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Rescue Teams in Taiwan Searching for Family Feared Trapped in Rockslide Following Earthquake

Workers begin demolition of collapsed building, two days after a powerful earthquake struck the city, in Hualien City, eastern Taiwan, Friday, April 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying)

HUALIEN, Taiwan (AP) — Rescue teams are searching for a family of five feared trapped in a rockslide following Taiwan’s biggest earthquake in 25 years, which has left at least 12 dead.

Two bodies have been found in the Taroko National Park, a tourist attraction famous for its rugged, mountainous terrain in Hualien County about 150 kilometers (90 miles) from Taipei. At least four other victims were found in the park. Authorities have yet to verify the identities of the latest victims.

The family, surnamed You, had gone on a hike after visiting ancestral sites for the traditional grave-sweeping observances.

Wednesday’s 7.4-magnitude quake sent boulders and mud tumbling down mountainsides, blocking roads and smashing cars, and injured more than 1,000 people.

In the county seat of Hualien, crews were working to demolish the five-story Tien Wang Hsing building, which was left leaning at a severe angle, one of scores of buildings damaged around the island. Residents wearing motorcycle and construction helmets recovered legal documents and other documents before large cement-penetrating drills and backhoes began bringing down the building.

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A building is seen partially collapsed, two days after a powerful earthquake struck the city, in Hualien City, eastern Taiwan, Friday, April 5, 2024.  (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying)

A high school teacher was killed in the building when she returned to her apartment to find her cat just as an aftershock struck, bringing down more debris.

Others were still stuck in areas cut off by road blockages, including one Canadian and two persons with joint Australian and Singapore citizenship, according to emergency services. Authorities were using cell phone signals to ascertain their positions.

Hualien will face a major challenge to rebuild and bring back tourism, said county head Hsu Chen-Wei.

“After such a strong quake, rebuilding and reconstruction will be an extremely heavy burden, especially for those who still need to make their monthly mortgage payments. That’s why people’s paths to rebuilding their lives will rely on help from charitable donations,” Hsu told reporters.

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A building is seen partially collapsed, two days after a powerful earthquake struck the city, in Hualien City, eastern Taiwan, Friday, April 5, 2024.   (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying)

The small number of casualties and rapid response has been attributed to tightened construction safety standards and the replacement of older buildings with modern structures built to resist earthquakes. Emergency services have upgraded their equipment and training, assisted by civic groups such as the Red Cross and the Buddhist Tzu Chi charitable foundation that have provided meals and set up shelters in school gymnasiums and other public spaces for those left homeless.

The powerful quake struck during the morning rush hour, sending schoolchildren rushing outdoors and families fleeing their apartments through the windows. The ground floors of some buildings collapsed, leaving them leaning at precarious angles. Though the island is regularly rattled by earthquakes and generally well prepared, authorities did not send out the usual alerts because they were expecting a smaller temblor.

Hualien was last struck by a deadly quake in 2018 which killed 17 people and brought down a historic hotel. Taiwan’s worst recent earthquake struck on Sept. 21, 1999, a magnitude 7.7 temblor that caused 2,400 deaths, injured around 100,000 and destroyed thousands of buildings.

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2 Tour Operators Ordered Close Over Use of Thai Nominees

Officials inspect documents of a tour operator in Bangkok’s Wang Thonglang district suspected of acting as nominee for foreign business on April 3, 2024.
Officials inspect documents of a tour operator in Bangkok’s Wang Thonglang district suspected of acting as nominee for foreign business on April 3, 2024.

BANGKOKTwo tour operators were ordered shut down on suspicion of acting as nominees for foreign businesses, tourism authorities said Thursday.

Jaturon Phakdeewanich, director-general of the Department of Tourism, said the department, which regulates tourism businesses in Thailand, revoked the licenses of Chang Long Travel and Sen Zhou Xing Tour after it was found that they made changes in the shareholder structure that were against the requirements to operate a tourism business.

Both companies have their registered offices in Bangkok’s Wang Thonglang district.

Under the law, operating a tourism business is restricted under the Foreign Business Act and therefore the Thai partners must hold more than 51 percent of the shares. At least half of the directors must also be of Thai nationals.

Jaturon said the crackdown on foreign businesses is the latest effort to improve the image of Thai tourism.

Authorities are conducting an investigation to pursue further legal actions against both companies, he said.

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Japan Football Manga “Captain Tsubasa” Ends After 43-Year Run

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The front cover of Captain Tsubasa Magazine (Copyright Yoichi Takahashi/SHUEISHA)(Kyodo)

TOKYO – The smash-hit Japanese football manga series “Captain Tsubasa” came to an end Thursday after a 43-year run with its creator Yoichi Takahashi saying he would retire as a manga artist but continue “creative activities.”

Takahashi, 63, said he will still produce stories on Tsubasa, the football prodigy who is the main character of the series, but switch to a rough storyboard format that he expects to be able to produce more quickly, delivering it to fans on a dedicated website.

“I still like drawing illustrations and thinking up stories,” he said in a post on the X social media platform Wednesday.

The last chapter in the manga format, “Captain Tsubasa Rising Sun,” depicts Tsubasa participating in an Olympics as captain of the under-23 Japanese football team.

The story will continue in the new format on the “Captain Tsubasa World” website from this summer, with weekly releases.

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The front cover of Captain Tsubasa Magazine Vol. 20, the last issue of the manga series. (Copyright Yoichi Takahashi/SHUEISHA)(Kyodo)

As the format does not require inking and adding screen tones, Takahashi said, he will be able to “deliver future stories at a faster pace.”

He also expects to have “more freedom of expression” as he will no longer face the need to meet deadlines or requirements for number of pages or format size.

Recalling that his starting point as a manga artist was back in elementary school when he began drawing original works using pencils on a blank sheet of paper, he said, “I am now going to do the same thing I was doing at that time — a manga series by pencil drawings.”

Tokyo publishing house Shueisha Inc. announced the end of the manga series in its Captain Tsubasa Magazine in January. Takahashi at the time cited a “decline in physical strength and changes in the drawing environment caused by the recent wave of digitization” that he said slowed the pace at which he could draw manga.

The first episode of “Captain Tsubasa” was printed in the Shukan Shonen Jump weekly in 1981.

The series has been adapted for anime and games in more than 50 countries and regions and has captivated children including some who became professional footballers such as Spanish star Andres Iniesta. In Japan, the series’ comics sold over 90 million copies.

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Panicked Passengers Jump Into Koh Tao Sea When Fire Breaks Out

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A fire broke out on the Koh Charoen 2, a Surat Thani-Koh Tao overnight ferry carrying 108 people, about 3 kilometres from Koh Tao on April 4, 2024.

SURAT THANIA fire broke out on the Koh Charoen 2, a Surat Thani-Koh Tao overnight ferry carrying 108 people, of whom 97 were passengers, about 3 kilometres from Koh Tao.  Some panicked passengers jumped into the sea.

At 6:50 a.m. on Thursday, April 4, officials received an alert. They mobilised officers from the Koh Tao and Koh Phangan Police Stations, as well as local officials, to assist those on the boat. Four people were slightly injured from choking on smoke.

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Fire blazed from the engine room of the Koh Charoen 2 ferry.

The Koh Charoen 2 boat left Surat Thani Province at 11:00 p.m. on April 3 and arrived at Koh Tao Subdistrict, Koh Phangan District, Surat Thani Province. The passengers on the ferry included Thais, Myanmar workers, and foreign tourists.

The province’s public relations department posted that everyone was rescued with no casualties. However, the Associated Press reported that panicked passengers jumped into the sea to escape a raging ferry fire.

Maitree Promjampa, a Surat Thani resident who often travels to Koh Tao for work, said he saw billowing smoke and fire less than five minutes later, and that was when people started shouting and rang the alarm.

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Smoke rises from a ferry in Surat Thani province, Thailand, Thursday, April 4, 2024. The ferry caught fire off the southern Thailand coast on Thursday morning while carrying more than a hundred people, sending panicking passengers to jump into the sea to escape the raging blaze. (Maitree Promjampa via AP)

“We could barely get the life vests in time,” he told The Associated Press. “It was chaotic. People were weeping … I also teared up.”

He said several boats came to their rescue around 20 minutes after they called for help, but the boats could not get close to the ferry out of fear of explosions. He said people had to jump into the sea to be rescued. 

“Everyone had to help themselves,” said Maitree.

Videos showed the ferry was also carrying several vehicles while people were hurrying out of the ferry’s cabin while putting on life vests as thick black smoke swept across the ferry. It was later engulfed in fire. Officials have still investigated the fire’s damage and cause.

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Police Raid Many Nominee Companies in Phuket That Belong to Russians

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Officers from Provincial Police Region 8 arrested the Russian suspect, who really owned the business illegally in Phuket.

PHUKET – Following an investigation, it was revealed that foreigners had illegally entered Thailand to work or conduct business by using nominees. Officers from Provincial Police Region 8, directed by Police Lieutenant General Suraphong Thanomchit, entered and searched suspicious places alongside members of the Phuket Provincial Administration, Commerce Department, Tourist Police, and Phuket Immigration Police.

One suspicious location is the restaurant OCTOPUS, which is a popular meeting area for foreigners. With the support of Thai citizens, they registered VVG Alliance Company Limited as a nominee at Ban Don-Choeng Thale Road, Choeng Thale Subdistrict, Thalang District.

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The chart shows the OCTOPUS business’s nominee network.

The police discovered that Ms. Punyanuch Thongkob, a Thai national, holds 51% of the shares but is only a nominee; Mr. Vladilav Zinakov, a Russian national, holds 24.5% of the shares but is the real owner of the store. The third accused, Pavel Shapovalov, acted in financial management., circulating funds of 80 million baht.

The fourth individual, Mr. Valerie, a stakeholder, faced accusations of being an alien collaborating to manage a business that Thais are unprepared to enter without authorization.

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Police Lieutenant General Suraphong Thanomchit (left) directed the investigation.

On the same day, officers from the Crime Suppression Division (CSD) raided eight locations in Phuket Province suspected of being involved in crimes committed by foreigners.

The raids were an extension of a case in which a man impersonating a regional electricity official scammed victims into installing an app that allowed him to control their phones. He then hacked into their accounts and transferred 500,000 baht to the account of a Russian man.

An investigation into the Russian man’s financial transactions revealed that he had also received cryptocurrency transfers from non-custodial wallets. He then sold large amounts of the cryptocurrency and had the money transferred to his own bank accounts in Thailand. He then immediately withdrew the money in cash.

The investigation also revealed that the Russian suspect withdrew cash from bank counters and ATMs from three bank accounts between July 7 and November 19, 2023, totaling 186 million baht. This amount was found to be unusually high, so it is suspected that it could be a form of money laundering.

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One of the 8 locations where the officers from the Crime Suppression Division raided to investigate.

The Russian’s background check revealed that he had previously presented a work permit showing that he was employed by a company in Phuket province. Officials then raided the company and found that it was not actually operating. It had been registered for the purpose of creating fake documents that foreigners could use to apply for a work permit and a residence permit in the Kingdom.

A further investigation revealed that the company had two Thai women and one Russian woman as directors and shareholders. All of these women were also shareholders and directors of 38 other companies.

It is suspected that they may have been involved in other crimes committed by foreigners. The CSD therefore gathered evidence and obtained a search warrant from the court, which led to the above-mentioned raids on eight locations with a total of 17 companies.

 

During the raids, officers found two Thai women who admitted to setting up a company to register other businesses, apply for work permits, apply for visas and various other permits for foreigners. They admitted to setting up companies that were not actually operating in order to create fake documents to apply for various permits for foreigners.

In addition, the officers found that office equipment had been set up on the second floor of the office building to take photos of work to be used for applying for various permits for foreigners.

Officials seized two computers used to create forged documents and store foreign customers’ data, as well as more than 50 company stamps and around 500 documents. They will examine the documents and, if any wrongdoing is found, take legal action.

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Japanese Media Film World War II Tunnel in Kanchanaburi

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Inside the tunnel, it is about 2 metres wide and 1.80–1.90 metres high.

KANCHANABURI – Manchai Wattanakaran and Srawut Traisangsiriphong, residents of Sangkhla Buri district, Kanchanaburi province, who discovered the tunnel believed to have been built by Japanese soldiers during World War II in Kanchanaburi province, led a team from Nippon TV in Japan to film the newly discovered tunnel.

It is located in Ban Songkalia, Village 8, Nong Lu sub-district, Sangkhla Buri district. The Thai media reported on this tunnel at the end of March and received a lot of attention.

The entrance to the tunnel is quite narrow and people have to bend down to enter slowly. Once they are inside, however, the tunnel is about 2 meters wide and 1.80-1.90 meters high.

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The tunnel is located in Ban Songkalia, Village 8, Nong Lu sub-district, Sangkhla Buri district. The entrance to the tunnel is quite narrow.

 

The distance from the entrance to the end of the tunnel is about 35 meters. The air inside the tunnel is quite cool and pleasant, with a temperature of around 20-25 degrees Celsius. The overall condition of the tunnel is quite good, with only traces of landslides at the entrance and at the end of the tunnel.

Jumpei Tanaka, a news anchor for Nippon TV, said through Chalanlak Janwanphen, a Nippon TV reporter based in Thailand, that he did not think there would be so many historical remains from World War II left in this area. He said that Japanese people today do not think that Thailand would have been involved in the Japanese military doing something like this.

However, after filming, he said he wanted both young and old Japanese people to see the history of what the Japanese military did during World War II, and that they might have done even worse things. He hopes that the filming will be able to communicate something to the Japanese people.

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The overall condition of the tunnel is quite good, with only traces of landslides at the entrance and at the end of the tunnel.

In addition to filming at the tunnel, the Nippon TV team also filmed four other historical sites related to World War II:

  • The remains of the Death Railway, located near the old airport, on Highway 323, Village 8, Ban Songkalia.
  • The remains of a bridge pier located near the Songkalia stream water play area.
  • The water well for refilling locomotives located at the pier in the middle of Ban Songkalia village, behind Ban Songkalia School.
  • The cement storage area and railway bomb crater located inside a rubber plantation in Ban Songkalia, on Highway 323, Songkalia-Ban Phra Chedi Sam Ong route.
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A team from Nippon TV came to cover the tunnel in Kanchanaburi province, which is thought to have been built by Japanese forces during WWII.

Kanchanaburi province is home to the world-famous River Kwai Bridge, an important historical site of the Second World War. The Japanese army forcibly recruited some 61,700 Allied prisoners of war, including British, American, Australian, Dutch and New Zealand soldiers as well as Chinese, Vietnamese, Javanese, Malay, Thai, Burmese and Indian laborers to build the strategic railroad line connecting to Burma.

The construction of the bridge and railroad was marked by hardship, the brutality of war, disease and food shortages, resulting in the deaths of tens of thousands of prisoners of war. It became known as the “Death Railway”. Every year, a memorial service is held at the bridge, attended by representatives from many countries.

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Russian Man Is Caught for Forex Fraud Linked to Thai Woman’s Death

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The CIB officers searched the suspect's place in Bang Lamung District for evidence linked to the company.

CHONBURI – In the case of Ms. Nawaporn, a Thai woman who committed suicide in 2022, her relatives suspect it was due to massive losses from convincing others to spend more than 20 million baht in foreign currency trading, or forex, with a company. Officials then probed the source.

According to the inspection into the suspicious company’s financial route, it was discovered that there was a turnover of about 100 billion baht in just three years, thus a search order and arrest warrant for the suspect were requested from the Chonburi Provincial Court.

On April 4, Pol. Lt. Gen. Jiraphop Phuridej, commander of the Central Investigation Bureau, directed officers from the Economic Crime Suppression Division to travel to a condominium in Village No. 12, Nong Prue Subdistrict, Bang Lamung District, Chonburi Province.

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On April 4, 2024, officers apprehended a Russian suspect based on the Criminal Court’s arrest warrant.

They apprehended Mr. Alexey Vegman, 40, of Russian nationality, on the basis of the Criminal Court’s arrest warrant, accusing him of “jointly operating a supervised payment service business, which is a service for accepting payments by electronic means without permission.”

At the same time, they searched the suspect’s home in Village No. 4, Huai Yai Subdistrict, Bang Lamung District, as well as the property in Village No. 10, Bang Saray Subdistrict, Sattahip District, Chonburi Province, and recovered documents linked to the company. The 22 items comprised 7 laptop computers, 3 phones, 6 electronic cards, 14 bank accounts, 4 chequebooks, and 9 Secure Pass/Tokens.

Vegman is suspected of running a forex company after signing a contract with a commercial bank to use bill payment services as a channel for receiving funds from groups of investors who must register as members on the company’s website. Later, some people participated in trading the currency, which caused significant damage and resulted in massive sums of debt.

The accused denies the charges. The officer then took him to the Economic Crime Suppression Division’s investigator for further legal action.

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Southeast Asian Countries Consider Ways To Boost ‘Green Financing’ as Region Chokes on Smog

A farmer tends their fields in stifling temperatures as surrounding hills are choked by smoke from field and hill fires across the region, Thursday, April 4, 2024, in Luang Prabang, Laos. (AP Photo/Elaine Kurtenbach)

LUANG PRABANG, Laos (AP) — Senior finance and central bank officials from Southeast Asia and major economies met Thursday in the scenic Laotian city of Luang Prabang to discuss ways to help the region build resilience against shocks like the COVID-19 pandemic and natural disasters brought on by climate change.

The need for faster progress was dramatically apparent as the city and surrounding region were engulfed in heavy smoke from fires — some set to clear forests for crops, some ignited by record high temperatures and tinder-dry conditions. The air quality index early Thursday was nearly 300, or “very unhealthy.”

Laos and other countries in Southeast Asia have committed to seeking more sustainable ways to feed their people and power their economies. The question is where the money will come from to do that.

Green finance is among several items on the agenda of the finance meetings of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations related to countering the mounting impacts of global warming. The officials also were set for talks on an ASEAN infrastructure fund and disaster risk financing and insurance, according to the agenda provided by hosts of this week’s meetings.

Also on the list, refining a “taxonomy” to help identify and agree on projects that support ASEAN’s sustainability agenda and align with its climate change commitments and other goals.

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Financial officials of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations were meeting in Luang Prabang, Laos to discuss ways to secure financing to help shift to more sustainable and less polluting agriculture and energy. (AP Photo/Elaine Kurtenbach)

The 10 member nations of ASEAN — Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam — range from tiny but wealthy Brunei and Singapore to big, fast growing economies like Vietnam and Indonesia. They have pledged to cut carbon emissions to help reduce the impact of climate change but are struggling to find ways to unlock financing needed to make that transition.

ASEAN members are extremely vulnerable to extreme weather, drought and rising sea levels. Investments in clean energy need to increase by five to seven times, to more than $200 billion a year, according to various estimates. Laos and its neighbors also are contending with a raft of other regional troubles, including human trafficking, a growing illicit drug trade and fast-growing enclaves of online scam centers run by criminal syndicates.

A landlocked country of about 7.5 million people, Laos is rich in hydroelectric power, but its economy has been shrinking in recent years and its national finances are fraught — strained by a heavy load of foreign and domestic debt, a weakening currency and inflation.

Longstanding traditions and a lack of funding to persuade farmers not to rely on crop burning — their most affordable option — mean that progress is slow. The government has set a goal of reducing the number of fires by 35% by the end of 2025. Similar burning in neighboring Thailand, Myanmar and Cambodia leaves the region shrouded in heavy smog for weeks at a time during the spring.

Countries in the region have begun to build regional electricity grids as one step toward improving a balance between supply and demand.

A higher priority for Laos, a Communist state where annual incomes average below $2,000 a person, is weaving itself into the wider regional economy of about 660 million people. Combined, the region is the world’s fifth-largest economy at about $3.3 trillion.

Like many countries in the region, Laos’ economy has become increasingly entwined with that of China. Those ties have deepened with the building of a $6 billion high-speed railway that links to railways in southwest China’s Yunnan province and eventually will be connected with a line running to Bangkok and the Gulf of Thailand. The downside: debts that are a heavy drain on the country’s resources.

Along with regional financial leaders, senior officials of major international financial institutions like the International Monetary Fund and Asian Development Bank, along with delegates from Japan, China, the U.S. and other major economies, are attending the talks in Luang Prabang.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is not attending the talks, but traveling to China this week, where she will meet with American business leaders and Chinese officials in south China’s Guangzhou and in Beijing.

Also in Beijing this week were Indonesia’s President-elect Prabowo Subianto and the foreign ministers of Vietnam, Laos and East-Timor, which is aspiring to become an ASEAN member. The flurry of visits highlights rivalries for influence in the region.

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Thailand’s Constitutional Court Says It Will Rule on Whether To Dissolve Popular Move Forward Party

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Move Forward party leader Chaithawat Tulathon, right, with its former leader Pita Limjaroenrat, talks to reporters during a news conference at parliament in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

The court said it had accepted a petition from the state Election Commission to hear the case against the Move Forward party after finding there was enough evidence, and instructed the party to submit evidence on its own behalf within 15 days.

It said the petition requested the party’s dissolution and a 10-year ban on political activity by the party’s executives.

The court’s decision is the latest move in what is seen as a yearslong attack against the country’s progressive movement by conservative forces trying to keep their grip on power. Move Forward’s predecessor, the Future Forward party, was dissolved by a Constitutional Court ruling in 2020 for violating election laws on donations to political parties. The dissolution was one of the triggers for youth-led pro-democracy protests that sprung up across the country in 2020.

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FILE – Supporters of the Move Forward Party hold a portrait of Pita Limjaroenrat, the leader of Move Forward Party, during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, July 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Those protests pushed the boundary for the progressive movement even further by openly criticizing the monarchy and demanding its reform, a subject that was previously taboo. It led to vigorous prosecutions under the law against defaming the monarchy, which Move Forward had campaigned to have amended.

Party leader Chaithawat Tulathon told reporters after Wednesday’s court announcement that the party has been preparing for the case and will seek to prove its innocence. He said the verdict could come within weeks, and the party will hold a news conference then to explain its position.

The same court already ruled in January that the party must stop advocating changes to the law, known as Article 112, that protects the monarchy from criticism by imposing penalties of up to 15 years in jail per offense. That ruling did not set any punishment for the party.

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Move Forward party’s leader Chaithawat Tulathon, center right, with its former leader Pita Limjaroenrat, center left, talks to reporters during a news conference at parliament in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2024.  (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Move Forward came under multiple legal attacks following its election victory. Pita Limjaroenrat, the party’s former leader, was suspended from Parliament after being accused of violating the election law for owning shares in a media company. He argued he was holding an insignificant number of shares merely as an executor of his late father’s estate. Pita resumed his parliamentary duties in January after the Constitutional Court cleared him of the charge.

Thailand’s courts, especially the Constitutional Court, are considered a bulwark of the country’s traditional royalist establishment, which has used them and nominally independent state agencies such as the Election Commission to issue rulings to cripple or sink political opponents.

The Move Forward party finished first in the 2023 general election after campaigning to amend Article 112 and introduce other democratic reforms. The victory indicated that many Thai voters were ready for change after nearly a decade of military-controlled government.

But the military-installed Senate blocked the party from taking power by refusing to agree to Pita’s selection as prime minister. Senators said they opposed Pita because of his intention to enact reforms to the monarchy.

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Thai Election Body to Seek Dissolution of Move Forward Party

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As Crimes Rise, Phuket Court Reopens Tourist Case Division

Phuket Provincial Court

PHUKET – Phuket Provincial Court has reopened its Tourist Case Division to provide justice for tourists and build confidence in the justice system when cases arise in Phuket.

Mr. Kriangsak Rotphanchu, Acting Chief Judge of Phuket Provincial Court, said that Phuket’s tourism industry attracts a large number of both Thai and foreign tourists. This has led to an increase in criminal cases where tourists are victims or suspects. These cases, whether criminal, civil, or consumer-related, have been reported in the media from time to time.

The Tourist Case Division aims to provide justice for tourists when disputes arise, both criminal and civil. It also works with relevant agencies to help tourists receive legal protection and ensure that perpetrators are punished.

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Mr. Kriangsak Rotphanchu

Phuket Provincial Court first opened the Tourist Case Division on 24 September 2017. However, it was closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The division has now been reopened to drive forward the work of handling tourist cases and to build confidence in the justice system when cases arise in Phuket.

The division works in collaboration with the following agencies: Phuket Provincial Public Prosecutor’s Office, Phuket Provincial Police Command, Tourist Police Division, Phuket Provincial Tourism and Sports Office, and Consulates of various countries.

The duties of the Phuket Provincial Court Tourist Affairs Department include: Advising and assisting tourists in filing complaints in consumer cases and scheduling hearings to ensure that cases go to arbitration within 24 hours and can proceed to the conclusion of the case.

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The department will also take evidence from tourists in advance, coordinate with representatives of the Ministry of Tourism and Sports and the Attorney General’s Office to expedite the appearance of defendants in court, serve subpoenas and copies of court proceedings on businesses, and notify them of court dates or orders by telephone, fax, email or other information technology means.

It will coordinate with interpreters and mediators who need to work outside regular office hours and provide assistance and advice to tourists who need to designate a representative of a government agency as their proxy to follow up on the case when they need to return home.

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