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Young Chinese Opt Out Of The Rat Race And Pressures At Home To Pursue Global Nomad Lifestyle

Chinese Wanxiong Huang, a free diving instructor, practices his skills in the sea around Bohol Island in the Philippines, April 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Shaoxu Wang)

YUCHENG TANG, BANGKOK — Shortly after China opened its borders with the end of “zero-COVID,” Zhang Chuannan lost her job as an accountant at a cosmetic firm in Shanghai and decided to explore the world.

“The cosmetics business was bleak,” said Zhang, 34, who explained everyone wore face masks during the pandemic. After being laid off, she paid $1,400 for an online Thai course, got an education visa and moved to the scenic northern Thai city of Chiang Mai.

Zhang is among a growing number of young Chinese moving overseas not necessarily because of ideological reasons but to escape the country’s ultra-competitive work culture, family pressures and limited opportunities after living in the country under the strict pandemic policies for three years. Southeast Asia has become a popular destination given its proximity, relatively inexpensive cost of living and tropical scenery.

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Chinese Chuannan Zhang, who is studying Thai in Chiang Mai, went hiking on the Chiang Dao mountain range in northern Thailand, June 2023.  (AP Photo/Syvia Wen )

There is no exact data on the number of young Chinese moving overseas since the country ended pandemic restrictions and reopened its borders. But on the popular Chinese social media platform Xiaohongshu, hundreds of people have discussed their decisions to relocate to Thailand. Many get a visa to study Thai while figuring out their next steps.

At Payap University in Chiang Mai, around 500 Chinese began an online Thai course early this year.

Royce Heng, owner of Duke Language School, a private language institute in Bangkok, said around 180 Chinese inquire each month about visa information and courses.

The hunt for opportunities far from home is partly motivated by China’s unemployment rate for people ages 16 to 24, which rose to a record high of 21.3% in June. The scarcity of good jobs increases pressure to work long hours.

Opting out is an increasingly popular way for younger workers to cope with a time of downward mobility, said Beverly Yuen Thompson, a sociology professor at Siena College in Albany, New York.

“In their 20s and early 30s, they can go to Thailand, take selfies and work on the beach for a few years and feel like they have a great quality of life,” Thomson said. “If those nomads had the same opportunities they hoped for in their home countries, they could just travel on vacation.”

During the pandemic in China, Zhang was cooped up in her Shanghai apartment for weeks at a time. Even when lockdowns were lifted, she feared another COVID-19 outbreak would prevent her from moving around within the country.

“I now value freedom more,” Zhang said.

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Chinese Chuannan Zhang, who is attending language courses in Chiang Mai, traveled to Hua Hin of Prachub Kirikhant province, southern Thailand, Wednesday March 1, 2023.   (AP Photo/Chuannan Zhang )

A generous severance package helped finance her time in Thailand and she is seeking ways to stay abroad long-term, perhaps by teaching Chinese language online.

Moving to Chiang Mai means waking up in the mornings to bird songs and a more relaxed pace of life. Unlike in China, she has time to practice yoga and meditation, shop for vintage clothes and attend dance classes.

Armonio Liang left the western Chinese city of Chengdu in landlocked Sichuan province for the Indonesian island of Bali, a popular digital nomad destination. His Web3 social media startup was limited by Chinese government restrictions while his use of cryptocurrency exchange apps drew police harassment.

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Chinese Armonio Liang sits on a beach as he works on his computer in Bali, Indonesia on Thursday, June 22, 2023.  AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)

Moving to Bali gave the 38-year-old greater freedom and a middle-class lifestyle with what might be barely enough money to live on back home.

“This is what I cannot get in China,” said Liang, referring to working on his laptop on the beach and brainstorming with expatriates from around the world. “Thousands of ideas just sprouted up in my mind. I had never been so creative before.”

He also has enjoyed being greeted with smiles.

“In Chengdu, everyone is so stressed. If I smiled at a stranger, they would think I am an idiot,” he said.

Life overseas is not all beach chats and friendly neighbors, though. For most young workers, such stays will be interludes in their lives, Thompson said.

“They can’t have kids, because kids have to go to school,” Thompson said. “They cannot fulfill their responsibilities to their parents. What if their aging parents need help? They eventually will get a full-time job back home and get called back home because of one of those things.”

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Chinese Armonio Liang works on his computer at his apartment in Bali, Indonesia on Thursday, June 22, 2023. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)

Zhang said she faces pressure to get married. Liang wants his parents to move to Bali with him.

“It’s a big problem,” Liang said. “They worry they will be lonely after moving out of China and worry about medical resources here.”

Huang Wanxiong, 32, was stranded on Bohol Island in the Philippines for seven months in 2020 when air travel halted during the pandemic, and he spent his time learning free diving, which involves diving to great depths without oxygen tanks.

He eventually flew home to the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, but lost his job at a private tutoring company after the government cracked down on the industry in 2021. His next gig was driving more than 16 hours a day for a ride-hailing business.

“I felt like a machine during those days,” Huang said. “I can accept a stable and unchanging life but I cannot accept not having any hope, not trying to improve the situation and surrendering to fate.”

Huang returned to the Philippines in February, escaping family pressures to get a better job and find a girlfriend in China. He renewed his Bohol Island friendships and qualified as a dive instructor.

But without Chinese tourists to teach and no income, he flew home again in June.

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Chinese Wanxiong Huang, a free diving instructor, practices his skills in the sea around Bohol Island in the Philippines, April 16, 2023.   (AP Photo/Shaoxu Wang)

He still hopes to make a living as a diver, possibly back in Southeast Asia, though he also may agree to his parents’ proposal to emigrate to Peru to work in a family-run supermarket.

Huang recalled he once surfaced too quickly from a 40-meter (131-foot) dive and his hands trembled from a dangerous lack of oxygen, known as hypoxia. The lesson he took was to avoid rushing and maintain a steady climb. Until his next move, he plans to use that free diver discipline to counter the anxieties of living in China.

“I will apply the calm I learned from the sea surrounding that island to my real life,” Huang said. “I will maintain my own pace.”

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Soldiers Declare Niger General As Head Of State After He Led A Coup And Detained The President

With the headquarters of the ruling party burning in the back, supporters of mutinous soldiers demonstrate in Niamey, Niger, Thursday, July 27 2023. (AP Photo/Fatahoulaye Hassane Midou)

NIAMEY, Niger (AP) — Mutinous soldiers who ousted Niger’s president declared Gen. Abdourahmane Tchiani, the coup leader, as head of state Friday, hours after the general defended the takeover and asked for support from the nation and international partners.

As concerns grew that the political crisis could set back Niger’s fight against jihadists and increase Russia’s influence in West Africa, spokesman Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane said on state television that the constitution was suspended and Tchiani was in charge. State TV identified Tchiani as the leader of the soldiers who said they staged the coup.

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Abdourahmane Tchiani makes a statement Friday, July 28, 2023, (ORTN via AP)

Various factions of Niger’s military have reportedly wrangled for control since members of the presidential guard detained President Mohamed Bazoum, who was elected two years ago in Niger’s first peaceful, democratic transfer of power since independence from France.

Niger is seen as the last reliable partner for the West in efforts to battle jihadists linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group in Africa’s Sahel region, where Russia and Western countries have vied for influence in the fight against extremism. France has 1,500 soldiers in the country who conduct joint operations with the Nigeriens, and the United States and other European countries have helped train the nation’s troops.

Extremists in Niger have carried out attacks on civilians and military personnel, but the overall security situation is not as dire as in neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso — both of which have ousted the French military. Mali has turned to the Russian private military group Wagner, and it’s believed that the mercenaries will soon be in Burkina Faso.

Now there are concerns Niger could follow suit. Even before the coup, Wagner, which has sent mercenaries around the world in support of Russia’s interests, already had its sights set on Niger, in part because it’s a large producer of uranium.

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In this image made from video, soldiers stand in the streets of Niamey, Niger, Friday, July 28, 2023 (AP Photo)

“We can no longer continue with the same approaches proposed so far, at the risk of witnessing the gradual and inevitable demise of our country,” Tchiani, who also goes by Omar Tchiani, said in his address. “That is why we decided to intervene and take responsibility.”

“I ask the technical and financial partners who are friends of Niger to understand the specific situation of our country in order to provide it with all the support necessary to enable it to meet the challenges,” he said.

If the the United States designates the takeover as a coup, Niger stands to lose millions of dollars of military aid and assistance.

The mutinous soldiers, who call themselves the National Council for the Safeguarding of the Country, later accused some prominent dignitaries of collaborating with foreign embassies to “extract” the deposed leaders. In a statement to state TV, they said it could lead to violence and warned against foreign military intervention.

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With the headquarters of the ruling party burning in the back, supporters of mutinous soldiers demonstrate in Niamey, Niger, Thursday, July 27 2023. (AP Photo/Fatahoulaye Hassane Midou)

Bazoum has not resigned and he defiantly tweeted from detention on Thursday that democracy would prevail.

It’s not clear who enjoys majority support, but the streets of the capital of Niamey were calm Friday, with a slight celebratory air. Some cars honked in solidarity at security forces as they drove by — but it was not clear if that meant they backed the coup. Elsewhere, people rested after traditional midday prayers and others sold goods at their shops and hoped for calm.

“We should pray to God to help people come together so that peace comes back to the country. We don’t want a lot of protests in the country, because it is not good … I hope this administration does a good job,” said Gerard Sassou, a Niamey shopkeeper.

A day earlier, several hundred people gathered in the city chanting support for Wagner while waving Russian flags. “We’re fed up,” said Omar Issaka, one of the protestors. “We are tired of being targeted by the men in the bush. … We’re going to collaborate with Russia now.”

That’s exactly what many in the West likely fear. Tchiani’s criticism of Bazoum’s approach and of how security partnerships have worked in the past will certainly make the U.S., France, and the EU uneasy, said Andrew Lebovich, a research fellow with the Clingendael Institute.

“So that could mark potentially some shifts moving forward in Niger security partnerships,” he said.

Even as Tchiani sought to project control, the situation appeared to be in flux. A delegation from neighboring Nigeria hoping to mediate left shortly after arriving, and the president of Benin, nominated as a mediator by West Africa’s regional bloc ECOWAS, had not arrived.

The bloc scheduled an emergency meeting for Sunday in Nigerian capital of Abuja.

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Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane, front center, makes a statement late Wednesday, July 26, 2023, in Niamey, Niger, as a delegation of military officers appeared on Niger State TV to read out a series of communiques announcing their coup d’etat. (ORTN via AP)

Earlier, an analyst who had spoken with participants in the talks said the presidential guard was negotiating with the army about who should be in charge. The analyst spoke on condition they not to be named because of the sensitive situation.

A western military official in Niger who was not authorized to speak to the media also said the military factions were believed to be negotiating, but that the situation remained tense and violence could erupt.

Speaking in Papua New Guinea, French President Emmanuel Macron condemned the coup as “completely illegitimate and profoundly dangerous for the Nigeriens, Niger and the whole region.”

The coup threatens to starkly reshape the international community’s engagement with the Sahel region.

On Thursday, U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris said the country’s “substantial cooperation with the Government of Niger is contingent on Niger’s continued commitment to democratic standards.”

The United States in early 2021 said it had provided Niger with more than $500 million in military assistance and training programs since 2012, one of the largest such support programs in sub-Saharan Africa. The European Union earlier this year launched a 27 million-euro ($30 million) military training mission in Niger.

The United States has more than 1,000 service personnel in the country.

Some military leaders who appear to be involved in the coup have worked closely with the United States for years. Gen. Moussa Salaou Barmou, the head of Niger’s special forces, has an especially strong relationship with the U.S., the Western military official said.

While Russia has also condemned the coup, it remains unclear what the junta’s position would be on Wagner.

The acting head of the United Nations in Niger said Friday that humanitarian aid deliveries were continuing, even though the military suspended flights carrying aid.

Nicole Kouassi, the acting U.N. resident and humanitarian coordinator, told reporters via video from Niamey that 4.3 million people needed humanitarian aid before this week’s military action and 3.3 million faced “acute food insecurity,” the majority of them women and children.

Jean-Noel Gentile, the U.N. World Food Program director in Niger, said “the humanitarian response continues on the ground.” He said the U.N. is providing cash assistance and food to people in accessible areas and that the agency is continuously assessing the situation to ensure security and access.

This is Niger’s fifth coup and marks the fall of one of the the last democratically elected governments in the Sahel.

Its army has always been very powerful and civilian-military relations fraught, though tensions had increased recently, especially with the growing jihadist insurgency, said Karim Manuel, an analyst for the Middle East and Africa with the Economist Intelligence Unit.

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SAM MEDNICK reported from NIAMEY, Niger. John Leicester in Paris; Chinedu Asadu in Abuja, Nigeria; and Edie Lederer at the United Nations in New York contributed to this report.

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A Rights Lawyer Who Was Fleeing China Has Been Arrested In Neighboring Laos

In this UGC image made from video by a source wishing to remain anonymous, one of the two activists, left, travelling with Chinese rights lawyer Lu Siwei, right, argues with police who were in the process of detaining Lu, near the Thanaleng dry port, 13 kilometers (8 miles), south of Vientiane Friday, July 28, 2023. (Anonymous Source via AP)

BEIJING (AP) — A Chinese rights lawyer stripped of his license for taking on sensitive cases has been arrested in the Southeast Asian country of Laos, with activists and family members worried he will be deported back to China where he could face prison time.

Lu Siwei was seized by Laotian police Friday morning while boarding a train for Thailand. He was on his way to Bangkok to catch a flight to the United States to join his wife and daughter.

“I’m extremely worried for his safety,” said his wife, Zhang Chunxiao, in a text message. “If he’s sent back to China, he’d definitely be imprisoned.”

Phone numbers listed for police in Lu’s hometown of Chengdu rang unanswered. The Chinese foreign ministry didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Lu had a history of taking on sensitive cases, and of navigating the fraught and murky waters of defending people who are deemed to be political targets by authorities.

Under Chinese leader Xi Jinping, China’s fledging legal rights movement has been heavily targeted. In 2015, hundreds of activists and rights lawyers were arrested in what later became known as the “709 crackdown” – named after July 9, the day it was launched.

Lu, an insurance attorney by trade, defended some of those arrested, including rights lawyer and Xi critic Yu Wensheng. Lu also defended people arrested for making liquor bottle labels commemorating the 1989 Tian’anmen Square pro-democracy protests.

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This UGC photo made available by a source wishing to remain anonymous shows Chinese rights lawyer Lu Siwei on a road, at an undisclosed location, around 300 kilometers (186 miles) north of Vientiane, Laos, Thursday, July 27, 2023,  (Anonymous Source via AP)

In 2021, Lu was stripped of his legal license after representing a Hong Kong pro-democracy activist who tried to flee to Taiwan. Later that year, Lu was barred from leaving China for a visiting fellowship in the United States and was told he had an exit ban placed on him.

For over a year, Lu has been separated from his wife and daughter, who both resettled in the United States last year.

Bob Fu, founder of Texas-based religious rights group ChinaAid, said he was contacted by Lu’s family two weeks ago to assist in his escape from China. Lu had valid visas for the US and Laos, Fu said, sending The AP pictures of Lu’s passport to verify his claims.

Lu was under surveillance, Fu and Lu’s wife Zhang said, but wasn’t being investigated or charged with a crime. His arrest on Laotian soil reflects how Beijing pursues critics abroad, Fu said, part of a broader clampdown that has instilled fear in Chinese dissents.

“This clearly shows the long arm of China beyond its borders to control and arrest those traveling overseas,” Fu said. “It’s very chilling.”

Numbers listed for the Laotian foreign ministry rang unanswered, while the Laotian embassy in Beijing didn’t immediately respond to emailed requests for comment.

Lu was being accompanied by two activists working with ChinaAid when he was arrested. Police also grabbed one of the activists and confiscated his passport briefly before returning it.

Fu said he had contacted the U.S. embassy in Laos to lobby the Laotian government for Lu’s release.

Dissidents on the run from the Chinese state have reported harassment elsewhere in Southeast Asia, including the family of one detained by Thai police after bomb threats were called in under their name.

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DAKE KANG reported from Beijing. Associated Press videojournalist Tian Macleod Ji contributed to this report from Bangkok, Thailand.

 

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Ashton Asoke’s Permit Is Revoked, Impacting 580 Families

The developer of the Ashton Asoke project, Sukhumvit 21 in Bangkok, Thailand, has had its building permit revoked by the Supreme Administrative Court. This decision has a significant impact not only on the joint venture between Thailand and the Japanese company Mitsui Fudosan, but also on the 142 foreign families living in the residential complex.

The project is a joint venture between Ananda Development and Mitsui Fudosan under the name Ananda MF Asia Asoke, with an ownership ratio of 51/49. The total value of the project is 6.481 billion baht, with 87 percent of the units, worth 5.653 billion baht, already occupied.

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Currently, 580 families are co-owners of the condominium, totaling 668 units, divided into 438 Thai families and 142 families from 20 different countries. Approximately 84 percent of these families have lived there for four years, while the remaining 13 percent face a total loss of over 200 million baht to Ananda Development.

The problem with the project, which has dragged on for seven years, stems from the use of land owned by the Mass Rapid Transit Authority (MRTA) of Thailand as the building’s entrance and exit. The court has ruled that MRTA land cannot be used by private companies for construction purposes, which has led to the denial of building permits and legal challenges.

The situation is further complicated by the fact that there are more than 13 similar projects in Bangkok, both residential and commercial, that have applied for rights of passage, with the MRTA having already received over 100 million baht in fees.

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Chanond Ruangkritya, the CEO of Ananda Development, explained that the case started with the Stop Global Warming Association suing the government organizations, but the company as well as the local residents are the only victims, as they had followed all legal procedures to obtain the construction permit.

He mentioned that the company would seek a meeting with the Bangkok Governor and MRTA within 14 days from July 27, 2023 to find a joint solution to the problem.

“The government, both the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and the MRTA, need to help us find a solution for us and our customers. We are currently in a difficult situation and do not know how to solve the problem,” Chanond said.

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Toyota To Be World’s Top Auto Seller In Jan.-june For 4th Yr In Row

TOKYO – Toyota Motor Corp. group is set to be the world’s top auto seller in the first half of 2023, outpacing Germany’s Volkswagen AG and other rivals in the Jan.-June period for the fourth straight year, industry data showed Friday.

Toyota said it sold 5.42 million vehicles globally in the six months ended June, including those sold by the group’s minivehicle maker Daihatsu Motor Co. and truck manufacturer Hino Motors Ltd., up 5.5 percent from a year earlier.

The Japanese carmaker said the solid sales came as it ramped up production capacity across the globe to keep up with rising demand amid an easing chip shortage.

Volkswagen sold 4.37 million vehicles in the same period, up 12.8 percent.

The Toyota group’s global output increased 10.3 percent to a record 5.63 million units. Its production outside Japan also hit an all-time high of 3.53 million vehicles, up 4.9 percent.

Domestic sales at the group rose 26.9 percent to 1.21 million vehicles in the period, thanks to an ongoing recovery from the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic and a parts shortage.

Oversea sales increased 0.6 percent to 4.21 million cars as growth in Europe was partly offset by weaker sales in China, the automaker said.

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Accused Of Bomb Threats They Say They Didn’t Make, Family Of Chinese Dissident Detained In Thailand

Gao Peng, son of Chinese dissident Gao Zhi, speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Bangkok, Thailand, on July 17, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

BANGKOK (AP) — When Gao Peng landed in Thailand on July 3, he was not expecting to be accused of making bomb threats, to be put on an EU travel blacklist, or to see his mother and 16-year-old sister detained and threatened with deportation back to China.

But bomb threats made in his and his mother’s names against airports, luxury hotels and the Chinese embassy in Bangkok derailed the family’s plan to seek asylum in the Netherlands, where Gao Peng’s father moved three years ago. The threats appear to be part of Beijing’s increasingly sophisticated efforts to harass Chinese dissidents living overseas and their families.

While parts of the story told by Gao Peng and his father, Gao Zhi, couldn’t be independently confirmed, their predicament echoes accounts by other Chinese dissidents abroad, who believe Chinese authorities are making bomb threats in their names to control their political activities.

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This photo shows a part of a detention center complex where family members of Chinese dissident Gao Zhi are believed to be held in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, July 21, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

William Nee, research and advocacy coordinator at a coalition of rights organizations known as Chinese Human Rights Defenders, said that the bomb threats appear to be a new tactic that manipulates other governments into acting against Chinese dissidents.

“Obviously, public authorities may take such a threat seriously,” he said. “It’s hard for them to have the context to understand that it is a preposterous allegation.”

Bomb threat allegations led the Netherlands to revoke visa approvals for Gao’s family, and put his wife and son on an EU travel blacklist that kept them in Thailand until their visas expired. Thai police have not confirmed whether they are investigating the bomb threats.

AN OFFER OF ASYLUM, AND A MYSTERIOUS BARGAIN

Gao Zhi was not a prominent dissident. Until early 2020, he was a migrant factory worker who’d learned to evade China’s censorship systems to use Twitter, now called the X platform, where he followed human rights activists and posted calls for the overthrow of the Communist Party.

Gao got asylum in the Netherlands and moved there in January 2020.

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In this photo released by Gao Zhi, the Chinese dissident poses for a photo in the Hilversum district near Amsterdam, Netherlands, on July 19, 2023. (Gao Zhi via AP)

Back home, police questioned Gao’s family twice, but the pressure felt manageable at first.

That changed when Gao attended a rally organized by his friend Wang Jingyu, a more prominent dissident, on the June 4 anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.

On June 15, police came to the home of Gao’s wife, Liu Fengling, and demanded her cellphone. When she refused, they forced her into a chair, scratching her wrist in the tussle, and took it.

When Liu told her husband what happened, he urged her to leave China.

Dutch officials told Gao his family could get emergency visas at the Dutch embassy in Bangkok, where Chinese citizens can get visas on arrival.

But before the family left China, someone claiming to work for the country’s Ministry of Public Security contacted Gao, according to undated screenshots he shared with the AP.

The person proposed a deal: if Gao promised to tone down his rhetoric and influenced Wang to give fewer interviews, the government would help reunite his family. Otherwise, Liu would be prevented from leaving China.

After speaking to Wang, Gao agreed.

The Associated Press was not able to verify the screenshots independently, and the ministry did not reply to a request for comment.

Liu and her daughter, Gao Han, traveled to Bangkok on June 27, followed on July 3 by the couple’s son.

Gao Peng said he didn’t know why they were going to Thailand. His parents had never told him why his father left China, although he was aware there was some trouble with the police.

DISSIDENTS AND FAMILIES FACE BOMB THREAT ACCUSATIONS OVERSEAS

The day after Gao Peng arrived in Thailand, someone called his mother and accused him of making bomb threats.

According to a recording made by Liu, the man identified himself as Wang Mingsen, a consular official at the Chinese embassy in Bangkok. “He said he wants to put a bomb at the embassy, because his father has been persecuted in China,” Wang said.

When reached by the AP, Wang said “This situation, we don’t have any information we can share with you.”

Gao Peng said that his family tried to report the bomb threats to police, but it took until July 9 to find an officer who spoke Chinese.

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Gao Peng, son of Chinese dissident Gao Zhi, speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Bangkok, Thailand, on July 17, 2023.  (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

He told them threats had been called in to hotels across the country, including Phuket’s Ritz Carlton and JW Marriott hotels, and rooms in many of the same hotels had been booked under Gao Peng and his mother’s names. The officer said it was probably a scam and they should just not pick up the phone.

A receptionist at the Marriott hotel in Phuket said they would ask their marketing team to provide comment. A resort under the Ritz-Carlton brand in Phuket said they hadn’t received any threats.

The accusations frightened Gao Peng, he said. “But I was also very indignant, because they’re accusing me and smearing me, I can’t accept that.”

Wang Jingyu, the Netherlands-based activist, and at least three other people linked to him have also described bomb threats made in their names. Wang said he was questioned by Dutch police, who eventually concluded that the threats were sent from IP addresses in Hong Kong and China, and gave him a document clearing his name.

A Chinese journalist living in Germany and a Dutch journalist who interviewed Wang also had bomb threats called into hotels where bookings were made in their names.

Bob Fu, a U.S.-based activist who helped Wang when he was detained in Dubai, said that he now has to alert both local and federal law enforcement every time he travels because of bomb threats.

PLAN DERAILED AS FAMILY FACES DEPORTATION

Bomb threats also stopped Gao Zhi from buying airline tickets for his wife and son. When he tried, airline websites refused, saying they were on an EU “safety blacklist.”

The Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service told him that bomb threats had been sent to European airports in their names, and helped remove them from the blacklist, but the back and forth took days.

Amid the delay, Liu and her daughter’s visas expired on July 11. The next day, Thai police came to the family’s hotel and took the two women into custody.

Around the same time, the Dutch government informed Gao that it had revoked his family’s visas, writing in an e-mail seen by the AP that Thai police had informed Dutch immigration authorities that they were investigating the family for bomb threats, and that the family had confessed and volunteered to go back to China.

The Dutch immigration service declined to comment, saying they do not discuss individual cases. The Royal Thai Police did not respond to a request for comment.

Liu was charged with overstaying a visa, according to the lawyer, Waritsara. Her daughter has not been charged.

Thailand has a record of deporting dissidents and refugees back to China, sometimes at the request of the Chinese government.

“It’s well understood that there is Chinese pressure in Thailand … so there’s quite a bit of pressure on Chinese activists and asylum seekers in Thailand,” said Nee.

Thai police told Waritsara that the Chinese embassy had expressed a special interest in the case.

Gao Zhi’s Telegram contact promised to help, and told him to send his son to Huai Khwang police station in Bangkok, where he would receive a report ending the investigation. The police did not issue the report, Gao Peng said, but did return the family’s cell phones.

Thai immigration officials also refused to extend Gao Peng’s visa, mentioning a police warrant according to a recording he made, but he has not been detained.

What’s next for the family is uncertain.

The Dutch government told Gao Zhi that if his son can get UNHCR refugee status and the family reaches the Netherlands, they can get visas.

Gao Zhi is spending his days writing to the Dutch and Thai governments to plead for his family.

“I thought I was saving them,” he said. “I didn’t think I was sending them into a Thai jail.”

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HUIZHONG WU reported from Taipei, Taiwan. TIAN MACLEOD JI and JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI reported from Bangkok, Thailand.

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Thai Parliament Says It Will Try To Pick A Prime Minister Next Week After 2 Unsuccessful Attempts

Supporters of the Move Forward Party hold a portrait of Pita Limjaroenrat, the leader of Move Forward Party on his head during protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, July 27, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI  — Thailand’s Parliament will try to pick a new prime minister next week following two unsuccessful attempts, it said Thursday, as political uncertainty grows more than two months after the country’s election.

Parliament said the vote will take place Aug. 4. The decision came despite the House speaker saying two days ago that the vote would be delayed pending clarity from the Constitutional Court on the constitutionality of Parliament’s vote last week to block Pita Limjaroenrat, whose progressive Move Forward Party captured the most seats in the election, to be nominated for prime minister a second time.

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Pita Limjaroenrat, the leader of Move Forward Party and top winner in the May’s general election attends a meeting at Parliament in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, July 19, 2023.   (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

The government ombudsman petitioned the court to rule on the issue after receiving complaints from private citizens and lawmakers from Pita’s party that Parliament’s vote was unconstitutional. Pita lost a first vote in Parliament on July 13.

Thai media say the court will meet next Thursday, a day before the new scheduled vote, to determine whether to accept the case. If accepted, it could order the vote to be postponed until it issues a ruling.

Adding to the political uncertainty, the daughter of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, one of the most divisive figures in Thai politics, announced Wednesday that he plans to return on Aug. 10 after living in self-imposed exile to escape a prison term in criminal cases he has decried as politically motivated.

Thaksin was elected prime minister in 2001 and easily reelected in 2005, but was ousted by a military coup in 2006 after being accused of corruption, abuse of power and disrespecting the country’s monarchy.

The Pheu Thai party, the latest in a string of parties closely affiliated with Thaksin, is seeking to gather enough support in Parliament to have one of its leaders become prime minister. Thaksin’s daughter, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, is one of the party’s three candidates.

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Paetongtarn Shinawatra, youngest daughter of exiled former deposed Thai leader Thaksin Shinawatra, and real estate mogul Srettha Thavisin, during general election final campaign rallies in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, May 12, 2023. (AP Photo/Wason Wanichakorn)

Forming a new government after the May election has proven an unexpectedly hard task. Move Forward, the surprise election winner, pulled together an eight-party coalition with 312 seats in the 500-member lower house. However, under the military-enacted constitution, confirming a new prime minister requires a majority vote by both the elected House and the 250-member Senate, which was appointed by a previous military government. Pita’s initial bid fell short by more than 50 votes, largely because only 13 senators backed him.

The Senate sees itself as the guardian of conservative royalist values. Many senators said they would not vote for Pita because of his party’s call for the reform of a law that makes it illegal to defame the royal family. Critics say the law, which carries a penalty of up to 15 years in prison, has been widely abused as a political weapon.

Parliament on Aug. 4 is also scheduled to debate a motion filed by Move Forward seeking to amend the constitution to eliminate the Senate’s ability to veto a prime ministerial candidate.

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Supporters of the Move Forward Party walk in a circle during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Sunday, July 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Public frustration has grown over Parliament’s failure to name a new leader. Supporters of the Move Forward Party have staged several protests calling for senators to stop blocking a candidate from the eight-party coalition.

Dozens of protesters gathered in central Bangkok on Thursday to express their anger at the Senate and over growing rumors that Pheu Thai plans to join hands with parties that supported the outgoing government of Prayuth Chan-ocha, who as army commander seized power in a 2014 coup and was returned as prime minister after a 2019 election.

Move Forward, the most progressive member of the coalition, stepped aside as the coalition’s leader after its two failed attempts at selecting a prime minister and let Pheu Thai, the second biggest member, take over. Pheu Thai’s other possible nominees include real estate tycoon Srettha Thavisin and Chaikasem Nitsiri, the party’s chief strategist.

Chaikasem Nitisiri, left, and Pheu Thai PM candidates Paetongtarn Shinawatra and Srettha Thavisin at a rally on Apr. 5, 2023.
Chaikasem Nitisiri, left, and Pheu Thai PM candidates Paetongtarn Shinawatra and Srettha Thavisin at a rally on Apr. 5, 2023.

Although Pheu Thai said last week that for now the coalition will stick with its original members and try to win more support before the next vote, it did not rule out the possibility that Move Forward could be excluded to attract more conservative lawmakers. It met with several parties that supported Prayuth as prime minister in 2019.

Move Forward supporters feel that Pheu Thai is putting the pursuit of power ahead of principle. The rumor of that Pheu Thai is switching sides was fueled further by the announcement of Thaksin’s return. The royalist establishment, backed by the military, holds a sharp animosity toward Thaksin, making many believe that Pheu Thai has compromised with them to facilitate the populist billionaire’s return.

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Thai Actress Tye Chutima Shares Her Social Media Struggles as Pita’s Ex-Wife

Thai actress Chutima Teepanat, also known as Tye Chutima, the former wife of Pita Limjaroenrat, gave an interview during an event on July 25 at Siam Paragon in which she addressed the constant scrutiny and criticism she faces on social media, regardless of the content she posts.

She revealed that everything she shares is always associated with Pita, a popular political figure, which generates constant attention and analysis in social media.

Move Forward Party leader and PM candidate Pita Limjaroenrat in Phuket province on June 9, 2023.
Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat is a popular political figure.

“Friends always advise me not to post if I cannot handle the criticism. But I wonder why I should not be able to post normal things, like taking care of my child and following regular activities. If someone has good intentions, there should be no problems. But people with prejudices or negative thoughts will always interpret things the way they want,” said Chutima.

She added that she is not a person with complicated plans, but rather straightforward and authentic. She posts everything that comes to her mind, with good intentions and without hidden meanings. Still, she can not control how others perceive her. When Pita recently went to Pattaya with their daughter, she did not accompany them, but was still criticized.

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Pita accompanied his daughter to Pattaya, and Tye Chutima went there as well, although at a separate time, but netizens concluded that they had been there together.

In addition, Chutima was criticized for appearing on a talk show on the topic that she is a former wife of Pita. She explained that it was normal for an actress to appear on a talk show. When she was in a relationship, she retired from the industry to focus on her family, but now she is working again, so it is normal for her to be invited to a talk show.

She clarified that when she talks about her past love life, she does not necessarily refer to Pita every time, because she also had other past relationships with their own stories and effects that she can tell about.

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instagram : tim_pita

She added that people like to talk sarcastically, telling her to go back to the end of the waiting list to be with Pita. She said that she will not be on the waiting list because she is at the front of the line doing her duty as a parent.

“It is not easy to be at the top. It brings responsibilities, like taking care of my child’s education and all the other expenses. We have to support each other,” said the actress.

Chutima and Pita Limjaroenrat got married on May 5, 2012 and have a daughter named “Pipim” who was born on March 18, 2016. They announced their separation in 2019.

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Tye Chutima and her beloved daughter Pipim

During that time, Chutima filed a lawsuit against Pita, accusing him of abuse. However, the case was later dismissed by the Central Juvenile and Family Court after the allegations were proven false.

In the past, Chutima has shown her support for the Move Forward Party through her posts on social media, eliciting both approving and disapproving reactions. Critics accused her of exploiting Pita’s popularity to gain attention in the entertainment industry. As Pita’s popularity grew, Chutima also faced reactions from Pita’s fans.

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Related article:

Tye Chutima Insists On Cheering Her Ex-Husband, Pita

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21 Dead And 40 Rescued After A Wind-tossed Boat Overturns In The Philippines

A man stands on a capsized passenger boat as they undergo rescue operations at Binangonan, Rizal province, east of Manila, Philippines on Thursday July 27, 2023. (Philippine Coast Guard via AP)

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — At least 21 people died and 40 others were rescued after a Philippine passenger boat overturned on Thursday when it was lashed by strong winds in Laguna Lake southeast of Manila, police said.

Police said rescue operations were continuing, but did not immediately provide figures for the total number of people on board the MBCA Princess Aya that capsized in Rizal province.

The incident happened as the passengers onboard suddenly moved to one side of the boat in panic when it came under fierce winds shortly after departing from a wharf for a nearby island. The boat overturned only about 46 meters (150 feet) from the shore, near the village of Kalinawan and the town of Binangonan, the coast guard said.

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In this handout photo provided by the Philippine Coast Guard, rescuers use a rubberboat to evacuate quarry workers trapped in Naguilian, La Union province, northern Philippines on Wednesday, July 26, 2023.   (Philippine Coast Guard via AP)

The Rizal provincial police said they immediately launched a search and rescue operation with the help of the coast guard and other local authorities, and that at least 40 people were saved but that 21 others drowned.

“The operation is still ongoing,” police said. They did not provide other details like how many passengers and crewmembers were on board.

A video released by the coast guard showed rescuers on a local government boat pulling a body out of the lake. Another video showed local fishermen aboard vessels approaching the overturned boat.

Typhoon Doksuri moved away Thursday after battering the northern Philippines and whipping up seasonal monsoon rains in a large swath of the archipelago.

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Workers transfer construction materials to higher grounds along a swollen river due to enhanced rains brought about by Typhoon Doksuri on Thursday, July 27, 2023, in Marikina city, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

The sinking on Thursday brought the death toll from a week of stormy weather across the main island of Luzon to at least 30. At least nine people were reported killed earlier, mostly due to landslides, flooding and toppled trees and thousands were displaced, disaster response officials said.

Sea travel was suspended in many ports during Doksuri’s onslaught from Tuesday to Wednesday, stranding thousands of passengers and cargo trucks. The no-sail orders were gradually lifted on Thursday as weather improved in many areas.

Coast guard spokesman Armand Balilo said the passenger boat had been cleared to sail from the town of Binangonan to the nearby Talim Island because the typhoon had blown out of the country.

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In this image from video provided by the Philippine Coast Guard, rescuers pull up a body from waters during a rescue operation at Binangonan, Rizal province, east of Manila, Philippines on Thursday July 27, 2023. (Philippine Coast Guard via AP)

At least four northern provinces remained under cyclone wind alert, banning fishing boats and smaller vessels from venturing out to sea. Rains, however, continued to swamp several towns and cities farther south, including in the densely populated capital region, metropolitan Manila, which lies to the west of Rizal province.

Sea accidents are common in the Philippine archipelago because of frequent storms, badly maintained boats, overcrowding and weak enforcement of safety regulations. In December 1987, the ferry Dona Paz sank after colliding with a fuel tanker, killing more than 4,300 people in the world’s worst peacetime maritime disaster.

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Police Crack Down on Internet Gambling Influencers

The Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau is making progress in prosecuting Internet influencers who entice people to gamble online. The most recent case involved a young country singer and her boyfriend, who are among a list of 30 people who all clearly violated gambling.

On July 27, Miss Pannarai Khamme, also known as “Modoil,” who has 1.1 million Twitter followers, was summoned by police for questioning. She was accused of enticing people to gamble online constantly through her public posts on social media.

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Pannarai Khamme, also known as “Modoil,” and her boyfriend was summoned by police for questioning on July 27, 2023.

Pannarai confessed to posting content that encouraged gambling after she was hired by an online gambling network through Line Messenger. She was paid 700 baht per post, earning around 20,000 baht per month since February this year. The payment was made in cash at various locations without any transactions through bank accounts.

She has apologized to her fan club for the incident. In addition to her Facebook page, there were also Twitter and Instagram accounts under her name where explicit content was posted and people were invited to join gambling groups. She reported this to the cybercrime police.

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Modoil has apologized to her fan club.

Pol. Maj. Gen. Amnat Traipoj, deputy commander of cybercrime police, said that police have taken action against 7 influencers, including Pon-Nipon, the creator of the song “Time Machine,” and his girlfriend, Oil Royjub, Cherry Samkhok, and Nack Nack, who were sentenced to two months in prison.

This punishment is considered appropriate, especially for artists, as imprisonment restricts their ability to perform or leave the restricted area. Police warned other influencers to stop accepting advertisements from online gambling websites.

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Related news:

Digital Gambling Craze: Over 3 Million Thai Young Players Hooked!

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