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Australian Wins World Press Photo

The World Press Photo of the Year titled "Hope for a new Life" by photographer Warren Richardson. The picture also won a first prize in the Spot News singles category and shows a man passing a baby through the fence at the Serbia-Hungary border in Roszke, Hungary, Aug. 28, 2015. Photo: Warren Richardson / World Press Photo / Associated Press

AMSTERDAM — An Australian freelance photographer's haunting, moonlit image of a baby being passed by migrants underneath a razor-wire fence on the Hungary-Serbia border has won the prestigious World Press Photo award for 2015.

The photo was taken by Warren Richardson on Aug. 28 near the border crossing point at Roszke in Hungary as migrants tried to get into Europe before Hungarian authorities could complete a secure fence along the length of the country's border with Serbia.

Jury member Vaughn Wallace, deputy photo editor for Al Jazeera America, calls the image "incredibly powerful visually, but it's also very nuanced."

He says the photo "causes you to stop and consider the man's face, consider the child. You see the sharpness of the barbed wire and the hands reaching out from the darkness."

Story: Associated Press

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Angelina Jolie Returns to Cambodia as Director

In this July 6, 2014, file photo, actress Angelina Jolie Pitt speaks to Cambodian reporters during a visit to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Andy Eames / Associated Press

BATTAMBANG, Cambodia — Between bites of spicy Cambodian curry and fried fish with rice, Angelina Jolie Pitt explains how this tiny country with a tumultuous past changed the course of her life.

She first visited Cambodia 16 years ago to portray "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider" — the gun-toting, bungee-jumping, supremely toned action hero that made her a star. Soon after, she adopted her first child from a Cambodian orphanage and returned again and again on humanitarian missions. Now, she's back for another movie but this time as a director, and the subject matter is a far cry from Lara Croft.

"First They Killed My Father," is based on a Khmer Rouge memoir written by survivor Loung Ung that recounts the 1970s Cambodian genocide from a child's perspective. The film, which she is directing and co-wrote with Ung for Netflix, is in Khmer, with an all-Cambodian cast and according to Jolie Pitt "the most important" movie of her career. During a break from filming, she talked to The Associated Press about how, more than ever, she feels a satisfying symbiosis between her life and work.

In person, Jolie Pitt is engaging and down-to-earth, dressed in a T-shirt and long black skirt, her hair pulled into a casual bun. She goes out of her way to play down her celebrity, hopping into the back of an SUV and squeezing into the middle seat beside a reporter for a short drive from the set to the crew's outdoor lunch tents. She is relaxed and articulate as the conversation veers from acting and directing, to history, humanitarian work, motherhood and her special relationship to Cambodia.

"When I first came to Cambodia, it changed me. It changed my perspective. I realized there was so much about history that I had not been taught in school, and so much about life that I needed to understand, and I was very humbled by it," said the 40-year-old Jolie Pitt, who grew up in Los Angeles where she felt "a real emptiness."

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In this Sept. 17, 2015, file photo, Angelina Jolie Pitt poses for a photo with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Photo: Andy Eames / Associated Press

 

She was struck by the graciousness and warmth of Cambodian people, despite the tragedy that left an estimated 2 million people dead. While shooting Lara Croft in 2000, some scenes required sidestepping land mines, she said, which made her aware of the dangers refugees face in countries ravaged by war. "That trip triggered my realization of how little I knew and the beginning of my search for that knowledge."

It prompted her to contact the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees to learn about the agency's work before joining as a goodwill ambassador in 2001. She was then given an expanded role as Special Envoy in 2012.

It was during an early trip back to Cambodia with the U.N. that Jolie had another epiphany — this time about motherhood.

"It's strange, I never wanted to have a baby. I never wanted to be pregnant. I never babysat. I never thought of myself as a mother," Jolie, now famously a mother of six, says with a laugh. But while playing with children at a Cambodian school, "it was suddenly very clear to me that my son was in the country, somewhere."

She adopted Maddox in 2002, and a year later opened a foundation in his name in northwestern Battambang province, which helps fund health care, education and conservation projects in rural Cambodia.

Maddox is now 14 and sporting what his mom calls "a blonde stripe" — a shaggy mohawk with the top dyed blonde. He joined her in Cambodia to help behind the scenes for the project that she sees as a unique merger of her film work and family with humanitarian interests.

"For me, this is the moment, where finally my life is kind of in line, and I feel I'm finally where I should be," Jolie Pitt said.

Her fondness for Cambodia is mutual, according to the country's most celebrated filmmaker Rithy Panh, who says "First They Killed My Father" will be the first Hollywood epic filmed in Cambodia about the country's genocide — a sign that the government trusts her to respectfully revisit the horrors of the past.

"I don't think they authorized Hollywood to come here. They authorized Angelina Jolie. It's not the same. She is special. She has a special relationship with the Cambodian people. There is a mutual respect," said Panh, her co-producer.

"I wonder if she's not a reincarnated Cambodian," he laughed, then thought about it. "Maybe. Maybe in a previous life she was Cambodian."

She expects to return to hold the film's premiere in Cambodia at the end of the year, before its release on Netflix.

Story: Jocelyn Gecker / Associated Press
 

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Court Dismisses Treason Case Against Junta

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha waves at reporters as he leaves the Army Club in Bangkok on May 21, 2014, one day before he would stage a coup d'etat and seize control of Thailand.

By Pravit Rojanaphruk
Senior Staff Writer

BANGKOK — The Appeals Court this morning threw out a lawsuit filed by 15 people accusing those behind the May 2014 coup of treason.

Human rights lawyer Anond Nampa, one of the 15 plaintiffs, said that in dismissing the case, the court cited Article 48 of the junta’s provisional constitution granting itself and its members amnesty.

“This is about the fact that there are still people who do not accept the power of the military regime and are resorting to the use of the judicial process [to challenge it],” Anond said after the ruling.

Anond said he and his peers, which included student activist Sirawith Seritiwat, activist Baramee Chairat and 18-year-old Khon Kaen student Krit Saengsuk, will petition the Supreme Court within one month as allowed by law.

More would have joined their lawsuit, Anond said, if it wasn’t for fear of being threatened or prosecuted.

“Ordinary folks may not want to join the lawsuit because they are in fear,” he said, referring the lawsuit first filed in criminal court on May 22, 2014 to mark the first anniversary of the 2014 coup.  It was rejected on the same grounds the appeals court dismissed it Thursday. The activists refiled it in July where it idled seven months until today's decision.

At the time, Anond said the lawsuit sought to try five coup makers, including Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, for high treason under Section 113 of the criminal code, which outlaws armed insurrection against the constitution, government or monarchy. Conviction carries the death penalty.

Prayuth, who was serving as army chief prior to the coup, unilaterally imposed martial law across the country on May 20, 2014, amid street protests against the elected government. He seized power two days later, citing the need to restore peace and order to the country.

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Nike Drops Manny Pacquiao in Wake of Anti-Gay Statements

In this Oct. 12, 2015, file photo, Manny Pacquiao takes questions at the Asia Society in New York

NEW YORK — Manny Pacquiao's latest disparaging comments about gays have cost him a contract with Nike.

It may not be the only endorsement Pacquiao loses, even as he and promoter Bob Arum scramble to contain the damage done by a television interview in the Philippines in which the boxer said gay people "are worse than animals."

"What he's saying is diametrically opposed to what I believe," said Arum, who is promoting Pacquiao's upcoming fight with Timothy Bradley. "I'm in favor of gay rights and same sex marriage. I'm apologetic personally to the gay movement in the United States."

Nike issued a brief statement Wednesday saying it was severing its ties with the boxer over his comments about gays. The company said it no longer will have any business dealings with the boxer.

"We find Manny Pacquiao's comments abhorrent," the statement said. "Nike strongly opposes discrimination of any kind and has a long history of supporting and standing up for the rights of the LGBT community."

Pacquiao, a congressman who is now running for Senate in the Philippines, made the comments to a television station that was asking candidates about their views on same sex marriage.

"It's just common sense," Pacquiao said in the remarks posted online by the TV5 network. "Have you seen any animal having male-to-male or female-to-female relations?"

Animals, he said, were better because they recognize gender differences, and "if you have male-to-male or female-to-female (relationships), then people are worse than animals."

Pacquiao's remarks were criticized by several Filipino celebrities, and he responded by issuing an apology of sorts. In it, Pacquiao said he was still against same sex marriage but loved all people.

Arum told The Associated Press that Pacquiao is an evangelical Christian who believes that homosexuality is wrong, and that he was trying to win votes in the Philippines, where the issue of same sex marriage has not been decided.

"What he said is completely for home consumption for Filipinos wrestling with the question of legalizing same sex marriage," Arum said.

In addition to his campaign for the Senate, Pacquiao is currently training for the April 9 fight in Las Vegas against Bradley in what he says will be his last bout. Arum said he could lose some other fight sponsors because of the remarks.

Pacquiao has not fought since losing to Floyd Mayweather Jr. last May in the richest fight ever. Pacquiao reportedly made more than USD$100 million for the fight, and is guaranteed USD$20 million to fight Bradley.

Arum said he expects some people not to buy the fight on pay-per-view because of the comments, but that others might buy it because of them.

"Instead of promoting a fight with a fighter I'm promoting a fight with a politician," Arum said. "It's like of Donald Trump was a boxer and I was promoting Donald Trump when he was running for president. I would be killed by the media for all the stupid statements he is making."

It's not the first time Pacquiao has been involved in a furor over gay rights. In 2012 he was quoted as saying he was against same sex marriage because "It's the law of God" though he denied inferring that homosexuals should be put to death.

The eight-time champion is the Philippines' most famous person and the country's most popular athlete. He has represented the Sarangani province in the Philippines' House of Representatives since May 2010, though has drawn criticism for seldom showing up for legislative duties.

Polls in the Philippines show he is a strong contender for the Senate seat, which many believe will eventually lead him to seek the country's presidency.

Story: Tim Dahlberg / Associated Press

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Red Shirt Leader Jatuporn Summoned for Attitude Adjustment

Jatuporn Prompan, at right, speaks to soldiers this afternoon at the offices of Peace TV on Thursday in Bangkok. Photo: Jatuporn Prompan / Facebook

BANGKOK — Prominent Redshirt leader Jatuporn Prompan was taken by soldiers today for another attitude adjustment session.

Jatuporn was at the offices of Peace TV on Thursday in Bangkok's Lat Phrao area when military officers arrived at about 1:30pm. After some discussion, Jatuporn was removed and taken to the 11th Military Base.

In recent days, Jatuporn has spoken out on Facebook and a Peace TV program he hosts about the military government's role in the scandal-plagued selection of a new Buddhist Supreme Patriarch. 

It was the second time this month Jatuporn was led away from the television station. On Feb. 2 he was briefly detained after Redshirt umbrella group United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship, or UDD, announced it would oppose the ruling junta's draft charter that goes before voters July 31.

Update: Jatuporn was released late Thursday afternoon, telling reporters it was just a general chat in which he was urged to be more cautious in his comments. Junta spokesman Col. Winthai Suvaree said he was brought in because he had been sowing division in society.

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German Drowns in Rough Seas on Koh Phangan

Photo: Joe Christiansen / Flickr

SURAT THANI — A 46-year-old German tourist drowned after reportedly ignoring a rough seas warning yesterday on Koh Phangan.

The wife of the unidentified deceased said they traveled from their bungalow to Thong Nai Pan Noi Beach where her husband went to swim in the sea. Later she heard him shouting for help. The woman and hostel staff tried to save the man but the waves were nearly 2-meters high, making it impossible to rescue the man, according to police Lt. Amorn Sangthong.

She said the couple planned to return home Feb. 26.

Amorn said the German tourist was unconscious when he was pulled from the water. Rescue workers tried to resuscitate him with CPR and sent him to hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Amorn said red flags were posted along the beach to warn tourists about the dangerously strong currents. Witnesses said no one went swimming in the area Wednesday but the deceased.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Fire Strikes Workers Camp Near RCA (Video)

Still image from a video of a fire devastating a workers’ camp Wednesday night on Phetchaburi Road near Bangkok’s RCA area. Image: Kamrob 57

BANGKOK — Fire burned through construction worker housing near a popular nightlife district last night destroying more than 200 rooms.

The blaze ignited about 11:50pm on Wednesday night at barracks housing more than 1,000 workers of Italian-Thai Development PCL on Phetchaburi Road near the famous Royal City Avenue nightlife area. Firefighters brought the fire under control after two hours, but not until after it had destroyed more than 200 worker’s rooms, TNN24 reported. No one was injured.

The residence was reportedly made of wood which help fueled the fire. The workers, who are Thai, Burmese and Cambodian, have been temporarily relocated to a nearby temple.

The cause of the fire is still investigated.

 

 

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Dissidents Fearful as Thailand, Once a Haven, Favors China

Chinese dissidents who asked not to be identified, speak Feb. 2, 2016, during an interview with Reuters in Bangkok. Photo: Jorge Silva / Reuters

By Andrew R.C. Marshall and James Pomfret
Reuters

BANGKOK — One night last month, Liu Xuehong stood weeping outside the gates of the United Nations headquarters in Bangkok, begging the guards to let her in.

The Chinese dissident had received a threatening call from an anonymous Chinese official, and feared that she, like other asylum seekers in Thailand, would be snatched away by agents of China or deported by a Thai junta increasingly allied to it.

The U.N. guards refused her entry. "I felt so frustrated," she said, tears streaming down her face. "We still live in fear here."

Liu is one of hundreds of Chinese who have fled for Thailand, say human rights groups. It was long considered a refuge, but not anymore.

Two Chinese dissidents recently disappeared from Thai soil, only to reappear a few weeks later in China in police custody. Thailand deported two others late last year despite a U.N. plan to resettle them in Canada.

"Thailand is no longer a safe haven for Chinese dissidents," said a senior Western diplomatic source based in Beijing.

Western governments have expressed concern over China's apparent extra-territorial reach, as President Xi Jinping intensifies a nationwide crackdown on human rights lawyers, journalists and labor activists.

China considers many dissidents to be criminals, including those who flee abroad.

Hong Kong Bookseller

Panitan Wattanayagorn, a top Thai government advisor, said police were "still checking" how the two Chinese dissidents had vanished from the country, and said it was possible one of them had "disappeared (by) himself."

As for the two deportations of Chinese refugees in November, Panitan said the Thai government would work more closely with the UNHCR "to prevent this kind of problem". He said China had not applied any pressure.

"Thailand decides on its own," he said.

Among those who disappeared in Thailand was Gui Minhai, one of five Hong Kong booksellers who have gone missing since late last year.

China's Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the disappearances, but has said its law enforcement officials would never do anything illegal, especially overseas. It said the November deportations were handled "in accordance with the law".

The Thai junta's seizure of power in 2014 strained ties with the West. As the United States and other countries downgraded political and military ties, the generals forged closer ties with Beijing.

China and Thailand held their first joint air force exercise in November. The following month, the two countries agreed to build a USD$13 billion railway line from the Thai-Lao border to Bangkok.

A record 7.9 million Chinese visited Thailand last year, or more than a quarter of the total number of tourists. Last July, Thailand deported 109 Uighur Muslims to an uncertain fate in China in what the U.N. called "a flagrant violation of international law."

Flushing Out Dissidents

Dissidents like Liu say the disappearances and deportations are part of a diplomatic and security squeeze by China to flush them out. Aiding them in Thailand, she believes, are Chinese agents posing as asylum-seekers.

 
 Liu, 55, was jailed for a month in Beijing in 2014 for "disturbing social order," a catch-all charge often used to suppress human rights activists. But she continued her work until last June, just weeks before the Chinese authorities began arresting hundreds of lawyers, legal assistants and activists in a nationwide crackdown.

"Almost all the people around me in China have been arrested," she said.

Liu flew to Thailand, where she is now a U.N.-registered refugee awaiting resettlement. She can still be arrested and deported for illegally entering Thailand, which officially doesn't recognize refugee status.

Men in cars often follow her through Bangkok, she says. "We have no protection here," said Liu.

Liu arrived in Thailand by plane. But other Chinese, too fearful to use their passports, travel overland through ill-policed borders from neighboring countries with the help of human smugglers.

Falun Gong

Song Zhiyu, 43, from Hebei Province, is a member of Falun Gong, a religious group banned as a cult in China.

He left China on a smuggler's motorbike until reaching the Myanmar town of Mongla. In Mongla, Song telephoned a Thai man known only as "the tour leader" who, in return for 20,000 yuan (110,000 baht), drove him towards the Thai border.

Then Song was spirited across a river into Thailand and hidden in the luggage hold of a Bangkok-bound bus. He spent the next 10 hours bent double. "I thought I would die," he said.

About 160 Falun Gong refugees and asylum-seekers are in Thailand, Song said, and in the past, authorities had rarely bothered them.

But more than 29 practitioners have been arrested on immigration charges under the military junta, he said.

"The Thai and Chinese governments now have a very close relationship," he said. "We are all afraid. Every day is dangerous for us."

 
 
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Jatuporn Nalamphun Gets 18 Month Ban for Betting on Tennis Matches

An April 9, 2015 file photo of Jatuporn Nalamphun. Photo: Nuk Bz' / Facebook

LONDON — A Thai tennis player has been banned 18 months and fined USD$5,000 (178, 000 baht) for betting on the sport.

The sanction was announced Wednesday by the Tennis Integrity Unit.

The tennis body says Jatuporn Nalamphun admitted to betting on matches between July and November 2014.

It says Nalamphun "contested, but was found guilty of a further charge of failing to cooperate with a TIU Investigation."

The ATP website shows the 22-year-old Nalamphun has never been ranked and has career earnings of $682 (24,000 baht).

Story: Associated Press

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Testosterone is No Fountain of Youth, Study Finds

CHICAGO — A landmark study suggests that testosterone treatment is no fountain of youth, finding mostly modest improvement in the sex lives, walking strength and mood of a select group of older men.

The long-awaited results from a rigorous, government-funded study are the first solid evidence of whether these hugely popular supplements can help treat low sex drive, lack of energy and other symptoms sometimes blamed on aging.

The researchers emphasized that the findings pertain only to use of testosterone gel by men 65 and older with low hormone levels and related symptoms; whether similar benefits would occur in younger men or with testosterone pills, patches or shots is unknown.

Also, the research was not extensive enough to determine whether long-term use raises the risk of heart attacks and prostate cancer, as some studies have suggested.

Lead author Dr. Peter Snyder, a University of Pennsylvania hormone specialist, said it would be premature to recommend the treatment even for men like those studied.

"Making a recommendation depends on knowing all the benefits versus risks," he said. "We still don't know everything we want to know."

The study involved almost 800 men 65 and older at 12 centers nationwide. All had low blood levels of testosterone, the main male sex hormone. They were randomly assigned to use testosterone gel or fake gel without hormones, rubbed daily on the skin for a year. They had to fill out questionnaires and take a six-minute walking test.

The study design is considered the most rigorous, gold-standard type of research.

Improvement in sex lives was modest among the testosterone group, and the benefits in erectile function were less that what has been seen with Viagra and similar drugs. The men on testosterone had slightly greater improvement in mood and walking strength than the other men, but there was no difference in energy boost between the two groups.

The research is among seven testosterone studies the National Institute on Aging launched in 2009 to examine the risks and benefits of testosterone supplements widely marketed on television to men with "low T."

Testosterone levels typically decline with age. Supplements are approved only for treating testosterone deficiency caused by certain medical conditions, such as problems with the testes, but they have become a multibillion-dollar industry, feeding on aging men's desire to remain youthful. The men in the study did not have any of those specified conditions.

The new research combines results from three of the government-funded studies. Results are expected later from the four other studies, which tested the hormone's effects on mental function, bone density, heart function and anemia.

The current results are in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.

The findings "bring some real rigor" to questions surrounding testosterone use and suggest that the treatment is "not a panacea" for age-related ills, said Dr. Eric Orwoll, a physician-researcher at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland.

On average, the testosterone increased men's hormone levels to what would be normal for someone 19 to 40 years old.

About 20 percent of testosterone men reported much improved sexual desire, and 30 percent reported a slight improvement, but almost half reported no change. Less than one-third of the fake-gel men reported any improvement in sexual desire.

On the walking test, testosterone and placebo men showed similar improvements when the comparison was only among men who started out with low scores. When the comparison was expanded to include other study men, about 21 percent of testosterone men achieved the walking goal versus about 13 percent of those on a placebo.

Snyder said those findings suggest but don't prove that the hormone builds muscles and increases strength and energy.

The men in the study didn't learn until it was over whether they had been given testosterone or the fake gel.

Dave Bostick, who participated at the University of Pittsburgh, said that as soon as he stopped using the gel he correctly guessed he had gotten the real thing. Bostick, 71, a retired vocational rehab counselor, said his low mood and energy level improved "a little bit" during the study but suddenly worsened afterward.

He said he has resumed using testosterone at his doctor's recommendation and isn't overly concerned about the potential risks.

"Something's going to get me sooner or later," Bostick said.

A small number of men had heart attacks or were diagnosed with prostate cancer during or after the study, but the rates were similar between the two groups. Dr. Richard Hodes, director of the National Institute on Aging, said the agency is awaiting results from the additional testosterone studies to determine whether to pursue research on potential long-term risks.

ABBVie Pharmaceuticals provided its AndroGel for the study and helped pay for the research but was otherwise not involved.

Company spokeswoman Libby Holman called the research "an important contribution" to understanding the role of testosterone therapy.

Story: Lindsey Tanner / Associated Press

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