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Locals In Awe Of Monk Statue's 'Bee-Beard'

(16 March) The beehives, perched on the chin of the statue of a famous monk in Sakol Nakhon province, have been hailed as a "miracle" by many local residents.

The 19-metre high statue at Wat Prachaniyom temple in Sawangdaengdin district was dedicated to the memory of Luang Phu Mun Bhurithatto, a local monk, well known by many Thai Buddhists for his alleged magical powers. 

Many locals have said that appearance of the beehives, which resemble a “beard” for the statue, have only added more signs of divinity of the late monk and groups of worshipers have been seen praying to the statue at the temple.

As the alleged miracle coincided with a lotto-drawing day, some temple-goers also interpreted the miracle into patterns of numbers which will appear on the lottery draws. 

Mr. Pramuan Srima, former subdistrict director of Nong Luang, said the statue cost over 9 million baht to build, and its construction was only recently completed in February 2014. He also expressed his belief that the "bee-beard" is a sign of a blessing for the country, and that Luang Phu Mun is known to have enriched his supporters with lucky lotto draws.

According to Mr. Pramuan, one local villager once won a lucky draw by betting on the year the construction of the statue started – 2553 B.E. "The locals are very confident that the appearance of the beehive heralds more fortune for our community," Mr. Pramuan explained.

However, the abbot of Wat Prachaniyom temple said he disapproved such belief, as he views the lottery as a sinful gambling. 

"We never give out any lottery numbers," said the 86-year old Luang Phu Boon Mee, "I'd rather see the temple-goers do good things and abandon their obsession over the lottery". 

 

 

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Missing MH Flight 'Did Not Enter' Thai Airspace

Military personnel look out of a Singaporean transport plane as they search for the missing Malaysia Airlines MH370 plane over the South China Sea March 11, 2014. (REUTERS)

(16 March) The missing Malaysian Airlines jet has not crossed over Thai airspace, contrary to the claim made by the Malaysian authorities, said a Royal Thai Air Force spokesman.

According to the Malaysian authorities, flight MH370, which disappeared over a week ago, has changed course and flown either over the Indian Ocean or over Thailand toward Central Asian region.

But Air Marshal Monthol Sutchukorn said the latter scenario is unlikely, as the radar installations in Thailand have indicated that the missing flight has not crossed over Thai airspace.

"If the plane does enter Thailand, our 24-hour radars would have surely detected it," AM Monthol said, adding that any unauthorised intrusion of air crafts into Thai airspace would have prompted the Royal Thai Airforce to scramble its jet fights and intercept the aircraft.

The spokesman also urged the Malaysian authorities to thoroughly study the possible course of the missing Malaysian Airlines jet once again, and to determine for certain whether the flight has indeed entered Thai airspace.

"I believe it's only a hypothesis by the Malaysians so far," AM Monthol said.

 
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Necromancer Arrested For Alleged Sexual Assaults

(14 March) Police in Pathum Thani province have arrested a self-styled necromancer for the alleged sexual assaults on his female followers.

Mr. Thanawan Assawapholsuwan, 43, was arrested during a police raid on his residence in Thanyaburi district, which was billed as a holy shrine of a "Gold-Faced God". Pamphlets found inside the temple claimed that Mr. Thanawan is gifted with various supernatural powers, such as curing diseases, binding loves, and procuring riches.

The police raid followed complaints by at least 6 women who informed the authorities that they had been sexually assaulted by Mr. Thanawan, who is known by his faithful followers as "The Karawek Master", police said.

The raid was observed by Ms. Paveena Hongsakul, director of Paveena Hongsakul Foundation for Children and Women, which first received complaints from the alleged victims and forwarded their testimonies to the police.

One of the women reportedly told the police that she approached Mr. Thanawan to seek miracle cure for her illness and a love charm to mend her relationship with her husband.

When she arrived at the temple, she said, Mr. Thanawan arranged a private meeting with her in which he allegedly told her to buy some gold for the ceremony. She was also allegedly instructed to give him some money and coerced into having sex with him.

After the sexual encounter, the woman said, she was blackmailed by Mr. Thanawan who demanded more money otherwise the photos of their sexual intercourse would be published on the internet. 

Other women said they had been likewise sexually assaulted by Mr. Thanawan, and he had instructed them not to speak to the authorities, with a threat of black magic curses if they did.

The police eventually applied for arrest warrants for Mr. Thanawan on charges of sexual assaults. 5 of the exorcist's accomplices are also under arrest for suspected frauds.

The women said they suspect that there might be more victims of Mr. Thanawan's alleged crimes, and the police are urging other possible victims to come forward and press charges.

 

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Udon Thani UDD Leader Released From Hospital

(14 March) Local Redshirts leader Kwanchai Praipana is back at his home in Udon Thani province for the first time since he was severely wounded in an assassination attempt.

Mr. Kwanchai of the United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD) was admitted to hospital in late January after a group of assailants shot him in his residence. He was said to have recovered steadily ever since, and has returned to his residence today at around 09.00 amid heavy security escort.

Speaking at his home in Mueang district, Mr. Kwanchai said he underwent the final surgery on 7 March and has been transported back to Udon Thani on 11 March. He added that the doctors have mended his leg's nerval system and inserted a metal supporter into his shoulder.

Nevertheless, he still needs to see the doctors for stitches removal and physical therapy later, Mr. Kwanchai said.

Mr. Kwanchai estimated that he has recovered by "70-80%", as he can now use his legs and arms normally, but he still needs companions to support his balance whenever he needs to walk. The Redshirts leader said he has been informed by the doctors that they would remove the metal supporter inside his shoulder 6 months from now.

A group of security guards, handpicked by Mr. Kwanchai, were seen patrolling the house. 

Mr. Kwanchai also stated that he would not get involved in any politcal activity in coming weeks, as his wife is running for the Senator seat in the province.

The police have arrested a group of Royal Thai Army officers in connection to his assassination attempt. They have been released after an interrogation session, and vowed to contest the charges in courts.

 

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Abhisit, Suthep Sued Over Crackdown Temple Deaths

A member of the security force walk past dead bodies of 6 civilians killed in Wat Pathumwanararm Temple, 20 May 2010

(14 March) Families of two civilians who were shot dead by the military during 2010 unrest have filed murder lawsuits against the former government leaders.

Mr. Abhisit Vejjajiva and Mr. Suthep Thaugsuban, the Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister at the time, respectively, are named in the lawsuit, which aims to prosecute the two Democrats on charge of co-instructing other individuals to commit premeditated murders.

The lawsuit specifically focused on the deaths of the two of six civilians who were shot as they took shelter inside Wat Pathumwanararm Temple in downtown Bangkok on 19 May 2010 – the day the military, acting under Mr. Abhisit's order, launched a final assault against the Redshirts' protesters who have been encamped in Bangkok's financial district for months.

According to court inquest last year, the soldiers who were stationed on the BTS track opposite the temple fired their weapons into the sanctuary and subsequently killed the six civilians, despite the government's designating the temple as a "safe zone". Several volunteer medics are among the dead.

Today, families of two of the slain civilians, Mr. Suwan Sriraksa and Mr. Attachai Chumchan, have appointed a lawyer to sue Mr. Abhisit and Mr. Suthep on their behalf. 

It is now up to the court whether to accept the lawsuit, said the lawyer, Mr. Chokechai Angkaew, during a press conference at the Ratchapisek Criminal Court in Bangkok.

Families of 4 other victims who had been slain in Wat Pathumwanararm Temple are also considering their own lawsuits, but they are not ready to file the cases at the time, Mr. Chokechai told reporters.

He added, "The victims' families have plenty of time to consider their lawsuit, because murder charges carry a limitation of 20 years".

Mr. Abhisit and Mr. Suthep are also facing separate murder charges filed by the public prosecutors for their roles in 2010 crackdown, which claimed the lives of more than 90 people, most of them civilians.

The former Prime Minister has acknowledged the charge and expressed his willingness to contest it in trials, while Mr. Suthep has repeatedly postponed the meeting with public prosecutors to acknowledge his charges, citing his need to lead anti-government protesters in their quest to oust Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

Related Story: Court Inquest Dispels Oft-Recited Myths Of 2010 Crackdown

 

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Chatchart: 'No Plan' To Run In Bangkok Governor Race

Mr. Chatchart Sittipan chats with a group of university students during a train ride in March 2014

(14 March) The Transport Minister who has been hailed on the internet as "the strongest Minister on earth" has denied media reports which suggest that he may run in the next Bangkok Governor election.

The speculation that the celebrity minister, Mr. Chatchart Sittipan, may represent Pheu Thai Party in the race surfaces almost as soon as the current Governor, Mr. Sukhumbhand Paribatra was handed "yellow card" by the Election Commission for his alleged violation of election laws during the March 2013 gubernatorial election.

The penalty meant a new election might be called by December this year; the case is pending a verdict by the Court of Appeals which may or may not drop the penalty handed down by the EC.

 However, the uncertainty of the new election does not stop political observers from speculating which candidate Pheu Thai Party will adopt to challenge the solid Democrat voting base in Bangkok metropolis.

Due to his fame and status as a cult hero on the internet, Mr. Chatchart was promptly named as a possible candidate by a number of media. Mr. Chatchart rose to prominence thanks to his attempts to improve the abysmal state of Thai public transport system with "hands on approaches" – riding and inspecting those transports by himself.

Whether those visits were done out of Mr. Chatchart's genuine care for public safety or his need for publicity stunts is not clear, but much of the public nevertheless praised him as the first top governmental official who bothers to experience and investigate the common folk's problems.

Some political analysts consequently expect him to easily muster enough swing votes and convert sizable number of urban voters to turn the table against the current Democrat Governor.

But Mr. Chatchart reportedly refused to run in the Bangkok gubernatorial race today. In a report published by Matichon, Mr. Chatchart was quoted of saying that he has not thought of joining the election, and no one in Pheu Thai Party has invited him to do so either.

Mr. Chatchart also explained that the wide array of responsibilities as a Bangkok Governor are beyond his skill to handle.

"Just because I have a good popularity doesn't mean I can do a good job of running Bangkok," Mr. Chatchart was quoted as saying, "And it doesn't mean people will vote for me as a governor. They are completely different stories".

Meanwhile, a recent verbal skirmish broke out between Mr. Chatchart and chairman of the Democrat Party, Mr. Abhisit Vejjajiva, who suggested in a televised interview that the Transport Minister should not use his ability to serve the evil regime of Pheu Thai Party.

"It's a pity that a person who has been praised by the online word as the strongest man on earth is serving an evil system," Mr. Abhisit said on Blue Sky TV yesterday.

The Transport Minister hit back in a Facebook post published this morning, in which he stated that he never judged anyone as good or evil, and he has been simply doing his job in the best way possible.

"[Mr. Abhisit] and I can't judge for other people who is bad, and who is good, because we both have stakes in the matter," Mr. Chathchart wrote, "We have to let the people judge for themselves".

Related Story: Read Khaosod English's interview with Transport Minister Chatchart Sittipan last year HERE

 

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CMPO May Revoke Emergency Decree By 18 March

Thai national flag seen from behind anti-grenade net at anti-government rally in Lumpini Park, 11 March 2014

(14 March) The Centre for Maintaining Peace and Order is aiming to end the State of Emergency over Bangkok by 18 March, a top official said.

The government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra declared the emergency decree over Bangkok and its neighbouring provinces in January in an attempt to contain the anti-government protests led by the People's Committee for Absolute Democracy With the King As Head of State (PCAD).

But the CMPO has recently concluded that the situation can be maintained by repealing the State of Emergency and resorting to the Internal Security Act, which was imposed over Bangkok prior to the SoE's enactment in January, said Lt.Gen. Paradorn Pattanatabutr, secretary-general of the National Security Council and a secretary to the CMPO.

The CMPO will seek approval from the Cabinet on 18 March. If granted, the State of Emergency will be revoked on the same day, Lt.Gen. Paradorn said.

He expected that the government will retain the power of the Internal Security Act until the end of April in order to provide public security for the Senate election in that month.

The State of Emergency granted the authorities a sweeping power to contain the protests, such as banning or suppressing any political gathering, banning the use of certain buildings and roads, detaining suspects without charges, and censoring the media.

However, a recent ruling by the Civil Court strips the CMPO of many of those powers, rendering the emergency decree powerless in the eyes of many observers.

 

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Thai Passports 'Very Hard' To Forge: Officials

Mr. Luigi Maraldi, an Italian citizen whose lost passport has been forged by one of MH370's passengers, posed with a police officer in Phuket province, 9 March 2014

(13 March) In the wake of evidence that two passengers on a missing Malaysian Airlines flight have boarded the plane with fake passports, the authorities have told the Thais to rest assured that their passports are very hard to forge.

Concern over security of passports and immigration in Thailand was raised after the two real holders of the forged passports told media they had lost their passports in Thailand.

However, the Department of Consular Affairs has released a statement today that the authorities have not encountered any single case of forged Thai passport ever since its launch of E-Passport system in 2001. 

The procedure of issuing Thai passports is accompanied with high levels of anti-forgery mechanism, the statement claimed, which corresponds to standard required by international authorities, such as the inclusion of biometrics data of the passport holders.

The statement also reminds the public that the passports used to board the missing flight MH370 were forgeries of foreign passports, not Thai ones.

"Ever since we began the program of electronic passports in 2001, we have procured over 10 million passports," the statement said, "No case of forged Thai passports has been reported".

 
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Inquiry Over PCAD Guards' Alleged Attempted Murder Expanded

Police investigate the scene where an unidentified body was found in Chao Praya River, 26 February 2014

(13 March) The police have expanded the investigation over attempted murder of a Redshirt protest after evidences suggested that the case might be related to two other dead bodies found earlier this year.

 Previously, the police have alleged that a prominent anti-government activist might have instructed his "guards" to torture a man called Mr. Yuem Nilla, who held membership of the United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), in the anti-government protest campsite at Lumpini Park in downtown Bangkok.

According to Mr. Yuem, a the suspects later dumped him into Bang Pakong River east of Bangkok with his feet and hands bound together, but a group of locals reportedly rescued the man and sent him to hospital. Mr. Yuem is reported to be under intensive care, as his lung and other organs have been damaged during the alleged torture.
 
The police have issued arrest warrants for Mr. Issara Somchai, a core leader of the People's Committee for Absolute Democracy With the King As Head of State (PCAD) and several of his guards in connection with the crime. Mr. Issara has refused to surrender himself to the police.
 
Today, the Bangkok Metropolitan Police stated that Mr. Yuem's case might not be an isolated incident.
 
Pol.Maj.Gen. Thitirart Nongharnpitak, deputy commander of the BMP, said in a press conference that the case features many similarities to recent discoveries of dead bodies in Bangkok.
 
On 28 January, the police found a dead body wearing anti-government protest outfit next to the railroad in Prachachuen district, and nearly a month later, on 26 February, another dead body with anti-government clothes and accessories was found in a submerged sack near the pier of Riverside Hotel on the western bank of Chao Praya River.
 
The first body was later identified as Mr. Boonthiang Kham-Im, a 41-years old resident of Chaiyabhum province, while the second body remains unidentified, Pol.Maj.Gen. Thitirat said.
 
Coupled with Mr. Yuem's case, all three incidents shared traces of torture, according to Pol.Maj.Gen. Thitirat. In these cases, he said, the bodies and the survivor were found with bound feet and hands, and wearing anti-government accessories, which might be planted on the persons without their willingness; Mr. Yuem has previously told police officers that the guards placed a whistle around his neck just before they dumped him into the river.
 
Furthermore, according to the deputy commander, investigation reveals that both Mr. Yuem and Mr. Boonthiang have ties to the Redshirts movements, raising speculation that the culprit in all three cases committed the crime out of political motive with intention to conceal the bodies afterward.
 
Nevertheless, Pol.Maj.Gen. Thitirart stressed that further investigation is needed before the police can officially establish the motive of the three incidents.
 
"We don't know for sure the intention of the culprits," Pol.Maj.Gen. Thitirart told reporters, "Please give the police some time to work things out".
 
He added that the police have acquired CCTV footage which purportedly captured the moments the suspects arrived on a car at Rama VIII Bridge and dumped the unidentified body into Chao Praya River before fleeing the area shortly afterward.
 
The area was said to be sealed off from traffic at the time, as officials were inspecting the area after PCAD guards dismantled their campsites on the bridge. 
 
The police are still investigating the ownership of the car seen in the CCTV footage, Pol.Maj.Gen. Thitirart said. 
 
 
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Redshirts Curse NACC Chief With Mock Funeral

(13 March) A group of Redshirts protesters has staged a mock funeral service to condemn the director of the National Anti-Corruption Commission in front of his office today.

Led by a local Redshirts group called People's  Radio for Democracy (PRD), over 100 protesters marched to the NACC headquarters in Nonthaburi province with two loudspeaker trucks at around 10.00 today, prompting police officers to seal all gates of the compound to prevent the protesters from intruding into the NACC office.

The PRD activists then proceeded to organise the mock funeral dedicated to NACC director, Mr. Wicha Makakhun, who has been accused by the Redshirts of harbouring prejudice against the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra and conspiring with anti-government protesters to depose her.

The NACC has previously summoned Ms. Yingluck to hear her charge of corruption concerning the controversial rice-pledging scheme. If proven guilty, Ms Yingluck might be removed from her caretaker position.

The mock funeral was complete with a coffin, funeral wreaths, relics for Buddhist cremation, while a sanitary pad was placed atop the coffin to curse Mr. Wicha's spirit in accordance with folk belief. The coffin was later burned to represent a mock cremation ceremony.

The activist also hung large poster bearing the portrait of Mr. Wicha on the NACC main gate, and hurled bags of human feces at the banner to express their disgust at the NACC chief.

Mr. Sornsak Malaithong, a core leader of the PRD, said he is angered by the NACC's alleged enthusiasm to pursue corruption charge against Ms. Yingluck while the Democrat Party has been left unscathed despite several pending corruption charges against the Democrat-led former government.

He also threatened to "escalate" the protest against the NACC should the agency continue to persecute the elected government.

"There will be no more dialogue," Mr. Sornsak said, "We cannot let the fake NACC who has been tasked with the job of overthrowing the government to continue their works. If they have any conscience, they must announce an end to prosecution of Ms. Yingluck"

"Otherwise, the people will persistently harass the NACC board in every step," he added.

A representative of the NACC later met with Mr. Sornsak to receive the PRD's complaint letter addressed to NACC directors.

  

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