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Spain Flood Survivors Hurl Mud at the Royals and Top Government Officials

Spain's King Felipe VI, centre, speaks with protesters in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, Sunday Nov. 3, 2024. A crowd of angry survivors of Spain's floods have tossed mud and shouted insults at Spain's King Felipe VI and government officials when they made their first visit to one of the hardest hit towns. (Biel Alino/EFE via AP)

PAIPORTA, Spain (AP) — A crowd of enraged survivors hurled clots of the mud left by storm-spawned flooding at the Spanish royal couple on Sunday during their first visit to the epicenter of their nation’s deadliest natural disaster in living memory.

Spain’s national broadcaster reported that the barrage included a few rocks and other objects and that two bodyguards were treated for injuries. One could be seen with a bloody wound on his forehead.

It was an unprecedented incident for a royal house that carefully crafts the image of monarchs adored by their country of more than 48 million people.

The fury had been unleashed against a state that appears overwhelmed and unable to meet the needs of people used to living under an effective government.

Officials also rushed Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez from the scene soon after his contingent started to walk the mud-covered streets of one of the hardest-hit areas, where over 60 people perished and thousands of lives were shattered. The disaster fueled by climate change killed at least 205 people in eastern Spain.

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Spain’s King Felipe VI, centre, speaks with protesters in Paiporta, near valencia, Spain, A crowd of angry survivors of Spain’s floods have tossed mud and shouted insults at Spain’s King Felipe VI and government officials when they made their first visit to one of the hardest hit towns. (Biel Alino/EFE via AP)

“Get out! Get out!” and “Killers!” the crowd in the town of Paiporta shouted, among other insults. Bodyguards opened umbrellas to protect the royals and other officials from the tossed muck.

Police had to step in, some officers on horseback, to keep back the crowd of several dozen, some wielding shovels and poles.

Queen Letizia broke into tears sympathetically after speaking to several people, including one woman who wept in her arms. Later, one of the queen’s bodyguards had a bloody wound on his forehead

But even after being forced to seek protection, King Felipe VI, with flecks of mud on his face, remained calm and made several efforts to speak to individual residents. He insisted on trying to speak with people as he tried to continue his visit. He spoke to several people, patting two young men on their backs and sharing a quick embrace, with mud stains on his black raincoat.

Still, one woman smacked an official car with an umbrella and another kicked it before it sped off.

While far from awakening the passion that the British hold for their royals, Felipe and Letizia’s public events are usually greeted by crowds of fans.

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Spain’s Queen Letizia reacts as she conforts a woman affected by the floods in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, Sunday Nov. 3, 2024. A crowd of angry survivors of Spain’s floods have tossed mud and shouted insults at Spain’s King Felipe VI and government officials when they made their first visit to one of the hardest hit towns. (Ana Escobar/EFE via AP)

The 56-year-old Felipe took the throne when his father, Juan Carlos, abdicated in 2014 after he was tarnished by self-made financial and personal scandals. Felipe immediately cut a new figure, renouncing his personal inheritance and increasing the financial transparency of his royal house. He and the 52-year-old Letizia, a former journalist, dedicate a significant part of their public agenda to cultural and scientific causes.

Visits to sites of national tragedies are also part of the royal duties for monarchs seen as a stabilizing force in a parliamentary monarchy restored following the death of dictator Francisco Franco in 1975.

But the public rage over the haphazard management of the crisis has been building. Felipe heard some jeers when he took part in a tribute to the dead of a deadly 2017 terror attack in Barcelona, but that was nothing comparable to Sunday’s reception.

The queen had small glops of mud on her hands and arms as she spoke to women.

“We don´t have any water,” one woman told her.

Many people still don’t have drinking water five days after the floods struck. Internet and mobile phone coverage remains patchy. Most people only got power back on Saturday. Stores and supermarkets are in ruins and Paiporta, population 30,000, still has many city blocks completely clogged with piles of detritus, countless totaled cars and a ubiquitous layer of mud.

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People react as Spain’s King Felipe VI speaks with people amidst angry Spanish flood survivors in Paiporta, near Valencia, Spain, Sunday Nov. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/David Melero)

Thousands have had their homes destroyed by a tsunami-like wave of muck and indignation at mismanagement of the disaster has begun.

The floods had already hit Paiporta when the regional officials issued an alert to mobile phones. It sounded two hours too late.

More anger has been fueled by the inability of officials to respond quickly to the aftermath. Most of the cleanup of the layers and layers of mud and debris that has invaded countless homes has been done by residents and thousands of volunteers.

“We have lost everything!” someone shouted.

Shouts Sunday included demands aimed at regional Valencia President Carlo Mazón, whose administration is in charge of civil protection, to step down, as well as “Where is Pedro Sánchez?”

“I understand the indignation and of course I stayed to receive it,” Mazón said on X. “It was my moral and political obligation. The attitude of the king this morning was exemplary.”

Spanish national broadcaster RTVE reported that the barrage aimed at the royals included a few rocks and other hard objects were tossed and that two bodyguards were treated for injuries, and the monarchs and officials called off another stop Sunday at a second hard-hit village, Chiva, about half an hour to the east of Valencia city.

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Thai ‘Floating Train’ Launches Weekend Service to Scenic Reservoir Route

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Thailand's floating train makes its premiere journey across Pasak Jolasid reservoir on November 3, 2024 with regular weekend services.

LOPBURIThailand’s unique “floating train” service launched its inaugural run in the first week of the year, attracting many tourists who were thrilled by the full-water scenery at Pasak Jolasid Dam in Lopburi Province.

On November 3, the State Railway of Thailand (SRT), in collaboration with the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), Lopburi Province, and Pasak Jolasid Dam, organized the premiere special train service that runs along tracks extending across the c creating the illusion of floating on water.

The special train consists of 14 carriages, accommodating 1,200 passengers per trip. The journey begins at Bangkok’s Hua Lamphong Station and ends at the floating train tourist attraction at Pasak Jolasid Dam. Services run every Saturday and Sunday, one trip per day, from November 2024 to January 2025 (except during New Year holidays on December 28-29, 2024, and January 4-5, 2025), totaling 21 days.

 

This tourism initiative supports domestic travel recovery in line with government policy, creating jobs, generating income distribution, and strengthening grassroots economy and community sustainability.

The trip’s highlight includes a 20-minute photo stop at a viewpoint where tourists can admire the beautiful scenery of the full dam. This offers a unique experience in Thai railway history.

The journey also includes a 30-minute stop at Ban Khok Salung Station where tourists can shop for local OTOP products, including food, souvenirs, and community products, supporting local income generation.

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Thailand’s unique ‘floating train’ service launches its inaugural run across Pasak Jolasid reservoir on November 3, ahead of regular weekend services starting 2024 to January 2025.

The train then returns to Pasak Jolasid Dam Station, where tourists can participate in various activities around the dam area, including photographing the first sunflower field of Lopburi Province at Ban Kluai Khai, before departing at 3:30 p.m.

The floating train track was originally part of the Bangkok-Bua Yai-Nong Khai railway line in the Pasak River basin in Pattana Nikhom district, Lopburi. The area was later developed into Pasak Jolasid Dam, a Royal Initiative project by King Rama 9 for water storage and public welfare.

The elevated railway was constructed above the water to maintain transportation links to other provinces. As the train runs along the reservoir’s edge, it appears to be floating on water, hence the name “floating train.”

Interested tourists can purchase tickets and make reservations through the D-Ticket system or at any railway station nationwide. Group travelers can rent special carriages to be attached to the tourist train.

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Massive Cannabis Haul: Thai Authorities Stop Drugs Headed to Italy, UK

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The Airport Interdiction Task Force (AITF) seized 89 kilograms of cannabis in two separate cases, involving one female and two male suspects during November 1-2, 2024.

SUVARNABHUMI — Thai authorities from ONCB, Suvarnabhumi Airport Police, and Customs Department jointly intercepted international cannabis network bound for Italy and UK – 89 kilograms seized.

On November 3, Police Lieutenant General Phanurat Lakboon, Secretary-General of the Office of Narcotics Control Board (ONCB), revealed the results of intercepting cannabis smuggling attempts from Thailand to Europe. The Airport Interdiction Task Force (AITF) seized 89 kilograms of cannabis in two separate cases, involving one female and two male suspects.

In the first case, AITF officers arrested one Singaporean suspect on November 1 after discovering 19 kilograms of cannabis flowers concealed in luggage while attempting to travel to Singapore en route to Italy.

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AITF officers arrest a Singaporean man on November 1 after discovering 19 kilograms of cannabis flowers concealed in luggage while attempting to travel to Singapore en route to Italy.

On November 2, 2024, AITF officers arrested two Malaysian suspects – one female and one male – who were scheduled to travel from Bangkok to Singapore before connecting to London, UK. A search of their luggage revealed cannabis hidden in four bags, totaling 70 kilograms.

Suspects in both cases were charged with “attempting to export controlled herbal plants (cannabis flowers) out of the kingdom without a permit and failing to declare items according to customs law.”

Police Lieutenant General Phanurat added that this successful operation resulted from close coordination between AITF agencies, including ONCB, Suvarnabhumi Airport Police, and Customs Department, in intercepting and preventing drug trafficking and illegal items, particularly at airports which serve as crucial connection points for transnational drug trafficking routes.

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AITF officers arrested two Malaysian suspects – one female and one male – who were scheduled to travel from Bangkok to Singapore before connecting to London, UK on November 2, 2024..

Drug traffickers often use Thailand as a transit route to third countries. He emphasized the importance of preventing and intercepting drugs that tend to use Thailand as a transit route. The public can report drug-related tips or information through the ONCB hotline at 1386, available 24 hours.

In August this year, the British Embassy in Bangkok issued a warning against attempting to smuggle cannabis into the UK, following a rise in the number of arrests of air passengers arriving from Thailand, Canada and the US.

Around half of all arrests (184) in 2024 related to cannabis that originated in Thailand, while 75 arrests related to cannabis originating from Canada and 47 related to cannabis from the US.

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Thailand Made More Inclusive Move But We Can Do More

Thailand has approximately 60 ethnic groups, representing a population of 6 million people, or about 10% of the country's total population, distributed across all provinces. (Khaosod Photo)

Thailand took the right step earlier this week when the Cabinet of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra approved new criteria to accelerate the process of granting Thai citizenship and legal status to nearly half a million people who are long-term residents in the kingdom. Beneficiaries include 19 ethnic minority groups, children born in Thailand who are registered as children of long-term residents.

The Paetongtarn government deserves to be commended for finally approving the bold initiative which would also significantly reduce the processing time from 270 days to 5 days, decentralize the approval process to the provinces as well as streamlining documentation requirements.

Virtually all these 480,000 or so people in Thailand have either been born in the kingdom or are people who lived here for many decades and there is no reason why they should be denied Thai citizenship. They will now have access to publicly-funded healthcare, education and other social services. They will no longer be treated as outsiders but as Thais, and part of Thai society, thus it’s expected that they will feel invested in this society.

Keeping them “alien” can only make them feel unwelcome, and not part of Thailand, and would risk pushing them into criminalities and a feeling of alienation.

The move comes as Thailand is becoming a greying society in need of more working-age population as the birth rate continues to decline.

What’s equally important, if not more important, is that the move, which is expected to be implemented within 30-60 days, is a just thing to do.

To continue to deny these people statehood by keeping them, particularly young people, not recognized as Thai is cruel and a violation of their fundamental right as a member of this society.

In the days since the Cabinet made this important decision, some xenophobes have accused the Paetongtarn government of selling Thailand out to foreigners and alleged that it would lead to increasing criminalities as some of these people with exploit their newly granted Thai citizenship to engage in illicit activities that would undermine national security.

While it’s possible that some of these nearly half a million new Thai citizens will turn into criminals, keeping them as outsiders with little or no basic rights accorded to them as Thai citizens will likely turn more of them into criminals.

In Japan, for example, it’s a known fact that many Yaguza gangsters were originally of Korean ethnicity and were unable to be fully accepted as equal. With less than equal legal job opportunities, by the straitjacket Japanese society, they ended up becoming part of the criminal underworld.

Also, the integration and inclusion of Chinese migrants over the centuries was a success and many Chinese-looking Thais who descended from these immigrants are now full-fledged Thais, patriotic, speak Thai as their mother tongue, and have contributed to all aspects of Thai society and not just in the business sector.

Most of these half a million new Thai citizens will likely not leave the kingdom, thus a policy of inclusion is actually the solution and will strengthen Thai society, and not the opposite.

The government deserves praise but it can also do more.

Thailand hosts millions of migrant workers, chiefly from Myanmar but also from Cambodia and Laos, and even if most will not be granted Thai citizenship soon or ever, it’s also to the benefit of Thai society to make them feel more welcomed as guest workers in Thailand. The same can be said about better-to-do Western, Japanese, Korean, Chinese and other expats in Thailand. Thailand can and should find ways to make them feel more at home.

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Phuket Police Arrest Taxi Rider Who Forced Tourists from Bolt Car

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Dashboard camera footage shows a female taxi driver being confronted by a local motorcycle taxi rider (not visible in this frame) who opened the back door and intimidated her in front of foreign tourist passengers before forcing them out of the vehicle.

PHUKETThe motorcycle taxi rider from the viral clip, who was seen forcing tourists out of a Bolt taxi service and confronting the female driver, has been arrested by Phuket police.

The incident occurred on October 31 around 5:30 p.m., when a female taxi driver, Ms. Thanaporn, age 32, picked up foreign Asian tourists who had booked through the Bolt application at Loma parking lot in Patong, Kathu district, intending to take them to the airport.

Before they could leave, a taxi rider approached, opened the taxi door, and confronted Ms. Thanaporn for picking up passengers in his territory. Despite her explanation that the tourists had booked through the app themselves, the man wouldn’t listen and ordered the two tourists to get out of the car. Both Ms. Thanaporn and the tourists were frightened, and the tourists complied and left the vehicle.

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A Patong police officer questions Mr. Champen, a motorcycle taxi rider who forced tourists out of a Bolt service vehicle, at Patong Police Station on November 2, 2024.

On November 2, Patong police tracked down the taxi rider using his vehicle registration number to Thawiwong Road in Patong. They found him riding erratically like a drunk person. When he stopped near Laem Petch monastery, police searched under his motorcycle seat and found a half-empty bottle of Thai whiskey.

The police identified the man as Mr. Champen, age 53, and took him to Patong Police Station. An alcohol breath test showed 75 mg%, exceeding the legal limit. They confirmed he was the same person who had threatened the female taxi driver and foreign tourists.

Mr. Champen was charged with drunk driving, using a vehicle not registered for its current use, not wearing a helmet, not carrying a vehicle registration copy, lacking a public transport driver’s license, and failing to pay annual vehicle tax.

At 1:00 p.m. the same day, Ms. Thanaporn gave her statement to investigators to pursue additional charges against Mr. Champen for intimidation, which carries a maximum penalty of 1 month imprisonment or a fine up to 10,000 baht, or both.

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Monk Who Blessed ‘Moo Deng’ Amulets Ordered to Leave Temple

Facebook page 'Srithanyaland: Land of Smiles' posts a photo of Phra Samuh Thanawut (Ajarn Chin) blessing small Moo Deng figurines on October 31, 2024.

CHONBURI — A district ecclesiastical chief in Chonburi Province has ordered ‘Phra Ajarn Chin’ to leave his temple within 7 days after blessing figurines of ‘Moo Deng,’ the world-famous pygmy hippopotamus, in a wealth-beckoning pose, which drew widespread criticism.

Although Moo Deng, the pygmy hippo at Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi who will turn 4 months old on November 10, has become a star bringing fame and revenue to the zoo and licensed businesses, when she became linked to Thai amulet culture, it sparked widespread criticism and opposition, resulting in the monk who created these amulets being asked to leave his temple.

The incident became news when a Facebook page ‘Srithanyaland: Land of Smiles‘ posted photos of monks blessing small Moo Deng figurines on October 31 at Anant Burapharam Buddhist Monastery in Huai Yai Sub-district, Bang Lamung District, Chonburi Province.

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Facebook page ‘Srithanyaland: Land of Smiles’ posts photos of monks blessing small Moo Deng figurines on October 31, 2024.

The post showed the hippo in a wealth-beckoning pose, drawing criticism from netizens with comments like ‘Have we really come to this point?’ and ‘This business has gone too far.’

The Zoo Director Attaporn Sriheran warned that people shouldn’t be superstitious about Moo Deng as she is just a wild animal. He said while he doesn’t object to Moo Deng merchandise like clothes, bags, or shoes, using her image for religious or supernatural beliefs is inappropriate.

On November 2, the Bang Lamung District ecclesiastical chief ordered Phra Samuh Thanawut (Ajarn Chin) to leave the district’s ecclesiastical jurisdiction within 7 days.

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Facebook page ‘Srithanyaland: Land of Smiles’shows a small Moo Deng figurines on October 31, 2024.

In an interview with Khaosod, Ajarn Chin said he accepted the order without resistance and wanted to apologize to Buddhists and society, acknowledging his actions were ‘inappropriate’ and apologizing for affecting people’s faith.

He accepted teachings from senior monks and reminded Buddhists that amulets are meaningless if one commits sins, emphasizing that following Buddhist precepts and practices is most important.

His disciple, Songyot Soncha, expressed regret about the order and clarified that disciples had created the amulets and invited the monk to bless them, insisting the blessing didn’t occur within temple grounds.”

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The Zoo Director Attaporn Sriheran warned that people shouldn’t be superstitious about Moo Deng as she is just a wild animal.

The story highlights the tension between traditional Buddhist values and commercial exploitation of popular culture in Thailand, particularly regarding the case of Moo Deng, a baby hippo that has become a national sensation.

The controversy over the Moo Deng amulets comes amid broader debates in Thai society about Buddhism, where some people have fallen for unusual practices and beliefs, while others oppose the exploitation of superstition for profit—practices that deviate from Buddha’s core teachings of mindfulness and wisdom in daily life.

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Attack on Central Israel Injures 11 As Iran’s Leader Promises a Punishing Response

Israeli police men work at the site where projectiles fired from Lebanon hit a home in Tira, central Israel, Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

JERUSALEM (AP) — An attack on a central Israeli town early Saturday injured 11 people as Iran’s supreme leader vowed a punishing response to Israel’s attack last week.

The predawn strike on Tira, which followed air raid sirens across central Israel, was one of several barrages fired from Lebanon early in the day. Many of the projectiles were intercepted by Israeli air defenses, while others landed in unpopulated areas.

The Magen David Adom emergency service said 11 people were hurt by shrapnel and glass shards in a direct strike on a building in Tira, a predominantly Israeli Arab town. Three were in moderate condition, while the others suffered milder injuries.

Footage showed significant damage to the roof and top floor of the three-story building and cars below.

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A man looks at damaged building after projectiles fired from Lebanon hit a home in Tira, central Israel, Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah group said on Saturday that it had used missiles and explosive drones to target military and intelligence facilities in northern and central Israel. It claimed responsibility for firing missiles toward the Israeli military’s Unit 8200 base in Glilot, on the edge of Tel Aviv, and for firing rockets toward military facilities in Zvulun. Hezbollah also said it had targeted central Israel’s Palmachim Air Base with explosive drones, saying they “scored precise hits on targets.”

Israel’s military did not confirm whether any of the three Hezbollah targets had been hit and said it had no comment on the group’s claims.

Hezbollah said the Saturday dawn missile attack directed at Glilot was in retaliation for the “massacres” that are being committed by Israel. Tira, is about 20 kilometers (12.5 miles) from Glilot.

Tamar Abdel Hai, a resident of Tira, said that the attack was frightening. “I call upon all the leaders in the Arab world and the leaders in Israel and to everyone who can help to end this war. It’s enough,” he said.

Hezbollah also said that its fighters fired salvos of rockets into northern Israeli towns including Dalton, Yesud HaMa’ala and Bar Yohai.

Israeli media showed images of damage reportedly caused by a drone that hit a factory north of Nahariya. The army said several drones crossed from Lebanon into Israel, one was intercepted but “fallen targets were identified in the area.”

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Israeli police men work at the site where projectiles fired from Lebanon hit a home in Tira, central Israel, Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

Meanwhile, an Israeli airstrike on a southern suburb of Beirut on Saturday afternoon wounded 11 people, the Lebanese Health Ministry said. Israeli planes resumed strikes on on the southern suburb of Dahiyeh overnight Friday, following four day lull in the capital.

In a separate incident, a Lebanese ship captain was taken away by a group of armed men who landed on a coast north of Beirut, Lebanese authorities said Saturday. Officials said the incident occurred Friday at dawn and authorities are investigating whether Israel was involved.

There has been no immediate Israeli comment on the matter. In the past, Israel has carried out commando operations deep inside Lebanon to kidnap or kill Hezbollah and Palestinian officials.

Iran threatens more attacks

The early Saturday attacks may be only a precursor to a more severe strike against Israel.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, on Saturday threatened Israel and the U.S. with a punishing response over attacks on Iran and its allies following Israel’s Oct. 26 airstrikes that targeted Iran’s military bases and other locations.

“The enemies, whether the Zionist regime or the United States of America, will definitely receive a crushing response to what they are doing to Iran and the Iranian nation and to the resistance front,” Khamenei said in video released by Iranian state media.

A further attack by Iran, which has already launched two direct attacks against Israel this year, could push the wider Middle East closer to a broader conflict. Israel is already battling the Iran-backed militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The fight against Hezbollah has weakened the group but has also taken a heavy toll on southern Lebanon and other parts of the country.

On Friday, Israel launched dozens of intense airstrikes across Lebanon’s northeastern farming villages, killing at least 52 people and wounding scores more, the Lebanese Health Ministry reported.

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Palestinians gather to receive bags of flour distributed by UNRWA, the U.N. agency helping Palestinian refugees, in Deir al Balah, central Gaza Strip, Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)

Since the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah erupted in 2023, more than 2,897 people have been killed and 13,150 wounded in Lebanon, according to a Health Ministry update early Friday. United Nations agencies estimate that Israel’s ground invasion and bombardment of Lebanon has displaced 1.4 million people.

Residents of Israel’s northern communities near Lebanon, roughly 60,000 people, have also been displaced for more than a year.

Israeli strikes in Gaza kill at least 42 people in 24 hours

Israel has also stepped up its offensive against Hamas’ remaining fighters in Gaza, raising concerns about humanitarian conditions for civilians still there.

A series of Israeli strikes on Nuseirat, a refugee camp in central Gaza, killed at least 42 people, more than a half of them women and children, in 24 hours, Dr. Marwan Abu Naser, director of Al-Awda Hospital that received the casualties, told The Associated Press. A further 150 were wounded, he said.

The World Health Organization began a scaled-down polio vaccination campaign on Saturday, giving second doses to at-risk children only in Gaza City after providing first doses in multiple parts of northern Gaza, which has seen intense Israeli bombardment.

The second round was initially set to start Oct. 23 but was postponed due to lack of access amid intense Israeli bombing, mass evacuation orders and a lack of assurance about humanitarian pauses.

Israel’s war in Gaza has killed more than 43,000 Palestinians since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas militants killed roughly 1,200 people in Israel and took some 250 hostages back to Gaza. Health officials inside Hamas-run Gaza do not distinguish between civilians and combatants, but say more than half of the dead in the enclave are women and children.

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Danish Man with BB Gun Threatens Thais and a Myanmar in Koh Samui

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Koh Samui police detain the Danish suspect and search his room and car on November 2, 2024. They find 1 long BB gun, 2 short BB guns, 1 samurai sword, 1 axe, 6 short knives, plastic bullets, and 4 cans of gas.

KOH SAMUIPolice arrested a foreigner for threatening others with a BB gun. Koh Samui police searched his room and found BB guns, a samurai sword, an axe, and short knives. Police charged him with disorderly conduct and sent him for psychiatric and drug testing.

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Koh Samui police search the Danish suspect’s car and find 1 long BB gun, 2 short BB guns, 1 samurai sword, 1 axe, 6 short knives, plastic bullets, and 4 cans of gas.

On November 2, Police Colonel Denduang Thongsrisuk of Bo Phut Police Station, Koh Samui, Surat Thani Province, revealed that they received a complaint from a Myanmar male worker who reported being threatened with death by a foreigner. The victim feared for his safety and filed the complaint with investigators.

Meanwhile, two more victims, both Thai women, filed additional complaints. One stated that while collecting items, she heard someone throwing objects at her car. When she went to check, she saw a foreign man holding a BB gun in his right hand and a jungle knife in his left. He shot at her car with the BB gun, saying “Get out,” and also shot at her.

Later, while she was riding her motorcycle on the ring road, the same foreigner drove his car in front of her and pointed a gun out the window to threaten her, causing her fear and alarm.

Another complainant, a hotel owner in Moo 2, Maret Subdistrict, Koh Samui, reported that a foreign guest in Room 2 was behaving disruptively, causing disturbance by throwing objects at other hotel guests and threatening people with a BB gun.

Police officers investigated and found the suspect, identified as Mr. Asger, age 31, Danish national, who was intoxicated. They detained him and searched his room and car.

Officers found 1 long BB gun, 2 short BB guns, 1 samurai sword, 1 axe, 6 short knives, plastic bullets, and 4 cans of gas. These items were seized as evidence. The suspect was taken to Police Lieutenant Colonel Atcharee Wuttiwattana, Investigation Inspector at Bo Phut Police Station.

Initially, he was charged with disorderly conduct and sent for psychiatric and drug testing for legal proceedings.

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German Man Faces Serious Charges After Hit-and-Run at Pattaya Police Checkpoint

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Pattaya officers take the German suspect in a hit-and-run at a police checkpoint to the hospital for alcohol testing on November 2, 2024.

PATTAYA — A German national faces four serious charges after crashing his motorcycle through an alcohol checkpoint in Pattaya and severely injuring a police officer early Saturday morning. The suspect initially fled the scene but was later captured

The incident occurred at 2:20 AM on November 2nd on Second Jomtien Road, Nong Prue Subdistrict, Bang Lamung District, Chonburi Province. A foreign man riding a Honda CB 650 motorcycle with Bangkok registration plates crashed through an alcohol checkpoint, hitting Police Lieutenant Rapeepat Prommin, a deputy traffic inspector at Pattaya City Police Station. The officer was thrown and suffered severe head injuries upon impact with the ground, while the motorcycle fell over.

 

Rescue workers at the checkpoint provided immediate first aid to the injured officer before rushing him to the hospital. During this time, the foreign suspect managed to escape, fleeing into nearby bushes.

Subsequently, over 50 officers from Pattaya City Police Station surrounded the wooded area. Motorcycle patrol units and plainclothes investigation officers were positioned at potential escape routes.

The suspect eventually emerged from the woods and walked into the sea at Jomtien Beach, apparently attempting to disguise himself. However, officers who had witnessed the earlier incident recognized him and arrested him as he came out of the water. He was then taken to the Dong Tan Curve Police Substation for alcohol testing.

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The motorcycle involved in the Pattaya checkpoint crash that seriously injured a police officer is being held as evidence.

The man refused to provide his name or consent to an alcohol test. Officers took him to the hospital for testing, where results showed his blood alcohol content exceeded legal limits. Police identified him from the motorcycle rental documentation as Mr. Christopher, age 30, who was confirmed to be the same person who hit the officer.

CCTV footage from the checkpoint clearly captured the incident, which was handed over to investigators as evidence for legal proceedings.

Mr. Christopher faces four serious charges:

  1. Drunk driving and reckless driving causing physical and mental harm to others and property damage
  2. Failing to provide assistance or notify authorities immediately after an accident, and fleeing the scene
  3. Violating traffic officer orders under the Land Traffic Act
  4. Resisting arrest and obstructing officers in their duties

Regarding the injured officer’s condition, doctors at Pattaya City Hospital are keeping him under observation for 3-4 days due to minor brain bleeding and a minor fracture in the posterior nasal cavity. If his condition doesn’t improve, he will be transferred to Chonburi hospital.

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Thai Trafficking Boss Arrested After Deadly Rohingya Transport

CCTV footage shows the enclosed cargo truck used to smuggle Rohingya migrants through Thailand's Chumphon Province en route to the Malaysian border on October 17, 2024.

BANGKOKAfter more than two weeks of pursuit, Anti-Trafficking in Persons Division police have arrested the third suspect in the shocking case where 26 Rohingya were transported in a enclosed pickup truck, resulting in 3 deaths in mid-October.

Somkiat, or ‘Bang Golf’, age 30, the leader of the Rohingya smuggling team, was arrested in Kaeng Hang Maeo district, Chanthaburi Province on November 1. His two team members, Nattawut and Pongpisanu, both 20 years old, were arrested while hiding in Bangkok. All were transferred to Lang Suan Police Station in Chumphon Province.

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Police officers arrest Somkiat, or ‘Bang Golf’, age 30, the leader of the Rohingya smuggling team, in Kaeng Hang Maeo district, Chanthaburi Province on November 1, 2024.

Previously, police arrested two other members of the operation: Seksan, age 21, the driver, and Pitak, age 30, who was riding with him, on Petchkasem Road in Cha-am district, Phetchaburi province. All individuals were charged with jointly assisting illegal aliens to enter the Kingdom to avoid arrest.

On November 1, Pol. Maj. Gen. Saruti Khwaengsopha, Commander of Anti-Trafficking in Persons Division, stated that this trafficking network had tens of millions of baht circulating in their accounts. Somkiat was the gang leader who took orders from investors before directing his subordinates to drive and pick up Rohingya from the Rom Klao area to transport them to the southern region, planning to cross into Malaysia, but the tragic incident occurred first.

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One of the suspects is arrested while hiding in Bangkok.

The investigation revealed that when Somkiat learned his subordinates were arrested, he quickly fled Bangkok to Khun Song subdistrict, Kaeng Hang Maeo district, Chanthaburi Province, in a national park forest area bordering a neighboring country, which was difficult to track. However, officers eventually managed to locate and arrest him.

Somkiat confessed that he received payment from brokers to transport Rohingya to Hat Yai District, Songkhla Province, before waiting to cross into Malaysia, with a fee of 3,000 baht ($88.5) per person. The transportation method involved using a sealed pickup truck that was narrow with little ventilation to avoid detection.”

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Police inspect the area where two Rohingya bodies were discovered in Moo 4, Wang Tako Subdistrict, Lang Suan District, Chumphon Province on October 17, 2024.

26 Rohingya were smuggled by human traffickers in a enclosed pickup truck and hidden in a forest near the foot of Wat Sekharam mountain in Lang Suan District, Chumphon Province, approximately 2 kilometers from Petchkasem Road. Monks from Wat Sekharam discovered them on the morning of October 17.

Three of them died of suffocation while others were in a weakened state due to lack of oxygen from sitting in the nearly airless truck over a long distance.

The survivors told police they were all brought from Myanmar’s Rakhine State and smuggled into Thailand en route to Malaysia, where they have relatives. They hoped to find employment and improve their lives. The entire process takes nearly a month, with each person paying approximately 150,000 Thai baht ($4,500).

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Related article:

Rohingya Deaths Unfolds Human Trafficking Horror from Myanmar to Thailand

 

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