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Two Cars Burn Down in New Year's Day Blaze

Two high-end cars were burned to crisp in Chiang Mai province on 1 Jan 2015 in a fire that police suspect was caused by a sky lantern or firework.

CHIANG MAI — Two high-end cars burned to crisp in Chiang Mai province on New Year’s day in a fire that police suspect was caused by a sky lantern or firework.

The owners of the vehicles were spending New Year’s Day at a neighbor’s house when their garage caught on fire.  

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It took firefighters nearly an hour to put out the flames, which caused more than 100,000 baht in damages to the two vehicles.

The incident is still under investigation, but police suspect the fire was caused by a sky lantern on firework set off nearby. 

 

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Malaysia Counts The Cost As Floods Recede

A women walks through floodwaters near Rantau Panjang district of Kelantan state, 400 km north-east of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. EPA/STR

KUALA LUMPUR (DPA) – Floodwaters were subsiding in Malaysia Friday as the country started counting the cost.

Around 85,000 people remained in evacuation centres nationwide as of Friday morning, the National Security Council (NSC) said.

Damage in the worst-hit state of Kelantan on the east coast was estimated at more than 200 million ringgit (57 million dollars), said Trade and Industry Minister Mustapa Mohamed, who is leading the relief operation in his home state.

"This is only a ballpark figure and we have yet to tabulate the losses of the victims," he was quoted as saying by The Star daily. "We are now compiling the full data on the losses."

The number of people still in evacuation centres in Kelantan was around 30,000 Friday, down from a high of more than 150,000 on Wednesday.

Nearby Terengganu state said it would need 132 million ringgit just to repair the roads.

Repairing schools in the five affected states would cost at least 350 million ringgit, said Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin, who is also the education minister.

The federal government has allocated 96 million ringgit to clear 93 landslides from blocked roads in Kelantan, Terengganu, Pahang and Perak, Works Minister Fadilah Yusof said.

Monsoon rains started around three weeks ago, pounding the coastal states along with high tides, and forcing more than a quarter million people to flee their homes and seek shelter in schools or stadiums.

The NSC recorded 18 casualties from the floods, including 10 in the rural and less developed state of Kelantan.

Some areas were expecting more rain from the north-east monsoon, which normally runs from November to March, The Star cited the country's meteorological department as saying.

 

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NLA Prepares 163 Laws For The New Year

Pornpetch Wichitcholchai, chairman of the NLA, heading a meeting on 6 Nov 2014.

BANGKOK— The legislative body appointed by Thailand’s military junta has prepared 163 draft laws for consideration this year, state media reported.

The National Legislative Assembly (NLA) has already proposed 72 draft bills since it was formed in August following the 22 May military coup. Forty-nine of those bills have already been passed, while the rest are still being reviewed by subcommittees and are expected to be approved this year, said NLA vice president Peerasak Porchit.

One of the bills will address inequality in Thai society, Peerasak said, calling it a “new year’s gift” for Thais from the government.

According to data from the World Bank, income inequality in Thailand has decreased in recent years, but remains consistently high with wealth disparities largely drawn along rural-urban lines.

On 18 December the NLA considered a inheritance tax bill that would impose a 10% tax on bequests worth more than 50 million baht. The draft bill is now under review by a 25-person committee. 

The NLA has also appointed a committee on academic and technical affairs to help classify the high number of incoming bills and help the assembly process them quickly, Peerasak added. 

According to NLA president Pornpetch Wichitcholchai, nearly two thirds of the draft bills discussed in 2014 were proposed by the Cabinet, while the other third was proposed by the junta, formally known as the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO).

Under the 2014 interim constitution, the NLA is responsible for passing and amending laws until the next general election, which is expected to be held in 2016 at the earliest. 

More than half of the assembly's 250 members, who were handpicked by the NCPO, are active or retired military and police personnel. 

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Search in Full Swing For AirAsia Fuselage, Flight Recorders

Relatives wait for news of the missing AirAsia plane at Juanda Airport, Surabaya, Indonesia. EPA/FULLY HANDOKO

By Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibrata

JAKARTA (DPA) – The search for the fuselage and flight recorders of the AirAsia plane that crashed off Indonesia was in full swing Friday, as weather improved five days after the accident. 

"We are prioritizing finding the main body of the aircraft and location of the flight recorders," said Bambang Sulistyo, the head of the National Search and Rescue Agency. 

Ships equipped with sonar technology and signal detectors were scouring an area of 1,575 square nautical miles (approximately 5,400 square kilometres) to locate the fuselage and the black boxes, Bambang said.

At least three Indonesian ships were in the area, as well as one from Singapore, and one from the United States.

"We hope we will get more significant results today," he told reporters. 

The cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder, known as black boxes, are key to shedding light on what went wrong with the flight, which was AirAsia's first fatal crash.

A total of 10 bodies have been retrieved, Bambang said. Eight of the bodies had been flown to Surabaya, where the AirAsia Indonesia flight departed, for identification.

Flight QZ8501 crashed Sunday with 162 passengers and crew on board, halfway through a two-hour flight between Surabaya, Indonesia's second-largest city, and Singapore.

 

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Details of Patong New Year's Shooting, Suicide Incidents Emerge

Police nab the 20-year-old suspected shooter in Phang Nga, 1 Jan 2015 [The Phuket News]

(The Phuket News)

PHUKET – Police believe the teenage victim of a shooting in front of a convenient store in Patong early this morning was not the intended target, while details have emerged regarding a suicide that also took place at the start of the year in the island’s premier party town.

Mr Boonphrom Chupeng, 18, of Kathu, is in critical condition and being treated at Watchira Hospital after he was shot in his left jaw at around 5am this morning in front of a 7-11 convenience store on Soi Nanai 8 in Patong.

Having studied CCTV footage and spoken to eyewitnesses, police have identified and arrested the shooter, who was nabbed at Phang Nga’s Kok Kloi bus station this morning at 8am.

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More Bodies Found As Search in Full Swing After AirAsia Crash

Indonesian military personnel in Surabaya carry one of two coffins with remains recovered from the AirAsia crash site as they arrive at Juanda Airport, in Surabaya. Photo EPA/MADE NAGI

By Ahmad Pathoni

JAKARTA (DPA) – More bodies were found Friday as the search was in full swing for the flight recorders and fuselage of the AirAsia plane that crashed off Indonesia with 162 people on board. 

Twenty bodies were recovered from the sea off Borneo island Friday, bringing the confirmed death toll to 30, search chief Bambang Sulistyo told reporters. 

A US navy Seahawk helicopter unloaded 8 of the bodies in Pangkalan Bun, a town in Central Kalimantan province, after they were retrived from the sea by a US navy ship, officials said.

The captain of an Indonesian navy ship said it had detected what appeared to be the tail of the plane at the bottom of the ocean. 

"We managed to detect the tail of the aircraft using the side-scan sonar," the captain of the KRI Bung Tomo, Colonel Yayan Sofyan, said on Metro TV.

He said the object was on the sea bed at a depth of 29 metres. 

Search chief Bambang said the hunt for the aircraft's fuselage and the flight recorder was focused on an area of 1,575 square nautical miles (about 5,400 square kilometres), involving ships equipped with sonar technology and signal detectors.

The cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder, also known as black boxes, are key to shedding light on what went wrong with the flight, which was AirAsia's first fatal crash.

At least three Indonesian ships were in the area, as well as one from Singapore, and one from the United States. Divers from the Indonesian Navy were also involved in the search. 

Seventeen aircraft and 29 ships were taking part in the wider search, he said. 

The head of Indonesia's National Transport Safety Committee, Tatang Kurniadi, said five hydrophones were ready to be deployed to detect acoustic signals underwater.

Two of the hydrophones were from Singapore and one from Britain, he said. 

"We are racing against time," Tatang said. "The signal lasts only 30 days and if the signal is dead, we will have to use remotely operated vehicles to locate them, which will be more difficult."

Hydrophones will not work effectively during high seas because of the extra noise, he said, as weather conditions improved around the search area.

"This morning weather is quite good but there's still light rain," Bambang said early in the day.

The remains of the victims will be transported to Surabaya, where the AirAsia Indonesia flight departed, for identification.

The first victim officially identified was passenger Hayati Lutfiah Hamid, who was buried by her family on Thursday.

Three more victims were identified Friday, including 22-year-old flight attendant Khairunnisa Haidar Fauzi and Kevin Alexander, an Indonesian student at Monash University in Australia.

Their remains were handed over to their families in a solemn ceremony in Surabaya.

AirAsia chief executive Tony Fernandes said in a message on Twitter that he would accompany the remains of Khairunnisa to her home in Palembang in South Sumatra province. 

"I cannot describe how I feel. There are no words," he tweeted. 

Flight QZ8501 crashed Sunday halfway through a two-hour flight between Surabaya, Indonesia's second-largest city, and Singapore.

The Airbus A320-200 last made contact with air traffic control in Jakarta to request permission to ascend to avoid bad weather.

When air traffic control contacted the plane a few minutes later to tell the pilots that they could make a limited ascent, there was no response.

AirAsia said 155 of the people on board were Indonesians. The others included three from South Korea, and one each from Singapore, Malaysia, France and Britain.

 

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Black Box Locator Deployed to AirAsia Crash Site


Indonesian Air Force members look the cockpit windows of C-130 Hercules plane during a search and rescue operation as they search for the missing AirAsia plane over Bangka Island, Indonesia. The search for a missing AirAsia plane that left Indonesia with 162 people on board expanded, with more aircraft and ships sent to scour a wider area. EPA/ADI WEDA

By Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibrata

JAKARTA (DPA) – A research ship equipped with a black box locator was being deployed to the presumed crash site of AirAsia flight QZ8501 in the Java Sea, Indonesian search officials said Thursday.

The Baruna Jaya research ship is also equipped with a sonar device that can detect metal and provide three-dimensional underwater images with the hope of finding the plane's fuselage, the Search and Rescue Agency's operations chief Tatang Zaenudin said in a press conference.

Two Indonesian military aircraft and a South Korean plane were already in the search zone, Zaenudin said.

"We hope that searches from the sea and the air will yield more findings," Zaenudin said.

Despite hopes of a break in the bad weather, seas continued to be unsettled with waves estimated at between 3 and 4 metres, and winds of some 70 kilometres per hour, the national meteorological agency said.

AirAsia Indonesia flight QZ8501 crashed Sunday with 162 passengers and crew on board, halfway through a two-hour flight between Surabaya, Indonesia's second-largest city, and Singapore.

Two objects believed to be parts of the plane have been plucked out of the ocean, an Indonesian broadcaster reported Thursday. 

Footage broadcast by Metro TV news channel showed a red object with the AirAsia logo and a part of a black  plastic object with a label reading "inflatable manufactured in Mexico," both recovered by the Indonesian navy ship Bung Tomo in Kumai Bay near Central Kalimantan.

Two more bodies pulled from around the crash site were taken ashore to the nearby town of Pangkalan Bun by navy helicopter, Tempo.co news website reported Thursday.

Two other bodies had already been flown to Surabaya and are being identified by forensic doctors, he said.

Seven bodies had been found in total.

The search area was expanded Thursday to four sectors with a total search area of 13,500 nautical miles, after it was previously limited to two sectors.

 

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Five Family Members Found Dead in Bangkok House

BANGKOK — Police are investigating the suspected murder of five family members, including two teenagers, who were found dead in their home in Bangkok last night.

The bodies of 89-year-old Lim Kiang Xiam and her daughter Petcharat Jarupankit, 61, were found on the first floor of a house in Thonburi by forensic officers who were informed of the murder by the house’s owner. Both women were covered with white sheets.

The grandmother’s 64-year-old son Anan Jarupankit and his two children, a 16-year-old girl and 14-year-old boy, were also found hanging on the second floor, with three chairs collapsed beneath them.

According to a neighbor, the owner of the house found the family dead yesterday. 

"The family was about to move out, so the owner came by to discuss their contract," said the neighbour, Thanida Rattanathanakul. "He called out, but there wasn't any response. The front door was also closed, so he went in and found that everyone was dead."

Police found two notes inside the house, one written by Anan describing his anxiety about moving, and the other penned by his daughter, who described a problematic relationship with Anan's ex-wife. 

Police suspect that poison may have played a role in some of the deaths. The bodies have been sent to a forensic hospital for autopsy. 

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Teenage Gang Blocks Road, Attacks 2 Cars On New Year’s Day

A teenage gang allegedly shattered the windshield of a  family's car in Chonburi, 1 Jan 2014.

CHONBURI — A group of teenagers allegedly launched unprovoked attacks on two cars driving through Chonburi province early this morning, police say.

Prawit Wongbooppa, 57, was driving his wife and two sons to a Buddhist temple at around 6 am this morning when a group of teenagers reportedly blocked the road and began to beat his car with heavy sticks, shattering the windshield and injuring Waranyu Wongbooppa, who was sitting in the passenger seat.

Shortly after, the group attacked another vehicle driving down the same road in Udomsak county, police say.

Pol.Col. Pichitpong Yordpikul said he believes the teens were blocking the road to wait for a rival gang.

"They've got a lot guts attacking people like that," said Pol.Col. Pichitpong Yordpikul. "They will be punished with the justice system of the law." 

Police are investigating the two incidents and looking for suspects, he said.

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Economy To Grow in 2015: TDRI

Thai junta leader and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha visits a train station in Beijing, China, 23 December 2014

BANGKOK — The Thai economy will improve in 2015 under the military junta's rule, a Thailand-based policy institute has predicted.

Yongyuth Chalamwong, the director of the Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI), says he's confident the economy will grow by 4% in 2015 as a result of the military government’s investment projects and what he predicts will be a more stable political climate, state media reported.

Thailand’s GDP grew by less than one percent this year, the lowest in three years and the slowest rate in the region. The downturn was caused in large part by losses in the tourism industry, which was hampered by months of anti-government street protests that paralyzed parts of Bangkok and culminated in a military coup in May.

After seizing power, the junta, formally known as the National Council For Peace and Order (NCPO), imposed martial law and has banned all political protests. The NCPO, which has retained absolute power over the interim government it appointed several months ago, is expected to remain in power until 2016 at the earliest. 

According to state media, TDRI Director Yongyuth said he also believes new investment projects pursued by the military government, which is led by coup-maker turned Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, will lower the unemployment rate to around 1%.

Gen. Prayuth recently approved plans to work with Chinese developers to construct a "medium-speed rail system" that will connect Bangkok and northeastern Thailand. Transport officials are also reportedly looking to Japan for help in building three other rail routes in Thailand.

The Thai economy, the second-largest in Southeast Asia and once dubbed the "Teflon economy" for its perceived resilience, showed signs of recovery in November with private consumption increasing after a 0.3% contraction the month before. 

 

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