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Boy Injured When Bus Drives Into Post

A No. 147 bus rests against an electrical pole Tuesday night in western Bangkok after its driver said he intentionally drove into it to arrest the vehicle’s momentum.

BANGKOK — A young boy was injured Tuesday night on a passenger bus after its driver said the brakes failed, forcing him to deliberately crash it into a utility pole.

The pink No. 147 bus had just left The Mall Tha Phra when it drove into an electrical pole at the entrance of Soi Phetkasem 18/1 in western Bangkok. Bus driver Tontrakan Chanma, 35, said he decided to crash the bus because he saw a checkpoint ahead and could not slow the vehicle.

A 7-year-old boy was reportedly injured and sent to Phayathai 3 Hospital.

 

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After Setting iPhone Record, Apple Forecasts Sales Drop

Apple CEO Tim Cook discusses the new iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus during an Apple event in San Francisco in a Sept. 9, 2015, file photo.Photo: Eric Risberg / Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple is bracing for its first sales decline in 13 years, despite selling a record 74.8 million iPhones in the final three months of 2015, in what may prove to be a turning point for the world's most valuable company.

The tech giant says revenue could fall at least 8.6 percent during the January-March quarter, compared with a year earlier. Analysts say the latest iPhone models aren't providing the boost Apple needs to match the massive sales growth it enjoyed last year.

Apple executives painted the downturn as a momentary hiccup. But they also acknowledged the company is working to broaden its business beyond the iPhone itself, which in recent years has provided the bulk of Apple's revenue.

"We have become more and more of a platform company," Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri told The Associated Press. He said Apple has a large base of customers — with 1 billion Apple devices now in active use — who can be relied on to purchase new Apple gadgets, mobile apps and services like Apple Music.

Reporting on its financial performance in the December quarter, Apple said it managed to inch past its previous record, established when it sold 74.5 million iPhones in the holiday quarter of 2014. But Tuesday's forecast implies Apple doesn't expect to match the 61 million iPhones sold in last year's January-March quarter.

Apple's stock has been in a slump for months, as investors worry the company won't be able to duplicate last year's growth in sales, which were in the double-digit percentages. Tuesday's report confirmed those fears.

Executives blamed a strong dollar for reducing revenue from overseas sales in the December quarter. Apple is also confronting an economic downturn in China, one of its biggest markets.

"We're seeing extreme conditions, unlike anything we've experienced before, just about everywhere we look," CEO Tim Cook told analysts on a conference call.

But researchers also say global demand for new smartphones has been slowing over the last year. Apple relies on the iPhone for two-thirds of its revenue and a similar share of profit.

The giant tech company is in no financial danger. It earned $18.4 billion in profit for the October-December quarter, ending the period with USD$216 billion (7.7 trillion baht) in cash. Cook called it "the mother of all balance sheets."

Profit rose 1.8 percent from a year earlier, while revenue increased 1.7 percent to USD$75.9 billion. Earnings amounted to USD$3.28 a share, which beat the USD$3.23 average forecast among analysts surveyed by FactSet. Revenue fell short of analysts' estimates, which averaged USD$76.7 billion.

No one expects Apple to match those results in the current, January-March quarter, as sales traditionally drop after the holiday shopping season and the introduction of new models. But Apple's forecast, which calls for revenue between USD$50 billion and USD$53 billion in the current period, was lower than analysts expected and a significant drop from the USD$58 billion in sales Apple reported a year earlier.

That would be Apple's first year-over-year sales decline since the January-March quarter of 2003 — long before the company began selling iPhones and iPads. Back then, Apple was a fraction of its current size, reporting quarterly revenue of just USD$1.45 billion.

While the iPhone has been a phenomenal success, analysts say it's difficult to match the sales surge that Apple enjoyed last year after it introduced the first iPhone models with significantly larger screens to compete with big-screen phones from rivals like Samsung, which were hugely popular in Asia.

Analysts say last September's release of two more big-screen phones, the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, made less of a splash because they were viewed as relatively similar to the previous models, despite some new features. Analysts say the slight increase in sales for the December quarter came in part because Apple began selling the newest models several days earlier in key markets such as China.

Apple is expected to release the next iPhone models, with new features, later this year. That could fuel another surge in sales. Along with first-time buyers and people who switch from competitors' phones, analysts say Apple can count on a loyal base of iPhone owners who will buy a new model every two years or so.

Maestri also cited USD$5.5 billion in revenue the company collected from sales of apps and services in the last quarter — a 15 percent increase from a year earlier.

Skeptics, however, note that Apple hasn't come up with a blockbuster product to replace the iPhone. The company's latest report showed sales of Mac computers and iPads both declined in the previous quarter.

At least for now, Apple "continues to be dominated by the iPhone and that will certainly, in the near run, continue to dictate the company's prospects," said analyst Bill Kreher of the Edward Jones investment firm.

Over the longer term, he said, revenue from apps and services, along with new products like the Apple Watch, "will be critical as the company attempts to re-ignite growth."

Story: Brandon Bailey / Associated Press

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Brazil Fields 220K Soldiers to Eradicate 'Zika' Virus Mosquitoes

A municipal worker gestures during a Tuesday  operation to combat the mosquitoes that transmit the Zika virus in Recife, Pernambuco state, Brazil. Photo: Felipe Dana / AP

RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil's health minister says the country is sending some 220,000 troops to battle the mosquito blamed for spreading a virus suspected of causing birth defects — but he also says the war is already being lost.

Marcelo Castro said that nearly 220,000 members of Brazil's Armed Forces would go door-to-door to help in mosquito eradication efforts ahead of the country's Carnival celebrations. Agency spokesman Nivaldo Coelho said Tuesday details of the deployment are still being worked out.

Castro also said the government would distribute mosquito repellent to some 400,000 pregnant women who receive cash-transfer benefits.

But the minister also said the country has failed in efforts against the Aedes aegypti mosquito that transmits Zika, dengue, chikungunya and yellow fever.

"The mosquito has been here in Brazil for three decades, and we are badly losing the battle against the mosquito," the ministers told reporters as a crisis group on Zika was meeting in the capital, Brasilia.

A massive eradication effort eliminated Aedes aegypti from Brazil during the 1950s, but the mosquito slowly returned over the following decades from neighboring nations, public health experts have said. That led to outbreaks of dengue, which was recorded in record numbers last year.

The arrival of Zika in Brazil last year initially caused little alarm, as the virus' symptoms are generally much milder than those of dengue. It didn't become a crisis until late in the year, when researchers made the link with a dramatic increase in reported cases of microcephaly, a rare birth defect that sees babies born with unusually small heads and can cause lasting developmental problems.

The World Health Organization repeated Tuesday that the link remains circumstantial and is not yet proven scientifically.

But worry about the rapid spread of Zika has expanded across the nation, and the hemisphere beyond. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has advised pregnant women to reconsider travel to Brazil and 21 other countries and territories with Zika outbreaks.

One of them, the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico, reported 18 new confirmed cases of Zika on Tuesday, though none involve pregnant women. One case had been reported earlier.

Officials in El Salvador, Colombia and Brazil have suggested women stop getting pregnant until the crisis has passed.

Repellent has disappeared from many Brazilian pharmacies and prices for the product have tripled or even quadrupled where it's still available in recent weeks since the government announced a suspected link between Zika virus and microcephaly

Nearly 4,000 suspected cases of microcephaly have been reported in Brazil since October, compared with fewer than 150 cases in the country in all of 2014.

Castro's remarks have proven controversial, both in and outside Brazil.

World Health Organization spokesman Christian Lindmeier said he hadn't seen the remarks, "but in general terms I think that this would be a bit of a fatalistic approach because this should mean we could lay down all our approaches now and declare the war lost.

"I don't think this is the case," he added at WHO headquarters, in Geneva.

In Brazil, some called for Castro to be fired.

"He is incapable of occupying his position," wrote Helio Gurovitz, a columnist with G1, the internet portal of the Globo television network. "To prove that Castro doesn't have the capacity to occupy such an important position, at such a delicate moment with the spread of the epidemic, all that's needed is a selection of such comments."

Both Brazil's Zika outbreak and the spike in microcephaly have been concentrated in the poor and underdeveloped northeast of the country, though the prosperous southeast, where Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro are located, are the second hardest-hit region. Rio de Janeiro will host the Aug. 5-21 Olympic games.

On Tuesday, officials in Rio also ramped up their fight against the Aedes aegypti, dispatching a team of fumigators to the Sambadrome, where the city's Carnival parades will take place next month, and the region's governor was distributing mosquito-fighting vehicles for poor suburbs of the city.

Officials in another hard-hit South American country, Colombia, also ramped up efforts against Zika on Tuesday.

Health Minister Alejandro Gaviria visited the city of Ibague, a hotbed of Zika, to start a "Tour of Colombia" campaign to educate local officials on how to fight the mosquitoes. Colombian officials say they've recorded more than 13,500 suspected cases and President Juan Manuel Santos said there could be 600,000 cases by year's end.

The WHO's Lindmeier said Tuesday that the U.N. agency plans a special session on the virus during a Geneva meeting of its executive board on Thursday.

Story: Jenny Barchfield / Associated Press

Additional reporting Jamey Keaten in Geneva and Cesar Garcia in Bogota, Colombia

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Koh Tao Murders: Lawyer Alleges Prison Mistreatment

Protesters 'cosplay' as Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo at a Dec. 26, 2015, rally near Thai-Myanmar border.

BANGKOK — Two Myanmar men sentenced to death last month for killing two British tourists in 2014 are being singled out for mistreatment in prison, their lawyer said today.

Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo are forced to wear shackles and remain in their cell 24 hours a day, according to lawyer Nakhon Chompuchat, who said he will file an appeal of their conviction some time in February after being granted an extension by the court. 

“Their condition is good. They can watch TV, but they have some problems: They have to wear shackles 24 hours a day,” Nakhon said Tuesday. “We will campaign against this. We won’t only do it for them; this is about principles. The way they treated [Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo] is not in prison regulations. They claim it's a security measure."

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Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo at the Oct. 3, 2014, police news conference on Koh Tao 

The two Myanmar men are being held at a prison in Nakhon Si Thammarat province. 

According to Nakhon, the prison wardens also withhold money transferred for their use by their supporters and families. 

“We deposit money for them, but it still hasn’t reached them,” Nakhon said. 

The two migrant workers were arrested two weeks after British tourists David Miller and Hannah Witheridge were found murdered on Koh Tao in the early morning of Sep. 15, 2014. Police accused Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo of raping Witheridge and killing both tourists. The two men denied the accusation.

After months of trial, the court ruled last month against Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo, finding them both guilty and sentencing them to die. 

The Dec. 24 verdict sparked outrage on social media and protests in Myanmar, including rallies in front of the Thai Embassy in Yangon. There was broad criticism of the verdict online, with skeptics of the ruling believe the two suspects were "scapegoats" falsely implicated by Thai police. 

Nakhon said his team is still working on their case to appeal the Dec. 24 verdict. The court had agreed to extend the time for submitting the appeal from Jan. 24 to Feb. 24, Nakhon said. 

He also told Khaosod English the defense team may request to transfer them to Bangkok because "it would be more convenient" for communication.

Related stories:

Koh Tao Murders: Court Says DNA Trumps Other Flaws in Case

Koh Tao Murders: Protest at Thai – Myanmar Border [PHOTOS] 

 

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

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Cache of Weapons Seized from Feuding Bangkok Tech Colleges

Police display weapons seized Tuesday from the campuses of two Bangkok vocational colleges.

BANGKOK — Weapons were found Tuesday on the campuses of two rival vocational colleges in the heart of Bangkok one week before a date known to be commemorated with violence.

Metropolitan police today seized two pistols, 43 knives, 52 bullets and six bulletproof vests from a campus located near MBK Center belonging to Rajamangala University of Technology Tawan-Ok Uthenthawai, or simply Uthenthawai.

Police Maj. Gen. Songpol Wattanachai said he sought a search warrant from the Bangkok South Criminal Court in an attempt to prevent violence between students from Uthentawai and the Pathumwan Institute of Technology, two rivals with a bloody history situated around the corner from each other in the Siam area.

Authorities said students typically spar in prolonged brawls each year on Feb. 1, the anniversary of Uthentawai’s founding, known as Blue Day. Only 12 knives were discovered in a search of Pathumwan’s campus.

Uthentawai school official Suebpong Muangchu said some of the weapons had been found previously by teachers. He stressed the schools have made monitoring students a priority, and those found possessing illegal weapons are punished and sent to police.

In October 2014 both campuses were temporarily shut down after a mass brawl erupted at the Victory Monument after several students from both schools were killed in tit-for-tat revenge murders.

 

Related stories:

BKK Robbery Spree Not Connected to Technical Students: Police

Shots Fired At Downtown BKK's Technical College

 

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'There Will Definitely be an Election' in 2017, Prayuth Promises

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks to reporters Tuesday at Government House in Bangkok

By Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Panarat Thepgumpanat
Reuters

BANGKOK — A general election will be held in 2017 even if the draft constitution does not pass a referendum this year, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha said today.

The government had previously made a new constitution a prerequisite for a general election, but junta leader Prayuth, who serves as prime minister, said Tuesday a vote would go ahead in mid-2017, even if it had to be held under a previous constitution.

"No matter whether the draft constitution passes the referendum or not, the government will hold the election in 2017 according to our roadmap," Prayuth told reporters.

The junta has curbed dissent and pushed back the timetable for elections to 2017, raising concern about the prospects of a country that was for years hailed as a shining example of a fast-developing Asian economy.

A junta-appointed committee has written a draft for the country's 20th constitution and is expected to unveil it on Friday.

A military appointed "reform council" rejected a previous draft in September. This time, the government will put the draft to a referendum, which is expected in July though no date has been fixed.

Democracy activists and some political parties say the charter will undermine the development of democracy and result in weak coalitions easily manipulated by the military.

Meechai Ruchupan, chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee, said in a interview last week the constitution was aimed at resolving long-running problems such as abuse of power by lawmakers.

Contentious articles include provisions that empower a Constitutional Court to intervene in political conflict, a partially or wholly appointed Senate and provisions for an unelected prime minister.

Prayuth did not say why he wanted an election even if the draft is rejected, but his announcement is likely to ease concern that a return to democracy could be repeatedly derailed.

"I promise that in July 2017 there will definitely be an election," he said.

 

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

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'There Will Definitely be an Election' in 2017, Prayuth Promises

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks to reporters Tuesday at Government House in Bangkok

By Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Panarat Thepgumpanat
Reuters

BANGKOK — A general election will be held in 2017 even if the draft constitution does not pass a referendum this year, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha said today.

The government had previously made a new constitution a prerequisite for a general election, but junta leader Prayuth, who serves as prime minister, said Tuesday a vote would go ahead in mid-2017, even if it had to be held under a previous constitution.

"No matter whether the draft constitution passes the referendum or not, the government will hold the election in 2017 according to our roadmap," Prayuth told reporters.

The junta has curbed dissent and pushed back the timetable for elections to 2017, raising concern about the prospects of a country that was for years hailed as a shining example of a fast-developing Asian economy.

A junta-appointed committee has written a draft for the country's 20th constitution and is expected to unveil it on Friday.

A military appointed "reform council" rejected a previous draft in September. This time, the government will put the draft to a referendum, which is expected in July though no date has been fixed.

Democracy activists and some political parties say the charter will undermine the development of democracy and result in weak coalitions easily manipulated by the military.

Meechai Ruchupan, chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee, said in a interview last week the constitution was aimed at resolving long-running problems such as abuse of power by lawmakers.

Contentious articles include provisions that empower a Constitutional Court to intervene in political conflict, a partially or wholly appointed Senate and provisions for an unelected prime minister.

Prayuth did not say why he wanted an election even if the draft is rejected, but his announcement is likely to ease concern that a return to democracy could be repeatedly derailed.

"I promise that in July 2017 there will definitely be an election," he said.

 

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Police Seize Contraband Child Spirit Dolls

150 illegally imported haunted spirit dolls known as ‘Luk Thep’ are displayed Tuesday by police in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A haul of strange looking dolls was shown off by police today as the latest evidence of public obsession over a kind of haunted spirit doll.

Police were dispatched to inspect shops selling Luk Thep in Bangkok’s largest wholesale markets Tuesday, where they confiscated 150 dolls from their sellers for smuggling them into Thailand without paying duties.

Inspired by the latest obsessive trend, police were sent to markets in the Sampeng and Wang Burapa areas, as well as some shops in the capital’s Bang Khae district. The 150 dolls were seized from vendors who failed to show proper tax documents and taken to the police station.


‘Luk Thep’ Drug Mule Busted at Chiang Mai Airport 


The dolls have street values ranging from 500 baht to 5,000 baht. For the ritual ceremony in which a child’s soul is invited to inhabit the doll as a spiritual vessel, the police assessed another 500 baht value on top of their listed price.

Police from the Economic Crime Suppression Division said the ongoing smuggling of Luk Thep dolls has cost the country more than 100,000 baht.

Luk Thep have become increasingly coveted recently since first being introduced last year as a trendy possession for the superstitious set. Many are believed to be factory-made dolls from China brought to Thailand to undergo the ritual required to be full-fledged Luk Thep.

More inspections and seizures of contraband spirit dolls will be done across metro Bangkok to also make sure they are not used to transport illegal goods, police said.

 

Related stories:

‘Luk Thep’ Drug Mule Busted at Chiang Mai Airport

 

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Rage Woman Returns in New Video

Screenshots show an angry woman at the Department of Land Transport in Bangkok on Tuesday.

BANGKOK — A woman who went viral on the internet last week for her abusive behavior over a parking ticket was back with more today.

In a video posted online Tuesday, a woman was seen shouting incoherently at officials at the Department of Land Transport.

A representative at the Department of Land Transport confirmed the video shows a woman ranting at the venue, but said the incident occurred yesterday, not today as alleged by the Facebook page to which it was posted.

“… She was shouting something. We couldn’t make out what she said,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because she feared punishment from her supervisors. According to the official, the woman arrived in a car and drove away after she finished her ranting. 

Asked whether the department will alert police about the woman's actions, the official said they have guards capable of handling security.

“As long as she doesn’t do something violent, we won’t call the police,” the official said. 

In the first video posted Wednesday, the woman was seen throwing a tantrum at department officials, reportedly after losing her temper over being ticketed for parking in a restricted area. 
 

Editor's note: All identifying information was removed from this story after publication per instruction from the editorial management of Khaosod English's parent organization, Khaosod newspaper, who feared that it might lead to possible legal action.

 

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

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No Chance of Snow in Thailand, Meteorologist Confirms

The view Tuesday morning from Doi Changmoob, located next to the Thai border with Myanmar in Chiang Rai, where the temperature fell to minus 3C.

CHIANG RAI — Netizens’ hope to see a white winter melted away today.

Following snowballing rumors on social media that northern Thailand would soon be blanketed in snow, meteorologist Sri Chaiyathon said it’s not going to happen, because it’s not possible.

Snowy speculation first surfaced Jan. 22 when some Pantip users noticed snow forecast by some online services over some parts of the north such as Doi Inthanon, the nation’s highest peak. Subzero temperatures recorded in the northern mountains also fueled imaginations. 

But snow needs more than below-freezing temperatures, Sri said, including low-altitude clouds and other climate factors not found in Thailand.

Nonetheless, a small solace for cold-loving Thais: Sri said the cold spell will continue a few more days thanks to cold winds blowing from Myanmar.

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FreeMeteo.com perpetuates the false notion that snow is coming to northern Thailand.

 

Related stories: 

Cold Blamed for 8 Deaths, Storms Sink 3 Ships

 

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

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