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The Hunt For White Elephant Continues

(24 April) Officials are still trying to verify reports that a ?white elephant?, a rare type of elephants held to be lucky by the Thai royal custom, has been found in Petchaburi province′s Kaeng Krachan National Park.

Royal tradition decrees that white elephants are sacred Auspicious Elephants whose presence in the palace compound reinforces the monarch′s supernatural power. Siamese kings in the past who possessed white elephants were particularly revered.

There has been reports in the past week that a 4-5 year old white elephant has been spotted near a reservoir in Kaeng Krachan. A photojournalist had snapped a photo showing the said elephant frolicking while a large elephant stood nearby.

Mr. Manopat Huamuangkaew, head of the National Park Department, said the photo was not enough to determine if it is indeed a white elephant, pointing out that the elephant seems to have black tail in the photo.

Nonetheless, Mr. Manopat said that if the elephant had been captured, it will be determined by palace officials whether it possesses the traits of Auspicious Elephants. Once confirmed, it will be offered to the royal household as the tradition decrees.

Meanwhile, Mr. Dulasit Sanitwong Na Ayuddhaya, an expert on elephant conservation, expressed his doubts that a white elephant has been found. He said the locals in Kaeng
Krachan sub-district had been aware of the elephant for years now and told him the elephant likes to frolic in light-color mud which makes its skin look similar to white elephants.

He also said white elephants tend to have isolated lives, but the ?white elephant? reported in the news was apparently photographed standing near another elephant.

Furthermore, Mr. Dulasit said he had questions whether the rumor about ?white elephant? in Kaeng Krachan was facilitated with ?conspiratorial? intention because the area was known to be plagued with illegal elephant poaching and corruption among local officials.

Other officials interviewed by Khaosod correspondent said a large, coordinated search for the ?white elephant? was ongoing, but none of them had seen the creature personally.

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Bus Crash In Chainat Injures Thais And Foreigners

(22 April) An accident involving an inter-provincial bus packed with Thais and foreign tourists in Chainat province injured 10 passengers.

Police were alerted of the accident, which took place around kilometer mark 112-113 of the Asia Highway in Sappaya sub-district, around 05.30 am. At the scene, rescue crew discovered an overturned two-storey bus in the concrete ditch next to the highway. Paramedics tended to the wounded at the scene, while those with more serious condition were sent to Sappaya Hospital.

A police officer said the bus was driven by Mr. Nit Songkratoke, 54, and carried 48 passengers, including 15 foreign tourists, headed from Chiang Mai province to Bangkok. The bus was particularly packed because many people are traveling back to the capital city as Songkran holiday season wrapped up, the officer added.

Nationalities of the tourists were not immediately known.

Mr. Nit told police it was raining when he encountered a truck heading off near a U-Turn, so he tried to brake the bus but lost control, sending to the bus into the ditch.

However, Mr. Narin Im-yim, one of the injured passenger, said the driver was driving very fast since the bus left Chiang Mai and refused to slow down even when it ran into potholes in the highway. Mr. Narin said the bus crashed into a signpost before landed at the ditch.

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Malaysian, Briton Killed In Separate Bike Accidents

(21 April) Phuket police said a Malaysian man died after his motorcycle slid off the bend in Talang sub-district.

The deceased was identified as Mr. Loh Zhi Wei, 29, and police said he was a son of a millionaire in Malaysia. The accident took place the particularly perilous section of the outbound road known locally as Curve of the 100 Deaths.

A police inspector told our correspondent Mr. Wei apparently approached the curve on his motorcycle at high velocity and failed to turn direction in time. He added that most of the accidents happened because the drivers ignored a large sign nearby which advised motorists to lower their speed.

Mr. Wei′s friends told police he traveled to Thailand with them to participate in the 19th annual Phuket Bike Week event, which was held from 14-21 April at Patong beach. He was last seen driving off from the hotel.

On the same day, a man from the United Kingdom was also killed in a motorcycle accident at a road bend in Phuket′s Muang sub-district. Early accounts from the scene identified him simply as Paul.

Police said the Briton was seen driving in reckless manner around the curve shortly before he was found dead. He was reportedly killed when his motorcycle crashed into the road fence, sending him flying into the ground. The incident took place in early morning.

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Homeless Man Found Dead In Bus' Storage

(21 April) A bus driver in Buriram province found a dead body in the storage space of his vehicle.

Mr. Roj Viharn, 53, said he was preparing his bus for the day′s duty in the morning at Buriram Bus Depot when he found the male, shirtless corpse in the space where he usually stored water pails and gasoline tanks, and alerted the police.

The dead man was estimated by the police to be in his 50. His identity could not be immediately verified. Locals told police they had never seen him before.

Police suggested that he was a homeless who crept into the bus to seek shelter for the night, but the space was tight and he must have suffocated to death after he closed the storage door.

The bus was identified as a private-owned, inter-provincial bus, running between Nakorn Ratchasrima and Buriram.

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Court Cites Korkaew's Unrepentant Behavior As Reason To Detain Him

(22 April) Criminal court refused to temporarily release Mr. Korkaew Pikultong, a Pheua Thai MP, from his detention, citing his defiant behavior.

Mr. Korkaew is currently facing terrorism charge for his role in 2010 Redshirts protest. He was placed in detention after the court stripped him of his bail for making comments about the Constitutional Court which the judges deemed to be insulting. His lawyer had since filed a plea to have him temporarily released.

Earlier today Mr. Korkaew was brought to the Criminal Court at Ratchadapisek Road, where the judges told him that although he behaved well and polite during the previous parliamentary session, he insisted that he did nothing wrong in making those comments about the Constitutional Court.

Therefore, the judges said, Mr. Korkaew was apparently ?unrepentant for the violation he had committed? and lost the right to temporary release he was seeking.

Mr. Korkaew′s lawyer said he had filed an appeal.

Speaking to our correspondent at the court before he was escorted back to his holding cell at Laksi Temporary Prison, Mr. Korkaew said he had asked Ms. Thida Tojirakarn, chairwoman of the National United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), to look after his family in his absence.

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Does Thai Media Devote Too Much Attention To Boston Bombing?

There is no dispute that the bombing which killed 3 and injured more than 160 people in the US city of Boston in the past week was certainly a big news in many countries around the globe.

What is being
disputed is the question of whether the incident attracts relatively excessive media coverage. On
the internet, some people complained that the US media gives so much airtime to the terror in Boston
but almost virtually ignored deadly acts in other countries which killed far more victims.

On
the day the Boston Marathon was attacked, these critics pointed out, dozens of Syrian civilians were
killed in airstrikes, and Iraq saw one of the worst waves of violence in recent months, killing more
than 50 people. Both news were barely mentioned in many media outlets.

Some voiced their
concern that lives of few Americans have more value in the eyes of media than those of other
nations.

But there are also those who argued that it′s only natural that US media paid much
more attention to what happened in their very homeland than faraway places like the Middle East or
Africa.

When we lose a family member or a friend, it completely makes sense that we feel
more affected by loss of that person than dozens of victims who died in a terror attack
somewhere,
a Facebook user commented in one of the virtual debates.

However, it is not
only the US media that devotes so much attention to the Boston attack. Thai media does the same as
well, which led to the question of Why?.

Jirapon
Vitayasakdipan, a lecturer in mass media communications who teaches at Chiangmai University, said in
an interview that it is partly

because of Thai media′s heavy reliance on news items from
Western – espcially American –  media agencies like the CNN and the AP.

Whatever is
currently the big news in the West and the US, Thai media will also ?import? the trend and propagate
it in Thailand, without really considering or prioritizing which news actually has more immediate
effect on our country, she said.

Ms. Jirapon suggested that elements of drama of the Boston
attack – scenes of explosion right in front of camera, and of bloodied bystanders running and
screaming in panic – fit in very well with Thai media′s widespread preference for sensational and
dramatic news pieces.

Ultimately, Thai people lost sight of what is news and information,
and what is drama. Just look at how some reporters even mistook Meryl Streep for Margaret
Thatcher,
Ms. Jirapon said, refering to the infamous incident in which Thailand′s public TV
Channel 5 displayed picture of the American actress along with coverage of the British former Prime
Minister′s death.

She added that there was also a situation when some of the public criticize
Thai media for giving too much attention to a certain news piece, but the media industry argues that
the public prefers to know more about that news than other topics, and the media merely serves the
public′s will.

It descends into the vicious cycle, Ms. Jirapon said.

In the
conversation with Khaosod correspondent, Ms. Jirapon conceded that there was certainly a huge number
of news consumers in Thailand who prefer sensational, tabloid items to hard news, but insisted that
it should not be the media′s excuse ecause it is merely about shoving responsibility to the
audiences whereas it is the media′s duty to serve them with thoughtful, critical news.

It
is possible that some reporters hold liberal and progressive stances, so they broadcast their
sympathy with the US, which is widely seen as a bastion of liberalism, out of their principles, Ms.
Jirapon said, ut there are reporters who had no ideology. They simply bend to the ongoing trends
like trees in the storm

Meanwhile, Saksith Saiyasombut,
a correspondent of Singapore-based Channel News Asia, gave his viewpoint as a member of the media
industry. He said the Boston incident in itself is rightfully newsworthy; partly because the attack
took place in a major sports event, in the presence of so many witnesses and media crews, so the
situation naturally attract attention from many people, including Thais.

Furthermore, he
said, the attack shattered the widely-held image of the US as a superpower where its citizens lived
in safety, so the twin bombing at Boston is far more unexpected and shocking than daily violences
in warzone regions like Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan.

This is not only about West versus
Middle East. The same happens even in Thailand. There were almost daily lethal attacks on soldiers
and civilians in the Deep South, but we are more shocked by a terror attack that strikes in the
heart of a city, like what happened in Boston,
Mr. Saksith said.

Mr. Saksith said there
might be the issue of American soft power at play as well, refering to the Thai public′s generally
positive perception of the US, contrary to what might be the case in, say, the Middle East, and can
be observed from much of Thai social network′s expression of sympathy toward the US in the aftermath
of the bombing.

I think Thai people have been identifying themselves closely with the West,
it′s just they are not aware of that themselves, he concluded.


(Note: this article was published by the paper
edition of Khaosod before the dramatic hunt for the 2 suspects in Boston took
place)

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Thai Film ‘Pee Mak’ Sets a New Record

BANGKOK —A classic story of most famous Thai ghost, domestically produced comedy has set a new record and expected becoming the highest-grossing film to date.

The GTH company has celebrated on April 15 that the adapted movie Pee Mak Phrakanong has grossed more than 400 million baht ($ 13.8 million) since its March 28 debut. It is expected to passed 500 million baht in May.

It is based on a local folklore that a beautiful young woman named Nak, who lived by Phra Khanong canal in Bangkok waiting for her husband, Mak who was sent to war. Later she died in childbirth but Mark comes home without knowing they are the ghosts. It is filled with humour and satire scenes.

The director, “Tong” Bunjong Pisanyathanakul is so pleased that it also beat Hollywood movies, including Transformer 3. The film also get good result in Indonesia as it continues to screen in Australia, Myanmar, Philippines and Singapore.

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Thaksin Posted Photos Of His Trip To Myanmar

(18 April) Former PM Thaksin Shinawatra posted photos on his Facebook accounts detailing his recent trip to Myanmar. He said he traveled to the cities of Mandalay and May Myo after wrapping up his business visit in Hunan province, China.

Mr.
Thaksin also wrote that he met with army chiefs of Myanmar for traditional greetings on the occasion
of Songkran, which is known as Thingyan in Burmese.

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Facebook Guns, Drugs Dealers Busted

(18 April) Trang police arrested 2 men for selling firearms and narcotics via their Facebook accounts.

Mr. Patompon Vimolmueng, 29, aka Grandmaster, Valley of Vice Men, and Mr. Jensakdi Yairak, 21, operated their business along the provincial border of Trang and Nakorn Srithammarart, police said.

The two allegedly posted pictures of themselves brandishing their goods, which include submacine guns and AK-47 assault rifles, as advertisements.

Drugs were also regularly sold.

The suspects reportedly confessed to charges laid against them.

Some of the sold firearms were used in committing crimes, police added.

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Hanged Man: 'I Didn't Want To Be Drafted'

(18 April) A man hanged himself to death in his residence in the province of Supanburi. Police found a handwritten note in his room, saying he committed suicide because he was drafted into the the army.

I picked a red card. I didn?t want to be drafted, the letter reportedly said.

His relatives said they did not find his death suspicious, but added that he was drinking and singing seemingly without worry during recent Songkran holiday.

According to Thai laws, all Thai males are required to register for 2 year service in the military, except those who went through 3 years military training during high school years and those deemed unfit for service by the army officials. In the selection process, red cards are mixed with black ones in a bowl in which all potential draftees must randomly pick up one. Picking up a red card sealed one′s fate as a draftee, while a black onemeans walking home free.

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