The rescuers transported the body down from the mountain's top in Pattaya on April 2024.
PATTAYA – Police officers from Pattaya City Police Station and rescuers from the Sawang Boriboon Thammasathan Foundation proceeded to investigate the body of a foreign man found on Big Buddha Mountain, Ban Ko Lan, Village No. 7, Na Kluea Subdistrict, Bang Lamung District, Chonburi Province.
The finding was made at the summit of Big Buddha Mountain, which is 230 metres above sea level. The body is Mr. Gnanamurthy, a 31-year-old Indian national. A rope was put around his neck and tied to a tree. The officers investigated the body and found no signs of mistreatment.
Ms. Koi, 36, who runs a motorcycle rental service, stated that the Indian man had been in Pattaya for two months. He rented her motorcycle and borrowed money from her. He informed her that his father was a police officer in India. Before the tragedy happened, Mr. Gnanamurthy called his father to ask for money that he had borrowed. Because he still owes vehicle rental expenses.
The rescuers pointed at the tree where the Indian body was found.
“He showed me his texts to his family.” He threatened to commit suicide if his father did not return the money. “At first, I thought he was just threatening,” Ms. Koi explained.
Initially, the police turned over the body to rescue workers, who transported it to the Institute of Forensic Medicine at the Police Hospital for an autopsy. They also coordinated with the Indian embassy. Regarding the cause of death, the police concluded that, after reviewing numerous pieces of evidence, the man didn’t have any money, which caused stress until the end of his life.
Three women place flowers as a tribute near a crime scene at Bondi Junction in Sydney, Sunday, April 14, 2024, after several people were stabbed to death at a shopping center Saturday. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)
SYDNEY (AP) — A police officer and several bystanders are being hailed for running “towards danger” to confront the attacker who stabbed and killed six people at a suburban Sydney shopping center.
The shopping mall, one of the country’s busiest and near the world-famous Bondi Beach, was a hub of activity on Saturday afternoon when 40-year-old Joel Cauchi used a knife to kill five women and one man. He also injured at least a dozen others, including a 9-month-old baby whose mother died during the attack, before a police officer shot him dead.
New South Wales Police confirmed Sunday Cauchi had a history of mental illness and investigators weren’t treating the attack as terrorism-related.
Emergency officers stand by with stretchers outside Westfield Shopping Centre where multiple people were stabbed in Sydney, Saturday, April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)
The number would have been far higher, according to NSW Premier Chris Minns who on Sunday praised “the ordinary members of the public that cornered and confronted a murderer in the Westfield Shopping Centre, showing what I would call instinctive bravery under terrible circumstances.”
Talking to reporters while standing outside the shopping mall, Minns underscored the role played by Inspector Amy Scott — the first emergency responder on the scene — who shot and killed Cauchi and has since been widely lauded as a hero.
Inspector Amy Scott
“(Scott)… ran towards danger and showed professionalism and bravery and without a shadow of a doubt, saved many, many lives in the last 24 hours,” he said.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also praised Scott in a press conference in Canberra: “The wonderful inspector who ran into danger by herself and removed the threat that was there to others, without thinking about the risks to herself,” he said.
He commended “ordinary Australians putting themselves in harm’s way in order to help their fellow citizens. That bravery was quite extraordinary that we saw yesterday.”
People are led out from Westfield Shopping Centre where multiple people were stabbed in Sydney, Saturday, April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)
Video footage shared online showed many people fleeing, some carrying their children as they escaped while a knife-wielding Cauchi ran erratically through the shopping center, lunging at people.
Other footage showed a bystander holding what appeared to be a metal pole to hold off Cauchi who was coming up an escalator at the time.
Hundreds of floral tributes and messages for the victims had been laid outside the closed shopping mall on Sunday, which police said would remain an active crime scene for days if not weeks.
The Central Group website published details of Kadewe department stores in Germany that it has already bought.
BANGKOK – The Central Group has published highlights of its business as it has already acquired the business of KaDeWe Group from the insolvent Austrian company Signa. Its website stated that a luxury department store group in Europe under Central Group consists of KaDeWe in Berlin, Alsterhaus in Hamburg, and Oberpollinger in Munich, Germany.
“KaDeWehas more than50,000visitors per day, Alsterhaushas more than 15,000visitors per day, and Oberpollingerhas more than30,000visitors per day,” it stated.
The big business of Thai group did not confirm the purchase price. But Germany’s Handelsblatt newspaper put the figure at about €1 billion ($1.07 billion), while Reuters news agency reported that the Thai retailer already holds a 50.1% majority stake in the group.
Reuters also reported that Signa, the property empire founded by tycoon Rene Benko, has been one of the biggest casualties of Europe’s real estate crisis, with creditors filing claims worth billions of euros.
KaDeWe
The group’s holding company, which sits at the centre of a web of hundreds of firms, has declared insolvency, as have its two most important units, Signa Prime and Signa Development.
According to the Central Group, KaDeWe in Berlin was also amongst the top 3 in the world with the third place in the category “World’s Best Team at a Department Store”, awarded to the Wine & Spirits Team of KaDeWe by IGDS.
KaDeWe Group department stores under Central Group will expand their empire and presence in Europe with a launch of the very first luxury department store in Vienna, ‘LAMARR’, connected to Thompson Vienna Hotel in Austria. The second upcoming project is ‘Carsch Haus’ in Dusseldorf, Germany. The 2 new projects are scheduled to unveil in 2025.
“The acquisition of the KaDeWe building is the first important milestone for us in the attempt to restore and restructure the KaDeWe Group operating company towards a sustainable, financially viable business,” said Vittorio Radice, board member of Central Group Europe, in a statement.
In 2023, Central Group has taken over Selfridges department stores as Signa faces an investor revolt.
AP PHOTO
The deal, reportedly worth 4 billion pounds ($5.4 billion), adds to Central’s collection of posh retailers that includes Rinascente in Italy, Illum in Denmark, Switzerland’s Globus and The KaDeWe Group in Germany.
Selfridges was founded in 1908 by Harry Gordon Selfridge and is controlled by the billionaire Weston family of Canada. The group owns 18 department stores including a historic property in London’s Oxford Street shopping district.
Central is the retail flagship of the Thai billionaire Chirathivat family. Selfridges is a nice trophy as it expands globally from its base in Thailand, where the retailing conglomerate owns many department stores and malls.
Israeli Iron Dome air defense system launches to intercept missiles fired from Iran, in central Israel, Sunday, April 14, 2024. Iran launched its first direct military attack against Israel on Saturday. (AP Photo/Tomer Neuberg)
The Associated Press reported on April 14 that Iran had launched its first direct military attack against Israel.
Booms and air raid sirens sounded across Israel early Sunday after Iran launched hundreds of drones, ballistic missiles and cruise missiles in an unprecedented revenge mission that pushed the Middle East closer to a regionwide war.
Iran had been threatening to attack Israel after an airstrike earlier this week widely blamed on Israel destroyed Iran’s consulate in Syria, killing 12 people, including two elite Iranian generals.
Iranian demonstrators wave a Palestinian flag during their anti-Israeli gathering at the Felestin (Palestine) Square in Tehran, Iran, early Sunday, April 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
Israel and Iran have been on a collision course throughout Israel’s six-month war against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip. The war erupted after Hamas and Islamic Jihad, two militant groups backed by Iran, carried out a devastating cross-border attack on Oct. 7 that killed 1,200 people in Israel and kidnapped 250 others, including Thai workers, eight of whom are still in Hamas captivity.
An Israeli offensive in Gaza has caused widespread devastation and killed over 33,000 people, according to local health officials.
The Thai government issued a statement to warn Thai people in the Mideast region to be on alert for any possible emergency scenarios and to closely follow the announcements and alerts by their embassies in the region.
“I am following the situation in the Middle East closely and with much concern, especially reports on the rising tensions between Israel and Iran, and I urge Thais in the region to be on alert for any possible emergency scenarios and follow closely the announcements and alerts by our embassies in the region,” said Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs also issued a statement on Saturday saying that due to the rising tensions between Israel and Iran, the Royal Thai Government and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Thailand are concerned for Thai nationals staying in areas that may be directly affected. As such, Thai embassies in the region have been instructed to monitor the situation in the region closely.
Mohammad Bader, 27, inspects his torched vehicle, in the West Bank village of al-Mughayyir, Saturday, April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)
“Thai nationals in the region are urged to stay alert and follow announcements and advice from Thai Embassies closely. The Royal Thai Embassy in Tel Aviv has already issued a warning to Thai nationals living there to prepare for possible emergency situations and can be contacted directly for any related assistance. Other Thai nationals are strongly urged to avoid travelingthere if not deemed urgent or necessary at this time,” it stated.
According to the Associated Press report, the Israeli military says Iran fired more than 100 bomb-carrying drones toward Israel. Hours later, Iran announced it had also launch much more destructive ballistic missiles and cruise missiles.
The Israeli Defense Forces said in a statement early Sunday the “vast majority” of missiles launched from Iran were intercepted outside of Israel’s borders. Israel has made missile defense a priority, with a variety of air-defense systems available to shoot down incoming missile and drone fire.
Mr. Shin (black shirt) was arrested at Chiang Mai International Airport.
CHIANG MAI – When some people enjoy splashing water during the Songkran festival, they may be unaware of stolen items.
On April 13, Chiang Mai Tourist Police officers and Chiang Mai City Police Station caught a foreign group that stole items from individuals participating in the Songkran water festival around the Chiang Mai moat.
According to the investigation, this gang of thieves consists of four South Korean men: 1. Chu Doo Man, 2. Shin Boo Kook, 3. Hong Seoung Bok, and 4. Lee Chul Hyun. The second and fourth people walked around the victim to draw attention, then guided the first person to use nail clippers to cut off the victim’s necklace.
Mr. Chu was arrested near the Tha Phae Gate area of Chang Moi Subdistrict, Mueang Chiang Mai District.
On April 12, the four attempted to commit a crime but were unsuccessful, according to a video clip caught by a good citizen. They later snatched the victim’s gold necklace and fled.
Mr. Chu was caught near the Tha Phae Gate area of Chang Moi Subdistrict, Mueang Chiang Mai District, while Mr. Shin was arrested at the international passenger terminal as he was about to depart from Chiang Mai International Airport.
The police found a gold necklace weighing one baht and a Buddha framed in gold worth 50,000 baht in the hotel room where they slept. The current price of gold is substantially higher, exceeding 40,000 baht per baht.
The police found a gold necklace weighing one baht and a Buddha framed in gold worth 50,000 baht in the hotel room of the suspects.
Both were charged with stealing property. According to Criminal Code Section 336, anyone who commits theft by snatching in the presence of another is guilty of snatching and faces up to five years in jail and a fine of ten thousand Baht. Officials are trying to track down and prosecute the third and fourth gang members.
Business woman Truong My Lan, front center, attends a trial in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on Thursday, April 11, 2024. (Thanh Tung/VnExpress via AP)
HANOI, Vietnam (AP) — The unusually harsh death sentence given to a real estate tycoon in Vietnam was a pivotal moment in the decadelong “Blazing Furnace” anti-corruption campaign as the Vietnamese business community wrestled with an uncertain future Friday.
Real estate tycoon Truong My Lan, who was sentenced to death Thursday by a court in Ho Chi Minh city for orchestrating the country’s largest ever financial fraud case, was one of Vietnam’s most important businesspeople for years. She has been convicted for fraud amounting to $12.5 billion — nearly 3% of the country’s 2022 GDP — and for illegally controlling a major bank and allowing loans that resulted in losses of $27 billion, state media outlets reported.
Vietnam typically gives death penalties crimes like terrorism or murder and, according to Amnesty International, has among the highest rates of capital punishment worldwide. But a death sentence for a financial crime is rare in the country.
Defendants attend a trial for their involvement in a $12.5 billion fraud case in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on Thursday, April 11, 2024. . (Thanh Tung/ VNExpress via AP).
Thursday’s sentencing marked a “big turning point” in the ongoing anti-corruption drive in Vietnam, said Nguyen Khac Giang, an analyst at Singapore’s ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.
“It signals that the party’s commitment to a crackdown on corruption has … expanded,” he said.
The Communist Party’s so-called Blazing Furnace campaign began in 2013, but it wasn’t until 2018 that authorities began scanning the private sector. Since then, several owners of Vietnam’s fast-growing businesses have been arrested. The trial for Trinh Van Quyet — the former chair of the real estate company FLC, which also owns Vietnam’s third-largest airline, Bamboo Airways — will likely be heard next. He was arrested in 2022. Giang said Lan’s trial was “an example” for upcoming cases.
The anti-corruption campaign is a hallmark of Communist Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, Vietnam’s top politician. The 79-year-old ideologue views corruption as a grave threat facing the party and has vowed that the campaign will be a “blazing furnace” where no one is untouchable.
It’s making foreign investors jittery while dampening Vietnam’s economic outlook at a time when the country has been positioning itself as the ideal home for businesses looking to shift their supply chains away from China. Vietnam already lost two presidents in a little over a year and the country’s bureaucracy has ground to a halt with terrified officials choosing to do nothing lest they be in the crosshairs.
Lan’s death sentence sent “shockwaves” across the Vietnamese business community, creating a “sense of uncertainty” about the future, said Giang.
Business woman Truong My Lan attends a trial in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on Thursday, April 11, 2024. (Thanh Tung/VnExpress via AP)
The real estate sector in particular is floundering. An estimated 1,300 property firms withdrew from the market in 2023 and high-rises lie empty in major cities like Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh. Add to this poor global demand and reduced public investment slowing Vietnam’s economic growth down to 5.05% last year, compared to 8.02% in 2022, according to government data.
Meanwhile, despite the long campaign against graft, public opinion about corruption in Vietnam remains mixed, according to an annual survey built on interviews with nearly 20,000 people known as the Vietnam Provincial Governance and Public Administration Performance Index. It found that, while fewer people were asked for bribes, the number of people who felt the government was serious about fighting corruption had actually dipped in 2023 from the previous year.
Giang said that these were now “uncharted waters” for Vietnam, making it impossible to predict what lay next.
“We haven’t really seen anything like this before,” he said.
Thai locals and tourists play with water guns during the Songkran water festival to celebrate the Thai New Year in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Tananchai Keawsowattana)
It’s water festival time in Thailand where many are marking the country’s traditional New Year, splashing each other with colorful water guns and buckets in an often raucous celebration that draws thousands of people, even as this year the Southeast Asian nation marks record-high temperatures causing concern.
The festival, known as Songkran in Thailand, is a three-day shindig that starts Saturday and informally extends for a whole week, allowing people to travel for family celebrations. The holiday is also celebrated under different names in neighboring Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, which like Thailand have populations that are predominantly Theravada Buddhist.
A woman reacts as a bucket of water is splashed on her during the Songkran water festival to celebrate the Thai New Year in Prachinburi Province, Thailand, Saturday April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn)
Songkran is immensely popular — predicted this year to attract more than 500,000 foreign tourists and generate more than 24 billion baht ($655 million) in revenue, according to the state tourism agency. Past Thai governments have been reluctant to call for dialing down the fun even during crises such as droughts and the pandemic.
Though the festival originated as a way to pray for a rainy season that helped crops and included activities such as cleansing images of the Buddha and washing the hands and feet of elders, Songkran these days is now often associated with public drunkenness, sexual assault in the guise of merrymaking, and a spike in traffic fatalities, noticeable to the point that the extended holiday has been dubbed the “seven dangerous days.”
The festival usually falls at the hottest time of the year when temperatures can creep above 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).
But this year, the unusual heat wave, with expected record temperatures for the next few months, has triggered apprehension. The United Nations Children’s Fund warned Thursday the sweltering weather could put millions of children’s lives at risk, asking caregivers to take extra precautions.
People holding umbrellas walk by the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, April 5, 2024. Thailand, Cambodia and other countries in this region are celebrating with their annual water festivals as they also suffer through the global heat wave. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)A visitor with an umbrella walks downstairs of the Golden Mount inside the Buddhist Wat Saket temple complex in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, April 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
The UNICEF statement said in the Asia-Pacific region, “around 243 million children are exposed to hotter and longer heatwaves, putting them at risk of a multitude of heat-related illnesses, and even death.”
Heat waves can be lethal as they affect the ability to breathe, making the old and young particularly vulnerable.
Benjamin Horton, director of the Earth Observatory of Singapore where natural phenomena such as climate change are studied, said three factors determine heat waves; El Nino, a natural, temporary and occasional warming of part of the Pacific, an increase in global temperatures and human-induced climate change.
A woman reacts as a bucket of water is splashed on her during the Songkran water festival to celebrate the Thai New Year in Prachinburi Province, Thailand, Saturday April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn)
The poor are particularly vulnerable to heat waves, exacerbated in many Southeast Asian cities where concrete buildings make the weather more stifling and few trees provide shade, he said.
Horton added that the past year saw record-high global average temperatures and the heat waves in Southeast Asia were mirroring that trend, adding that “it is only going to get worse.”
The entirety of the Mekong Delta, which includes Vietnam as well as Myanmar, Laos, Thailand and Cambodia, saw extreme heat, with parts of Laos and Thailand seeing temperatures that were 5-7 degrees Celsius (41-44.6 degrees Fahrenheit) more than the average between April 3-9, according to the Mekong Dam Monitor program of the Stimson Center in Washington D.C.
This extreme heat also means less water for hydropower dams to produce energy.
“Heat waves put a significant strain on power systems, from surging energy demand to compromising grid capacity. Hydropower generation is particularly impacted” when heat results in drought over multiple years, according to Dimitri Pescia, director for Southeast Asia at the German-based thinktank Agora Energiewende
“The cumulative effects, amplified by climate change, cause great distress to society and ecosystems,” he said.
A man reacts as a bucket of water is splashed on him during the Songkran water festival to celebrate the Thai New Year in Prachinburi Province, Thailand, Saturday April 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn)
Singapore’s Horton said earth-warming carbon emissions needed a drastic cutting down as people learned to adapt to the new climate which included learning the dangers of overly hot weather and for authorities to create an emergency response to warn people about high temperatures beforehand and provide them with areas to cool down when needed.
Last week, the Philippines suspended classes in more than 5,800 public schools and shifted to home-based and online learning to protect millions of students from the scorching heat.
Schools in several cities, including the congested capital Manila, shifted classes to early morning to avoid sweltering noontime and afternoon temperatures. Also, tens of thousands of students in grade and high schools were allowed to alternate between going to school and online classes every other day, officials said.
Manila Mayor Honey Lacuna-Pangan, a medical doctor, said they have limited outdoor activities especially if the heat index rises to an extreme level. “If people don’t have urgent tasks outside, the best precaution really is to stay indoors.”
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Anirudda Ghosal and Jintamas Saksorncha reported from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Sopheng Cheang in Phnom Penh, Cambodia and Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines contributed to this report. Asia Business Climate correspondent Aniruddha Ghosal reported from Hanoi, Vietnam.
Thai military personnel on an armored vehicle keep guard along the Moei river on the Thai side, under the 2nd Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in Mae Sot in Thailand's Tak province on Friday, April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
JERRY HARMER and JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI, MAE SOT — Thailand’s foreign minister on Friday said he urged Myanmar’s military authorities not to violently respond to its army’s loss of an important border trading town to its opponents, and that so far they seemed to be exercising restraint.
Parnpree Bahiddha-Nukara spoke during a visit to Mae Sot, which lies directly across a river from Myanmar’s Myawaddy, where army troops abandoned their last defensive position early Thursday.
Their hasty escape ceded virtual control of the busy trading town to guerrillas of the ethnic Karen National Union and its allies, including members of the pro-democracy People’s Defense Forces.
Thai Foreign Minister Parnpree Bahiddha-Nukara arrive at the 1st Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in Mae Sot in Thailand’s Tak province on Friday, April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Myanmar’s once-mighty armed forces have suffered a series of unprecedented defeats since last October, losing swathes of territory including border posts to both ethnic fighters and guerrilla units. Civilians took up arms after the generals seized power in 2021 from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi. The military has frequently hit back heavily, using air power.
Maj. Gen. Zaw Min Tun, spokesman for Myanmar’s military government, told the BBC’s Burmese language service Thursday night that the soldiers at the army’s last base outside Myawaddy town abandoned the post for the safety of their families who were living with them. He said Myanmar was in talks with Thailand about getting them safely back, and acknowledged that Karen guerrillas were inside the town.
There is concern that the Myanmar military might launch a concerted counter- attack against Myawaddy, which could send thousands fleeing into Thailand for safety and badly disrupt border trade.
Thai military personnel on an armored vehicle keep guard along the Moei river on the Thai side, under the 1st Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in Mae Sot in Thailand’s Tak province on Friday, April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Speaking to reporters after inspecting the area, Foreign Minister Parnpree said Thailand had already spoken with Myanmar’s military and told them they did not wish to see violence, offering Thailand’s help.
“Now, what we are most concerned about is that we want to see peace in Myawaddy, not only because of the trading, but it’s our neighbor,” he said. “We do not wish for any violence to happen. If talks are possible, among their groups, we will be very welcoming of that, and if they want us to be the mediator, we are ready to help coordinating.”
He said he hoped there could be talks between the opposing sides to prevent retaliatory attacks.
“We have already sent people to talk to them. And for the situation today, they already said that there will not yet be any violent retaliation. If they wanted to be violent, they would have already done that days ago.”
On Friday evening, however, there were at least two loud explosions emanating from the area on the Myanmar side of one of the two bridges connecting Myawaddy and Mae Sot. Their cause could not immediately be discovered.
Residents from both sides of the river said earlier there have been frequent explosions in the past few days from airstrikes against captured positions outside Myawaddy town, but that Friday was quiet. Thai immigration officials said visitor numbers from Myanmar were unexceptional.
But for some, the quiet was the problem. A Myawaddy resident who only gave his name as Sulai told The Associated Press it unnerved him so he fled.
“They fear the quiet. They are afraid of silence with no sound of fighting. Those with experience say it means the fight is much more likely to continue,” he said.
Thai troops were keeping watch in Mae Sot on Friday, especially near the bridges. Besides reassuring residents of their safety, they served to block pockets of trapped Myanmar soldiers from slipping across the border.
On the Myanmar side, a small group of men lounged in the stifling heat. Thai troops said they were from the Border Guard Force, a Karen group that was aligned with Myanmar’s military who recently severed their links.
Lightning illuminates the sky behind the gunner on a Thai military armored vehicle, as he keeps watch along the Moei river, under the 2nd Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge in Mae Sot in Thailand’s Tak province on Friday, April 12, 2024.(AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
The Karen National Union — the leading political body for the Karen ethnic minority — said in a statement on its Facebook page on Friday that it will establish administrative mechanisms, prevent illicit businesses, contraband and human trafficking and implement stability and law enforcement as well as facilitate trade in the Myawaddy area when it secures its position there.
The KNU said it’s deeply concerned about the security of the people living on both sides of the border, seeks to have stability and access to humanitarian aid and is working to achieve meaningful cooperation with the Thai government and local and international partner organizations.
The Karen, who are native to the eastern state of Kayin, have been fighting for more than seven decades for greater autonomy from Myanmar’s central government. A wider struggle including other ethnic minority groups and pro-democracy militants began after the army’s 2021 takeover.
The Karen make up a large part of about 90,000 refugees from Myanmar who live in nine long-term refugee camps in Thailand after fleeing previous rounds of fighting.
The army’s setbacks of the past few months have been noted by Myanmar’s neighbors, who have generally been wary of intervening in the crisis there, said Moe Thuzar, a Myanmar scholar who is a senior fellow at Singapore’s ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute.
“Already, we have heard the Thai prime minister acknowledge that the Myanmar military is losing strength. How will the various opposition forces coordinate and consolidate these gains towards the resistance’s stated objectives for the country’s political future, is yet unclear,” she told The Associated Press in an email. “Unclear too, is how neighboring capitals will react or respond to the implications of the change in tax and administrative control of these border crossings.”
Khao San Road Songkran water fight is officially on April 12, 2024. (Khaosod Photo/ Somjit Jaichuen)
BANGKOK – The Songkran Festival is currently celebrated across Thailand, and the government expects this festival to increase revenue in the second quarter of this year.
Ms. Thapanee Kiatphaibool, Governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), announced that the TAT expects total tourism revenue of 613.6 billion baht for the second quarter of 2024 (April-June). The main factors behind this growth are the “Maha Songkran World Water Festival 2024”, which takes place April 1-21.
TAT expects theMaha Songkran World Water Festival 2024 will inspire more travel and tourism activities during April 12–16, resulting in 24.42 billion baht in overall tourism revenue, an increase of 18% when compared to the same period in 2023.
This constitutes 8.76 billion baht from international tourism and 15.66 billion baht from domestic tourism, with 510,000 visitor arrivals and 4.29 million domestic trips.
Ms. Thapanee Kiatphaibool, Governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand (center)
Songkran celebrations in Bangkok are expected to generate 3.69 billion baht in revenue and attract 653.590 domestic trips, while the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration organised a full-scale event with up to 118 points by dividing Songkran into two styles: “little wet” cultural activities, including events at Sanam Luang from April 12 to 14, and “very wet” spashing water activities, highlighted at Khao San Road, Phra Nakhon District, Khao San World Water Festival UNESCO 2024, and Silom Road.
As a result, TAT expects that in the second quarter, domestic trips will account for 44.4 million, generating 245.7 billion baht in revenue, an increase of 19 percent and 17 percent, respectively.
For foreign tourists, 8,272,300 arrivals are expected, an increase of 29 percent compared to the same period last year and and accounting for 92 percent of 2019.
This will generate revenue of 367.9 billion baht, an increase of 25 percent compared to the previous year and and accounting for 95 percent of 2019.
Khao San Road Songkran water fight is officially on April 12, 2024. (Khaosod Photo/ Somjit Jaichuen)
Domestic tourism in the first quarter of 2024 (January-March) grew year-on-year with 41.18 million domestic trips, an increase of 10 percent, and 228.1 billion baht in tourism revenue, an increase of 8 percent.
The main factors for this growth were a strong upswing in domestic tourism with 1.3 million more visitors than the 8 million in the October-December 2023 period and the total of 9,381,098 foreign tourists visiting Thailand, an increase of 44 percent, which generated 476 billion baht in tourism revenue, also an increase of 44 percent compared to the same period in 2023.
ASEAN, Europe and South Asia have recovered to pre-pandemic levels, while Northeast Asia has recovered well at 67 percent of 2019 levels, exceeding expectations.
The top 10 source markets for foreign tourists to Thailand are: China, Malaysia, Russia, South Korea, India, Germany, Laos, United States, United Kingdom, and Japan. Together, these 10 markets account for 65 percent of all foreign tourist arrivals to Thailand.
Mr. Tharatit na Pattalung, 33, pointed at his car, which was damaged by an American visitor.
PHUKET – A Thai man was stunned to witness an American man abruptly smash his car with a brick in front of Phuket’s hotel.
Police officers from Wichit Police Station, Phuket Province, received a complaint from Mr. Tharatit na Pattalung, 33, stating that on April 11, 2024, at around 5:30 a.m., while he was parking his car in front of the Seabed Hotel in Wichit Subdistrict, Phuket Province, a foreigner, later identified as Mr. Denny, a 46-year-old American citizen, took a brick and smashed his car, causing damage to the driver’s door and the front passenger door glass.
He therefore filed a complaint with the investigating officer to prosecute Mr. Denny Ian Martini for destruction of property.
The driver’s door and the front passenger door glass were damaged by a 46-year-old American visitor in Phuket.
The police arrested the suspect. The victim said he did not know the foreigner and had never seen him before. He usually parks in the same place. The foreigner himself continues to make contradictory statements and says he saw his wife in the car or his phone in the car and smashed the car window to get the phone.
The insurance company initially estimates the damage at around 20,000 baht for the door and the glass. There may also be other damage. The injured party must take the car to the garage for repairs and rent a car in the meantime. He may have to claim additional costs from the foreigner, but he does not know when the two will be able to communicate effectively.
The American man claimed to have seen his wife or his phone in the car and smashed the car window to get the phone.
On April 12, the police officers revealed that they had charged him with causing others to lose their property.
According to Thai law, Section 358 of the Criminal Code states that whoever is damaging, destroying, causing the depreciation of value, or rendering useless the property belonging to the other person, of which the other person is the co-owner, shall be said to commit mischief and shall be imprisoned for not more than three years, fined for not more than 60,000 Baht, or both.