 UBP-DMK

> DD9410 DMK-SNO

> DD9411 SNO-DMK

> DD9814 DMK-KKC

> DD9815 KKC-DMK

Passengers requiring more information should call the Nok Air hotline on 1318.

 

Related stories:

Nok Air Denies Flying Unqualified Trainee Pilots

Nok Air Punishes Employees After Strike Strands Hundreds

Nok Air to Compensate Passengers After Strike Leaves Hundreds Stranded

 

 

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Reject the Draft Charter to Break the Cycle of Coups

Illustration to Dante's Inferno, 1857, Gustave Dore.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

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BANGKOK — Has giving a middle finger to the junta’s draft charter become a crime in Thailand? When I posted such a photo recently along with another version in which I gave it a thumbs-up junta reps rang me up twice to express their displeasure before putting pressure on my employer Friday.

But none of that’s why I will reject its proposed constitution.

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While many will reserve judgment until the final draft is issued by the end of March, I will not. I have already decided that I must reject it.

It’s not because I don’t care about the content of what could become Thailand’s 20th “permanent” constitution. My reason to reject it cannot be found in its 270 articles (nor their many flaws).

Nor do I have anything personal against junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, who staged the coup in 2014, or the charter drafters. In fact I’ve known drafting committee spokesman Amorn Wanichwiwatana since we were trapped together at the same university in England a decade and a half ago, while another, Norachit Sinhaseni, served under my father at the Thai Embassy in Manila. I call him “Uncle Norachit” to this day.

It pains me to see them on the junta’s side of the political divide, but it’s their choice, and I respect that.

Personal connections and sentiments aside, I am being a political early bird and announcing that I will vote against the charter on July 31 because, to me, its context is more important than its content.

More important than being asked what kind of constitution we want to have is weighing in on what kind of Thailand we’d like to live in. A Thailand where the military presents us fresh constitutions to approve after tearing up the last is not for me.

I am not a dog that will keep fetching a Frisbee thrown by its master without questioning why I should be stuck in a never-ending game.

First, the whole drafting process is illegitimate and undemocratic. The current (second) effort stems from the 2014 coup. People only need a new constitution because the coup makers tore up the previous one when they staged a putsch. That 2007 constitution was also prepared under military sponsorship, but at least it was adopted by voters after a period of free debate in which people were allowed to publicly campaign for or against it.

Those who now want to campaign against it are being threatened with prosecution. In recent weeks, two meetings to debate the draft were banned by the junta: one at the National Institute of Development Administration in Bangkok and another at a kindergarten in Amnat Charoen province. We’re unlikely to see an end to such censorship and restriction.

Up until now, with less than six months to go before it goes to a vote, Thai citizens are not being told what will happen if they reject it.

Second, the whole process was not participatory. All 21 charter drafters, mostly men, were appointed by junta leader Prayuth without any consultation with the public.

Third and most importantly, endorsing the junta-sponsored draft charter is tantamount to endorsing more coups in the future because it validates the whole cycle.

The message sent to the generals is that they can always get away with seizing power and starting the whole protracted process over again because people will dutifully come out to vote on such drafts based only on their content.

Like the dog and frisbee, the public seems to have no political memory of doing it all before and is stuck in a loop approving military-sponsored charters for the purpose of being torn up by future coup-makers.

Instead of weighing its articles and clauses, voters should apply the same bigger-picture thinking as when buying a used car – be sure it’s not stolen and thus won’t perpetuate thievery and looting.

Come July 31, I am going to have to say NO to the draft charter, regardless of its virtues or problems, to play my part in ending the cycle of coups.

Do not encourage more political thievery and looting. Do not encourage more coups.

 

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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Harper Lee, Author 'To Kill a Mockingbird,' 89

Harper Lee's two books, "To Kill a Mockingbird," and "Go Set A Watchman" are displayed with a bouquet of tulips in the Monroe County Heritage Museum old courthouse Friday, Feb. 19, 2016, in Monroeville, Ala. Photo: Brynn Anderson / Associated Press

NEW YORK — Harper Lee, the elusive novelist whose child's-eye view of racial injustice in a small Southern town, "To Kill a Mockingbird," became standard reading for millions of young people and an Oscar-winning film, has died. She was 89.

Lee died Friday, publisher HarperCollins said in a statement. It did not give any details about how she died.

"The world knows Harper Lee was a brilliant writer, but what many don't know is that she was an extraordinary woman of great joyfulness, humility and kindness. She lived her life the way she wanted to — in private — surrounded by books and the people who loved her," Michael Morrison, head of HarperCollins U.S. general books group, said in the statement.

For most of her life, Lee divided her time between New York City, where she wrote the novel in the 1950s, and her Alabama hometown, which inspired the book's fictional Maycomb.

"To Kill a Mockingbird," published in 1960, is the story of a girl nicknamed Scout growing up in a Depression-era Southern town. A black man has been wrongly accused of raping a white woman, and Scout's father, the lawyer Atticus Finch, defends him despite threats and the scorn of many.

The book quickly became a best-seller, won the Pulitzer Prize and was made into a movie in 1962, with Gregory Peck winning an Oscar for his portrayal of Atticus. As the civil rights movement grew, the novel inspired a generation of young lawyers and was assigned in schools all over the country.

By 2015, its sales were reported by HarperCollins to be more than 40 million worldwide, making it one of the most widely read American novels of the 20th century. When the Library of Congress did a survey in 1991 on books that have affected people's lives, "To Kill a Mockingbird" was second only to the Bible.

Lee herself became more mysterious as her book became more famous. She began declining interviews in the late 1960s and, until late in her life, firmly avoided making any public comment about her novel or her career. Other than a few magazine pieces for Vogue and McCall's in the 1960s and a review of a 19th-century Alabama history book in 1983, she published no other book until stunning the world in 2015 by permitting "Go Set a Watchman" to be released.

"Watchman" was written before "Mockingbird" but was set 20 years later, using the same location and many of the same characters. Readers and reviewers were disheartened to find an Atticus who seemed nothing like the hero of the earlier book. The man who defied the status quo in "Mockingbird" was now part of the mob in "Watchman," denouncing blacks as unfit to enjoy full equality.

But despite unenthusiastic reviews and questions whether Lee was well enough to approve the publication, "Watchman" jumped to the top of best-seller lists within a day of its announcement and remained there for months.

Story: Kendal Weaver / Associated Press

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

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Umberto Eco, Author 'The Name of the Rose,' 84

Italian writer Umberto Eco gestures as he speaks during a press conference in 2011 at a book fair in Jerusalem. Photo: Sebastian Scheiner / Associated Press

ROME — Italian author Umberto Eco, who intrigued, puzzled and delighted readers worldwide with his best-selling historical novel "The Name of the Rose," has died.

Spokeswoman Lori Glazer of Eco's American publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, told The Associated Press that Eco died Friday at 84. She could not immediately confirm the cause of death or where he died.

Author of a wide range of books, Eco was fascinated with the obscure and the mundane, and his books were both engaging narratives and philosophical and intellectual exercises. The bearded, heavy-set scholar, critic and novelist took on the esoteric theory of semiotics, the study of signs and symbols in language; on popular culture icons like James Bond; and on the technical languages of the Internet.

"The Name of the Rose" transformed him from academic to international celebrity, especially after the medieval thriller set in a monastery was made into a film starring Sean Connery in 1986. "The Name of the Rose" sold millions of copies, a feat for a narrative filled with partially translated Latin quotes and puzzling musings on the nature of symbols. But Eco talked about his inspiration with characteristic irony: "I began writing … prodded by a seminal idea: I felt like poisoning a monk."

His second novel, the 1988 "Foucault's Pendulum," a byzantine tale of plotting publishers and secret sects also styled as a thriller, was successful, too —though it was so complicated that an annotated guide accompanied it to help the reader follow the plot.

In 2000, when awarding Eco Spain's prestigious Prince of Asturias Prize for communications, the jury praised his works "of universal distribution and profound effect that are already classics in contemporary thought."

Eco was born Jan. 5, 1932 in Alessandria, a town east of Turin; he said the reserved culture there was a source for his "world vision: a skepticism and an aversion to rhetoric." He received a university degree in philosophy from the University of Turin in 1954, beginning his fascination with the Middle Ages and the aesthetics of text. He later defined semiotics as "a philosophy of language."

He had always loved storytelling and as a teenager wrote comic books and fantasy novels.

"I was a perfectionist and wanted to make them look as though they had been printed, so I wrote them in capital letters and made up title pages, summaries, illustrations," he told The Paris Review in 1988. "It was so tiring that I never finished any of them. I was at that time a great writer of unaccomplished masterpieces."

Eco remained involved with academia, becoming the first professor of semiotics at the University of Bologna in 1971. He also lectured at institutions worldwide and was a fellow at elite colleges like Oxford University and Columbia University. Twenty-three institutions had awarded him honorary degrees by 2000.

But Eco was also able to bridge the gap between popular and intellectual culture, publishing his musings in daily newspapers and Italy's leading weekly magazine L'Espresso.

Eco started in journalism in the 1950s, working for the Italian state-owned television RAI. From the 1960s onwards, he wrote columns for several Italian dailies. He also wrote children's books, including "The Bomb and the General" ("La Bomba e il Generale").

In 2003, Eco published a collection of lectures on translations, "Mouse or Rat? Translation as Negotiation," and a year later he wrote the novel "The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana," a story about an antiquarian book dealer who loses his memory.

Recent works include "From the Tree to the Labyrinth," an essay on semiology and language published in 2007 and "Turning Back the Clock," a collection of essays on various subjects, ranging from the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, anti-Semitism and his staunch criticism of Silvio Berlusconi's conservative government. His most recent novel, "Numero Zero," came out last year and recalled a political scandal from the 1990s that helped lead to Berlusconi's rise.

 

 

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Police Spokesman Prawut to be Indicted

Lt. Gen. Prawut Thavornsiri speaks in his capacity as police spokesman April 22, 2015, at the national police headquarters in Bangkok. Photo: Royal Thai Police

BANGKOK — High-ranking police officials including a well-known police spokesman will be prosecuted for allegedly installing a communications device atop Bangkok’s tallest building for a “suspicious purpose” during last August’s Bike for Mom event.

Lt. Gen. Prawut Thavornsiri and other unnamed officers face prosecution for malfeasance after their case was forwarded to the national police chief today, according to deputy police chief Sriwarah Rangsitpramkul.

Prawut has not been seen publicly since he was pulled from his post Oct. 27 when he seemed to be swept up in a crackdown on officials said to be abusing their connections to the monarchy.

An arrest warrant was eventually approved by the Criminal Court for Prawut for allegedly installing a radio transmitter on the Baiyoke Tower II during the Bike for Mom event. Lt. Gen. Sriwarah on Friday said the case went to national police chief Chakthip Chaijinda to forward to the National Anti-Corruption Commission.

Sriwarah said he was not concerned that Prawut would flee the prosecution.

In October, during a purge of high-level officials accused of defaming the monarchy by exploiting their links, one of the suspects, later found dead in his cell, was accused of sneaking into the skyscraper to install radio devices taken from the Bung Kum Police Station.

Investigators said they found five mobile phones inside the residence of police Maj. Prakrom Warunprapha tuned in to the signal coming from Baiyoke II, which led to an accusation of unauthorized eavesdropping.

It was not specified what Prawut’s alleged criminal link was to Prakrom.

He suddenly stepped down from a very visible post as the public face of the national police 11 days after three men – Suriyan "Mor Yong" Sujaritpalawong, Jirawong Watanathewasilp and Prakrom – were arrested and charged with defaming the monarchy.

A martial court ordered the trio into a military prison and two nights later authorities said Prakrom was found hanged in his room. On Nov. 9, officials announced Suriyan, a nationally famous astrologer and palace aide, had died two days earlier in the same military base prison of a blood infection.

At the time, Chakthip dismissed speculation Prawut was linked to the other suspects as “just a rumor.”

No mention was made Friday of Prawut’s present whereabouts.

 

Related stories:

Fallen Former Police Spokesman ‘Back in Thailand’

Police Spokesman Prawuth Replaced

 

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Walking Street Sweep Nets 30 Foreigners Without Proper Papers in Pattaya

Police checks the identification document of foreign tourists at a club on Pattaya Walking Street early Friday morning.

PATTAYA — More than 100 officers raided nightclubs along Pattaya’s famed Walking Street early Friday morning and took dozens of foreigners in for interrogation because they were not holding passports.

Officers from the Central Investigation Bureau and soldiers from the 14th Military Base went into five venues in the infamous nightlife and red-light area in what was billed as a crackdown on transnational crime, which ended up finding at least 30 foreigners without their passports.

All of them were taken in for criminal record checks and were reportedly released after they were able to show their passports to police.

 

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Wildlife Inspectors Find Orangutan ‘Disappeared’ from Phuket Zoo

Milo, now a 13-year-old orangutan in an undated photo. Photo: Vicky Kiely / Change.org

PHUKET — A female orangutan whose conditions in captivity were decried by activists vanished from the Phuket Zoo just before wildlife officials arrived to see if it was keeping her legally.

Methee Meechai, a local National Parks Department director, said Friday afternoon that the 13-year-old ape named Milo was missing when officials went to inspect the zoo this morning after finding no record she was legally registered. Witnesses said she was last seen at the zoo Thursday.

An animal rights activist Friday accused the zoo of hiding her from authorities.

Edwin Wiek, founder of Wildlife Friends of Thailand, said he does not believe zoo owner Surapong Tantaweewong’s claim to have released Milo in the woods where she was found two years ago. He believes Milo may have been removed from her cage and hidden somewhere.

“I don’t believe they released Milo into the forest. If they did, it’s illegal to release wildlife into public areas,” the activist said over the phone Friday afternoon.

Attention was drawn to Milo’s status after an online petition calling for her release from captivity drew nearly 9,000 signatures since January.

Petition author Vicki Kiely said she was concerned about the orangutan’s conditions, saying she was locked up in a dark concrete box with no light, forced to pose for photos with tourists, looked overweight and appeared unhappy.

Kiely was present this morning for the inspection, and when Milo could not be found, she drove around the island but failed to find her beloved animal.

The incident comes a few months after smuggled orangutans were reportedly seized from private zoos and tourist attractions throughout Phuket and sent back home to Indonesia on Nov. 14.

 

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