30 C
Bangkok
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Home Blog Page 3104

Prayuth Preparing 'Surprise' For National Children's Day

Gen. Prayuth greets schoolchildren at the Government House on 7 Jan 2015 in a run-up to National Children's Day on 10 Jan 2015.

BANGKOK — Junta leader and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has a special "surprise" planned for Thai children on Saturday, his spokesperson said.

Yongyuth Maiyalap, spokesperson of the Office of Prime Minister, said the Government House will host several exhibitions and events to celebrate National Children’s Day, which falls on the second Saturday of each year.

"The Prime Minister will have a surprise," Yongyuth said. "You have to wait for that day to see what it is."

On National Children's Day, the Government House traditionally open its doors to children and allows them to take turns sitting at the Prime Minister’s desk.

According to Yongyuth, this year's celebration will also feature cultural performances, photo-ops with the Prime Minister's podium, and a motorized parade by the Prime Minister's bodyguard corps.

Gen. Prayuth will personally open the ceremony at 8.30 am and watch the cultural show at 10.30 am, Yongyuth said. 

"Then the Prime Minister will give a speech to the children. It will be broadcast live on Channel 11," the spokesperson said. 

As per tradition for Prime Ministers, Gen. Prayuth designated the "lesson" of this year's holiday in an announcement last month: "Knowledge and morality will lead us to the future." 

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

Officials at Royal Thai Army informed the media on 5 January that the army would be moving tanks, APCs, and helicopters from various military bases into Bangkok for the occasion. The army alsoadvised the public not to panic when they see the military vehicles.

Last year, the army issued a similar statement assuring the public that its convoy of tanks for National Children's Day should not be interpreted as a sign of an imminent military coup.  

"The public should not mistake such maneuver as a military coup," the deputy spokesperson of the Royal Thai Army said on 6 January 2014. 

Five months later, Gen. Prayuth, who was serving as an army chief at the time, led a coup on 22 May and toppled the elected government. He later appointed himself as chairman of the ruling military junta and was selected as Prime Minister by a legislature whose members he handpicked. 

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

Advertisement

Vigil For Charlie Hebdo Massacre Victims in BKK

Several dozen people gathered in central Bangkok to honor those killed in the deadly attack on a satirical magazine in France, 8 Jan 2015.

BANGKOK — Several dozen people gathered in central Bangkok Thursday evening to honor those killed in the deadly attack on a satirical magazine in France yesterday.

The group lit candles and lay flowers around signs printed with the words “Je Suis Charlie” and other phrases that have come to symbolize solidarity with the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, that was the target of the shooting.

\
A vigil for the victims of the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Bangkok, 8 Jan 2015.

Two masked gunmen broke into the magazine’s office in Paris yesterday and opened fire on journalists and cartoonists who were gathered for an editorial meeting, killing twelve, including two police officers.

“I could not sleep last night after I heard about the news, and when I woke up the next day I felt like I needed to do something,” said Chiranuch Premchaiporn, a journalist at Prachatai who helped organize the vigil in front of the Bangkok Art and Cultural Center.

Witnesses say the gunmen screamed “Allahu Akbar” during the shooting, which the President of France has labeled an “act of terrorism.” The magazine regularly poked fun at religions, including Islam, and was firebombed in 2011 after it published a spoof issue “guest edited” by the Prophet Muhammad.

Shortly after the massacre, crowds began gathering in cities around the world to condemn the attack, with many holding up pens and pencils to show their support for free speech.

The attack on freedom of expression has particular resonance in Thailand, where people were forced to test the military junta’s ban on political gatherings to attend tonight’s vigil.

“We had to do something simple because of martial law,” said Chiranuch. “So we made it clear that this is not a political gathering, just a spiritual gathering to honor those whose lives were lost.”

Thailand's military junta banned all political activities shortly after seizing power in a coup on 22 May 2014.

Prach Panchakunathorn, a former journalist who attended tonight’s vigil, said the attack in France made him think of another restriction on free speech in Thailand: the draconian lese majeste law that punishes any criticism of the monarchy with up to 15 years in prison.

“What happened in France has happened in Thailand to a lesser degree,” Prach said. “People who mock or criticize members of the royal family are often bullied. In some cases people have even come to where they live and shot bullets at their homes.” 

Those accused of lese majeste often face severe social stigma in Thailand, where King Bhumibol is widely revered. Even those acquitted of the charge often struggle to find employment. 

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

Advertisement

Vigil For Charlie Hebdo Massacre Victims in BKK

Several dozen people gathered in central Bangkok to honor those killed in the deadly attack on a satirical magazine in France, 8 Jan 2015.

BANGKOK — Several dozen people gathered in central Bangkok Thursday evening to honor those killed in the deadly attack on a satirical magazine in France yesterday.

The group lit candles and lay flowers around signs printed with the words “Je Suis Charlie” and other phrases that have come to symbolize solidarity with the satirical magazine, Charlie Hebdo, that was the target of the shooting.

\
A vigil for the victims of the Charlie Hebdo massacre in Bangkok, 8 Jan 2015.

Two masked gunmen broke into the magazine’s office in Paris yesterday and opened fire on journalists and cartoonists who were gathered for an editorial meeting, killing twelve, including two police officers.

“I could not sleep last night after I heard about the news, and when I woke up the next day I felt like I needed to do something,” said Chiranuch Premchaiporn, a journalist at Prachatai who helped organize the vigil in front of the Bangkok Art and Cultural Center.

Witnesses say the gunmen screamed “Allahu Akbar” during the shooting, which the President of France has labeled an “act of terrorism.” The magazine regularly poked fun at religions, including Islam, and was firebombed in 2011 after it published a spoof issue “guest edited” by the Prophet Muhammad.

Shortly after the massacre, crowds began gathering in cities around the world to condemn the attack, with many holding up pens and pencils to show their support for free speech.

The attack on freedom of expression has particular resonance in Thailand, where people were forced to test the military junta’s ban on political gatherings to attend tonight’s vigil.

“We had to do something simple because of martial law,” said Chiranuch. “So we made it clear that this is not a political gathering, just a spiritual gathering to honor those whose lives were lost.”

Thailand's military junta banned all political activities shortly after seizing power in a coup on 22 May 2014.

Prach Panchakunathorn, a former journalist who attended tonight’s vigil, said the attack in France made him think of another restriction on free speech in Thailand: the draconian lese majeste law that punishes any criticism of the monarchy with up to 15 years in prison.

“What happened in France has happened in Thailand to a lesser degree,” Prach said. “People who mock or criticize members of the royal family are often bullied. In some cases people have even come to where they live and shot bullets at their homes.” 

Those accused of lese majeste often face severe social stigma in Thailand, where King Bhumibol is widely revered. Even those acquitted of the charge often struggle to find employment. 

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

Advertisement

Soldiers To Monitor Buddhist Temple's iPhone Charity Draw

Monks and temple-goers prepare the gifts for Friday's giveaway. Wat Ratchaburana temple in Pitsanulok province, 8 Jan 2015.

PITSANULOK — Soldiers have been dispatched to maintain order at a temple in Pitsanulok province where monks have promised to give away five free iPhones to temple-goers tomorrow.

The giveaway is a part of a tradition that typically involves monks throwing coins at crowds of temple-goers following major religious ceremonies.

Yet while most temples distribute coins and other humble gifts, Wat Ratchaburana in Mueang district will be giving away banknotes worth 20, 50, 100, 500, and 1,000 baht, its abbot says.

The temple will also give away five free iPhone 6 Plus devices, said the abbot, Phra Kru Sitthitham Wipat.

He explained that the winning raffle tickets for the iPhones will be mixed in with the cash prizes and thrown indiscriminately into the crowds.

"We will throw the money in four different spots throughout the temple, to prevent the crowd from becoming too dense," Phra Kru Sitthitham said. "We have already requested police, soldiers, and rescue workers to assist us in the event, to deter any criminals that may blend in with the crowd."

The giveaway is scheduled to take place after a ceremony marking the construction of a new Buddha statue at the temple on 9 January. 

The iPhones were donated to Wat Ratchaburana Temple by some "Thais who are living in Germany," said Weerayuth Potassa, a staff at the temple. 

Over 100 police officers and soldiers will be deployed to oversee security at the temple during the iPhone draw tomorrow, said Pol.Col. Damrong Muen-artyim, an officer at Mueang Pitsanulok Police Station.

"We are afraid that a fight may break out between the people when they struggle to collect the money," Pol.Col. Damrong said. "There may also be criminals who intend to commit crimes during the ceremony."

A group of soldiers from a local military base were already stationed at the temple by today's afternoon. 

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

Advertisement

Thai Junta Gives Green Light to Bill on Mass Surveillance

(Prachatai English)

BANGKOK – The Thai junta has approved a proposed bill which will allow the authorities to conduct mass surveillance on every means of communication in the name of “national security”.

According to Thai Netizen Network, the cabinet on Tuesday gave the green light to the proposed Cyber Security bill to establish a National Committee for Cyber Security, under the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society (MDES), whose former title was the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology (MICT).

The Cyber Security Bill was one of eight proposed bills on telecommunications which are aimed at restructuring and tightening control of telecommunications in Thailand.

Read more here

Note: Khaosod English is not responsible for content on other websites.

Advertisement

Thai Junta Gives Green Light to Bill on Mass Surveillance

(Prachatai English)

BANGKOK – The Thai junta has approved a proposed bill which will allow the authorities to conduct mass surveillance on every means of communication in the name of “national security”.

According to Thai Netizen Network, the cabinet on Tuesday gave the green light to the proposed Cyber Security bill to establish a National Committee for Cyber Security, under the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society (MDES), whose former title was the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology (MICT).

The Cyber Security Bill was one of eight proposed bills on telecommunications which are aimed at restructuring and tightening control of telecommunications in Thailand.

Read more here

Note: Khaosod English is not responsible for content on other websites.

Advertisement

Indonesian Search Teams Look to Lift AirAsia Plane Tail

An undated handout picture released by the Indonesian Search And Rescue Agency (BASARNAS) on 07 January 2014 shows a part of the crashed AirAsia Flight QZ 8501 off Pangkalan Bun, Central Borneo, Indonesia. Searchers have found the tail of the AirAsia plane that crashed into the Java Sea with 162 people on board 10 days ago. EPA/BASARNAS

By Pathoni Ahmad

JAKARTA (DPA) – Search teams were Thursday trying to retrieve the flight recorders from the tail section of the AirAsia plane that crashed into the Java Sea in late December, officials said.

Search teams confirmed they had found the tail on Wednesday after divers took pictures of it 30 metres underwater.

The discovery raises hopes for investigators to recover the aircraft's cockpit voice and flight data recorders, known as the black boxes, which are located in the aircraft's tail section.

Three teams of divers had been sent to the location to measure the tail to determine whether it was possible to lift it with the black boxes still attached.

"I'm leading the operation to lift the aircraft's tail," Indonesian armed forces chief General Moeldoko said.

But poor visibility prevented divers from determining whether the black boxes were still attached to the tail, said Bambang Sulistyo, the head of the National Search and Rescue Agency.

"We are waiting for the currents to subside and send the divers again."

He said the black boxes, which record the chain of events leading up to an accident, required special handling and that the approval of crash investigators was needed before lifting the tail.

"If they allow it, we will use a crane to lift it," he said.

AirAsia flight QZ8501 crashed into the Java Sea with 162 people on board on December 28.

The cause of the crash is still unknown, but one of the pilots requested permission to climb to higher altitude to try to avoid bad weather minutes before the plane disappeared from the radar.

So far, only 40 bodies have been retrieved and no survivors have been found.

International search teams are also trying to find the plane's fuselage, which is thought to contain many of the victims' bodies.

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

 

Advertisement

Prayuth Preparing 'Surprise' For National Children's Day

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 Jan 2015.

BANGKOK — Junta leader and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has a special "surprise" planned for Thai children on Saturday, his spokesperson said.

Yongyuth Maiyalap, spokesperson of the Office of Prime Minister, said the Government House will host several exhibitions and events to celebrate National Children’s Day, which falls on the second Saturday of each year.

"The Prime Minister will have a surprise," Yongyuth said. "You have to wait for that day to see what it is."

On National Children's Day, the Government House traditionally open its doors to children and allows them to take turns sitting at the Prime Minister’s desk.

According to Yongyuth, this year's celebration will also feature cultural performances, photo-ops with the Prime Minister's podium, and a motorized parade by the Prime Minister's bodyguard corps.

Gen. Prayuth will personally open the ceremony at 8.30 am and watch the cultural show at 10.30 am, Yongyuth said. 

"Then the Prime Minister will give a speech to the children. It will be broadcast live on Channel 11," the spokesperson said. 

As per tradition for Prime Ministers, Gen. Prayuth designated the "lesson" of this year's holiday in an announcement last month: "Knowledge and morality will lead us to the future." 

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

Officials at Royal Thai Army informed the media on 5 January that the army would be moving tanks, APCs, and helicopters from various military bases into Bangkok for the occasion. The army also advised the public not to panic when they see the military vehicles.

Last year, the army issued a similar statement assuring the public that its convoy of tanks for National Children's Day should not be interpreted as a sign of an imminent military coup.  

"The public should not mistake such maneuver as a military coup," the deputy spokesperson of the Royal Thai Army said on 6 January 2014. 

Five months later, Gen. Prayuth, who was serving as an army chief at the time, led a coup on 22 May and toppled the elected government. He later appointed himself as chairman of the ruling military junta and was selected as Prime Minister by a legislature whose members he handpicked. 

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

 

Advertisement

France Mourns Magazine "Heroes" as Police Pursue Attackers

Participants in a candlelight vigil gather silently in the thousands at Paris' Place de la Republique hours after an attack by masked gunmen on the offices of the newspaper Charlie Hebdo, leaving at least 12 dead. President Francois Hollande has called for a day of mourning as the manhunt for the perpetrators continues. EPA/IAN LANGSDON

PARIS (DPA) — France began a day of national mourning Thursday, as police hunted suspected Islamist attackers who left 12 people dead at the Paris offices of a satirical magazine.

The youngest of three suspects in the assault turned himself in to police in the town of Charleville-Mezieres, some 70 kilometres north-east of Reims, one of the areas where police were carrying out their search.

He was in custody, but had not been charged, French news agency AFP reported sources as saying.

Eight journalists, including the editor of magazine Charlie Hebdo and several well-known cartoonists, were among the dead.

Two masked gunmen with automatic rifles stormed the offices of magazine in central Paris at midday Wednesday. The attackers cried "Allah is great" and "We have avenged the prophet," witnesses said.

Two other suspects, brothers named as Cherif and Said Kouachi, aged 32 and 34 respectively, were still on the run.

They are likely "armed and dangerous," police said as they published the men's photographs in an appeal for witnesses.

Cherif was convicted in 2008 for helping to send recruits to fight for al-Qaeda in Iraq and sentenced to three years in prison.

The identity cards of the brothers – both French nationals born in Paris – were found by police in their abandoned car, French magazine Le Point reported.

Charlie Hebdo is known for its unwavering stance on freedom of expression, has printed cartoons of the prophet Mohammed in the past, and was firebombed after publishing similar material in 2011.

Tens of thousands of people gathered in cities across France overnight to remember those killed.

The victims at the magazine died for "freedom," French President Francois Hollande said Wednesday, describing them as "our heroes" and declaring a day of national mourning.

There would be a "moment of contemplation" at midday (1100 GMT), and a ceremony at the National Assembly, an official statement said.

Flags would fly at half-mast for three days.

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

 

Advertisement

Pattaya Robbers Crash Tourists' Romantic Evening

A volunteer police points at the crime scene where group of robbers reportedly attacked two Russian tourists who were enjoying a romantic bottle of wine on a helipad in Pattaya, 8 Jan 2015.

CHONBURI — A group of robbers reportedly attacked two Russian tourists who were enjoying a romantic bottle of wine on a helipad in Pattaya early this morning.

Police received a report about the incident at around 01.00 am. 

The tourists told police they brought a table, bottle of wine, and bouquet to a helipad on Khao Phra Tamnak hill so that they could drink the wine in a romantic setting. 

According to the victims, an unspecified number of people assaulted them while they were drinking wine and stole their money and mobile phones.

Police say the attackers hit one of the Russians in the head with the wine bottle, badly injuring the tourist. 

A volunteer police officer said he and his team encountered the couple prior to the attack and warned them about potential dangers.

"I told them they could be in danger, because the area looked unsafe," the officer told reporters, "But the two told us that they wouldn't be there for long, so my team went to patrol somewhere else."

Police say they are studying CCTV footage to identify and locate the thieves.

Crimes against foreigners are common in Pattaya, a resort town east of Bangkok known for its red light district.

 

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

You can also find Khaosod English on Twitter and Facebook
http://twitter.com/KhaosodEnglish
http://www.facebook.com/KhaosodEnglish

 

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
30 ° C
30 °
30 °
74 %
4.4kmh
100 %
Sat
29 °
Sun
36 °
Mon
35 °
Tue
33 °
Wed
32 °