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Question Quota Proposed to Ease Prayuth’s Distress

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha announces cabinet meeting resolutions Feb. 2 at Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Reporters with questions for high-level government officials could be asked to write them down and then cross their fingers for luck.

That’s one idea being weighed by the military government to screen potentially irksome questions before they reach junta leader Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha and other ranking officials, a government spokesman confirmed Tuesday.

Maj. Gen. Sansern Kaewkamnerd said that the idea was proposed by the prime minister’s public relations team in response to the junta chief’s episodes of irritation and rage in recent weeks. Under the proposal, reporters could submit their questions in advance for review — along with their names and the names of their media outlets. Four winning questions would be chosen for answering.

Prayuth declined to take regular questions after his previous cabinet meeting on Feb. 9, one week after the notoriously querulous former general blew his top and angrily pounded his podium as cameras rolled.

Sansern said the question quota idea was inspired by a question raised over whether Prayuth’s discontent originated with himself or members of media.

Reporters should conduct interviews in accordance to what their subject wants to say, Sansern said.

 

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Boxing Star Manny Pacquiao Draws Flak For Same-Sex Marriage Comment

Filipino boxer and Congressman Manny Pacquiao, right, at the start of the official campaign period for the May 9, 2016 presidential elections at suburban Mandaluyong city east of Manila, Philippines Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2016. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

MANILA, Philippines — Boxing star Manny Pacquiao has created a firestorm in his home country after saying people in same-sex relationships "are worse than animals."

Pacquiao, who is running for a Philippine Senate seat, made the remark in a video posted Monday on local TV5's election site. He also said animals are better than people in same-sex relationships because they recognize the difference between males and females.

Among those expressing opposition to the comments was gay comedian and television host Jose Marie Viceral, known as Vice Ganda. He tweeted that lesbian, gays, bisexuals and transgenders are humans, not animals. He said they're not saints, but that they'll pray for Pacquiao.

Danton Remoto of the LGBT group Ladlad said Pacquiao's comments showed he had a shallow understanding of issues important to the LGBT community.

On Tuesay Pacquio posted further comment on the issue on his instagram account

Story: Associated Press.

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Source Material: Translated Excerpt of Bombing Suspect’s Letter Alleging Torture

Photo taken by police of Adem Karadag, aka Bilal Mohammed, at the time of his Aug. 29 arrest in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — In a Jan. 22 letter addressed to the president of the Uyghur American Association, suspected Bangkok bomber Adem Karadag alleges he was tortured and coerced into confessing a central role in the Aug. 17 attack which killed 20 people at the Erawan Shrine.

Police and junta officials have denied either suspect has been abused in any way and say there is sufficient material evidence linking them to the crime.

\In his letter, Karadag wrote that officials made him dress up like the yellow-shirted man seen in security footage leaving the bomb in the shrine minutes before the blast. He said they gave him a yellow T-shirt, black trousers, sunglasses, arm bands and a wig to wear so that he would resemble a composite sketch issued after the attack.


Top Brass Present During Torture, Bombing Suspect Alleges


Here’s a translation of his account from the original letter:

"After that the officers who told me to admit to being the person in the (CCTV) pictures, which were shown to me by the officers who kept saying that if I do not admit to being the man in the yellow shirt who set the bomb at the Erawan Shrine at Ratchaprasong intersection, I would be sent back to the government of China.

“I refused  to admit anything because I did not do anything wrong and was not the man in the picture, so I was punched in my stomach several times by the officer who served as the English interpreter and threatened by saying they will kill me if I do not confess.

“Sometimes some of the officers would tell me that they will send me back to the Chinese authorities, and let loose a military dog to bark and threaten me at a close distance all the time.

“These threats and torture against me took place over a period of more than two hours, and they brought pictures to show me several times. And because I was afraid that I'd be further tortured or sent back to the Chinese authorities, and because I am well aware that Uighur Muslims who fled China and are forcibly returned to China would all be killed by the Chinese authorities, along with their relatives and family members who would also be tortured and hunted.

“I was tortured like that until almost 7am on the morning of the Sept. 22, 2015. Due to exhaustion and fear, I then told the officers that I’m the man in the yellow shirt who set the bomb at the Erawan Shrine. And the man wore grey at Lumpini Park, and the man in the blue shirt who set the bomb at the pier in accordance with the pictures shown; they were all me.

“The fact that I told the officers that I am the person in the pictures was because I wanted the officers to stop torturing me, and at that time I was suffering from severe stomach pain. Afterward, the officers brought me back to my detention room, and later at around 9am on Sept. 22, 2015, I told the officers who detained me in the room that I wished to see a medical doctor, but nobody contacted a medical doctor to examine my body.

“As a result I suffered from severe pain in my stomach and had to suffer this tortured state for a whole day. I could not eat anything beyond a piece of bread and milk.

 

Related stories:

Bombing Suspects Deny All Charges in Military Court

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Retired General’s Immodest Proposal Pits Prostitutes, Coyotes Against Monk Mob

A monk and soldier speak Monday west of Bangkok at a Buddhist park in Nakhon Pathom province.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — An aristocrat and retired army major general today suggested the junta should deal with protesting monks by sending hired coyote girls, prostitutes, female masseuses and female soldiers to disperse any future protests instead of male troops.

Coming a day after thousands of monks clashed with soldiers briefly at a grand Buddhist Park west of Bangkok, retired Maj. Gen. HSH Prince Chulcherm Yugala weighed in on Facebook early Tuesday morning with his suggestion, saying that physical contact with women would make the monks impure and cost them their celibate status.

Scenes of monks and soldiers pushing and shoving, with a monk grappling a soldier in a headlock after soldiers tried to block upward of 30,000 monks from entering the park in Nakhon Pathom province, caused a public stir. The monks wanted to protest in support of their candidate for the post Supreme Patriarch and demand Buddhism be formally established as the national religion.


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


\At right, retired Maj. Gen. HSH Prince Chulcherm Yugala

Chulcherm, 69, said deploying female forces to come into physical contact with the monks was a practical solution: It would serve to get the monks disrobed, while alleged “fake” monks who did not surrender their robes could then be arrested.

Chulcherm, who once served as president of Rajvithi Football Club, laid it out thusly:

“When the mob of monks and fake monks arrives, we will have women soldiers, women police, standing in the front row to spearhead the clash with the monks and nuns, while male soldiers will be behind. If there aren’t enough women soldiers or police, then force or ask (for the country, army and the National Council for Peace and Order), for the cooperation of hired masseuses, be it traditional or modern, red-light women, coyotes and [female] market vendors for reinforcement,” he wrote.

If they are real monks, he said, officers can proceed to defrock them, as they have become tainted through the direct contact.

Fifteen hours after the post was made, it had gathered over 2,500 Likes and 130 comments, mostly in support of Chulcherm’s proposal.

 

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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Bombing Suspects Deny All Charges in Military Court

BANGKOK — Two suspects accused of killing 20 people at a shrine in Bangkok denied the charges today before a military tribunal.

Adem Karadag, 31, aka Bilal Mohammed, told the military court Tuesday he was not even in Thailand at the time of the Aug. 17 explosion at the Erawan Shrine, which killed mostly foreign tourists.

His co-defendant, 27-year-old Yusufu Mieraili, said he did not want the court-appointed military lawyer assigned to him despite his request for civilian representation.

"I am not guilty and I have been in jail for six months," Mieraili said in court through a Uighur translator. "I want to find a lawyer and pay for it myself."


Top Brass Present During Torture, Bombing Suspect Alleges


Through his lawyer Schoochart Kanpai, Karadag admitted to entering Thailand illegally with a fake passport, saying he sought to travel on to work in Malaysia to help support his family in Turkey, who had already fled China’s far flung Xinjiang territory.

Both defendants are ethnic Chinese Uighurs. Uighurs have complained of systematic discrimination and abuse by Chinese authorities. Violent attacks against Han Chinese have led Beijing to brand some as terrorists.

Outside the court, Karadag’s lawyer said that while being detained inside an army camp in Bangkok, Karadag was waterboarded, forced to be naked in a cold room, and blindfolded while a dog threatened him.
 

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Defense lawyer Schoochart Kanpai speaks to reporters Tuesday outside the military court in Bangkok.
 
 

Karadag alleges that he paid an agent, Abdullah Abdullahman, who he believed to be Turkish, to help get into Thailand. Abdullahman took him from a hotel in Vietnam to Laos and then entered Thailand on Aug. 21.

He said Abdullahman took him to stay at the Poon Anan Apartment in eastern Bangkok where he was arrested Aug. 29. Mieraili was taken into Thai custody Sept. 1.

Karadag's lawyer repeated allegations that his was tortured to confess many times between Sept. 14 and Sept. 26. Karadag claimed officers threatened to kill or deport him back to China.

In a letter obtained today by Khaosod English, he alleged that top officials were present when threats were made.

Through his lawyer, Karadag said he ended up confessing Sept. 22 that he was the man in pictures shown to him by police: the man in the yellow shirt who placed the bomb inside the shrine, a man in a gray shirt seen later inside Lumpini Park, and a man in a blue shirt who left a bomb in the water near Sathorn Pier.

Three days before he was led by police to publically “re-enact” the crime on Sept. 26, Karadag said he was taken on the morning of Sept. 23 to four places and told to say he was there before. They included the Erawan Shrine, a pier, a bridge and a mosque. He said he was accompanied by police officers including police chief Chakthip Chaijinda and Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sriwarah Rangsitpramkul.

After being held in custody for nearly three months, the two accused were indicted Nov. 24 on 10 counts including premeditated murder and possession of explosives for the attack. They were not charged with terrorism.

Seventeen suspects were named in arrest warrants during the course of the investigation, but the two Uighur men remain the only to be arrested.

The next scheduled hearing is April 20, when the evidence against them will be examined.

 

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Top Brass Present During Torture, Bombing Suspect Alleges

Bombing suspect Adem Karadag led Oct. 19 into the military court in Bangkok.

By Sasiwan Mokkhasen and Todd Ruiz

BANGKOK — The chief suspect in August's bombing of the Erawan Shrine has claimed top military and police officers were present when he was told he would be killed if he did not confess to the crime.

In a letter obtained by Khaosod English, Adem Karadag, the Chinese Uighur man identified by police as the “yellow shirt” man who on Aug. 17 left the bomb which killed 20 people at the shrine, alleges that he confessed to carrying out the bombing while in pain and fear of further torture, during part of which top officials including the former and current police chiefs were present.

The Jan. 22 letter from Karadag, aka Bilal Mohammed, appealed for help from the president of the U.S.-based Uyghur American Association. It alleges a session of physical and psychological abuse on Sept. 22 that culminated in him signing an untranslated confession.

“The fact that I told the officers that I am the person in the pictures was because I wanted the officers to stop torturing me, and at the time I was suffering from severe stomach pain,” Karadage wrote. While his authorship of the letter could not be independently verified, the letter was originally sent from his attorney Schoochart Kanpai.


Bangkok Shrine Bombing: Those Who Died


Karadag’s arrest Aug. 29 in an apartment in eastern Bangkok provided the first break in the investigation. Co-defendant Yusufu Mieraili was taken into Thai custody near the border with Cambodia on Sept. 1. The first hearing in their trial opened before a military tribunal this morning.

His letter indicates he signed the confession after being abused throughout the night until 7am on the morning of Sept. 22. He specified four alleged methods: being punched repeatedly in the stomach by an officer acting as his English interpreter, being threatened with death, being threatened with forcible return to Chinese authorities and use of a military dog to menace him at close proximity.

Thai officials have flatly denied any suggestion Karadag or other suspects were subjected to abuse, saying such tactics have long been set aside.

Karadag in the letter admitted to entering Thailand illegally, possessing fake travel documents and repeated claims made after his arrest that he did so to transit to Malaysia for employment.

Interrogators presented security camera images of three suspected perpetrators from the night of the attack, the letter alleges.

“Due to exhaustion and fear, I then told the officers that I’m the man in the yellow shirt who set the bomb at the Erawan Shrine, and the man who wore grey at Lumpini Park, and the man in the blue shirt who set the bomb at the pier in accordance with the pictures shown were all me,” he said.

Soon thereafter he alleges that 10 armed military men entered the room with a new interpreter. Among them was then-police chief Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang, his successor Gen. Chakhtip Chaijinda, metropolitan police chief Maj. Gen. Sriwarah Rangsipramnakul and other senior military officers. The letter alleges all were present when he was threatened with death should he not sign the confession.

In the following days, the investigators who had been sending mixed signals over Karadag’s role played down the confession before announcing Karadag was indeed the shrine bomber.

"Yesterday I didn't have clear information yet, but based on interrogation information obtained at around 9pm last night, I can now confirm that Adem Karadag or Bilal Mohammed [sic] is the yellow-shirted man,” Sriwarah said Sept. 25.

The next day Karadag was led around Bangkok for an official “re-enactment” of his alleged crimes.

Junta spokesman Col. Winthai Suvaree said in a Reuters report published Monday that he doubted Karadag and Mieraili were tortured.

"I am fairly certain nothing happened to the suspects while they were in military custody," he was quoted saying.

Karadag and Mieraili, both Uighur members of a Muslim-minority group in China, were held at a controversial military prison. They face trial on charges including premeditated murder and possession of explosives, but they were not indicted for terrorism. No motive has been officially attached to the attack, but the consensus of security experts is that it was retaliation for Bangkok’s forcible repatriation of more than 100 Uighurs refugees to China.

Additional reporting Pravit Rojanaphruk
 

Related stories:

Chinese Uighur Karadag Tortured Into Confession, Lawyer Says

Bangkok Bombing Suspects Won't be Tried for Terrorism

Police Link Bomb Attack to Uighurs, Deep South and Thai Politics

Police Chief Plays Down Bombing Suspect’s Alleged Confession

Turkish Suspect Denies Involvement in Erawan Bomb Attack

Bangkok Bombing Suspects Won't be Tried for Terrorism

Mounting Evidence Links Bombing to Turks, Uighurs

No Longer Whole, a Family Buries its Dead and Waits for Answers

Seen Often on Sathorn 10, Suspect Thought to Use Fake Turkish Passport

Bangkok Shrine Bombing: Those Who Died

Tourists Narrowly Escape Second Bangkok Bombing in 24 Hours

Bangkok Shrine Bombing: Police Hunt Backpack Man

Tourists Among 19 Killed by Bomb at Bangkok's Erawan Shrine

 

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Nok Air Punishes Employees After Strike Strands Hundreds

Passengers queue Monday at Don Mueang Airport in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A Nok Air official was fired and two others suspended last night following a pilot strike which left more than 1,500 passengers stranded.

Sanit Kongpetch, a pilot and the airline’s manager of flight standards, was fired without severance or compensation for an unspecified “offense against the company”, according to an announcement from the budget carrier, which has blamed its pilots for the debilitating work stoppage that left hundreds of travelers stranded at Don Mueang Airport and elsewhere.

Two other unidentified employees were suspended for eight days beginning Monday through Feb. 23, while seven others face an inquiry, according to the document signed by Nok Air CEO Patee Sarasin.

The airline contends the strike began after a number of pilots Friday failed to pass a new assessment made to bring the airline in line with international safety standards. In December, the International Air Transport Association downgraded the safety rating of Thailand’s civil aviation.

The pilots dispute that, saying it had nothing to do with the recent downgrade of Thai civil aviation by international monitors. Speaking anonymously to the media, a Nok Air pilot Tuesday morning rejected that explanation, saying it was about internal company issues.

Sanit, the fired official, said Tuesday he was fired for canceling the flights.

“I arrived at the airport yesterday, but as the captain and flight standard manager, I found many pilots sick and stressed, which I thought could affect flight safety,” Sanit said. “So I told the flight division to cancel flights. I went back home and found myself fired without any inquiry.”

He denied it was a strike.

“If pilots did strike, we would have cancelled 120 flights, not nine,” he said, adding that Nok recently lost many pilots to other airlines.

Nok Air is the budget airline of struggling national carrier Thai Airways International.

Nok CEO Patee couldn’t be reached for comment. He tweeted Monday afternoon that he would not speak to the media until the company finalizes a plan to address the problem, possibly by Thursday.
 

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Related stories

Nok Air to Compensate Passengers After Strike Leaves Hundreds Stranded

 

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Cambodian Tycoon Gets Short Sentence for Beating TV Presenter

Cambodian actress SaSa, 28, whose real name is Ek Socheata, speaks to The Associated Press at her clothing shop on July 16, 2015, in Phnom Penh. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — A Cambodian court gave a lenient prison sentence on Monday to a real estate tycoon whose savage beating of a female TV presenter was seen on video circulated widely on the Internet.

Phnom Penh Municipal Court Judge Sor Lina sentenced Sok Bun to three years in prison but suspended all but 10 months. Four months of prison time is left after counting time served.

In the video taken at a nightclub in Phnom Penh last July, the tycoon repeatedly punches and kicks Ek Socheatha in the head for about a minute as his bodyguard holds a gun on her. Ek Socheatha said she had been trying to keep Sok Bun from taking advantage of a friend of hers who was too intoxicated to defend herself.

"My client said she wanted the case to end at this time, so she will not appeal the verdict," said Ek Socheatha's lawyer, Puth Theavy. "She is accepting the verdict and said it is fair for her."

Ek Socheatha, popularly known as Sasa, last month withdrew the most severe complaint, of attempted murder. The Phnom Penh Post and the Cambodia Daily newspapers reported that she apparently accepted out-of-court brokered compensation from Sok Bun, although she would not confirm that.

The case caused a stir largely because the video circulated widely on the Internet, and because the rich and well-connected in Cambodia often escape any kind of justice for misdeeds.

Even Prime Minister Hun Sen weighed in on the case last year, directing his comments at Sok Bun before he turned himself in.

"Don't think that because you have money you can escape," Hun Sen said. "What you have done is intolerable."

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Obama Welcomes Prayuth and ASEAN Leaders in California

President Barack Obama stands with Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, left, at an ASEAN summit on Monday at Sunnylands in Rancho Mirage, Calif., Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — President Barack Obama opened a meeting of leaders from a 10-nation bloc of Southeast Asian nations on Monday, calling the landmark gathering on U.S. soil a reflection of his personal commitment to an enduring partnership with the diverse group of countries.

Obama and leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations will spend two days discussing economic and regional security issues.

In brief remarks as the leaders sat around a horseshoe-shaped table, Obama said he became familiar with Southeast Asia as a boy living in Indonesia with his mother. Since becoming president, Obama has made numerous trips to Asia-Pacific countries as part of his policy "pivot" toward the region, with the goal of reassuring allies unnerved by China's assertive presence there while also reaping economic gains for the U.S.

"You and the people of ASEAN have always shown me extraordinary hospitality and I hope we can reciprocate with the warmth today and tomorrow, which is why I did not hold this summit in Washington," Obama said.
 

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Thai junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha is seated, third from left Monday at the ASEAN summit in California. Photo: Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press

 

"It is cold there. It's snowing, so welcome to beautiful, warm Sunnylands," he said. Sunnylands is the storied California desert estate where the leaders will conduct their talks at a conference center with picturesque views of the snow-capped San Jacinto Mountains.

Underscoring the relaxed atmosphere, all leaders wore open-collar shirts with their suits.

It's the first time the leaders of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia have held a stand-alone meeting in the U.S. China is not an ASEAN member, but its territorial claims over disputed waters have raised international concerns and heightened tensions with some member countries.

Obama said trade between the U.S. and ASEAN had increased 55 percent since he took office. The region is now the U.S.'s fourth-largest goods trade partner. U.S. companies are also the largest source of foreign investment in its member nations, he said.

Obama said he wants to build on that progress "so that growth and development is sustainable and inclusive and benefits all people."

Monday's talks will focus on the economy. After a working dinner, the conversation on Tuesday, the summit's final day, shifts to regional security issues, including the South China Sea and counterterrorism.

China says it has a historical right to virtually all of the South China Sea and has built seven artificial islands, including with airstrips, to assert its sovereignty. Taiwan and ASEAN members Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines also claim land features in these potentially resource-rich waters, which are an important conduit for world trade.

Though not a claimant, the U.S. has spoken out against China's conduct and has angered Beijing by sailing Navy ships near some of the artificial islands. The U.S. has argued for the maritime rights issue to be resolved peacefully and is looking for ASEAN to take a unified stance by calling for the disputes to be resolved based on international law. ASEAN has avoided criticizing China by name in joint statements issued at past summits.

The Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade agreement among the U.S., ASEAN members Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam, and seven other nations, will likely be discussed. The pact is Obama's signature trade achievement, one he has sought to sell to skeptical lawmakers as a chance for the U.S. to shape the region's trade rules, not China. Congress, however, must ratify the deal and that outcome remains in doubt.

Terrorism inspired by the Islamic State group is of increasing concern in the region. Eight people were killed during assaults last month in Indonesia's capital, Jakarta, the first major attack there in six years. Police said the attackers were linked to IS.

Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, have all reported citizens traveling to fight in Iraq and Syria, and several small militant groups in the Philippines have pledged allegiance to IS.

Obama also plans to raise issues of good governance and adherence to the rule of law.

Human rights advocates have faulted the U.S. for inviting unelected leaders, like Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who seized power in a May 2014 coup. Cambodia's Hun Sen, who has used violence and intimidation against political opponents, made his first official U.S. visit during his 31-year tenure as prime minister.

Story: Darlene Superville / Associated Press

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

A tide of saffron-robed monks confront army vehicles on Monday west of Bangkok at Phutthamonthon in Nakhon Pathom.

NAKHON PATHOM — Hundreds of monks clashed with military officers Monday west of Bangkok after soldiers blocked the entrance to the Phutthamonthon Buddhism park where they planned to gather.

Dozens of enraged monks appeared to approach a military truck after it parked to obstruct the entrance to the park as the gathering violated a junta ban on political gatherings. It was expected that more than 30,000 monks and Buddhists were going to Phutthamonthon today to demand immediate endorsement for the current acting Supreme Patriarch to be named to the post permanently, and enshrine Buddhism as a national religion by statute.


Politics, Corruption in Battle for Naming New 'Supreme Patriarch'


The meeting was also organized to show opposition to controversial monk Buddha Issara, a political activist who has petitioned to disrobe Phra Dhammachayo, the abbot of a large Buddhist cult known as Dhammakaya.

By late Monday afternoon the military reportedly allowed the monks entrance to the park.

 

 

Related stories:

Politics, Corruption in Battle for Naming New 'Supreme Patriarch'

Protest Prompts Officials to Postpone Dhammakaya Monks March

 

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