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PCAD’s 'Final Battle' Kicks-Off With Media Intimidation

PCAD protesters storm Channel 7, demanding favorable news coverage. 9 May, 2014.

BANGKOK — Thousands of anti-government protesters are laying siege to nearly all of Bangkok’s state-owned TV stations, demanding that they refrain from broadcasting any “pro-government” coverage.

The operation is a part of the "Final Battle" called by the leader of the People's Committee for Absolute Democracy With the King As Head of State (PCAD), Suthep Thaugsuban. The group’s stated aim is to topple the government of Prime Minister Niwatthamrong Boonsongphaisarn, who replaced former PM Yingluck Shinawatra after she was removed from office in a court ruling on Wednesday.

The verdict found Ms. Yingluck and nine Cabinet members guilty of unlawfully removing the head of the National Security Council in 2011, forcing them to step down from their caretaker positions.

Although the ruling was a victory for PCAD, which has been campaigning to oust Ms. Yingluck since last November, Mr. Suthep said his crusade against the government is not over yet.

The former Democrat Party MP declared that the fight will not be over until all Cabinet members are removed and an unelected Prime Minister is installed alongside an unelected "People's Council" that will be tasked with implementing unspecified "national reforms."

Mr. Suthep has expressed opposition to the upcoming general election on 20 July, insisting that he will not allow any elections to go forward before the "national reforms" are completed. 

Over the past few weeks, Mr. Suthep has been calling on supporters across the country to gather at Lumpini Park for today’s "Final Battle." Mr. Suthep chose to launch the demonstration at 9:09 a.m., which many Thais consider to be an auspicious time because of the number nine's association with His Majesty the King, the ninth monarch in the Charki dynasty.

Shortly before 9:09 a.m., Mr. Suthep revealed his plan to have demonstrators march to the state-owned TV Channels 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11. According to Mr. Suthep, these media agencies are "mouth pieces" of the government and must be "convinced" to refrain from broadcasting any more "pro-government propaganda."

"They must not report the news on behalf of the tyrants any longer, because it distorts the truth," Mr. Suthep said, adding that he intends to "ask for cooperation" from these stations to broadcast his speech once “victory” is achieved.

Thai PBS, which is also owned by the state, was curiously left out of Mr. Suthep's plan, likely because anti-government protesters generally view the channel as sympathetic to their cause.

Mr. Suthep said that the protesters will camp outside these TV stations "overnight" to make sure they don’t deviate from PCAD-approved coverage.

Nevertheless, Mr. Suthep said the demonstrators will not forcefully enter any of the state-owned media headquarters, insisting that the siege should not be considered as an attempt to intimidate the media.

This is not the first time PCAD activists have attempted to sway media coverage in their favor. When the latest round of anti-government protests flared up in November last year, hundreds of anti-government demonstrators stormed  several TV stations in Bangkok, demanding the staff only broadcast content deemed favourable by the protesters.

A number of reporters, both Thai and foreign, have been also routinely assaulted or threatened by PCAD activists in the past.

Also on the move today is a group of PCAD protesters led by Buddhist monk Buddha Issara. The group is en route this morning to the headquarters of Centre of Administration of Peace and Order (CAPO). Security forces stationed at the CAPO compound have erected additional barricades and barbed wire to prevent the protesters from entering the area.

 

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Rohingya Escape Shelter North of Phuket

Rohingya women and children arrive at the Khao Lak shelter (Phuketwan).

(Phuketwan)

PHUKET —  A group of nine Rohingya women and children fled by climbing down sheets from a bedroom within 48 hours of arriving at a family shelter north of Phuket this week.

The nine escapers were simply making their way along the ''human trafficking superhighway'' that runs through Thailand, according to US Congressman Chris Smith.

Read the rest of the story here: http://phuketwan.com/tourism/boatpeople-escape-shelter-north-phukettrafficking-thailand-continues-20228/
 

 

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Following Earthquake, Chiang Rai at Risk of Mudslides

(Chiang Mai City News)

CHIANG MAI — Experts from the Department of Mineral Resources (DMR) have surveyed the areas affected by Monday's earthquake and found that four Tambon in Chiang Rai are at risk of mudslides if the rainfall exceeds 180 mm per hour.

The DMR sent two teams of experts to survey the earthquake damage in Chiang Rai. Suwit Kosuwan, Director of Active Faults Research, led the team of surveyors. The second team was led by Somjai Yensabai, Director of Geological Disaster Sector.

Read the rest of the story here: http://chiangmaicitynews.com/news.php?id=3816

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Defendants Plead Not Guilty in Historic Hong Kong Corruption Trial

Billionaire property developer Thomas Kwok arriving at the Hong Kong High Court on day one of his trial where he is facing allegations of corruption in Hong Kong, China, 08 May 2014 (DPA).

Hong Kong (DPA) — Hong Kong's former number two government official and the billionaire brothers who run one of the world's largest real estate firms pleaded not guilty at the opening of the city's biggest-ever corruption case Thursday.

Former chief secretary Rafael Hui Si-yan, 66, received bribes in the form of payments and loans totalling more than 35 million Hong Kong dollars (4.5 million US dollars) from the co-chairmen of Sun Hung Kai Properties, prosecutors said.

The trial is scheduled to last for 70 days before High Court Judge Andrew Macrae, and comes two years after Hui and brothers Thomas and Raymond Kwok were arrested by the city's Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) in March 2012.

Hui is the highest-ranking official ever to stand trial in the city, and the case has increased scrutiny of the relationships between Hong Kong's tycoons and government officials.

The graft allegations against him cover his tenure as chief secretary from 2005 to 2007 under the administration of chief executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen, and subsequently as a non-official member of the Executive Council until 2009.

Looking relaxed in the courtroom and dressed in a dark blue suit, Hui denied all eight charges including furnishing false information, misconduct in public office and conspiracy to commit misconduct in public office.

The total of five defendants, who have been out on bail, pleaded not guilty to all charges against them.

The Kwoks faces a charge of conspiracy to offer an advantage to a public servant, and Raymond Kwok and Hui both face a charge of furnishing false information contained in an invoice.

Two other bribery charges concern Sun Hung Kai director Thomas Chan and Francis Kwan, a former executive at bourse operator Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd.

Hui and the Kwoks were seated together in the courtroom, with the two other defendants sitting behind them. More than 100 local and international reporters who could not get a seat in the courtroom watched the trial outside on three large screens.

A total of 82 prosecution witnesses, including business tycoons and former government ministers who served alongside Hui, are expected to testify during the trial.

Hong Kong, a Special Administrative Region of China, has a separate government and legal system from the mainland. It reverted to Chinese sovereignty in 1997, following more than 150 years of British colonial rule.

The ICAC was set up by the British colonial government in the 1970s to tackle corruption.

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Ratchaburi Monk Protests 'Lack of Donations'

Phra Sap Abhitno staging a one-man protest over the lack of out-of-temple trips and donations he has been offered over the past seven years, 8 May 2014.

RATCHABURI — A monk in Ratchaburi province has staged a one-man protest over the lack of out-of-temple trips and donations he has been offered over the past seven years.

Phra Sap Abhitno, 35, drew much attention and bafflement from shoppers at a market in Bhotharam district this morning by explaining his grievance over a loudspeaker in front of a vegetarian charity lunch house. 

Some curious motorists also stopped their vehicles to listen to the monk's speech, causing a considerable traffic jam in the area.

Phra Sap said he was ordained at Bhotharam Temple eight years ago (he had been a gangster before he joined the monkhood, he claimed), but over the past seven years he has never been invited to perform religious duties outside the temple. As a result, he has not had the chance to receive any donations from people outside the monastery.

Thais routinely invite monks to bless their new homes and businesses, often giving the monks donations in return. 

Phra Sap also claimed that his abbot, Phra Kru Bhodiwaradhorn, has intercepted all of the invitations intended for him, and distributed them to other monks at the monastery instead.

"I am very sad," Phra Sap said through the loudspeaker. "It is as though I am merely a security guard for the temple."

He then announced to onlookers that he has resigned from Photharam Temple out of frustration, and is now looking for a temple that will provide him with more generous donation opportunities.

 

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China Detains Prominent Journalist on State Secrets Charges

Chinese journalist Gao Yu during the public debate called "When the Revolution is not velvet" on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the Velvet Revolution, in Prague, Czech Republic 18 November 2009 (DPA).

By Bill Smith (DPA)

BEIJING —  Chinese police have detained prominent journalist Gao Yu on charges of passing state secrets to an overseas website, China Central Television said on Thursday.

The state broadcaster showed Gao, 70, confessing to the charge and saying her action had "harmed national interests."

But London-based Amensty International accused China of "using trumped-up charges" against the well-known government critic, who was a regular contributor to Germany's Deutsche Welle.

Beijing-based dissident Hu Jia, a close friend of Gao, said he detected a "change" from her usual voice in the video, in which her face was obscured. 

"We hope people don't believe that this is the real Gao Yu," Hu told dpa by telephone, adding that security officers had coerced other activists into making filmed confessions.

"Gao is the latest victim of China's vaguely worded and arbitrary state secret laws, which the authorities repeatedly use as a smokescreen to target activists," said Anu Kultalahti, Amnesty's China researcher.

"The TV confession proves nothing and is likely to have been made under duress," Kultalahti said.

Other state media quoted a Beijing police statement as saying Gao was suspected of "illegally obtaining a highly confidential document and sending an electronic copy of it to an overseas website" in June.

Observers speculated that the charge could be linked to a Hong Kong-based website's publication of an internal file, known as Document No 9, that discusses political threats to the ruling Communist Party.

"The information contained in Document No 9 in no way merits being classified as a state secret," Kultalahti said. "If Gao is being held for sharing this document, she must be immediately released."

Hu said Gao's apparent leaking of the document had "historical significance."

"She's letting international society understand [party leader] Xi Jinping's true nature," he said.

The leaked document lists seven "noteworthy problems" facing the party's ideology, including attempts to undermine it with "Western constitutional democracy," and the promotion of "universal values" and civil society.

It warns party members that "Western anti-China forces and internal dissidents" are trying to challenge "our mainstream ideology."

Gao was previously sentenced to six years in prison in 1993 on the same charge of leaking state secrets to a Hong Kong newspaper.

Police detained her again on April 24 and seized "substantial evidence" at her Beijing home, state media said.

Her arrest came amid a crackdown on dissent ahead of the 25th anniversary of the party's military suppression of democracy protests overnight on June 3-4, 1989.

Gao was detained for more than one year in the crackdown that followed the 1989 protests, but she was released on health grounds. She has a "direct link to June 4," Hu said.

Police in Beijing have detained at least five activists on public order charges this week after about 20 people held a seminar on Saturday to mark the anniversary.

They have placed Hu and other dissidents under house arrest.

"The timing of Gao's detention is highly dubious and raises serious questions as to the authorities' true motives," Kultalahti said.

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Police Block Redshirts from 'Negotiating' With PCAD Leader

PRD protesters attempt to march to anti-government camp on Chaeng Wattana road, 8 May 2014.

BANGKOK — Rival protest groups narrowly avoided a collision in northern Bangkok today when police stopped pro-government activists from storming a campsite maintained by an anti-government protest group.

The pro-government activists were led by the People's Radio for Democracy (PRD), a local Redshirt group based in Nonthaburi province.

More than 100 PRD supporters gathered in Laksi district this morning and marched toward Chaeng Wattana Road with the intention of encountering anti-government leader Buddhist Issara. 

"We want to ask them to return [Chaeng Wattana Road] to the public, and to return the happiness to the people," PRD leader Sornsak Malaithong said, declaring his plan to attempt to negotiate with Buddha Issara and convince the monk to accept the PRD's demands.

Buddha Issara has been in charge of the anti-government rally site on Chaeng Wattana, which has been sealed off from the public since the protests began in January.

However, a company of riot police quickly blocked the road leading to the Laksi Intersection and prevented the Redshirts from approaching the anti-government campsite, leading Mr. Sornsak to get off of his loudspeaker vehicle and negotiate with a high-ranking police officer.

The officer insisted that he would not let the PRD protesters beyond the Laksi Intersection, citing fears that violent clashes could erupt between the two groups of protesters. A clash between Redshirts and anti-government demonstrators at Laksi Intersection on 1 February escalated into a gun battle that left one elderly man paralysed. 

After 10 minutes of negotiation, police went to Buddha Issara on behalf of the PRD to communicate the group’s demands. According to police, the monk promised to vacate the road by 18 May. 

But Mr. Sornsak said he is not satisfied by Buddha Issara's offer. He vowed to return to Laksi Intersection and attempt another direct "negotiation" with Buddha Issara on 11 May.

PRD activists eventually dispersed without any incidents.

 

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South Korea Arrests Owner of Sunken Ferry Operator

Kim Han-sik, president of the Chonghaejin Marine Co., the operator of the sunken ferry Sewol, enters the Incheon District Prosecutors' Office in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, 29 April 2014, to face questioning on criminal charges related to the ferry disaster (DPA).

SEOUL (DPA) — Authorities have arrested the head of the company operating the ferry that sank off South Korea in April leaving more than 300 dead or missing, a news report said.

Kim Han Sik was seized at his home in Bundang, south of Seoul, on charges including manslaughter and vessel safety violations, Yonhap News Agency reported, citing unnamed investigators.

Kim was thought to have approved or tolerated the routine overloading of the Sewol as it plied the route from the western port of Incheon to the southern resort island of Jeju, it said.

The vessel was carrying 3,608 tons of cargo, including 108 vehicles, on April 16 when it capsized and sank on its way to the island, around three times its official limit, investigators have said.

Of the 476 people on board, 172 are now listed as survivors, 35 were missing and 269 bodies were recovered.

Many of the dead were from a high school group of teenagers on an outing.

Rescuers said they hoped to wrap up the recovery operation by Saturday.

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Ousted Yingluck To Be Re-Ousted By Senate, NACC Rules

BANGKOK — Ex-Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has been indicted for corruption charges in connection with the government's rice-pledging scheme, paving the way for the Senate to impeach her.

In an unanimous 7-0 vote on Thursday, the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) ruled that Ms. Yingluck was aware of massive corruption in the government’s costly rice program, but refused to put an end to it.

The offence amounts to negligence of duty, as outlined in Thailand’s Criminal Codes, the NACC ruled. 

The case will now head to the Senate, which will vote on whether or not to impeach Ms. Yingluck and ban her from political office for the next five years. An affirmative vote would effectively rule out the possibility of Ms. Yingluck running in the next general election, which is scheduled to take place on 20 July. It would also open Ms. Yingluck up to being sued in Criminal Court for the damages caused by the rice program’s corruption.

The government's populist rice-pledging policy was intended to bring in more revenue for Thai rice farmers, but backfired dramatically, causing the government to lose billions of baht and fail to pay farmers on schedule. 

It is unclear when the Senate will convene to proceed with the impeachment against Ms. Yingluck.

The NACC's ruling came only a day after Ms. Yingluck was found guilty by the Constitutional Court of unlawfully removing the National Security Council (NSC) director, and subsequently removed from her caretaker position. 

 

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Foreigner Found Dead On Prachuap Railroad

A dead body was found on a railroad track around 800 metres away from Bo Nok Train Station in Mueang district on 8 May, 2014.

PRACHUAP KIRI KHAN — A foreigner reportedly fell off of a moving train to his death in Prachuap Kiri Khan province last night.

The body was found on the railroad track around 800 metres away from Bo Nok Train Station in Mueang district early this morning. The deceased was described as a white, approximately 35-40 year old  male with blonde hair. 

Police said the man was wearing a black T-shirt and shorts at the time of his death. Headphones were also found next to his body, but the man carried no ID cards with him, police said.

The body has been sent to Prachuab Kiri Khan Hospital for a detailed autopsy, according to police.

Samruai Taiwan, a railway authority official at Bo Nok Train Station, said the body was found by a group of maintenance workers who were inspecting the railroad track in the area. 

Mr. Samruai believes the man was on the southbound 167 Bangkok-Kantan train which left Bo Nok Train Station at around 12:30 a.m. last night. 

According to Mr. Samruai, staff at a train station in Chumphon province also received complaints from a foreigner who said he his friend, who was supposed to arrive on that train, never showed up.

Mr. Samruai said the man might have fallen asleep while sitting on the ledge between train carriages, causing him to fall onto the track below. 

 

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