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Lingering War Ghosts Continue To Haunt Vietnamese Due to U.S. Cluster Bombs

(VNA/Handout via Xinhua)

HANOI – On their way home from school in Vietnam’s northern Son La province, two boys unknowingly picked up a strange metal object which turned out to be an unexploded cluster bomblet left over from the Vietnam War.

Initially mistaking it for a toy, Vi Hoang Khai and his brother Vi Hoang Khiem carried the object home. When they accidentally dropped it, the bomblet exploded, causing severe injuries to both children.

“Doctors said too many fragments and steel pellets landed on or through our kids’ bodies, causing serious injuries to their livers, stomachs, intestines and legs. Thanks to the doctors’ great efforts hour by hour, day by day, our kids eventually escaped death,” the victims’ father Vi Van Quyen, an electricity worker, recalled.

Quyen’s family has suffered a lot since the accident occurred in August 2022. But they consider themselves fortunate compared to many others who have lost their lives or suffered life-altering injuries due to unexploded ordnance (UXO) from the Vietnam War.

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Cluster bombs used by the U.S. forces during Vietnam War are displayed in the Engineers Museum in the capital Hanoi, Vietnam, on July 14, 2023. (Photo by Pham Dinh Duc/Xinhua)

Do Thi Thu, a civil servant in the police sector in the central highlands province of Kon Tum, shared a heart-wrenching story about two boys from her neighbor’s family.

“Long time ago, two siblings from my neighbor’s family went to herd ducks in the paddy field, picked up some cluster bomblets and played with them as toys. A bomblet exploded, killing the elder brother and injuring the younger brother,” Thu said.

“Losing an eye and an arm in the explosion, he has since endured many physical and mental pains and lives with a constant fear of similar incidents.”

When working in his cassava field, A Nhi, a 24-year-old farmer in Kon Tum’s Dak Ha district, found unexploded ammunition and brought it to the house of his father-in-law.
He hit the ammunition with a machete to check the content inside, but it suddenly exploded, killing him instantly. Later, his injured four-year-old son and his wife’s younger brother died in hospital.

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The unexploded shells and grenades are detonated in a shooting range in Tinh Bien district, An Giang province, Vietnam, on Dec. 14, 2022. (VNA/Handout via Xinhua)

“The most painful thing is that children make up the majority of UXO victims. With their hyperactive nature and lack of understanding, they often play with, move and throw UXO, especially cluster bomblets, leading to explosions,” Thu told Xinhua.

These devastating incidents are not limited to children alone. Among the victims are individuals involved in collecting scrap metal, including breadwinners who rely on this perilous occupation for their livelihood.

On March 22, 2022, a 41-year-old scrap collector in Quang Xuong district of the central Thanh Hoa province was killed when the UXO he was sawing exploded.

On Aug. 18, 2017, a UXO exploded when people in Khanh Son district of the central Khanh Hoa province mistook it for metal and exploded. The blast killed six people, including four children, on the spot.

On March 19, 2016, scrap dealers in Ha Dong district in the capital city of Hanoi attempting to extract metal from a 100+ kg unexploded bomb triggered a fatal explosion, killing four people, injuring 10 others, and damaging 131 apartments.

Tragedies associated with UXO have occurred in various cities and provinces across Vietnam for many years.

The Vietnam War ended in 1975 after a nearly two-decade conflict, but according to a recent survey by the Technology Center for Bomb and Mine Disposal under the Vietnamese Army’s Engineering Command, over 2,000 people die or get maimed from UXO explosions nationwide every year.

The survey categorizes the cause of these explosions, with 38 percent resulting from children playing with UXO, 30 percent from scrap collectors sawing them for salvage, and 18 percent from accidental ignition by individuals, such as farmers hoeing in their paddy fields.

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The unexploded shells and grenades are seen before their detonation in a shooting range in Tinh Bien district, An Giang province, Vietnam, on Dec. 14, 2022. (VNA/Handout via Xinhua)

Most victims of UXO accidents are people of working age and children alike. Even those who survive face long-term disabilities, becoming burdens to their families and society as a whole.

According to a UXO survey, before the 2010-2020 national UXO clearance program, UXO pollution covered 6.1 million hectares of land in Vietnam, accounting for 18.8 percent of the Southeast Asian country’s total land area.

In the 2010-2020 period, Vietnam cleared 485,000 hectares of land contaminated with UXO with a total cost of 12.614 trillion Vietnamese dong (534.5 million U.S. dollars), according to data released at a conference on the action plan in February 2022.

As a result, the area contaminated with UXO decreased to 5.6 million hectares, or 17.7 percent of Vietnam’s land area.

“UXO left by the war in Vietnam is a daily threat to the people, a burning problem of the country, causing many difficulties in production and life and hindering development,” Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said at the review conference.

According to incomplete statistics, from 1975, when the Vietnam War ended, to early 2022, some 40,000 people were killed and 60,000 others injured due to UXO explosions.

On average, each year witnesses over 1,000 fatalities and 1,300 individuals suffering permanent injuries as a result of such incidents.

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Cluster bombs used by the U.S. forces during Vietnam War are displayed in the Engineers Museum in the capital Hanoi, Vietnam, on July 14, 2023. (Photo by Pham Dinh Duc/Xinhua)

According to an international monitor, the U.S. military dropped 413,130 tons of cluster munitions over Vietnam between 1965 and 1973. Concurrent with the Vietnam War, U.S. warplanes dropped some 260 million cluster bombs on neighboring Laos, making Laos “the most heavily bombed nation in history.”

“I still remember that the United States bombed Hanoi terribly in 1967 and 1972. We had to wear hats made from dried paddy straw and placed thick layers of straw on bomb shelters to avoid being killed or injured by cluster bombs,” Nguyen Thi Vuong, a 70-year-old resident of Thanh Tri district in Hanoi, told Xinhua.

But not all of her villagers were lucky. Over 30 people died and dozens of others were injured after the U.S. bombers dropped blockbusters and cluster bombs in the two years, she recalled.

With tears in her eyes, the old lady expressed her heartfelt wish for a world free from bombing, not only in Vietnam but in all countries affected by such devastation.

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Leicester City Invites All Football Fans To Join ‘FIND FILBERT’

FIND FILBERT is a special activity to seek out and scan QR codes throughout the locations in Bangkok to win a round-trip for two people to watch an LCFC match in UK

Bangkok – Leicester City Football Club (LCFC) will host its biggest ever international fan event in summer 2023, as LCFC Live comes to Bangkok, Thailand, during July 21–26. City will take on Tottenham Hotspur at Bangkok’s Rajamangala Stadium on Sunday, July 23, at 5 p.m.

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Leicester City happily invites all football fans to join a fun activity “FIND FILBERT” – the Club’s mascot, Filbert Fox by seeking out and scanning QR codes at different locations in Bangkok to win unique prizes held during 17-25 July 2023.

To participate in this campaign, easily register at lcfc.com/findfilbert or at findfilbert.th to create an account and start scanning.

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Each user would trigger a set amount of tokens that will be used to enter lucky draws to win unique prizes and limited-edition gifts such as LCFC Pin Badges, LCFC Live Tour T-Shirts, LCFC Pennants, LCFC Live Baseball Caps, LCFC Gift Pack, LCFC Signed Home/Away Shirts, Tottenham Hotspur vs LCFC Tickets, £100 LCFC E-Vouchers (free postage and packaging), and a round-trip for two people to watch an LCFC match in Leicester City, United Kingdom.

The 30 QR codes can be found around Siam Square, Silom, Sathorn, Rangnam and maybe on Filbert!

For further information and details about the campaign, visit www.LCFC.com

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Thailand’s Economy Awaits New Government to Tackle Wealth Gap

Although it is still unclear what Thailand’s new government will look like, two months have passed since the May 14 election, and economic tasks await solutions, especially for income inequality.

Kobsak Pootrakool, chairman of the Federation of Thai Capital Market Organizations (FETCO), analyzed the economic situation in Thailand and made recommendations to the new government.

He explained that income inequality has been a major problem in the country for the past 25 years. Income inequality between the top 20 percent of income earners and the bottom 20 percent has grown 10-fold.

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Kobsak Pootrakool, chairman of the Federation of Thai Capital Market Organizations (FETCO)

Kobsak’s information coincides with a World Bank report titled “Rural Thailand Faces the Largest Poverty Challenges with High Income Inequality” released on October 21, 2022. According to the report, Thailand has the highest income inequality in East Asia, and rural households are particularly affected by poverty challenges.

Another reflection came from Forbes, an American leading business magazine website, which published on July 5 a ranking of 50 of Thailand’s wealthiest businesspeople in 2023. This year, the Chearavanont brothers are on top of the tycoons with a net worth of $34 billion, while the combined wealth of all the richest rose by almost 15% to $173 billion.

Forbes stated that ballooning household debt, which reached 87% of GDP in the fourth quarter of 2022, remains a worry. Thailand also has one of the highest household debt to GDP ratios in Asia (third after South Korea and Hong Kong), according to Bank for International Settlements data.

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Kobsak provided data that based on historical records from 10 years ago, more than 80 percent of the land in Thailand belonged to wealthy individuals, while only about 0.25 percent was in the hands of the poor, a staggering difference of about 300 times.

The proportion of deposit accounts with balances of 10 million baht or more is nearly 200,000 accounts out of a total of 110 million accounts in the banking system. However, this group of individuals holds an amount equivalent to half of Thailand’s total bank deposits. Together with the group of individuals with deposits of 1 million baht or more, the total number of accounts reaches 1 million, representing over 70 percent of total bank deposits.

A worker at Bangkok's Khlong Toei Market. Photo: Mark Fisher
A worker at Bangkok’s Khlong Toei Market. Photo: Mark Fisher

There is also the problem of the Thai capital market, which can be called the “graveyard of small investors” because attempts to bring a large number of small investors to the market sometimes do not provide sufficient protection. As a result, many inexperienced investors suffer losses, and their investment accounts end up completely empty.

“The downside of the speculative capital system is the emergence of a ‘big fish eats little fish’ trading mentality, which leads to various consequential problems. So if we do not change something from today, it will be difficult for us to coexist in the next 20 years. So we need to focus on sustainable development,” said Kobsak.

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A senior citizen resides in an old house in the province of Mae Hong Son. / Khaosod Photo

The current problems are as follows: 1. The problem of external debt. 2. The problem of an overly dominant central system that exerts excessive control over various sectors. 3. The lack of knowledge and innovation.

The solutions are as follows: 1. Promote strong and capable leaders. 2. Empower community groups to have more bargaining power. 3. Encourage private sector participation in community support in return for tax breaks. 4. The government needs to reduce restrictions in various regulations.

The new government must drive the strengthening of the country from the grassroots to the top, because focusing on the top alone will no longer drive the economy as much. Therefore, we need to understand and support communities and help SMEs (small and medium enterprises) to grow together. This can be achieved through various collaborative projects involving the private sector, financial institutions and the capital market.

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Alcaraz Beats Djokovic In Five Sets To Win Wimbledon

Spain's Carlos Alcaraz, right, celebrates with his trophy after beating Serbia's Novak Djokovic, left, in the men's singles final on day fourteen of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — Carlos Alcaraz said he wanted another shot at Novak Djokovic. Said it would make winning a Wimbledon championship more special. Well, Alcaraz got his chance to face Djokovic. And he beat him.

Alcaraz put aside a poor start and surged down the stretch to end Djokovic’s 34-match winning streak at the All England Club by edging him 1-6, 7-6 (6), 6-1, 3-6, 6-4 in an engaging, back-and-forth final on Sunday, claiming his first championship at Wimbledon second Grand Slam trophy overall.

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Serbia’s Novak Djokovic, right, plays a passing shot to Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz in the final of the men’s singles on day fourteen of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

The No. 1-ranked Alcaraz prevented Djokovic from what would have been a record-tying eighth title, and fifth in a row, at the grass-court tournament. Djokovic also was kept from claiming his 24th career major.

Instead of Djokovic, a 36-year-old from Serbia, becoming the oldest male champion at Wimbledon in the Open era, Alcaraz, a 20-year-old from Spain, became the third-youngest. The age gap between the two was the widest in any men’s Slam final since 1974.

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Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz, front, embraces Serbia’s Novak Djokovic after beating him in the men’s singles final on day fourteen of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

So Alcaraz had youth on his side, which he also did, of course, when they met at the French Open last month. That one was extraordinary for two sets before Alcaraz cramped up and faded. This time, he had the stamina and the strokes to get past Djokovic.

Alcaraz is faster and capable of more power — serves topping 130 mph, forehands topping 100 mph — but Djokovic is equipped with an abundance of talents and so much muscle memory. He’s been there, and done that, in ways Alcaraz, for now, can only dream of.

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Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz celebrates with his trophy after beating Serbia’s Novak Djokovic in the men’s singles final on day fourteen of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

But if this victory on a windy and cloudy day at Centre Court, where Djokovic last lost in the 2013 final, was any indication, Alcaraz is on his way to achieving quite a bit himself.

Still, this is all relatively new to him: Djokovic’s record 35th Grand Slam final was Alcaraz’s second.

Yet it was Alcaraz who won a 32-point, 25-minute mini-masterpiece of a game on the way to taking the third set. And it was Alcaraz who moved out front for good by breaking to go up 2-1 in the fifth with a backhand passing winner. Djokovic, who fell during the point but quickly popped back up, reacted by slamming his racket into the net post, letting go on impact. He destroyed his equipment and earned a code violation from chair umpire Fergus Murphy.

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Serbia’s Novak Djokovic speaks after losing to Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz in the men’s singles final on day fourteen of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

They would play on for another 24 minutes, bringing the total to more than 4 1/2 hours, but Alcaraz never relented, never gave way. And it was Alcaraz, not Djokovic, receiving the trophy in the evening.

Djokovic, of course, already has achieved greatness, spending more weeks at No. 1 than any man or woman in the half-century history of the computerized rankings and accumulating those 23 Grand Slam triumphs — one more than Rafael Nadal and three more than Roger Federer, the only man with eight Wimbledon titles.

So often on Sunday, Djokovic would hustle and stretch and slide nearly into the splits to get Alcaraz’s apparent point-ending shots back over the net in ways no one else could.

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9 Bodies Pulled From A Flooded Road Tunnel In South Korea

Rescuers search for survivors along a road submerged by floodwaters leading to an underground tunnel in Cheongju, South Korea, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (South Korea National Fire Agency via AP)

9 Bodies Pulled From A Flooded Road Tunnel In South Korea As Rains Cause Flash Floods And Landslides

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean rescuers on Sunday pulled nine bodies from a flooded tunnel where around 15 vehicles were trapped in muddy water, as days of heavy rain triggered flash floods and landslides and destroyed homes across the country, officials said.

A total of 37 people have died and thousands have been evacuated since July 9, when heavy rain started pounding South Korea’s central regions.

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Rescuers search for survivors along a road submerged by floodwaters leading to an underground tunnel in Cheongju, South Korea, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (Kim Ju-hyung/Yonhap via AP)

Nearly 900 rescuers including divers were searching the tunnel in the central city of Cheongju, where the vehicles, including a bus, were swamped by a flash flood Saturday evening, Seo Jeong-il, chief of the city’s fire department, said in a briefing.

Fire officials estimated that the tunnel filled with water in as little as two or three minutes.

Photos and video from the scene showed rescue workers establishing a perimeter and pumping brown water out of the tunnel as divers used rubber boats to move in and out of the area.

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Rescue team work to search for survivors along a road submerged by floodwaters leading to an underground tunnel in Cheongju, South Korea, Sunday, July 16, 2023.  (Cheon Kyung-hwan/Yonhap via AP)

Yang Chan-mo, an official from the North Chungcheong provincial fire department, said it could take several hours to pump out all the water from the tunnel, which was still filled with 4 to 5 meters (13 to 16.4 feet) of water dense with mud and other debris. Workers were proceeding slowly to prevent any victims or survivors from being swept out, Yang said.

Nine survivors were rescued from the tunnel and around 10 others were believed to be missing based on reports by families or others, but the exact number of passengers trapped in vehicles wasn’t immediately clear, Seo said.

More than 60 centimeters (23.6 inches) of rain was measured in the South Chungcheong provincial towns of Gongju and Cheongyang since July 9. Cheongju, where the tunnel is located, received more than 54 centimeters (21.2 inches) during the same period.

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Rescuers search for survivors along a road submerged by floodwaters leading to an underground tunnel in Cheongju, South Korea, Sunday, July 16, 2023.  (South Korea National Fire Agency via AP)

The Korea Meteorological Administration said the central and southern parts of the country could still get as much as 30 centimeters (12 inches) of additional rain through Tuesday.

More than 8,850 people have been evacuated and 27,260 households had been without electricity in the past several days. The rain damaged or destroyed nearly 50 roads and more than a 100 homes, the Ministry of the Interior and Safety said. At least 35 people were treated for injuries.

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Houses collapsed from a landslide caused by heavy rain are seen in Yecheon, South Korea, Sunday, July 16, 2023. (Yun Kwan-shick/Yonhap via AP)

President Yoon Suk Yeol, who is on a trip to Europe, discussed the rain-related casualties and damages during an emergency meeting while traveling to Poland on a train after visiting Ukraine on Saturday, according to his office. Yoon called for officials to mobilize all available resources to respond to the disaster.

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RML Moves Into New Home At OCC Thailand’s Tallest Office Building

RML (Raimon Land Public Company Limited) has recently moved head office to OCC (One City Centre)’, the tallest grade A+ luxury office building in Thailand adjacent to BTS Ploenchit Station.

The relocation reinforces the company’s leadership in luxury and ultra-luxury real estate development and bolsters its future business growth.

The new office boasts functionality that encompasses working and lifestyle spaces in one place, accommodating diverse working styles of all generations of employees while creating a happy workplace and well-being at work as well as driving business with a strong corporate culture.

Korn Narongdej, Chief Executive Officer of RML, said that “At RML, we value every employee as our most valuable asset. We believe that take a good care of our employees results in good works, which, in turn, enables us to deliver high quality projects and excellent services to our customers as well.

Korn Narongdej Chief Executive Officer of RML
Korn Narongdej, Chief Executive Officer of RM

Currently, RML has approximately 200 employees, most of whom are Gen Y, which accounts for about 70% and Gen X about 20%. The age range of our employees is different from that of property developers in other segments since the luxury real estate business needs people with sheer expertise and strong experience.

We also have a new generation of employees at operational level, which is vital because younger employees are essential workforce that sustains the company to adapt to changes in the digital age, especially in the luxury real estate segment that is currently experiencing workforce shortage.

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Since the end of June 2023, all RML employees have moved to OCC. The relocation marks another important step for RML as we are readying ourselves to become no. 1 leader in luxury and ultra-luxury real estate development. Designed with the concept of ‘Luxury Reimagined’ to reflect the DNA of RML, our new office accentuates luxury, simple yet modern design, with functionality that meets the requirements of flexible work environment and diverse workforce in the organization.

We also implement advanced systems and technologies, including a mobile application for building entry and exit, and in-building touchless systems for lift access and face recognition for office entry and exit, to bring ease and convenience to our employees’ daily life.”

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OCC is designed with employee wellbeing in mind. A green space of over 5,000 square metres inside and outside the building brings refreshing ambience to the workplace.

“Employees in a post-pandemic world prioritize flexible working arrangement and happy environment in the workplace no less other essential factors. RML not only strives to be a happy workplace, but also embraces employee work life balance. Ultimately, we expect that moving to our new office at OCC will lead the company to a new chapter of growth in the future in which the working model is no longer the same,” concluded Korn.

 

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Opinion: An Open Letter To Move Forward Party Supporters

Leader of Move Forward Party and PM candidate Pita Limjaroenrat during PM vote at the Parliament on Jul. 13, 2023.
Leader of Move Forward Party and PM candidate Pita Limjaroenrat during PM vote at the Parliament on Jul. 13, 2023.

Short of a miracle, the prospect of Pita Limjaroenrat becoming Thailand’s 30th Prime Minister is now nil. Although his name will most likely be nominated again for a second bicameral vote this coming Wednesday, the fact that only 13 out of the 250 junta-appointed senators voted for him when he needs 55 or so votes from them means it is unofficially over even before the second vote.

I know all of you will continue to pressure the junta-appointed senators till the last minutes before the vote in a last bid effort as requested by Pita, but we all know that since these senators were indirectly chosen by the military junta, which was led by Gen. Prayut Chan-o-cha who staged the May 2014 coup, and gladly accepted the post, the concept of respecting the will of the people is alien to most of them and least of their concerns.

I know it has been nine years since the May 2014 coup, but you must think about the long game and the not so small price to pay and sacrifice along the way.

You know that some of your party leaders have effectively said the party’s ultimate goal is to change Thailand into a freer, more just, and equitable society. Thus, whether Pita becomes PM or not is of secondary importance.

What is of primary importance to the continued expansion of pro-democracy forces in Thailand to the point whether no cheating, lies and/or military intervention can stop the wind of change that is already blowing and hopefully gather into an unstoppable storm of change.

I hope you did not fail to notice that the six hours or so spent on Thursday in parliament leading up to the PM vote ends up becoming a de facto no confidence debate of the controversial lese majeste law for all Thais to watch on TV and mobile phone. Such a thing was inconceivable just a decade ago.

Put the clock back further 15 to 20 years ago and only a handful, no more than 30 or so Thais, dare to openly criticize and call for the amendment if not abolition of the lese majeste law.

As one of those thirty or so people, I am happy to report that over the past three or so years since the youth-led monarchy reform movement was born, the topic of lese majeste law reform has been trending on Thai-language Twitter every month or so and thousands, many of them young Thais, dissect and discuss what is wrong with the draconian law and beyond.

While many new critics of the law, and of the monarchy, are young and mostly below the age of 30, the ultra-royalist defenders of the law who try to ensure that Thais effectively have zero right to publicly scrutinize or criticize the king are increasingly aging and one cannot even think of the name of a single young and prominent ultra-royalist to defend the law.

On the people’s side, there are at least a dozen names that I can cite off the cuff, including people like political activist Parit Chiwarak, 24, or another Parit, Oxford-educated Move Forward Party MP Parit Wacharasindhu, 30.

While I definitely have no crystal ball, time is on your side – pro-democracy young Thais and supporters of the Move Forward Party.

It may be over for “PM” Pita, but definitely not over for pro-democracy Thais. I know how disappointed, frustrated and angry you all must be since Thursday evening when your PM of choice was rejected by the unrepresented senators.

Pita was gracious enough to speak to you all in a pre-recorded video yesterday (Saturday) to say he and his Move Forward Party will support the PM candidate from the Pheu Thai Party if he fails to secure the PM post. I call for Move Forward Party supporters to put the differences between yourself and the so-called redshirt supporters of the Pheu Thai Party aside and try to make the current eight-party coalition a reality.

Thailand has been under direct and indirect military control for nine years – far too long so it is imperative that the pro-democracy camp tries its best to give government formation a chance in order to undo the poisonous and undemocratic legacies left by the military junta and steer the nation towards a new democratic transition.

In the worst case scenario – even if Move Forward Party risks ending up in the opposition camp, and/or the party eventually dissolved and Pita along with the current party executive committee banned from politics for some years by the Constitutional Court due to the party’s pledge to reform the lese majeste law being ruled by the court as being against the democratic system with the King as head of state, it is still definitely not over.

I met and spoke to one prominent young Move Forward Party and my impression is the remaining young Move Forward Party MPs are prepared to lead yet a new party. It is a long game. Shed your tears if needed but pick yourself up as patience and fortitude are needed in this long fight.

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Abandoned Ghost Ship Hotel Becomes Tourist Attraction Of Trat

A hotel in Thailand’s Trat province, in eastern Thailand, has become popular with tourists after a Thai traveller filmed a video of the abandoned 7-story hotel built in the shape of a cruise ship.

The hotel, also known as the Ghost Ship, is located in Koh Chang Grand Lagoona, Ko Chang District, Trat. Although the hotel is not in operation, the owner opens the building for tourists to visit, swim in the nearby sea and lie on the beach.

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The project to build this hotel began 20 years ago, when Koh Chang started to attract the interest of tourists. It was supposed to be a luxurious hotel complex, but the project was affected by the slowdown of the economy.

The hotel also had to deal with a bad image, as one person had fallen to his death from the building. People in the area talked about the hotel being haunted until it was officially closed.

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To reach the hotel, you can start the journey at Ao Sapparot Pier, Koh Chang Subdistrict, Koh Chang District, Trat Province. If you turn right and continue straight, you will reach your destination after about 27 kilometers.

There are two types of entrance fees. You can choose to visit the Koh Chang Grand Lagoona project area or enjoy the beach, which costs 100 baht per person. However, if you want to visit the 7-story ghost ship, you have to pay an additional 50 baht. Once you are inside, you can explore all floors without any time limit.

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Floors 1-2 consist of conference rooms and staff areas. Floors 3-5 contain guest rooms, of which about 200 are available. Some rooms are locked, while others are open. Some rooms are still equipped with amenities such as televisions, refrigerators, water bottles, linens and towels, while others are in their original condition.

Floors 6-7 are where the kitchen and dining areas are located. Even though some areas are dilapidated, others are still functional. All tourists can visit each room on each floor.

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A New Look At An Old Clue Helps Investigators Arrest The Man Accused Of Gilgo Beach Murders

A crime laboratory officer removes a box of items as law enforcement searches the home of Rex Heuermann, Saturday, July 15, 2023, in Massapequa Park, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jeenah Moon)

MASSAPEQUA PARK, N.Y. (AP) — The first find was startling: a woman’s skeletal remains cast into the dunes along a remote Long Island highway.

Then came the shock.

Days after that discovery in December 2010, police discovered parts of three more women nearby on a spit of sand known as Gilgo Beach. The remains of six other people were found along several miles of the same parkway during the next few months. An 11th person, whose disappearance had spurred the initial search, was found dead by the highway in December 2011.

What became known as the Gilgo Beach murders — the victims mostly young women who had been sex workers — flummoxed investigators for over a dozen years. The case endured through five police commissioners, more than 1,000 tips, countless theories and supposed conspiracies. Then a fresh review last year tied an old clue, about a pickup truck linked to a victim’s disappearance, to a new name: Rex A. Heuermann.

Energized by the truck tidbit, investigators charted the calls and travels of multiple cellphones, picked apart email aliases, delved into search histories, and collected discarded bottles — and even a pizza crust — for advanced DNA testing, according to court papers.

On Friday, Heuermann was charged with murder in three of the killings, and prosecutors called him the prime suspect in a fourth.

“Since the discovery of the first victim, there’s been a lot of scrutiny and criticism regarding how this investigation was handled. I will tell you this: The investigators were never discouraged,” Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison said. He vowed they would continue working “until we bring justice to all the families involved.”

Heuermann, a 59-year-old architect, pleaded not guilty to multiple murder charges. He insists he “didn’t do this,” his lawyer Michael Brown said.

But police and prosecutors paint a picture of a scheming predator who outwardly maintained the life of a suburban professional, while secretly killing women when his wife was out of town.

“We are going to convict him, and we are going to hold him responsible for what he did,” Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney declared.

Voice and email messages seeking comment were sent Friday and Saturday to various numbers and addresses associated with Heuermann and his family.

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Rex Heuermann, a Long Island architect who was charged Friday, July 14, 2023, with murder in the deaths of three of the 11 victims in a long-unsolved string of killings known as the Gilgo Beach murders. (Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office via AP0

Heuermann used a victim’s cellphone to torment her relatives with calls — including one in which he said he’d killed her — and doggedly searched for information about the investigation while trying to obscure his identity online, according to prosecutors.

Among his searches: “Why hasn’t the long island serial killer been caught.”

The case began with a search for Shannan Gilbert, a sex worker who had called 911 as she ran from a client’s home, saying someone was chasing her. Police were looking for Gilbert in December 2010 when they stumbled upon the remains of someone else: Melissa Barthelemy, last seen alive the year before.

As the toll of victims grew and the search expanded, police used horses to reach the remote area, climbed firefighters’ ladders to see over poison ivy-infested thickets, scoured parking ticket records and got aerial surveillance photos from the FBI. Over the years, reward money was offered, FBI experts profiled the killer and evolving DNA techniques were used.

Harrison announced a new task force to work the case shortly after he became commissioner in January 2022. He’d been a high-ranking New York Police Department official and brought new energy and perspective to the investigation years after the Suffolk department’s former chief was arrested and went to prison in an unrelated case.

Tierney said a breakthrough came six weeks into the group’s work, when a New York State Police investigator used a database to determine that Heuermann owned an early-model Chevrolet Avalanche and lived in Massapequa Park, an area that had come into focus because of some victims’ cellphone activity.

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Melissa Barthelemy, top left, Amber Costello, top right, Megan Waterman, bottom left, and Maureen Brainard-Barnes. Authorities on Long Island are vowing to continue investigating a string of killings known as the Gilgo Beach murders after charging an architect in the deaths of three of the 11 victims. (Suffolk County Police Department via AP)

The Avalanche was key because witnesses had told police that a man had parked one outside the home of victim Amber Costello the night before she died, and that the sex worker had arranged to meet that man again the next night, according to prosecutors’ court filing.

Using subpoenas and search warrants, investigators dug into Heuermann’s background. They learned that his cellphone had often been in the same general areas, around the same times, as prepaid anonymous cellphones that had been used to contact Barthelmy, Costello and victim Megan Waterman, the court papers said. The “burner” phones and Heuerman’s phone sometimes even traveled together.

His phone’s location also roughly matched up with some places and times when a man used Barthelemy’s phone to call her relatives after her disappearance, according to the documents.

Combing Heuerman’s credit card records, investigators found payments to a dating site and followed that thread to uncover email addresses under fictitious names and more burner phones. The emails were linked to searches for violent pornography and information on the Gilgo Beach case, and to apparent selfies of Heuermann that were sent to arrange sexual trysts, court papers said.

The phones contacted massage parlors and sex workers as recently as this year. Heuermann was carrying one of the phones when arrested Thursday night, according to prosecutors.

Using advanced DNA testing not available early in the case, authorities also reexamined hairs found on a belt buckle, duct tape and a burlap restraint used in the killings.

Meanwhile, investigators employed more old-fashioned methods to snare a sample of Heuermann’s DNA: They tailed him and sifted through his garbage to pluck 11 bottles from his home bin and grab partially eaten pizza crusts that he’d tossed into a trash can on a Manhattan sidewalk.

The DNA from the pizza matched a hair found on burlap wrapped around one victim, and other hairs matched a relative of Heuermann’s who isn’t a suspect, investigators said. They believe he got the other person’s hair on him at home.

Heuermann has lived in the same ramshackle house since childhood, according to testimony he gave several years ago in one of several traffic-accident-related lawsuits he’s filed in the past decade. He graduated from the same local high school as actor Billy Baldwin, who tweeted Friday that news of his 1981 classmate’s arrest was “mind-boggling.”

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New York State police officers stand guard as law enforcement searches the home of Rex Heuermann, Saturday, July 15, 2023, in Massapequa Park, N.Y. (AP Photo/Jeenah Moon)

After getting a bachelor’s degree from the New York Institute of Technology, Heuermann formed his architecture firm in 1994. He did most of his architectural work in New York City, with clients including city agencies, charities, airlines and major retailers, according to a company biography and the firm’s website.

In 2007, the city’s Department of Buildings audited multiple jobs involving Heuermann after an allegation that he falsely said a seven-story building was vacant when it was set to be renovated. The audits didn’t find any pattern of false filings or significant disregard for city regulations, and no disciplinary actions were taken, according to the department.

After a brief marriage in the early 1990s, Heuermann has been married since 1996 to wife Asa, with whom he has a daughter — a graphic artist — and a stepson, according to his 2018 testimony. His wife, he testified, dropped him off at a nearby train station in the mornings.

Neighbors puzzled at the rundown home with the overgrown shrubs in their tidy midst, and at the contrast between the house and the businessman who set off from it each weekday with suit and briefcase.

“It was,” neighbor Barry Auslander said, “weird.”

___

JENNIFER PELTZ, MICHAEL R. SISAK and JAKE OFFENHARTZ reported from New York. Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

 

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Sergey Lavrov Holds Meeting with Thai Minister of Foreign Affairs in Phuket

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, and Thailand's Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai pose for a photo prior to their talks in Phuket, Thailand, Saturday, July 15, 2023. (Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service via AP)

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai held a bilateral meeting in Phuket, Thailand on Saturday, July 15, 2023.

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Thailand, their meeting was held in Phuket on the occasion of Mr. Lavrov’s visit to this province to preside over the official opening ceremony of the Consulate-General of Russia in Phuket.

Both sides had a fruitful discussion to follow up on the outcome of the 8th session of the Joint Thai-Russian Commission on Bilateral Cooperation on 27 April 2023, which had covered important issues of mutual interest.

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Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, and Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai talk to each other duringh their meeting in Phuket, Thailand, Saturday, July 15, 2023. (Russian Foreign Ministry Press Service via AP)

These included increasing bilateral trade to the pre-pandemic level through trade facilitation and removal of non-tariff barriers, particularly on Thai fishery products; enhancing cooperation in science, technology and innovation (STI), culture, sports, tourism; as well as expressing support for the commencement of negotiations on a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between Thailand and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) at the earliest opportunity.

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Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai greets Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Phuket, Thailand, on Saturday, July 15, 2023. (Foreign Ministry of Thailand)

Furthermore, the two parties also exchanged views on regional and global issues, such as the situations in the Asia-Pacific region, Ukraine, and Myanmar.

This recent visit was Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs’ first post-COVID-19 trip to Thailand after his latest official visit on 30 – 31 July 2019 to attend the 52nd ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Meeting (AMM) and Related Meetings held in Bangkok.

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