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Novak Djokovic And Carlos Alcaraz Will Meet In The Wimbledon Final

Spain's Carlos Alcaraz VS Serbia's Novak Djokovic / AP PHOTO

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) — This was the moment. If Novak Djokovic was going to be stopped in the Wimbledon semifinals, if his much younger and harder-hitting opponent, Jannik Sinner, was going to turn things around Friday, the monumental comeback required would need to start immediately.

Djokovic knew it. Sinner knew it. The 15,000 or so Centre Court spectators knew it.

After taking the first two sets, Djokovic trailed 5-4 in the third, and a flubbed forehand made the game score 15-40 as he served. Two chances for Sinner to finally break. Two chances for him to actually take a set. Djokovic hit a fault, which drew some sounds of approval from the stands. Djokovic sarcastically used his racket and the ball to applaud the noise-makers, then flashed a thumbs up.

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Serbia’s Novak Djokovic celebrates winning against Italy’s Jannik Sinner in their men’s singles semifinal match on day twelve of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Friday, July 14, 2023. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)

He can back up any such bravado. Djokovic simply does not lose at the All England Club lately. Or at any Grand Slam tournament, for that matter. So he calmly collected the next four points to claim that game, looked toward the crowd and mockingly pretended to wipe away a tear. Twenty minutes later, the match was over, and the 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (4) victory over Sinner allowed Djokovic to close in on a record-tying eighth title at Wimbledon and fifth in a row.

“The third set could have gone his way,” said Djokovic, who will meet No. 1-ranked Carlos Alcaraz for the trophy on Sunday. “It was really, really, just a lot of pressure.”

Alcaraz showed off every bit of his many talents, including winning 17 of 20 points when he serve-and-volleyed, while beating No. 3 Daniil Medvedev 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 on Friday to make his way to his first final at the grass-court major tournament.

While Djokovic, a 36-year-old from Serbia, is pursuing a 24th Grand Slam singles championship, Alcaraz, a 20-year-old from Spain, seeks his second after winning the U.S. Open last September.

“What can I say? Everybody knows the legend he is,” Alcaraz said about Djokovic. “It’s going to be really, really difficult. But I will fight. … I will believe in myself, I will believe that I can beat him here.”

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Spain’s Carlos Alcaraz reacts after winning a point against Russia’s Daniil Medvedev in a men’s singles semifinal match on day twelve of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Friday, July 14, 2023. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

No one has managed to beat Djokovic at Wimbledon since 2017. And no one has managed to beat him at Centre Court since 2013.

Against Sinner, Djokovic repeatedly served himself out of potential trouble, saving all six break points he faced, to reach his ninth final at the All England Club. It’s also his 35th final at all Grand Slam tournaments, more than any man or woman in tennis history.

As great as he is as a returner, as superb as his defense is — over and over, he would sprint and lean and stretch to get to a ball that extended a point until Sinner made a mistake — Djokovic possesses a serve that might be the part of his game he’s improved the most over his career.

That showed Friday, and it’s showed throughout this fortnight: In his half-dozen matches during the tournament, Djokovic has won 100 of his 103 service games and saved 16 of 19 break points.

“In the pressure moments, he was playing very good. Not missing,” Sinner said. “That’s him.”

The age gap between Djokovic and Sinner, 21, was the largest between Wimbledon men’s semifinalists in the Open era, which began in 1968. Djokovic would be the oldest champion at Wimbledon since professionals were first allowed to compete that year.

“I feel 36 is the new 26, I guess,” Djokovic said. “It feels good.”

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Serbia’s Novak Djokovic reacts as he wins the first set against Italy’s Jannik Sinner in a men’s singles semifinal match on day twelve of the Wimbledon tennis championships in London, Friday, July 14, 2023. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Sinner is the one who hit serves at up to 132 mph and pounded one fault that clanged against the speed readout board in a corner of the arena with such force it sounded as if he might have broken the thing. Of more concern to Sinner: It was followed by another fault in a service game he dropped to trail 2-1 in the second set.

In truth, talented as Sinner is, he didn’t really generate any more frustration for Djokovic than chair umpire Richard Haigh did.

In one game in which Djokovic would face — and erase — a break point, he argued to no avail after forfeiting a point because Haigh called him for hindrance for letting out a lengthy yell while the ball was still in play. Moments later, Haigh issued Djokovic a warning for letting the serve-clock expire.

“It was a very stressful game for me to survive and to kind of storm through. It was super important,” said Djokovic, who thought the hindrance call was incorrect after seeing a replay and Haigh needed to “recognize the moment a little bit more” instead of issuing the time warning. “Luckily for me, I stayed calm.”

Indeed he did, continuing his bid to join Roger Federer as the only men to have won eight singles trophies at Wimbledon. Martina Navratilova won the women’s championship nine times.

Djokovic got major title No. 22 at the Australian Open in January, and No. 23 at the French Open in June — his Wimbledon shoes have a small “23” stamped on the side — after getting past Alcaraz in the semifinals at Roland Garros.

If Djokovic wins Sunday, he will head to the U.S. Open in August with a chance at the first calendar-year Grand Slam by a man since Rod Laver in 1969.

With the main stadium’s retractable roof shut because of rain outdoors, the grass was slick and slippery during Djokovic vs. Sinner. Sinner slipped on the very first point; Djokovic on the third. And it kept happening to both. They repeatedly smacked the soles of their shoes with their rackets to try to remove grass and dirt that got stuck in there.

Taking on Djokovic represented a significant rise in the level of competition for Sinner. Until Friday, not only had he not faced a single seeded player, but he had gone up against opponents with these rankings: 79th, 85th, 98th and 111th.

No one in the half-century history of computerized tennis rankings — men’s and women’s — has spent more weeks at No. 1 than Djokovic, who currently is No. 2. But that number does not reflect his form at the moment.

This was Djokovic’s 46th major semifinal and Sinner’s first, and that seemed obvious at the most crucial junctures.

Sinner was quite close to reaching that stage a year ago at the All England Club: He took a two-set lead in the quarterfinals against Djokovic, who came all the way back to win in five.

That sort of work was not required on this afternoon. Djokovic never let it come to that.

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By HOWARD FENDRICH AP Tennis Writer

 

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Japanese Director Hayao Miyazaki’s New Anime Film Released, 1st in Decade

Poster for renowned Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki's animation film "Kimitachi wa Do Ikiru ka" (How Do You Live?). (Copyright 2023 Studio Ghibli via Kyodo)

Renowned Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki’s animation film “Kimitachi wa Do Ikiru ka” (How Do You Live?) was released Friday in Japan after a lack of promotion that had left fans guessing about his first feature film in 10 years.

The limited information available before the release of the latest Studio Ghibli Inc. film included a poster, revealed in December 2022, of a bird-like creature with white and blue feathers.

The 124-minute film by 82-year-old Miyazaki, who came out of retirement for it, features a boy who lost his mother in a fire in Japan during wartime.

He wanders into a mysterious world guided by a gray heron while looking for his father’s expected new partner who has gone missing.

The film’s title comes from a 1937 best-selling novel by Genzaburo Yoshino, an editor and writer of children’s literature. The novel shows up in the film as a book read by the main character.

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A long queue forms at a cinema in Tokyo on the morning of July 14, 2023, as renowned Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki’s animation film “Kimitachi wa Do Ikiru ka” (How Do You Live?) is released in Japan. (Kyodo)

Studio Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki said at a Tokyo event in late June that the decision to eschew advertising had been taken due to concern that over-promotion of previous movies may have led audience interest to “wane a bit.”

But he also revealed that Miyazaki was worried about its lack of promotion.

Dozens lined up for the first screening at a movie theater in Tokyo’s Shinjuku Ward.

A 27-year-old company employee described the film as a “culmination” of Miyazaki’s anime world. “I can’t digest it by just watching it once and I feel like I want to watch it again immediately,” he said.

As fans tried to learn more about the mysterious film before its opening day, interest in related printed works grew. Publishers of Yoshino’s book and a comic book based on it said they had decided to issue reprints.

Miyazaki’s works are popular in Japan and overseas. His fantasy movie “Spirited Away” won the prestigious Golden Bear award at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2002 and the American Academy Award for Animated Feature Film in 2003.

His other major works include the 1988 classic hit “My Neighbor Totoro,” “Princess Mononoke” in 1997 and “Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind” in 1984.

The Japanese animator announced his retirement in 2013 as “The Wind Rises” was being screened, citing difficulties in making films due to his age. But he later retracted the statement.

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Egg Prices Soar Once Again Hurting Low-Income Households

Egg prices rise to the highest level once again as farms have increased prices from 3.80 baht to 4 baht each since July 14 due to various factors such as El Niño and electricity costs. This affected low-income households.

The Padriw Egg Cooperative Network, the Chonburi Egg Cooperative Network, the Chiang Mai-Lamphun Egg Cooperative Network, and the Noi River Egg Cooperative Network announce another price increase of 20 satang per egg or 6 baht per tray, effective immediately, raising the farm-gate price of eggs from the previous 3.80 baht to 4.00 baht per egg.

This increase is higher than the previous adjustment on May 15, 2023 when the price was raised from 3.60 baht to 3.80 baht per egg.

Arida Tachapol, the owner of Kai Khai Pamaew egg store in Chiang Mai, mentioned that egg prices have led to a change in consumer behaviour. Customers used to buy big trays of 30 eggs, but now they have reduced their purchases to only 10 or 5 eggs.

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Khai Pamaew egg store in Chiang Mai

Some people, because of their low income, come in the morning to buy only 1 or 2 eggs, and I have to sell the smallest amount of eggs at 4 baht per egg. Some customers buy 2 eggs together with glutinous rice for 5 baht, totaling 13 baht, to feed their children before sending them to school. She does not want to sell at high prices or take advantage of the situation to make profit.

Suriya Chaobualuang, a seller of fried eggs with rice in Nakhon Ratchasima who sells 20 baht per pack, mentioned that the eggs he uses in his business are thin-shelled chicken eggs, which currently have a price of 95 baht per tray. He thinks it is necessary to find ways to reduce costs in other areas instead of increasing the price of his food. Since most of his buyers are his regular customers, he thinks it is necessary to maintain the price of 20 baht per pack.

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Suriya Chaobualuang, a seller of fried eggs with rice in Nakhon Ratchasima.

Mongkol Pipatsatayanuwong, president of the Chicken Egg Producers, Traders and Exporters Association, said that the main factor behind the increase in egg prices is the cost of feed, which has increased significantly and continuously since the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Currently, prices for feed ingredients such as corn, soybean meal and other grains remain high. These feed ingredients account for about 60-70 per cent of total production costs.

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Omelet with rice

The next factor is the El Niño phenomenon, or changing weather patterns, which affect various crops around the world and lead to a decline in production volumes. Feed ingredient prices will be persistently high throughout the year for the foreseeable future.

At the same time, electricity costs have also increased significantly due to higher electricity rates. Especially during the recent hot weather, more electricity was needed to run cooling fans and alleviate the heat. This factor is another major contributor to the rising production costs of chicken eggs. In addition, labor costs have also increased as finding workers has become more difficult.

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Related news:

Egg Price Hike Hits Low-Income People; Food Vendors Try to Cope

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THAI Operates Flights to Yangon and Dhaka with Airbus A320

Thai Airways International Public Company Limited (THAI) proceeds with the restructuring of business operation in aviation of the company and THAI Smile Airways. The fleet efficiency and aircraft utilization have effectively been enhanced.

The airline route network has also been strengthened to support increasing travel demands. THAI will utilize Airbus A320 aircraft to operate on the routes Bangkok – Yangon v.v., which was formerly operated by THAI Smile Airways, and Bangkok – Dhaka v.v., starting 16 July 2023 with details as follows:

1. Bangkok – Yangon v.v. will be operated with Airbus A320 aircraft providing inflight services of Silk Class, especially offered on routes operated with A320, with variety of food and beverages to fulfill all customers’ travel experiences and comfort throughout their journey, and Economy Class together with selections of inflight entertainment such as e-Reading and short movies. The operations will be 14 flights per week:

Bangkok – Yangon
• TG301 departs from Bangkok at 09:35 hours and arrives in Yangon at 10:35 hours (local time)
• TG303 departs from Bangkok at 17:05 hours and arrives in Yangon at 18:00 hours (local time)
Yangon – Bangkok
• TG302 departs from Yangon at 11:25 hours (local time) and arrives in Bangkok at 13:25 hours
• TG304 departs from Yangon at 19:00 hours (local time) and arrives in Bangkok at 21:00 hours

2. Bangkok – Dhaka v.v. (TG339/340) will be operated with Airbus A320 aircraft, an increase from three to seven flights per week, offering Economy Class service. With existing flight operations of TG321/322, THAI will totally fly double daily flights from Bangkok to Dhaka with details as follows:

Bangkok – Dhaka
• TG321, operated with B777-200ER aircraft, departs from Bangkok at 10:35 hours and arrives in Dhaka at 12:10 hours (local time)
• TG339, operated with A320 aircraft, departs from Bangkok at 23:50 hours and arrives in Dhaka at 01:25 hours (local time)
Dhaka – Bangkok
• TG322, operated with B777-200ER aircraft, departs from Dhaka at 13:35 hours (local time) and arrives in Bangkok at 17:00 hours
• TG340, operated with A320 aircraft, departs from Dhaka at 02:45 hours (local time) and arrives in Bangkok at 06:15 hours

Currently, THAI also operates flights to Delhi, Mumbai and Dhaka utilizing B777-200ER and A320 aircraft.

For further information about flight schedule, booking and ticket issuing, please visit thaiairways.com, contact THAI sales offices, or call (+66) 2-356-1111 for THAI Contact Center (24 hours a day).

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Police To Eliminate All Gangs in Pattaya After German Murder

27-year-old Pakistani Sharukh Karim Uddin, who has Thai citizenship, was arrested on July 12.

Following the case of Hans Peter Ralter Mack, a German businessman who was kidnapped, murdered, and dismembered in Nong Prue District, Chonburi Province, Pol. Gen. Surachet Hakpal, Deputy Commissioner of Police, said on July 14 that he directed the police to wipe out foreign criminal gangs in Pattaya.

He ordered that information be gathered about all gangs in the Pattaya area and living in Nong Prue, Chonburi Province, and monitored foreigners who came to live in Thailand without a job, riding a Harley Davidson, posing in gang tattoos, and on a retirement visa. Immigration officers should revoke their visas and return them via immigration processes.

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Pol. Gen. Surachet Hakpal, Deputy Commissioner of Police

“Thai officers will not allow these people to come to Pattaya as a shelter or to conduct crimes. As a result, immigration officers must investigate and eliminate all gangs, whether they are the Badidose or the Outlaws,” he said.

Pol. Gen. Surachet stated that after eliminating criminal organisations in Pattaya, their members would leave the country. These organisations will go wherever government officials are weak. As a result, the immigration service must take its responsibilities seriously.

In the Mack Murder case, he directed that investigators recognise charging the suspects with premeditated murder, which carries a death penalty.

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All the German suspects

The four suspects are: 52-year-old German Olaf Thorsten Brinkmann; 47-year-old German Petra Christl Grundgreif; 27-year-old Pakistani Sharukh Karim Uddin, who has Thai citizenship; and 52-year-old German Nicole Frevel, who owns the property where the police discovered Mack’s body. The last person was charged only with hiding, disguising the body.

On July 14, police took Uddin to the Pattaya Provincial Court to request for detention. Uddin told reporters through tears. “It was not done by me. “I did not murder. I was terrified.”

Uddin is seen on surveillance cameras sitting in the back of the pickup truck and carrying the freezer into the suspect’s house, where Mack’s body was hidden. On July 13, he was arrested in a hotel in Kanchanaburi Province and charged at Nong Prue Police Station in Chonburi Province.

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CCTV footage showed Sharukh Karim Uddin bring a freezer into the suspect’s home.

His brother revealed that Uddin was scared, claiming that Olaf pushed him to participate. He asserted that he had nothing to do with Mack’s death. He was terrified of meeting Olaf and was afraid he would be killed in prison.

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On July 4, 2023, Olaf Thorsten Brinkmann and Petra Christl Grundgreif were seen getting into the same car on CCTV.

Nicole Frevel, the landlord who discovered Mach’s death, had previously slashed her arms during the police arrest. “I could die today; if I do not die, I must be killed,” remarked this woman, who subsequently disclosed that Olaf brought the freezer inside the house. When she asked about what was in the freezer, she was threatened with death unless she remained silent and did not speak much.

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The French Celebrate the “Awakening of Freedom” On Bastille Day

Vive la France! It’s Bastille Day, or French National Day, today and HE Thierry Mathou, Ambassador of France to Thailand, will hold the French National Day reception this evening in Bangkok with attendees at Swissotel Bangkok Ratchada (owned by the French hospitality conglomerate Accor) including .

The event will be attended by many personalities such as Privy Counciller Atthaniti Disatha-amnarj, Senate President Pornpetch Wichitcholchai, caretaker Deputy PM Anutin Charnvirakul, Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt and distinguished guests from various sectors.

The French Embassy is sharing with us Information about the French National Day and the state of Franco-Thai relations below. Happy Bastille Day!

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HE Thierry Mathou, Ambassador of France to Thailand

14 July, a day of unity

When we think of 14 July, we generally think of the storming of the Bastille in 1789, and “Bastille Day” as many countries call it.

For the French, 14 July is an opportunity to come together and celebrate. This tradition was established in 1790 with “Federation Day”, which brought together the French people in republican banquets to celebrate concord and restored national unity. In 1880, 14 July became our “National Holiday”, with military parades, fireworks, balls and popular celebrations.

Since then, 14 July has been an opportunity for the French people across France and the world to meet and celebrate the “awakening of freedom” together.

14 July and symbols of France

Bastille Day on 14 July is an opportunity for French people, wherever they may be in the world, to celebrate the symbols and values of the Republic:
– Liberty – Equality – Fraternity

Say to any French person “Liberté, Egalité…”, and they will instantly complete the motto.

Give it a try!

Since 1880 (when 14 July was set as the French national holiday) each national holiday has been celebrated with a major military parade on the Champs-Élysées in Paris, to demonstrate the unbreakable link between the French people and their army.

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The parade takes place in the presence of the President of the French Republic, the Prime Minister, members of the government, the Presidents of the Senate and National Assembly, foreign ambassadors in France and sometimes foreign Heads of State.

All sit in the VIP stand at the end of the Champs-Élysées, on Place de la Concorde. After a flypast by the Patrouille de France, various army corps march down the famous avenue in turn, saluting the Head of State and representatives from the executive and legislative branches of government.

The tricolour flag, a national emblem

The tricolour flag came about during the French Revolution by combining the colour of the king (white) with those of Paris (blue and red).

The tricolour only took on its definitive form in 1794, before being adopted in modern times by the 1958 constitution of the French republic, which stated, in its Article 2, that “The national emblem shall be the blue, white and red tricolour flag.”

The bilateral relations between France and Thailand since 2016

In 2016 and 2019, France and Thailand celebrated successively the 160th anniversary of their relations (the Treaty of Friendship and Commerce between Siam and France was signed on 15 August 1856), and the 333rd anniversary of the first embassy of the Kingdom of Siam to France, led by Kosa Pan in 1686.

In order to celebrate the longstanding friendship between the two countries a permanent exhibition was inaugurated in February 2022 on the outside wall of the diplomatic compound of the French Embassy in Bangkok.

In 2018 Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha visited France twice. On June 25 his meeting with President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysée Palace marked the beginning of THEOS 2 program, the second Thai satellite made in France. On November 11, the Prime Minister visited Paris for the hundredth anniversary of the end of the First World War (Siamese troops marched through the Arc de Triomphe in Paris in a victory celebration after the end of World War I, on 14 July, 1919) and the first edition of the Paris Peace Forum.

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The friendship between France and Thailand was also illustrated during the dark period of the Covid-19 pandemic. France donated more than 4.2 million doses of vaccines to Thailand, a clear sign of the solidarity and the close bound existing between the two countries during this difficult period.

A major step in the development of the relations between France and Thailand was reached on 22 February 2022 with the signature in Paris by the two foreign ministers of the “Roadmap for France-Thailand bilateral relations 2022-2024”.

Both countries committed themselves to promote concrete projects in four main areas: security and defense, economy, human exchanges, and global issues, in order to upgrade their bilateral relation to the level of a strategic partnership.

The roadmap was rapidly implemented, notably in the sector of transports in which several agreements were signed between 2021 and 2023.

Defense and military cooperation has also been developing. The First Franco-Thai Joint Defense Committee took place in Bangkok on March 17-18, 2022.

President Emmanuel Macron’s official visit in Bangkok from 16 to 18 November 2022 was a major milestone in the history the franco-thai relations. Welcomed as Guest of the Chair to the APEC summit by Prime Minister Prayut o-cha, President Macron was the first European head of state or government to be invited to the APEC Summit, since the creation of the forum in 1989.

While this visit marked an important step in the development of the French Indopacific strategy, it also highlighted the growing importance France attaches to ASEAN countries, in particular to Thailand.

In 2022 HRH Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn graced with her presence at the French Residence in Bangkok the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Societé des Membres de la Légion d’Honneur (SMLH). From 12 to 19 May 2023 she made an official visit to France (Lyon and Paris) at the occasion of the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Princess Galyani Vadhana, founder of the Thai Association of French Teachers (ATPF).

In order to further deepen the bilateral relation between our two countries and to renew its content, 2023 was proclaimed by the two Governments, “France-Thailand Year of Innovation » (YOI).

This initiative was the occasion to showcase and promote the vibrant cooperation between France and Thailand in innovative and forward-looking sectors like air and space industry, bio-circular and green economy, healthcare, food industry and wellness, and cultural industries. The creation of a joint Franco-Thai platform for innovation will help create or strengthen long-term partnerships between researchers, companies, and start-ups from both countries.

These last few years, the French network in Thailand has been expanding. Five French schools are now established in the Kingdom, respectively in Bangkok, Phuket, Pattaya, and Ko Samui. A new school will be opened in Chiang Mai. In 2021 the Alliance Française (French cultural institutes) of Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai and Phuket emancipated from the Alliance Française in Bangkok, which celebrated 110 years of existence in 2022.

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The French Embassy has been pursuing an ambitious program of cultural events as shown by the launch in 2021 of the new Franco-Thai Animation Film festival and the development of its flagship artistic event « Galleries’ Nights » which celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2023 and is now organized not only in Bangkok but also in Bang Saen.

Milestones exhibitions have also been organized like TranceFiguration about sacred tattoos which took place in 2022 in partnership with the Ecole Française d’Extrême Orient (EFEO) and the Alliance Française, in Chiang Mai. The exhibition was presented in Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai and at the National Gallery in Bangkok.

In 2023, to better embrace and promote the wide range of activities of its cultural and cooperation department, the French Embassy also coined a new brand, “Sawasdee France” with the motto « Where France and Thailand meet ».

This new brand which replaces former concepts like “La Fête”, is meant to be a new bridge between France and Thailand in order to better communicate about the whole range of activities organized by the French Embassy in Thailand especially cultural events and initiatives to promote the French language, develop education partnerships, the mobility of students and researchers and foster cooperation on global subjects like health, the fight against climate change, and the protection of environment and biodiversity.

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Thailand’s Move Forward Party Leader Pita Falls Short In Parliamentary Vote For Prime Minister

Pita Limjaroenrat, right, the leader of Move Forward Party and top winner in the May's general election, reacts during vote counting at the Parliament, in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, July 13, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

By GRANT PECK and JINTAMAS SAKSORNCHAI

BANGKOK (AP) — The leader of the progressive Thai political party that outpaced its rivals to a surprise first-place finish in May’s general election failed Thursday in his initial bid to have Parliament name him the country’s new prime minister.

The vote of a joint session of the 500-seat House of Representatives and 250-seat Senate saw Pita Limjaroenrat win 324 votes in the first round of balloting, short of the majority of 376 needed to become prime minister.

His Move Forward Party finished first in the May 14 election and afterward assembled an eight-party coalition that together had won 312 seats, a healthy majority in the lower house.

But strong opposition in the Senate, whose members are overwhelmingly conservative and generally opposed to the reformist platform of Pita’s party, seemingly doomed his chances in the first vote. Only 13 senators supported Pita’s bid, while 34 voted against him and 159 abstained.

Pita told reporters afterwards that he “accepted” the vote but was not giving up. He said the result was below expectations and thanked the senators who voted for him.

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Supporter of Move Forward Party hold a sign during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, July 12, 2023. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

The biggest area of disagreement between the liberals backing Move Forward and the deeply conservative Senate is the campaign pledge of Pita’s party to amend a law that makes defaming the royal family punishable by three to 15 years in prison.

The monarchy is sacrosanct to members of Thailand’s royalist establishment. Even minor reforms that might improve and modernize the monarchy’s image are anathema to them. Move Forward’s coalition has proposed to limit the “royal defamation” law to allow only the royal family to lodge complaints and soften penalties.

Much of the debate that preceded Thursday’s vote concerned that law, also known as Article 112, which critics say is abused for political purposes.

The inconclusive finish to Thursday’s voting sets the stage for another ballot, which is expected next week. Whether Pita will make a second effort, or step aside to let a nominee from another party in his coalition try their luck, was not immediately known.

Some opponents explicitly said his party’s stand on Article 112 was the reason they would not vote for a government led by Pita. The Pheu Thai Party, the second biggest in the coalition holding 141 House seats, could step up and try to win support from enough senators.

Pheu Thai used to be the royalist establishment’s most bitter rival. The party is closely affiliated with former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a billionaire populist who was ousted in a 2006 military coup, in part because his popularity rubbed royalists the wrong way. But the party is anxious to get back into power, and less strident in supporting a reformist agenda that conservatives deem radical, though it would be considered moderate in Western countries.

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Pita Limjaroenrat, the leader of Move Forward Party and top winner in the May’s general election gestures at the Parliament, in Bangkok, Thailand, Thursday, July 13, 2023.  . (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Should Pheu Thai fail to successfully push through a prime minister candidate, the coalition would have to consider taking on new members.

Pita, regardless of how the prime minister issue is settled, faces additional challenges.

On Wednesday, the state Election Commission said it concluded there was evidence that he had violated election law, and referred his case to the Constitutional Court for a ruling. If the court accepts the case and finds him guilty, he could lose his House seat, get kicked out of politics and face a prison sentence.

There had been fears since even before the election that Thailand’s conservative ruling establishment would use what its political opponents consider to be dirty tricks to cling to power. For a decade-and-a-half, it has repeatedly utilized the courts and nominally independent state agencies such as the Election Commission to issue controversial rulings to cripple or sink political opponents.

The alleged violation involves undeclared ownership of media company shares, which are banned for Thai lawmakers. Political scientist Thitinan Pongsudhirak described the disputed charge and other legal complaints against Pita as “bogus” and something many people, especially voters who backed him, would be unwilling to tolerate.

A small number of Move Forward’s supporters, wearing the party’s signature orange colors, gathered outside Parliament, following the proceedings vote by vote on a large screen. They expressed disappointment and anger at the final result, especially the lack of support from senators.

“The Senate are not with the people. The election did not mean anything to them,” complained Nattapon Jangwangkaew, 42.

“I’m not ok with this,” said 35-year-old Wipada Pimtare, who was crying in the rain. “I hoped that it would finish today. Thailand should move forward. They shouldn’t buy time like this. The people have chosen and they should follow.”

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Supporters of Move Forward Party raise a three-finger salute, a symbol of resistance, during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Wednesday, July 12, 2023.   (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Pro-democracy activists have already called for protests, and there is concern that they could snowball, especially if Move Forward is shut out of power. When a forerunner party to Move Forward was forced to dissolve in 2019, it sparked a youth-led protest movement that ended up violently resisting efforts to disperse their gatherings. Political polarization in the years following the 2006 coup against Thaksin saw bursts of intense street fighting from both right and left, on occasion paralysing central areas of the capital Bangkok and its international airport.

Depending how they are resolved, the efforts to block Pita and Move Forward could prove dangerous and cause Thailand unnecessary pain, said Michael Montesano, a Thai studies expert who is an associate senior fellow at Singapore’s ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute.

“At the end of the day, the political system and those who would dominate need to move into closer correspondence with the realities of Thai society and with the aspirations of its younger, well-educated members,” Montesano said. “The biggest question is whether this transition will be painful and even violent, or whether it will be constructive and thus serve the country’s future prospects.”

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Associated Press video journalist Tian Macleod Ji contributed to this report.

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EU Rejects Myanmar’s Diplomatic Role And Says It Still Doesn’t Recognize Generals

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, right, talks with Malaysian Foreign Minister Zambry Abdul Kadir during ASEAN Post Ministerial Conference with European Union at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers' Meeting in Jakarta, Indonesia, Thursday, July 13, 2023. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim, Pool)

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — The European Union’s top diplomat on Thursday expressed opposition to Myanmar’s upcoming role as the overseer of relations between the 27-nation bloc and Southeast Asian nations and reasserted its non-recognition of the strife-torn country’s military government.

The comments marked the latest diplomatic fallout from the Myanmar army’s forcible seizure of power from Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected government on Feb. 1, 2021 that plunged the country into deadly chaos.

Josep Borrell, the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs, raised the concern in a meeting with foreign ministers of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta. The 10-nation ASEAN includes Myanmar and Indonesia, which leads the regional group this year.

“We face a challenge related to the potential of Myanmar assuming the role of ASEAN coordinator for relations with the European Union,” Borrell told his ASEAN counterparts at the start of their meeting.

”We don’t recognize the military junta and perhaps you will find a solution to overcome this issue,” he said.

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From left to right, Singaporean Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan, Cambodia’s senior official Kung Phoak, Vietnam’s senior official Vu Ho, European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell and Philippine’s Foreign Secretary Enrique Manalo hold hands for a group photo during ASEAN Post Ministerial Conference with European Union at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Jakarta, Indonesia, Thursday, July 13, 2023. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim, Pool)

There was no immediate reaction from the foreign ministers but a Southeast Asian diplomat attending the meetings told The Associated Press that the concern raised by the EU was being discussed within ASEAN to prevent any disruptions in the robust trade and geopolitical relations between the two regional blocs.

The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity because of a lack of authority to discuss the issue publicly.

The EU, the United States and other Western governments have imposed sanctions on Myanmar’s military government and demanded an immediate end to violence and the release of Suu Kyi and other political detainees.

ASEAN assigns a member state to oversee trade, political and security relations with each world power it has ties with, including the EU, for three years. The Philippines currently coordinates ASEAN-EU relations and is scheduled to be succeeded by Myanmar next year.

Among the options being considered by the ASEAN ministers was to assign Laos, which will hold the regional group’s rotational chairmanship next year, to coordinate ties with the EU, the diplomat said.

ASEAN also does not recognize Myanmar’s military government and has barred military-appointed representatives from attending the group’s top-level meetings, including those being hosted this week by Indonesia.

More than 3,750 civilians, including pro-democracy activists, have been killed by security forces and nearly 24,000 arrested since the military takeover, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a rights group that keeps tallies of arrests and casualties.

ASEAN officials barred the military government from attending its ministerial meetings and summits of heads of state after Myanmar’s generals refused to meaningfully comply with a five-point emergency plan that called for an immediate end to the violence and the start of talks among contending parties that could be brokered by the group’s special envoy.

Myanmar’s leaders have not given ASEAN’s special envoy access to Suu Kyi but Thailand’s foreign minister, Don Pramudwinai, told his counterparts in the bloc and the media that he met with Suu Kyi on Sunday and that she conveyed her openness to engage in talks to resolve the crisis gripping her nation.

The Thai minister is the only government official outside of Myanmar known to have met Myanmar’s democracy icon since she was detained with other officials after the army forcibly took power in 2021. He told his ASEAN counterparts Wednesday that Suu Kyi was in good health when he met with her for more than an hour.

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Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai, at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Jakarta, Indonesia, Wednesday, July 12, 2023. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)

“She encourages dialogue,” he told reporters in Jakarta when asked what message Suu Kyi conveyed to him. “Obviously we’re trying to find a way to settle with Myanmar.”

It’s too early to tell if the access to Suu Kyi granted by Myanmar’s military government would lead to further talks between her camp and the ruling generals.

___

By EDNA TARIGAN AND JIM GOMEZ reported from Jakarta. Niniek Karmini contributed to this report.

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Article 112 Makes Pita Fail to Get Enough Votes To Become PM

The parliamentary session for the vote of Pita Limjaroenrat as prime minister on July 13 became a platform for discussing amendments to Section 112 of the Criminal Code or Article 112 on the monarchy.

The majority of opposition members were senators and MPs of the former ruling coalition. Many declare they are royalists. They specifically accused the Move Forward party of attempting to undermine and dismantle the monarchy by amending Article 112.

At the end of the session, Pita could not get enough votes to reach 376 of the bicameral votes. The results of the vote came out with 324 approved, 182 disapproved, and 199 abstained. Only 13 junta-appointed senators out of 250 voted for Pita, while 43 did not show up.

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This outcome was not unexpected, since several senators and members of parliament who are royalists and on the right have stated that they will never vote for Pita if it persists on amending Article 112.

The session on Thursday began at 10:00 a.m. with the proposal of Pita Limjaroenrat, leader of the Move Forward party, as a candidate for the post of Thailand’s new prime minister by Chonlanan Srikaew, leader of the Pheu Thai party, which was involved in forming the government. Several deputies and senators then took the floor.

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All speakers who are not involved in forming the government criticized Pita and the Move Forward party for strict adherence to Article 112 of the law, and few people mentioned the issue of Pita’s ownership of ITV shares, which is currently being considered by the Constitutional Court.

Kamnoon Sidhisamarn, a senator, one of the speakers, criticized the amendment to Article 112 on the grounds that it would lead to defamation and unfair criticism on social media platforms. He argued that this would be tantamount to amending the constitutional provision protecting the monarchy, which could lead to blasphemy and charges against anyone accused under Article 112. This, in turn, would undermine respect for institutions that should not be violated by others.

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Kamnoon Sidhisamarn, a senator,

Pita requested the right to refute and dispute the allegations made by Kamnoon and other members. He clarified that the issue of amending Article 112 was not discussed in the MOU of the 8-party agreement.

The 8-Party Agreement was formed to enter the executive branch, while legislative amendments were the responsibility of the legislative branch. He stressed that the meeting was primarily about the election of the prime minister and not about legislative changes. Nevertheless, he declared his willingness to listen and be patient.

“The good leaders of this country must have patience, restraint, and the ability to listen to accusations, whether true or false. If we communicate with dignity, without using vulgar language, and use causes to achieve results, this is the way out for the country in any conflict that arises,” Pita explained.

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Pita further expressed that he has comprehensive qualifications in all fields. He has self-control and has submitted qualifications for consideration by the Election Commission from the time he first ran for MP until now and will continue to do so in the future, unlike someone who has never done this.

Although he did not name names, it is safe to assume that he was referring to General Prayut Chan-o-cha, who has not undergone such scrutiny either by the National Anti-Corruption Commission or the Election Commission.

However, it seems that most senators have not accepted his reason.

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Pita and the MFP members still smile after the vote.

Wan Muhamad Noor Matha, the new Speaker of the House of Representatives said earlier if Move Forward Party PM candidate Pita failed to get the 376 votes needed to become PM on July 13, a second voting will be held on July 19. There is no limit that the majority party would nominate Pita again.

Pita said he accepted the outcome but would not give up. His team would spend time strategizing on how to obtain more votes next time. He also stated that the MFP would stick to its original proposal to amend Section 112 of the Criminal Code and would form a government with the Pheu Thai Party.

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The MFP members thank the supporters outside the parliament.

Outside the parliament building, police have installed barbed wire and metal sheets to block protesters from accessing a pedestrian overpass at Kiak Kai Intersection next to the parliament shortly after 1 a.m. Thursday, the day of the bicameral vote for the new PM.

The Bangkok Metropolitan Police announced a ban on gatherings around the Parliament Building within a radius of no more than 50 meters from 06:00 am on July 12 until 00:00 midnight on July 15.

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Lopburi Counts Monkey Population; Police Instructs Tourists

Although it may be fascinating for tourists to see monkeys at tourist attractions in Lopburi Province, central Thailand, these monkeys affect the lives of locals: they sometimes steal food or fight among themselves, causing traffic jams.

Jaroon Chukiatwattana, the veterinarian of Lopburi, proposed a solution: He began counting the monkey population to bring order. The action was launched on July 11 at Pibulwittayalai School. The event was in preparation for a proper count of the population.

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Participants included representatives from Protected Areas Regional Office 1 (Saraburi), the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation, the Department of Livestock Development (Lopburi), teachers and students from Pibulwittayalai School, a citizen-led committee, the Lopburi Municipality Office, and other participating organizations.

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The monkey population survey will begin between July 18-19 and will cover 4 main sites, Phra Prang Sam Yot, Manohra Market, Chayo Wanich Store, and San Phra Kan. They will investigate all sites on the first day and repeat on the second day.

Lopburi Tourist Police have also dispatched officers to instruct tourists not to feed monkeys at tourist sites: Phra Prang Sam Yot (a 13th-century temple), San Phra Kan (Hindu temple), sidewalk in front of Van Station, Prang Khaek Shine and at the traffic intersection.

Police instruct tourists to give monkey food only at designated places. It is reported that tourists respond well to this instruction.

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