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Say Goodbye to Bangkok’s Flower Market

Vendors sell flowers on Valentine's Day, Sunday, at Bangkok's Pak Khlong Talad.

BANGKOK — It was a blue Valentine for Bangkok’s Pak Khlong Talad yesterday, as the historic flower market sold its final roses for the holiday.

Two weeks remain before a City Hall deadline its many streetside vendors clear out to improve the flow of traffic, which will spell the end of the iconic market known for being an inexpensive place to buy flowers.

With roots as a market stretching back to the late 1700s, the market has operated 24 hours a day for six decades. It’s most packed during the festive seasons flowers play a big part in celebrating such as Valentine's, Loy Krathong and Wai Khru, when Thai students show their gratitude to teachers with flowers. 

The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration has given them until Feb. 29 to clear out. Three locations have been arranged for vendors to relocate: inside a private building at Pak Khlong Talad, the nearby Yodpiman Flowers Market and the Song Serm Kaset Thai Market a few minutes walk north.


 

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Man Seeks Freedom for Brother Convicted of His Crime

Somphob Kanokmusikkul, in yellow second from right, meets officials at Ministry of Justice on Monday to ask the case for which his brother was convicted be reopened because he committed the crime.

BANGKOK — A Bangkok man is fighting to get himself convicted of sexually abusing a child five years after he says his brother was made a scapegoat and imprisoned for the crime.

Somphob Kanokmusikkul petitioned officials at the Ministry of Justice on Monday to reopen the case, saying he was guilty of abusing the 13-year-old boy his brother received a 20-year sentence for in 2011.

Somphob said he went to the ministry because police know they got the wrong man but have ignored his insistence that he should be punished for the crime rather than his younger brother, Kimjua Kanokmusikkul.

“We went to talk with the investigator, and he admitted he took the wrong person,” said Atchariya Ruengrattanapong, Somphob’s lawyer and president of the Help Crime Victims Club.

In 2008, the parents of the teen boy filed a complaint at Nonthaburi’s Bang Kruai police station, whereupon officers took him to the house where Somphob and Kimjua lived together.

Somphob said at that time he had already fled the scene, but the child identified his brother from an ID card provided by police despite the fact they do not look alike.

After Kimjua was sentenced in 2011, Somphob said that as the real abuser, he turned himself in to police. Police dismissed his claim, saying they thought it was only made to save his younger brother from punishment.

Atchariya said the mother of the boy has also contacted the ministry of justice to seek protection because she was threatened by the police officers who investigated the case if her son were to recant his testimony.

A key piece of evidence from 2008 may support Somphob’s story.

The handwriting on a piece of paper, on which a telephone number was believed given to the boy, matched Somphob and not Kimjua according to an examination by the Central Institute of Forensic Science, said police Col. Dusadee Arayawuth of the Justice Ministry.

Atchariya said despite pleading innocent of the charge, Kimjua has already paid 140,000 baht in compensation to the abused boy and is now serving the sentence handed down by the Supreme Court.

The lawyer team is now seeking permission to reopen the case by the end of February and seek Kimjua’s release within 60 days in accordance with the law.

 

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Bangkok Bombing: Chinese Uighur Karadag Tortured Into Confession, Lawyer Says

A suspect of the Aug. 17 blast, who has been referred to as Bilal Mohammed, also known as Adem Karadag, is escorted by soldiers and prison officers as he arrives at the military court in Bangkok, Nov. 24, 2015. Photo: Chaiwat Subprasom / Reuters

By Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Aukkarapon Niyomyat
Reuters

BANGKOK — A Chinese ethnic Uighur man arrested in Thailand over a bombing that killed 20 people in Bangkok last year denied on Monday charges of murder or involvement in the attack, retracting an earlier confession his lawyer said he was tortured into making.

Adem Karadag, also known as Bilal Mohammed, is due to appear at a military court on Tuesday, along with a second suspect, Yusufu Mieraili, to formally hear the charges. Police said both men had confessed to having a role in the Aug. 17 explosion.

A lawyer for Karadag, said his client was coerced into confessing that he took part in the attack. Most of the victims were foreign tourists, raising concerns that the country's lucrative tourist industry could suffer.

"At the time he was tortured and under pressure. That is why he confessed to the charges against him," lawyer Schoochart Kanpai told Reuters after visiting Karadag in detention.

"He still maintains he has no involvement in this. The only charge he accepts is illegal entry."

Winthai Suvaree, a spokesman for the junta, doubted whether the two suspects had been tortured while in military custody.

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

No group claimed responsibility for the attack, which Thai authorities have said was in retaliation for a crackdown on human smuggling gangs and not a terrorist attack.

But some security experts say the bomb was in retaliation for Thailand's forced repatriation of more than 100 Uighurs to China in July rather than in response to a crackdown on human smuggling gangs.

China has long faced criticism for the perceived harsh restrictions it places on religion and culture in Xingjiang, where the majority of Uighurs live.

The two suspects had first been charged by a military court in November, but neither had accepted or denied the charges because of interpretation issues at that hearing, Schoochart said. They were indicted on 10 charges, including murder and illegal possession of explosives, but not terrorism.

The lawyer did not say whether the second suspect, Mieraili, would also deny the charges against him on Tuesday.

Police have been issued warrants for 17 people in connection with the attack, he said. Fifteen of those wanted are still at large.

 

Related stories:

Bangkok Bombing Suspects Won't be Tried for Terrorism

Bangkok Bombing Suspect Confesses, Police Say

Police Return to 'Karadag' as Bangkok Bomber

First Suspect Charged in Erawan Shrine Bombing

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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Student Leader's Arrest Leads to Protest at India University

Members of Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), the student wing of the ruling Bharatiya Janata party, shout slogans during a protest in front of the India Gate in New Delhi, India, Friday, Feb. 12, 2016. Photo: Altaf Qadri / Associated Press

NEW DELHI — Massive protests paralyzed one of India's top universities Monday after the president of the student union was arrested on charges of sedition.

Kanhaiya Kumar was arrested Friday, days after a demonstration was held at Jawaharlal Nehru University to mark the anniversary of the 2013 execution of Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri man convicted of an attack on India's Parliament.

Kumar, a left-leaning student leader, was arrested amid allegations that anti-India slogans were used at that protest.

On Monday, several student groups called for a strike on campus and very few students attended classes. Over the weekend thousands of students and teachers from several universities and colleges across India held protest rallies at the university.

The arrest came after a student faction linked to the ruling rightwing Bharatiya Janata Party filed a police complaint against the campus event.

On Thursday, Home Minister Rajnath Singh tweeted that "If anyone shouts anti India slogan & challenges nation's sovereignty & integrity while living in India, they will not be tolerated or spared."

A day later, Delhi police, who are under Singh, entered the university and searched dorm rooms and demanded audio and video recordings of the pro-Guru demonstration, and arrested Kumar. He has denied making any anti-India comments, according to news reports.

India's Human Resource Minister Smriti Irani supported Kumar's arrest, telling reporters "the nation can never tolerate an insult to Mother India."

Several political commenters said the arrest is an attempt by the government to silence dissent.

"The arrest of Kanhaiya Kumar and the crackdown on political dissent at JNU suggest that we are living under a government that is both rabidly malign and politically incompetent," Pratap Bhanu Mehta, the head of the Center for Policy Research, a leading New Delhi-based think tank, wrote in an opinion piece over the weekend.

The government reaction to the protests at the prestigious university well-known for its politically active student body is seen by many as part of a rising tide of intolerance in India since Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist BJP came to power in 2014.

Over the last few months scores of artists, scientists and historians have returned government awards to protest against what they view as the government's silence or complicity in creating a climate where criticism is viewed as unpatriotic.

Story: Muneeza Naqvi / Associated Press

 

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Charter Vote Risks Being ‘Laughing Stock’ Poll Monitor Says

Opponents of the draft charter display stickers Sunday in a McDonald's near the Democracy Monument in Bangkok. Photo: Thai Lawyers for Human Rights

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — There’s still time to ensure the public referendum on the junta-sponsored draft charter slated for July will be free and fair if the military regime opens the debate to both sides, said veteran elections observer Pongsak Chan-On.

Since it unveiled the proposed constitution Jan. 29, the junta has broadly promoted it while quashing criticism, a strategy that left unchanged would disqualify the upcoming vote as being considered “free and fair,” said Pongsak, who for 14 years has monitored elections not just in Thailand but 26 countries around Asia.

“If you don’t ensure that there’s a participatory environment and freedom of expression [for or against the charter draft], then it cannot be called free and fair,” said the coordinator of Bangkok-based election monitoring group We Watch and international observer for the Asian Network for Free Elections. “If it’s not free and fair, then the results cannot be trusted.”

\At right, Pongsak Chan-On

Pongsak said any attempt to threaten those who would campaign against the draft charter will make the process not free and unfair. On Sunday, the Women’s Movement in Thai Political Reform (We-Move) condemned the military junta after its scheduled forum in Amnat Charoen province to educate the public about the draft charter was abruptly banned by the National Council for Peace and Order, the formal name of the junta.

Also Sunday, police ordered a group of seven opposed to the draft charter to stop distributing stickers urging rejection of the charter inside a McDonald’s next to Bangkok’s Democracy Monument.

The Election Commission is weighing a penalty for those using any media to “distort” the content of the charter draft. This comes as the junta-appointed Constitution Drafting Committee has appeared twice daily on all free TV and radio stations to promote the draft with no airtime given to critics.

Pongsak said he’s concerned those opposing the charter lack free space to express themselves, and the media are being flooded with only positive information about it. Officials have promoted the draft charter as containing necessary corruption-busting mechanisms, while its critics say it is undemocratic and enshrines intervention in civilian governments by unelected bodies.

“They think Thai people must be dumb. Such a process looks down on its own people. But there’s still time to change and let people listen to other voices as well if this government is truly sincere,” he said. “What’s the point of having a referendum if people have no participation in the drafting process and there’s no freedom of expression. It would be like ugly coercion. Do they think the international community is dumb too?”

The veteran observer said what the regime and the Election Commission must do now is open space for both proponents and opponents. He said three months before the plebiscite, people must also be told what will happen if the draft is rejected, otherwise the referendum cannot be considered free and fair.

Pongsak urged those who have already made up their minds to reject the draft charter to go out and vote in the referendum nonetheless, saying they will otherwise lose ownership of the process.

The Election Commission, he added, must be held responsible if they cannot ensure a credible vote is held and urged them to convince the military regime to recognize the importance of such.

“If [the Election Commission] is not confident that they can hold a free and fair referendum, they should insist that they won’t go ahead with it, as they will otherwise end up becoming the laughing stock of the whole world.”
 

Related stories:

Junta Threatens to Summon Critics of Charter Draft

Charter’s Uncertain Fate Mirrors Junta’s Own Lack of Confidence

The Good, Bad and Ugly of Junta’s ‘Anti-Corruption’ Constitution

 

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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Dutch Tourist 'Lucky' to Survive Tiger Attack

KATHMANDU, Nepal — A Dutch tourist who survived a tiger attack in the jungles of southwest Nepal by climbing a tree over the weekend says he is lucky to be alive.

Gerard Van Laar, who has been travelling in Nepal since last month, says he was attacked by the tiger when he and his Nepalese guide were hiking in Bardia National Park on Saturday.

Laar was able to escape by climbing the tree and stayed there for two hours until help arrived to chase away the tiger.

His guide was injured and hospitalized for a day but Laar was not injured in the attack.

The 33-year-old freelance engineer from Dedemsvaart, Netherlands, said he thought he would be killed until he was able to climb the tree.

Story: Associated Press

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Nok Air to Compensate Passengers After Strike Leaves Hundreds Stranded

Passengers were stuck at Don Mueang Airport on Sunday after pilots of budget airline Nok Air went on strike.

BANGKOK — At least one flight remained canceled Monday after a Nok Air pilot strike yesterday left more than 1,500 passengers stranded.

Angry passengers were left with little recourse after nine flights of budget airline Nok Air were canceled Sunday for which the airline has offered refunds and 600 baht compensation. On Monday morning, the airline issued a statement blaming the strike on pilots who did not pass heightened standards to bring the airline into international compliance.

“The airline informed the pilots of the assessment results which some did not pass,” airline CEO Patee Sarasin said Sunday. “We did not fire them but replaced them with other qualified pilots.”

Three additional flights Sunday night were arranged for passengers traveling from Don Mueang Airport to airports in Surat Thani, Nakhon Sri Thammarat, Phuket, Hat Yai, Khon Kaen and Chiang Mai provinces. Some passengers were offered rooms at the Amari Don Mueang Airport Hotel.

The first canceled flight Monday was DD8301 from Chiang Mai to Don Mueang, scheduled for 7:45am. The company said it had notified passengers of the cancellation and that the flight would be serviced by Lion Air instead.

Passengers can claim refunds and compensation from the airline under regulations set forth by the Department of Civil Aviation regulations, Nok Air announced.

According to Nok Air, the results of the pilot assessment were issued Friday as part of the airline’s attempt to comply with Thai aviation standards and an international safety audit IOSA, which late last year downgraded its safety rating of Thailand’s civil aviation.

 

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Love Triangle Blamed for Valentine’s Day Mall Murder

CentralPlaza Rattanathibet located on Rattanathibet Road in Nonthaburi city. Photo: CentralPlaza Rattanathibet / Facebook

NONTHABURI — A young girl was injured when a man shot a mall sales assistant to death yesterday in western metro Bangkok before turning the gun on himself.

Suchart Puapradit, 50, reportedly chased Pijakkana Somsakul, 44, who worked at CentralPlaza Rattanathibet on Sunday morning, to the mall’s second floor where he shot her three times with a .38 revolver.

A 9-year-old girl was hit in the neck by a stray bullet. She was immediately sent to a hospital where she is in stable condition and expected to survive, according to Maj. Gen. Susak Prakkamakul of Nonthaburi police.

Apinya Duangprom, 24, who works at a coffee shop in the mall, told police she saw a woman run up an escalator to the second floor with a man in pursuit. The man shot her three times then shot himself.

Suchart’s mother Sunadda Puapradit told police that her son dated Pijakkana, who was married with two children, for several months. The 69-year-old mother said she had urged her son to break it off with Pijakkana many times, but he said he was deeply in love with the woman.

Susak said police assume Suchart was distressed by some personal issue with Pijakkana which led to the murder.

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Sudden Supreme Court Vacancy Tests 2016 US Candidates

Republican presidential candidates, from left, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, businessman Donald Trump, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson take a moment of silence for US Supreme Court associate justice Antonin Scalia on Saturday at a Republican presidential debate in the state of South Carolina. Photo: John Bazemore / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The stakes in the U.S. presidential election just got higher.

The unexpected death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia — and the immediate declaration from Republicans that the next president should nominate his replacement — adds even more weight to the decision voters will make in November's general election.

The court now is divided between four liberal and four typically conservative justices, putting the ideological tilt up for grabs. Scalia, a hero to conservatives during his nearly 30 years on the Supreme Court, was found dead Saturday at a resort ranch in West Texas.

For months, the candidates have espoused theoretical, sometimes vague, policy proposals. Now, the prospect of President Barack Obama's successor nominating a Supreme Court justice immediately after taking office offers a more tangible way for voters to evaluate the contenders.

Candidates in both parties moved quickly to reframe the election as a referendum on the high court's future.

"Two branches of government hang in the balance, not just the presidency, but the Supreme Court," Texas Sen. Ted Cruz said in the latest Republican presidential debate, held in South Carolina just hours after word filtered out Saturday aboutScalia's death in Texas. "If we get this wrong, if we nominate the wrong candidate, the Second Amendment, life, marriage, religious liberty, every one of those hangs in the balance." The Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees the right to bear arms.

Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton painted a similarly stark scenario.

"If any of us needed a reminder of just how important it is to take back the United States Senate and hold onto the White House, just look at the Supreme Court," Clinton said.

Clinton has said she would have "a bunch of litmus tests" for potential nominees, including a belief that the Citizens United ruling clearing the way for super political action committees and unlimited campaign contributions should be overturned. She also said the court's makeup is crucial to preserving abortion rights and the legality of gay marriage nationwide.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is challenging Clinton for the Democratic nomination, has raised opposition to Citizens United as a requirement for any Supreme Court nominees.

Obama pledged to nominate a replacement in "due time," even after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said that responsibility should fall to the winner of the 2016 election.

Obama could try to ram a nominee through the Senate this year, taking a high court vacancy off the next president's immediate to-do list. Even if that were to happen, a confirmation vote probably would be months away, leaving the Supreme Court in the center of the campaign during the nomination process.

With three other justices over the age of 75, the next president could have other vacancies during his or her tenure, even if Obama fills Scalia's seat.

It's unclear how the new focus on the Supreme Court might affect voters' decisions in an election that has seen surprising and unconventional candidates such as billionaire businessman Donald Trump and Sanders challenge their parties' establishments.

Previous political thunderbolts that were supposed to push voters toward more traditional candidates, such as last fall's terrorist attacks in Paris and California, passed without any negative impact on Trump and Sanders. In fact, Sanders has strengthened since then, with the economic-focused Vermont senator handily defeating Clinton in the New Hampshire primary and finishing a close second in the Iowa caucuses.

Trying to counter Sanders' momentum, Clinton has urged voters to consider which candidate is most electable in November. With the balance of the Supreme Court now potentially on the line, Clinton and her allies are certain to increase their warnings about the risk of sending a self-declared democratic socialist to face a Republican in the fall.

"For any Democrat thinking about casting a protest vote for Sen. Sanders, this should serve as a wake-up call for what's exactly at stake," said Jim Manley, a former aide to top Democratic senators.

Among Republicans, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Ohio Gov. John Kasich are casting themselves as candidates who could appeal to swing voters in the general election and put Republicans in position to guide the next court nominations. But that could open them up to questions from Republican primary voters about the ideological purity of their judicial choices.

Cruz is using the potential vacancy to build on his long-standing argument that Republicans should select a nominee with the most conservative credentials. An uncompromising conservative since arriving in the Senate, Cruz vowed to put "principled constitutionalists" on the Supreme Court. He contends Trump could not be trusted to do the same.

"Donald Trump is president, he will appoint liberals," said Cruz, noting the billionaire's past support for Democratic politicians.

During Saturday's debate, Kasich bemoaned that Washington and presidential candidates had "run so fast into politics" following Scalia's death.

But if anything, the speed at which politics did take over portends a furious fight to come over which candidate gets to put his or her imprint on the court.

Additional reporting Ken Thomas

Story: Julie Pace / Associated Press

 

 

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50 Latvian Couples Get Hitched in Midair, Literally

This image taken from Associated Press television shows a hot air balloon with couples about to be wed in Jekabpils, Latvia Sunday Feb. 14, 2016.

JEKABPILS, Latvia — Latvian couples have tied the knot in the air on Valentine's Day hoping to set a world record in the number of simultaneous weddings in hot air balloons.

Fifty couples in 30 balloons rose into the sky Sunday during the Love Cup festival near the southeastern city of Jekabpils, watched by thousands of spectators but the balloons were hitched to cars because it was snowing at the time, impeding them from rising higher than some 15 meters.

It wasn't immediately clear if the ceremony would qualify for an entry in the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest airborne wedding in hot air balloons.

The event was watched by independent observers, including a Guinness representative who couldn't be reached for comment.

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This image taken from Associated Press television shows a couple preparing to be wed in a hot air balloon in Jekabpils, Latvia Sunday Feb. 14, 2016. 

 

Story: Associated Press

 

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