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Myanmar To Open Its First Stock Market in October

YANGON (DPA) – Myanmar will open its first-ever stock market later this year, the deputy finance minister said Saturday.

"We are ready to start it on October," Maung Maung Thein said.

He also said that stock exchange licences will be issued to companies soon.

"The Securities Exchange Commission will issue licences to the stock companies. It will be happen two or three months later," he said.

The minister said about 10 companies would meet the criteria for initial listing.

The commission was formed in August to supervise the new exchange.

 

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Crashed AirAsia Plane Tail Section Lifted


Part of the tail of the AirAsia flight QZ8501 plane floats on the water's surface as Indonesian Navy divers conduct search operations for the flight recorders of the aircraft in the Java sea, off Borneo, Indonesia, 10 January 2015. EPA/ADEK BERRY / POOL

By Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibrata

JAKARTA (DPA) – The search party working to recover wreckage of a crashed AirAsia flight hoisted the plane's tail section out of the Java Sea Saturday, local media reported.  

Footage on TV One broadcaster showed what appeared to be the airline's logo floating next to orange bags used to lift the tail section from the seabed about 30 metres below. 

The object was being towed toward the approaching Crest Onyx towing ship belonging to Indonesian energy regulator SKK Migas. 

"We are going to attach the tail and securely fasten it to the ship, so that divers can thoroughly re-check if the flight data recorder is still inside the tail," armed forces chief General Moeldoko told TV One. 

A preliminary check by divers conducted soon after the tail section was found failed find the flight data recorders inside, where they would normally be located. 

Suryadi Supriyadi, the national search and rescue agency's operational director, said the recorders could have been detached from the plane as it crashed to the bottom of the sea.

The homing beacon emitted by one of the recorders appeared to be about a kilometre from where the tail section was found, based on the signal detected by Indonesian ship KN Jadayat. 

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Motorcycle Gang Donates Food For Children's Day

A motorcycle gang in Amnart Charoen province organized a food giveaway event for poor children in celebration of Thailand’s National Children's Day, 10 Jan 2015.

AMNART CHAROEN — A motorcycle gang in Amnart Charoen province organized a food drive for poor children in celebration of Thailand’s National Children's Day today.

Over 100 members of the gang gathered in front of a motor repair shop in the province at around 1 pm to participate in the charity event. 

Attawut Chonthong, the leader of the gang, which is called "Dunlow," said he collected donations from fellow members and bought food, snacks, and drinking water for poor children in the province. 

The group will also donate some money to a local shelter home that houses orphans, Attawut said.

Many teenagers in Thailand's urban areas form gangs called "dek vans" (literally, racing kids) and race motorcycles on highways at night. Thai police have been battling dek vans gangs for years, occasionally setting up checkpoints to block the races.

According to Attawut, who did not give his age, Dunlow wants to show that not all dek vans gangs are troublemakers. 

"We don't always cause troubles like most people think, and not every dek vans group is the same," Attawut explained, "There many dek vans groups that legally use the highways, including my group. We only race our motorcycles in the manner that respects the laws. We never block the roads on our own, like some other groups."

He also vowed to organize similar charity events in the future to honor His Majesty the King.

 

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Prayuth Lectures Thai Children on "Knowledge and Morality"

Thai junta chairman and Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha receives a portrait of himself drawn by schoolchildren in honor of Thailand's National Children's Day, 7 January 2014

BANGKOK — Junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha addressed Thai children in a televised speech last night on the occasion of Thailand’s National Children's Day.

In the speech, which was broadcast on all state-owned TV and radio channels, Gen. Prayuth advised Thai children to strictly practice the "Twelve Values," and have a "correct understanding" of society. 

"If we only learn about freedom and democracy, without learning about duty, or if we only focus on materials and technology, we will not survive," Gen. Prayuth said. 

He also elaborated on the "lesson" for this year's Children's Day, which he penned last month: "Knowledge and morality will lead us to the future."

"We have to understand what knowledge is, how we can educate ourselves, either by personal education, formal education, leisure education, or out-of-school education," the junta chairman said. "Reading books, learning from experience, learning from facts, all these are knowledge."

He continued, "And what is morality? It is knowing what is good, and doing it. Don't do what is bad. Always act morally and think of other people. Be generous. As for 'leading us to the future,' if you are not moral people, and if you are not knowledgeable, you will be doomed. You won't have any certain future. You may be in jail, or lose your jobs, or become addicted to drugs."

"So think carefully on these lessons," Gen. Prayuth advised. "Knowledge and morality will lead us to the future. I don't want you to just memorize the motto and forget about it later, after you have gotten your prize or sung your karaoke."

Gen. Prayuth was referring to activities held at the Government House today, which include traditional art performances, a parade by the Prime Minister's bodyguard corps, karaoke booths, exhibitions about Thailand's neighboring countries, and a tour of the Prime Minister’s office.

Other state agencies will also hold activities to mark the holiday. The main highlight will be military parade and display of weaponry by the Thai armed forces.

The Aeronautical Radio of Thailand Ltd., which oversees flights in Thailand, announced yesterday that flights to and from Don Mueang International Airport in northern Bangkok will be delayed due to airshows involving jet fighters of the Royal Thai Air Force over the facility's airspace throughout 10 January. 

Some flights can be delayed up to 60 minutes, the agency warned. 

 
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Prayuth Lectures Thai Children on "Knowledge and Morality"

A father shows his child Royal Thai Air Force helicopters that have been transported for the event at National Children's Day at Don Mueang Airport, 8 January 2014.

BANGKOK — Junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha addressed Thai children in a televised speech last night on the occasion of Thailand’s National Children's Day.

In the speech, which was broadcast on all state-owned TV and radio channels, Gen. Prayuth advised Thai children to strictly practice the "Twelve Values," and have a "correct understanding" of society. 

"If we only learn about freedom and democracy, without learning about duty, or if we only focus on materials and technology, we will not survive," Gen. Prayuth said. 

He also elaborated on the "lesson" for this year's Children's Day, which he penned last month: "Knowledge and morality will lead us to the future."

"We have to understand what knowledge is, how we can educate ourselves, either by personal education, formal education, leisure education, or out-of-school education," the junta chairman said. "Reading books, learning from experience, learning from facts, all these are knowledge."

He continued, "And what is morality? It is knowing what is good, and doing it. Don't do what is bad. Always act morally and think of other people. Be generous. As for 'leading us to the future,' if you are not moral people, and if you are not knowledgeable, you will be doomed. You won't have any certain future. You may be in jail, or lose your jobs, or become addicted to drugs."

"So think carefully on these lessons," Gen. Prayuth advised. "Knowledge and morality will lead us to the future. I don't want you to just memorize the motto and forget about it later, after you have gotten your prize or sung your karaoke."

Gen. Prayuth was referring to activities held at the Government House today, which include traditional art performances, a parade by the Prime Minister's bodyguard corps, karaoke booths, exhibitions about Thailand's neighboring countries, and a tour of the Prime Minister’s office.

Other state agencies will also hold activities to mark the holiday. The main highlight will be military parade and display of weaponry by the Thai armed forces.

The Aeronautical Radio of Thailand Ltd., which oversees flights in Thailand, announced yesterday that flights to and from Don Mueang International Airport in northern Bangkok will be delayed due to airshows involving jet fighters of the Royal Thai Air Force over the facility's airspace throughout 10 January. 

Some flights can be delayed up to 60 minutes, the agency warned. 

 
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Russian Tourist Attacked For 'Not Buying Watch'

New Year's Eve in Pattaya, a popular destination for Russian tourists.

CHONBURI — Police in Pattaya are searching for a vendor who reportedly assaulted a Russian tourist who refused to buy a watch from his stall.

Police say the 22-year-old tourist was attacked with a knife at around 10 pm last night less than 50 metres away from Mueang Pattaya Police Station.

The tourist has knife wounds across his abdomen and is in critical condition, acording to medical workers at Pattaya Memorial Hospital.

According to the victim's sister, the vendor became angry after her brother decided the watches were counterfeit and refused to buy one. When her brother told the vendor to go away, the vendor reportedly attacked him with a knife and fled the scene, witnesses say. 

Pol.Lt. Jakkrit Chantakam, an officer at Mueang Pattaya Police Station, told reporters that police are checking CCTVs in the area to identify and locate the suspect. He also warned tourists in Pattaya to be wary of vendors who may become aggressive if tourists refuse to buy their wares.

"We will find the perpetrator and bring him to justice as soon as possible, because this incident damages the image of Pattaya as a tourist destination," Pol.Lt. Jakkrit said.

Pattaya, a seaside resort town east of Bangkok, is well-known for its seedy nightlife and high rate of crimes against foreigners.

Last week police arrested a vendor who allegedly attacked a 60-year-old Swiss tourist in Pattaya who refused to buy his souvenirs. 

 

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Air Asia Search Operation Races Against Worsening Weather

Indonesian navy divers board a rubber dinghy prior to conducting operations trying to lift the tail of the crashed AirAsia plane, in the Java Sea off Borneo, 09 January 2015. Indonesian searchers have detected a signal from the flight recorders of the AirAsia plane that crashed on December 28. EPA/ADEK BERRY / POOL

By Ahmad Pathoni

JAKARTA (DPA) – Indonesian rescuers were racing to lift the tail section of the crashed AirAsia plane as strong underwater currents were filling the wreckage with mud and making it heavier, local media reported Saturday. 

Divers were still searching for the flight recorders and more bodies as weathermen forecasted waves up to 3.5 metres high with strong winds and currents in the waters off Central Kalimantan province of Borneo island.

"We are working to use [inflated] lifting bags. The plane's tail section could be heavier now because it is now filled with sea mud and sand," Suryadi Supriyadi, the national search director, was quoted as saying by news website Kompas.com.

The rescue operation detected a signal from a flight recorder Friday but divers did not find the so-called black boxes inside the tail section, where they would normally be located. 

Surpiyadi said the recorders appeared to be about a kilometre from the tail section, based on the signal detected by Indonesian Navy ship KRI.

Navy divers were marking the wreckage location with orange balloons, armed forces chief General Moeldoko said via Twitter. 

AirAsia flight QZ8501 took off from the Indonesian city of Surabaya and disappeared from radar en route to Singapore. The crash killed all 162 people on board, mostly Indonesians. 

 

 

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Thai Royalists Call For Boycott of UN Refugee Agency

Ekapop Luara, 23, posted on his Facebook several weeks ago that he is now living in New Zealand, claiming to have been granted asylum by NZ authorities. His Facebook account has since been deactivated.

BANGKOK — Royalists in Thailand have called for boycotting a UN agency that reportedly helped a lese majeste suspect escape the country.

According to a report on the New Zealand Herald newspaper, Ekapop Luara, 23, was assisted by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in his escape from Thailand to New Zealand last year.

Ekapop has been charged with lese majeste (insulting the monarchy) for a speech he made at a Redshirt rally in November 2013.  

Ekapop is believed to have fled Thailand shortly after the military staged a coup on 22 May 2014. He posted on his Facebook several weeks ago that he is now living in New Zealand, claiming to have been granted asylum by NZ authorities. His Facebook account has since been deactivated. 

After the report on the New Zealand Herald spread across social media, aided by a translation to Thai that appeared on the right-wing Thai newspaper Naew Na, a number of royalists in Thailand have started calling for a "boycott" of the UNHCR for allegedly helping the "anti-monarchy" suspect.

The campaign, which appears to be coordinated by several Facebook pages, has also urged all Thais to refrain from donating to the UN agency. 

King Bhumibol is widely revered as a demi-god in Thailand, and many of his supporters view any critical remark of the Thai Royal Family as an attempt to overthrow the monarchy.

Section 112 of Thailand's Criminal Codes, the law known as lese majeste, criminalizes defaming His Majesty the King with a maximum penalty of 15 years in jail. The law is often interpreted to stifle any discussion that touches on the Thai monarchy.

"The UNHCR has received so much help from His Majesty. They were allowed to work fully on Thai soil, which led to their Nobel Peace Prize in 1982," a blogger on OK Nation wrote. "But in 2014, the UNHCR betrays His Majesty and grants a refugee status to a suspect who violated Section 112."

Several Thai royalists claimed on their Facebook accounts that they have already ceased donating to the UNHCR.

One of the users, named Saijai, also wrote that the UNHCR staff asked her to reconsider her decision because donations to the agency are only used in providing assistance to refugees who have been affected by war, famine, and other plights.

However, Saijai said she stood firm and insisted to cease her donation.

On 6 January, the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs summoned a diplomat from the New Zealand Embassy in Bangkok to express its concern over reports that Ekapop is residing in New Zealand.

"Mr. Ekapop is using his status granted by the New Zealand government to engage in political matters that affect the national security of Thailand, at a time when Thailand is moving forward and seeking a national reconciliation," said Sek Wannamethee, spokesperson of the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA).

The MFA also asked the New Zealand authorities not to allow anyone who violates Thai laws to use its country as a base for political activities, Sek told reporters.

The New Zealand Embassy in Bangkok has not responded to Khaosod English’s requests for comment.

Since staging a coup on 22 May 2014, junta leader and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has stepped up prosecution of lese majeste suspects. Gen. Prayuth, considered a hardline royalist, has also granted military courts – which do not permit appeals – jurisdiction over lese majeste cases.

Among those currently facing prosecution are two theatre activists accused by the military of insulting the Royal Family by staging a play about a fictional monarch in October 2013. The two activists have been held in prison since they were arrested last August, with the court repeatedly denying their requests for release on bail. 

The growing persecution has forced a number of activists and academics to flee Thailand and seek asylum in foreign countries. Apart from Ekapop, other notable exiles include transgender activist Saran Chuichai and historian Somsak Jeamteerasakul, who say they are living in France, as well as Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a political science scholar who lives in Japan. 

 
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Three Suspected Militants Shot Dead at Southern School

Soldiers at the madras where a shooting killed three suspected insurgents in Pattani province, 9 Jan 2015.

PATTANI — Three suspected insurgents were killed in a heated gunfight with security officers at a religious school in Pattani province today.

The gunfight broke out this morning after army rangers attempted to apprehend five suspects on terror charges who were residing at a madras in Mayo district, army officers told reporters.

However, the five men fired their weapons at the soldiers, forcing the officers to shoot back at the school building, the army says. 

(Video of the clashes filmed by TNN News)

"We fired ten rounds of tear gas into the building to flush the perpetrators out, but it failed," Pol.Col. Kong-at Suwannakham told Manager ASTV. "They kept firing at us constantly."

The firefight continued for several hours, until soldiers overran the compound at around 2.30 pm. Security officers told reporters three militants died in the gunfight, and two were arrested.

During a lull in the fighting soldiers also reportedly evacuated residents from the surrounding area and invited religious leaders to negotiate with the suspects, but the talks broke down.

One of the deceased was wanted for his role in the murder of four army officers in 2012, according to security officers. Soldiers also reportedly found one M-16 rifle, one AK-47 rifle, and three pistols at the crime scene.

It is unclear what the suspects were doing in the religious school prior to the clash. 

At least 6,200 people have died in the secessionist violence that has plagued the southern border provinces of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat since 2004, rights groups say. The violence also occasionally spills into some districts of Songkhla province.

The bloody campaign has been waged by shadowy militant groups seeking to revive the independent sultanate of Pattani that was incorporated into modern Thailand in the early 20th century.

In contrast to the rest of country, where the vast majority of Thais are Buddhist, Thailand's 'Deep South' is dominated by Muslims who speak a Malaysian dialect and often do not consider themselves Thai. 

Over 60,000 troops and armed volunteers are deployed in the southern border provinces to combat the insurgency. 

However, security officers have been often accused of human rights abuses and using excessive violence towards civilians in the region.

 
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Three Suspected Militants Shot Dead at Southern School

Soldiers at the crime scene where a shooting killed three suspected insurgents in Pattani province, 9 Jan 2015.

PATTANI — Three suspected insurgents were killed in a heated gunfight with security officers at a religious school in Pattani province today.

The gunfight broke out this morning after army rangers attempted to apprehend five suspects on terror charges who were residing at a madras in Mayo district, army officers told reporters.

However, the five men fired their weapons at the soldiers, forcing the officers to shoot back at the school building, the army says. 

(Video of the clashes filmed by TNN News)

"We fired ten rounds of tear gas into the building to flush the perpetrators out, but it failed," Pol.Col. Kong-at Suwannakham told Manager ASTV. "They kept firing at us constantly."

The firefight continued for several hours, until soldiers overran the compound at around 2.30 pm. Security officers told reporters three militants died in the gunfight, and two were arrested.

During a lull in the fighting soldiers also reportedly evacuated residents from the surrounding area and invited religious leaders to negotiate with the suspects, but the talks broke down.

One of the deceased was wanted for his role in the murder of four army officers in 2012, according to security officers. Soldiers also reportedly found one M-16 rifle, one AK-47 rifle, and three pistols at the crime scene.

It is unclear what the suspects were doing in the religious school prior to the clash. 

At least 6,200 people have died in the secessionist violence that has plagued the southern border provinces of Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat since 2004, rights groups say. The violence also occasionally spills into some districts of Songkhla province.

The bloody campaign has been waged by shadowy militant groups seeking to revive the independent sultanate of Pattani that was incorporated into modern Thailand in the early 20th century.

In contrast to the rest of country, where the vast majority of Thais are Buddhist, Thailand's 'Deep South' is dominated by Muslims who speak a Malaysian dialect and often do not consider themselves Thai. 

Over 60,000 troops and armed volunteers are deployed in the southern border provinces to combat the insurgency. 

However, security officers have been often accused of human rights abuses and using excessive violence towards civilians in the region.

 
For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
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