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Man City’s Treble Bid Up And Running After Winning English Premier League

Manchester City supporters celebrate outside the Etihad stadium in Manchester, England, Saturday, May 20, 2023. Manchester City clinched the English Premier League title on Saturday after their nearest challengers Arsenal lost 1-0 to Nottingham Forest. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Manchester City’s bid for a treble of major trophies is up and running.

The first was secured on Saturday without City even playing as the team clinched a third successive English Premier League title — and a ninth top-flight crown in its 143-year history — thanks to another slip-up by second-placed Arsenal.

Arsenal’s end-of-season collapse is complete. Manchester City is the English Premier League champion once again.

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Arsenal’s manager Mikel Arteta reacts during the English Premier League soccer match between Arsenal and Brighton and Hove Albion at Emirates stadium in London, Sunday, May 14, 2023. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

A 1-0 loss at Nottingham Forest capped a stunning implosion by Arsenal in a title race that came to an end on Saturday, with City holding an unassailable four-point lead and champion for a third straight year.

City’s players will get their hands on the league trophy after their match against Chelsea on Sunday, but don’t expect the celebrations to last too long.

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A banner celebrating their title win is unfurled outside Manchester City’s Etihad stadium in Manchester, England, Saturday, May 20, 2023. Manchester City clinched the English Premier League title on Saturday after their nearest challengers Arsenal lost 1-0 to Nottingham Forest. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Pep Guardiola’s squad has its sights on becoming just the second team to capture the Premier League-FA Cup-Champions League treble, and still has two finals to play.

The FA Cup final against Manchester United is on June 3 at Wembley Stadium followed by a meeting with Inter Milan in the Champions League final on June 10.

City is enjoying a period of domestic dominance rarely seen in English soccer.

That’s five league titles in seven years in Guardiola’s reign and seven in a 12-season spell that began with Sergio Aguero’s storied stoppage-time goal to win the league in 2012.

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Players of Arsenal walk off the pitch after the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Arsenal at City ground in Nottingham, England, Saturday, May 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira)

“The Premier League is without doubt the most demanding and competitive league in the world,” City captain Ilkay Gundogan said, “so that tells you everything about what an achievement this is.

“That quality and consistency helps sum up what Manchester City stand for and ensures the club will continue to strive for success going forward.”

It’s the first time City has won three leagues in a row and comes while the Abu Dhabi-owned club is facing an unprecedented slew of charges from the Premier League for allegedly breaking financial rules from 2009-18 and a subsequent failure to co-operate with an investigation.

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Manchester City’s Ilkay Gundogan celebrates after scoring his side’s opening goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Everton and Manchester City at the Goodison Park stadium in Liverpool, England, Sunday, May 14, 2023. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Those charges — 115 in total — cast a shadow over City’s achievements under its Abu Dhabi ownership, though it could be years before a verdict is reached by an independent disciplinary commission.

What isn’t up for debate is the quality City has produced in its now-familiar end-of-season burst of victories that piled the pressure on Arsenal, which has the unwanted distinction this season of leading the league for a record number of days (248) without eventually winning it.

While City has finished like a train by winning 11 straight games, Arsenal — owning the youngest squad in the league under inexperienced coach Mikel Arteta — has buckled with a first top-flight title since 2004 in sight and won just won of its last eight games.

“One team in six seasons has beaten Manchester City to the title,” Arsenal goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale said. “But it was our own doing, individual errors in games we should have won. We were in a position to win those games.”

Forest is safe from relegation after its win.

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Nottingham Forest’s manager Steve Cooper, left, celebrates with Nottingham Forest’s Cheikhou Kouyate, center, and Nottingham Forest’s Taiwo Awoniyi after the English Premier League soccer match between Nottingham Forest and Arsenal at City ground in Nottingham, England, Saturday, May 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira)

MAN UNITED CLOSE

Manchester United is on the brink of a return to the Champions League. Liverpool is almost certain to miss out.

The race for the final two Champions League qualification places behind Man City and Arsenal is nearly over after United beat Bournemouth 1-0 away and Liverpool could only draw 1-1 at home to Aston Villa.

That left fifth-placed Liverpool three points behind both Newcastle in third and United in fourth. While Liverpool has only one game to play — at already-relegated Southampton — Newcastle and United have two and need only a point each to secure top-four finishes.

Newcastle could get over the line as early as Monday in a home game against Leicester, before finishing at Chelsea. United still has Chelsea and Fulham to play at home.

Casemiro scored from an acrobatic overhead kick in the eighth minute for the only goal at Bournemouth.

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Manchester United’s Casemiro celebrates scoring their side’s first goal of the game during the English Premier League soccer match between Manchester United and Bournemouth at the Vitality Stadium, Bournemouth, Saturday May 20, 2023. (Adam Davy/PA via AP)

A Brazilian was Liverpool’s scorer, too. Roberto Firmino marked his last game at Anfield for the club with the 89th-minute equalizer against Villa. Jacob Ramsey put Villa ahead in the 27th, soon after Ollie Watkins missed a penalty for the visitors.

MINA SAVES EVERTON

Yerry Mina headed in Everton’s latest recorded Premier League goal — in the ninth minute of stoppage time — in potentially a big moment in the relegation fight.

It earned Everton a 1-1 draw at Wolverhampton and moved the team two points clear of the bottom three, currently occupied by already-relegated Southampton as well as Leicester and Leeds.

Leeds and Leicester have two games left and Everton just one — Bournemouth at home next weekend.

Everton is seeking to preserve its 69-year stay in the top-flight.

Fulham drew at home to Crystal Palace 2-2 in the day’s other league game.

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Thai Police: A Lao Activist’s Relatives May Murder Him

Thai police are still investigating who killed Mr. Kitiyano Bounsuan, a 56-year-old anti-Lao government activist, and why. There are two plausible explanations: one, he was opposed to what the Lao government was doing; second, his relatives are upset with him since he caused them to be pursued and arrested by the government.

Kitiyano was shot with three bullets while riding a motorcycle and died in Song Khon Subdistrict, Si Mueang Mai District, Ubon Ratchathani Province, northeastern Thailand, bordering Laos, on May 17.

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Song Khon Subdistrict is home to Mr. Kittiyano. While attending the celebration, he was shot at in Ban Nonjik, Warin Subdistrict, and Sri Mueang Mai District. On the day of the incident, the police brought five witnesses to testify, including Mr. Kittiyano’s acquaintance, who lives in Song Khon Subdistrict.

According to UNHCR sources, Mr. Kittiyano has refugee status and has requested to visit Australia, the third country, next week, because he was aware that he was being sought after joining the Free Laos movement, a Laotian human rights movement.

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The Sri Muang Mai Police Station in Ubon Ratchathani Province reported to the Laos Embassy in Thailand that a Laotian with refugee status was shot and died without any family arriving to collect the body at Sappasitthiprasong Hospital’s forensic department.

Many anti-government Lao activists fled to Ubon Ratchatani, resulting in the tracing and murder of numerous movement members in this province. The most recent crime occurred in Pathomphon Village, Warin Chamrap District, approximately five years ago, when an assailant shot and murdered a KTP Movement member in front of their home while cutting down a tree in front of the home.

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Dubai’s Next Big Thing? Perhaps A $5 Billion Man-made ‘Moon’ As The City’s Real Estate Market Booms

This artist rendering shows the $5 billion project, MOON envisioned on the Dubai Pearl, a coveted plot of land at the base of The Palm Jumeirah. (Michael Henderson/Moon World Resorts via AP)

Who says you cannot reach for the moon? A proposed $5 billion real estate project wants to take skyscraper-studded Dubai to new heights — by bringing a symbol of the heavens down to Earth.

Canadian entrepreneur Michael Henderson envisions building a 274-meter (900-foot) replica of the moon atop a 30-meter (100-foot) building in Dubai, already home to the world’s tallest building and other architectural wonders.

Henderson’s project, dubbed MOON, may sound out of this world, but it could easily fit in this futuristic city-state. Dubai already has a red-hot real estate market, fueled by the wealthy who fled restrictions imposed in their home countries during the coronavirus pandemic and Russians seeking refuge amid Moscow’s war on Ukraine.

And even though a previous booms-and-bust cycle saw many grand projects collapse, Henderson and others suggest his vision, funded by Moon World Resorts Inc., where he is the co-founder, might not be that far-fetched.

“We have the biggest ‘brand’ in the world,” Henderson told The Associated Press, alluding that the moon itself — the heavenly body — was his brand. “Eight billion people know our brand, and we haven’t even started yet.”

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Michael Henderson, co-founder of Moon World Resorts discusses his brainchild, a proposal to build a $5 billion moon-shaped resort, at the Arabian Travel Market, May 4, 2023.  (AP Photo/Nick El Hajj)

The project Henderson proposes includes a destination resort inside the spherical structure, complete with a 4,000-room hotel, an arena capable of hosting 10,000 people and a “lunar colony” that would give guests the sensation of actually walking on the moon.

The MOON would sit on a pedestal-like circular building beneath it and would glow at night. Henderson discussed the project at the Arabian Travel Market earlier in May in Dubai.

Already, artist renderings commissioned by Moon World Resorts have played with the location for his MOON — including at the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building at a height of 828 meters (2,710 feet). Others have placed it at the Dubai Pearl, a long-dormant project now being destroyed near the man-made Palm Jumeirah archipelago, and on its unfinished sister, the Palm Jebel Ali.

The Pearl and the Palm Jebel Ali represent two “white elephant” projects left over from the 2009 financial crisis that rocked the sheikhdom and forced Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, to provide Dubai with a $20 billion bailout.

Now nearly 15 years later, Dubai largely has turned around. Rents on average across Dubai are up 26.9% year-on-year, even with anti-price-gouging protections. Dubai saw 86,849 residential sales last year, beating a previous record of 80,831 from 2009.

“Dubai is in a completely different world compared to” 2009, said Lewis Allsopp, the CEO of the prominent Dubai real estate agency Allsopp & Allsopp. Launched products are “selling out on the spot.”

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This artist rendering shows the $5 billion project, MOON envisioned on The Palm Jumeirah island in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.. (Michael Henderson/Moon World Resorts via AP)

Inflation and interest rate hikes around the world have led to fears of a global recession. The UAE’s currency, the dirham, is pegged to the dollar, meaning it has followed lock-step the hikes imposed by the Federal Reserve.

But cash still remains king for Dubai buyers, with fourth-fifths of transactions paid in currency without financing in 2022, said Faisal Durrani, the head of Middle East research at real estate agency Knight Frank.

“You could argue that the interest rate hikes that are taking place, to an extent the market is a little bit shielded from that given the fact that so much of the transactional activity has been driven by cash,” Durrani said.

Other major projects are moving ahead.

Nakheel, the state-owned developer behind the Palm Jebel Ali, has relaunched development plans for it. The developer also unveiled a multibillion-dollar plan to build 80 resorts and hotels on the man-made Dubai Islands, though it remains largely empty and under the flight path of the nearby Dubai International Airport, the world’s busiest for international travel.

The MOON project also includes space for a possible casino as well. Gambling remains illegal in the UAE, a federation of seven hereditarily ruled sheikhdoms on the Arabian Peninsula. However, major brands like Caesar’s Palace already exist or hope to build in Dubai. Wynn Resorts plans to build a $3.9 resort in Ras al-Khaimah north of Dubai with gambling to open in 2027 — meaning a change to the law is likely to come.

Like other high-profile, eye-catching marvels, the MOON could fit well into “the legitimacy formula of Dubai’s ruling elite,” said Christopher Davidson, a Middle East expert who wrote the recent book “From Sheikhs to Sultanism.” Dubai also hosts the UAE’s space center, which has sent a probe to Mars and unsuccessfully tried to put a rover on the moon.

“They can be seen as a non-democratic elite but nonetheless believe strongly in science and progress — and that’s ultimately very legitimizing and a megaproject like this would seem to tick all of those boxes,” Davidson said.

Henderson’s plan would go a step further than other globe-shaped projects, such as the MSG Sphere, a $2.3 billion dome blanketed by LED screens, that is set to open in Las Vegas later this year.

His structure would be fully spherical, and could be illuminated alternatively as a full, half or crescent moon.

The brightness may not go down well with potential neighbors — plans to build another MSG Sphere in London were halted after residents protested the significant light pollution and disruption the structure would cause.

“It’s hard to please everybody,” Henderson acknowledged. “You might need dark curtains.”

___

NICK EL HAJJ reported from Dubai and Jon Gambrell contributed to this report.

 

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Pita Apologises To Supporters As MFP Backtracks to 8 Party Coalition

The Move Forward Party (MFP) has announced that there will be no news conference on Saturday as a result of the trouble when forming a government, in which its supporters strongly objected to the Chart Pattana Kla Party and the New Party joining the coalition on social media.

During election campaign, MFP vowed not to join a coalition with any party that support the military junta, while Korn Chatikavanij was a senior Democrat Party member and a prominent figure in the People’s Democratic Reform Committee (PDRC) movement which called for military intervention before the May 2014 coup.

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MFP apologised to its supporters.

On Friday when local media report that Chart Pattana Kla, the two MP-party, would be joining the coalition, MFP supporters unleashed angry tweets which sent the hashtag, “if there is Korn there won’t be me” ( #มีกรณ์ไม่มีกู ) trending with nearly half a million tweets late Friday night and 609K by Saturday morning. 

Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat apologized late Friday night and insisted Chart Pattana Kla won’t be a coalition partner.

“I apologize. I’ll always remember that “The party is bigger than any member. People are bigger than the party,” Pita tweeted.

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Pita Limjaroenrat

Chart Pattana Kla Party chairman Suwat Liptapanlop said Saturday he’s not sulky that Move Forward Party backtrack from their invitation to have his party join the coalition. Suwat said the talk was initiated by Move Forward Party but he respects their decision to now not invite the party to join the coalition. Suwat wouldn’t say at the press conference whether the party’s two MPs will vote for MFP’s PM candidate Pita Limjaroenrat.

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Korn Chatikavanij

In the case of the New Party dropping from the coalition, it happened after the key party executive said in a video clip that those violating the la lèse-majesté law should be “executed”. This led to Move Forward Party supporters posting online, particularly on Twitter, that they wouldn’t accept this party.

Even though it issued a statement Saturday saying it has no policy to increase the penalty under the law: “The party has warned [the person] and would like to apologize.”

MFP is desperately trying to get as many MP votes as possible, including some of the senators, to ensure that Pita will become the next PM with 376 votes. Now MFP general secretary Chaithawat Tulathon said 313 votes from MPs could be enough; they will find others from senators.

That means they will have a coalition of eight parties: MFP, Pheu Thai, Thai Sang Thai, Prachachat, Thai Liberal, and FAIR.

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In Cannes, Harrison Ford Bids Adieu To Indiana Jones

Phoebe Waller-Bridge, from left, director James Mangold, Harrison Ford, Shaunette Renee Wilson, and Mads Mikkelsen pose for photographers upon arrival at the premiere of the film 'Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny' at the 76th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 18, 2023. (Photo by Scott Garfitt/Invision/AP)

CANNES, France (AP) — As the Cannes Film Festival crowd stood in rapturous applause, a visibly moved Harrison Ford stood on the stage, trying to keep his emotions in check.

The warmth of the audience and a clip reel that had just played had left Ford shaken.

“They say that when you’re about to die, you see your life flash before your eyes,” he said. “And I just saw my life flash before my eyes — a great part of my life, but not all of my life.”

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Harrison Ford poses for photographers upon arrival at the premiere of the film ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny’ at the 76th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 18, 2023. (Photo by Joel C Ryan/Invision/AP)

If last year’s Cannes was partially defined by its tribute to “Top Gun Maverick” star Tom Cruise, this year’s has belonged to Ford. This time, it’s been far more poignant. Ford, 80, is retiring Indiana Jones, saying goodbye to the iconic swashbuckling archeologist more than 40 years after he first debuted, with fedora, whip and a modest snake phobia.

It’s been a moving farewell tour — most of all for Ford, who has teared up frequently along the way. Speaking to reporters Friday, Ford was asked: Why give up Indy now?

“Is it not evident?” he replied with a characteristically sheepish grin. “I need to sit down and rest a little bit. I love to work. And I love this character. And I love what it brought into my life. That’s all I can say.”

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Producer Kathleen Kennedy, from left, Ethann Isidore, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, director James Mangold, Harrison Ford, Shaunette Renee Wilson, Mads Mikkelsen, and Boyd Holbrook pose for photographers upon arrival at the premiere of the film ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny’ at the 76th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 18, 2023. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole)

“Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” the fifth Indiana Jones film, premiered Thursday night in Cannes, bringing an affecting coda to the franchise begun with 1981’s “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” While that film and the next three were all directed by Steven Spielberg from a story by George Lucas, Ford’s final chapter is directed and co-written by James Mangold, the “Ford vs. Ferrari” filmmaker.

The gala, one of the most sought-after tickets at Cannes this year, also included an honorary Palme d’Or given to Ford. The next day, Ford was still struggling to articulate the experience of unveiling his final turn as Indiana Jones.

“It was indescribable. I can’t even tell you,” said Ford. “It’s just extraordinary to see a kind of relic of your life as it passes by.”

Following the disappointment of 2008’s little-loved “Indiana Jones and the Crystal Skull,” the possibilities for a fifth film lingered for years and went through many iterations. Ford said he was intent on seeing a different, less youthful version of Jones. “Dial of Destiny” is set in the 1960s and finds Indiana as a retiring professor whose long-ago exploits no longer seem so special in the age of space exploration.

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Harrison Ford poses for photographers with his honorary Palme d’Or at the photo call for the film ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny’ at the 76th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Friday, May 19, 2023. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP)

“I wanted to see the weight of life on him. I wanted to see him require reinvention and support. And I wanted him to have a relationship that was not a flirty movie relationship,” said Ford, who stars alongside Phoebe Waller-Bridge. “I wanted an equal relationship.”

Ford is clearly deeply pleased with the movie. He was especially complimentary of his castmates and Mangold, whom he said did more than “fill the shoes that Steven left for us.”

“Everything has come together to support me in my old age,” said Ford with a wry grin.

The movie begins with an extended sequence set back in the final days of WWII. In those scenes, Ford has been de-aged to appear much younger. Lucasfilm chief Kathleen Kennedy was quick to say that an AI-crafted Ford won’t be used by the company in the future. Ford called the employment of a de-aged version of him “skilled and assiduous” — and didn’t make him jealous.

“I don’t look back and say I wish I was that guy. I’m real happy with age,” said Ford. He then added, with an expletive, that it could be worse. “I could be dead.”

Ford isn’t retiring from acting. He has two ongoing TV series (“Shrinking,” “1923”) and he said he remains committed to working.

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Harrison Ford, left, Ethann Isidore and Mads Mikkelsen pose for photographers upon departure from the premiere of the film ‘Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny’ at the 76th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 18, 2023. (Photo by Joel C Ryan/Invision/AP)

“My luck has been been to work with incredibly talented people and find my way into this crowd of geniuses and not get my ass kicked out,” said Ford. “And I’ve apparently still got a chance to work and I want that. I need that in my life, that challenge.”

Ford, like Indiana, isn’t departing without his hat. He’s kept one, Ford said, but he more prizes the experience of making the films. “The stuff is great but it’s not about the stuff.”

And Ford can still turn heads. One female reporter declared that the 80-year-old was “still hot” and asked Ford — who briefly appears shirtless in the movie — how he stays fit. After a few chuckles and some mention of his avid cycling, Ford answered with mock pomposity.

“I’ve been blessed with this body,” he replied. “Thanks for noticing.”

___

Jake Coyle reported from Cannes.

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Girl, 15, Released, but Section 112 Still Looms Over Government Formation

Yok, a 15-year-old teenager prosecuted under Section 112, finally returned to school in Bangkok on 19 May 2023 to report to continue her studies after being released from Ban Praani Training Centre for Children and Young Women, Sampran District, Nakhon Pathom Province on May 18. Her school has been open for the new semester for 3 days.

Yok, who has been politically active since she was 14, had been detained for 51 days on 28 March after being arrested along with another artist who had painted the Grand Palace wall with the anarchist symbol and the letter 112.

The picture of a young girl showing a red rash on her back while detained, with a quote from Yok in the interview saying, ‘Has it come to the point that I deserve to be detained like this for 51 days?’ goes viral as an online posting, sparking criticism.

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The unexpected release of Yok following the court’s decision to reject the police request for her continued detention coincides with the formation of the coalition government involving the Move Forward party and other parties with a total of 9 parties and 314 MPs.

Section 112 has become a tricky condition for the formation of the government, including gathering support from the remaining political parties and MPs to secure Mr Pita Limjaroenrat, the leader of the Move Forward Party, with a total of 376 votes out of 500 seats in both houses.

Several parties and individuals have called for the deletion of the amendment to Section 112 from the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to form the government. Some Conservative MPs and Senators have stated that they will not support Pita if plans to amend section 112 remain.

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Regardless of how the Move Forward Party chooses to deal with Section 112, it is likely to be criticised from both sides — the faction that wants legislative change and the faction that opposes any change.

Previously, in April 2018, ahead of the 2019 general election, Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit and Piyabutr Saengkanokkul, leaders of the now-defunct Future Forward Party, had announced that they would not make amending Section 112 a priority for their party. This decision has disappointed human rights groups, as they had hoped for a different stance from the party.

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FILE Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, Pita Limjaroenrat and Piyabutr Saengkanokkul

The social movement demanding the amendment of Section 112 became evident in early 2012 during the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. It became known as the “Campaign for the Amendment of Section 112” and consisted of groups of academics, legal experts, historians, social scientists and social activists.

They opened a petition for public support and Charnvit Kasetsiri, the former rector of Thammasat University, represented them in handing over a list of 39,185 signatures to parliament. However, the legislative caucus did not respond and the campaign ended on  May 29, 2012.

The criminal law provision, section 112, is seen as a political tool that allows individuals to be targeted and charged, with severe penalties. The law states: “Whoever defames, insults or threatens the king, queen, heir to the throne or regent shall be punished with imprisonment for a term of three to fifteen years.

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Six Indian Tourists Are Arrested as Ice Cream Vendors

They came as tourists, but later six Indians were found working as ice cream vendors.  They were arrested with an ice cream truck parked at their residence.

On May 19, 2023, officers from Hat Yai Tourist Police, Immigration Police, and Tamhod Police Station in Phatthalung Province, southern Thailand, arrested six Indian nationals who were engaged in the sale of ice cream as a profession, despite being in possession of a tourist visa and having overstayed their right to reside in the Kingdom.

Authorities conducted a search and found the group of Indian men at their rented house in Moo 1, Mae Kari Subdistrict, Tamot District, Phatthalung Province. There were a total of seven people present, including a father and son.

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They all had Indian passports showing their entry into Thailand at different times. Some had entered in 2020 while others came in 2022. They posed as tourists but were selling ice cream in the Mae Khari sub-district in Phatthalung province. There was also an ice cream lorry parked near their rented room.

The police took control of the situation and handed over the case to the Tamhod police station. The persons were charged with exceeding their permitted period of stay in the kingdom without proper authorisation. They had failed to leave Thailand within the prescribed period of 90 days or more. As a result, each person was fined 20,000 baht and subsequently deported, with a ban on re-entry into Thailand for the period exceeding the permitted length of stay.

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Myanmar Raises Death Toll From Cyclone Mocha to 145

Local residents walk past damaged buildings after Cyclone Mocha in Sittwe township, Rakhine State, Myanmar, Tuesday, May 16, 2023. Myanmar’s military information office said the storm had damaged houses and electrical transformers in Sittwe, Kyaukpyu, and Gwa townships. (AP Photo)

The official death toll from the powerful cyclone that struck Myanmar has burgeoned to at least 145, including 117 members of the Muslim Rohingya minority, state television reported Friday.

It said the figure applied to the western state of Rakhine, where Cyclone Mocha did the most damage, but did not say how many storm-related deaths there have been in other parts of the country.

The accounting of casualties from the cyclone has been slow, in part due to communication difficulties in the affected areas and the military government’s tight control over information. The military government has said that unofficial death tolls surpassing 400 are false, but in the absence of independent confirmation, uncertainly remains about the actual extent of casualties and destruction.

Cyclone Mocha roared in from the Bay of Bengal on Sunday with high winds and rain slamming a corner of neighboring Bangladesh and a wider swath of western Myanmar’s Rakhine state. It made landfall near Rakhine’s Sittwe township with winds of up to 209 kilometers (130 miles) per hour before weakening to a tropical depression Monday as it moved inland.

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An aerial view of damage buildings after Cyclone Mocha in Sittwe township, Rakhine State, Myanmar.  (Military True News Information Team via AP)

The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said widescale destruction of homes and infrastructure was seen throughout Rakhine state.

“Urgent needs include shelter, clean water, food assistance and healthcare services,” it said. “There are rising concerns in flooded areas about the spread of waterborne disease and the movement of landmines,” a legacy of civil conflict that has been going on in Myanmar for decades.

“The impact of the cyclone was also felt heavily in the country’s northwest where houses were blown or washed away. Strong winds and rains have also damaged camps for displaced people in Kachin state,” the U.N. agency said.

Three Indian navy ships carrying relief material reached Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city, on Thursday and a fourth ship will arrive Friday, said India’s External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar. Yangon is south of the cyclone-hit area and has a major international port.

“The ships are carrying emergency food items, tents, essential medicines, water pumps, portable generators, clothes, sanitary and hygiene items,” Jaishankar said in a tweet.

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Soldiers and members of fire service help to repair a damaged buildings after Cyclone Mocha in Pyapon township, Ayeyarwaddy Delta, Myanmar. (Military True News Information Team via AP)

India has been the first responder to climate-related disasters in the region.

Refugee camps in Bangladesh, where more than 700,000 members of Myanmar’s Muslim Rohingya minority fled in 2017 to escape a brutal counterinsurgency campaign, missed the brunt of the storm with no reported deaths, thanks in part to a well-organized evacuation, but housing was severely damaged.

Many of the Rohingya who stayed in Myanmar after being made homeless by the 2017 attacks by security forces were settled in crowded displacement camps on the outskirts of Sittwe, where their ramshackle housing on low-lying land was reportedly swept away by the storm surge.

There are fears that there could be many fatalities in the Sittwe camps, but independent confirmation is difficult because of post-storm conditions and long-standing government restrictions meant to isolate the camps.

“Bridges have collapsed to the west of downtown Sittwe following #CycloneMocha, leaving only one access route to camps in the area,” Ben Small, who works for the U.N. Development Program in Myanmar, said on Twitter. “This further hinders humanitarian access. They urgently need repairing.”

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This photo provided by Myanmar Military True News Information Team on Monday, May 15, 2023, shows an aerial view of damage buildings after Cyclone Mocha in Sittwe township, Rakhine State, Myanmar.

A Rohingya who does relief work at one of the camps said by phone Thursday that they were instructed by the authorities not to provide information to the media.

Rakhine state spokesperson and attorney general Hla Thein issued a qualified denial of reports that hundreds of people had died, from other ethnic groups as well as the Rohingya. He said confirmation of further deaths would require investigations, including inspections of burial places.

Hla Thein said the authorities had warned people in the camps to move to safer places days before the storm hit, but some stayed until seawater poured in, wreaking destruction. He said the government was trying to send relief supplies to affected areas and there were no restrictions on relief organizations in sending aid, an assertion that could not immediately be confirmed.

A leader of a local charity group helping to collect data about casualties inside the Rohingya camps and nearby villages said Thursday that the bodies of at least 116 people from 15 camps and villages, including 32 children and 46 women, had been given burial rites.

He requested that neither he nor his organization be identified because of possible punishment by the authorities.

The charity worker said reports of higher death tolls may have resulted from misunderstandings due to communication breakdowns which also prevented the authorities from getting an accurate count.

The Associated Press could not independently confirm any of the casualty figures.

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LEE KUM KEE Flavour Express Will Make Debut Appearance at THAIFEX Brings Authentic Asian Flavours to Any Kitchen Around the World

Lee Kum Kee, the inventor of Oyster Sauce and a globally renowned Asian sauce and condiment brand, will make its debut appearance at THAIFEX – Anuga Asia (“THAIFEX”) – the Asia’s largest and most comprehensive food and beverage tradeshow from 23 to 27 May 2023 in Bangkok, Thailand to continue to strengthen its presence in Thailand and Southeast Asia. 

With the stringent quality management philosophy of “100-1=0” from farm to fork, Lee Kum Kee has become a world-renowned symbol of quality and trust. Lee Kum Kee upholds the spirit of Constant Entrepreneurship and has developed over 300 types of sauces and condiments for distributing to over 100 countries and regions. Lee Kum Kee is excited to participate in THAIFEX to provide foodservice solutions and innovative recipes to the visitors of the Asia’s largest food trade fair. 

Lee Kum Kee’s booth will be located at Hall 10 (Booth no.: LL15, Fine Food Category) in IMPACT Muang Thong Thani. Themed “From Asia to Any Kitchen”, the booth will be transformed into “LEE KUM KEE Flavour Express” which symbolises the journey of bringing the flavours of Asia to any kitchen around the world and is set to inspire new possibilities along the way. The Company’s goal is to showcase the versatility and richness of Asian flavours through a wide range of signature products including oyster sauce, soy sauce, sesame oil and convenience sauces. LEE KUM KEE Flavour Express will also feature a series of engaging activities including cooking demonstration, product tasting and samples giveaway. One of the highlights will be the cooking demonstration by two celebrity chefs on 23 May – Chef Thanarak Chuto (Chef Pom) from Thailand and award-winning Master Chef Kwok-keung Chan from Hong Kong, China. They will present Asian delicacies with Lee Kum Kee sauces at the booth.

Chef Pom is second to none for Chinese food in the country. He offers contemporary Chinese cuisine with an emphasis on seasonal quality ingredients in Cantonese, Sichuan, Shanghai and Hong Kong styles. Award-winning Master Chef Kwok-keung Chan has over 35 years of culinary experience, he is an expert in the culinary styles of Huaiyang, Sichuan, Canton and Beijing.  

Lee Kum Kee will also be the official premium sauce partner for the 9th Edition of Thailand Ultimate Chef Challenge (Asian Rice and Noodle category) with the aim of promoting culinary exchange, inspiring chefs on the diverse applications of Lee Kum Kee sauces and condiments and nurturing future culinary talents. The Challenge, which will take place at Hall 12 in IMPACT Muang Thong Thani during 23 – 27 May 2023, targets to bring over 700 professional and aspiring chefs worldwide to compete in 19 categories. 

Join us to learn more about Lee Kum Kee’s quality sauces and condiments at THAIFEX:

  • Booth: LL15, Hall 10 (Fine Food Category)
  • Venue: IMPACT Muang Thong Thani, Bangkok, Thailand
  • Date: 23-27 May 2023
    Trade Visitors: 23 – 26 May 2023 10:00am to 6:00pm;
    Trade and Public Visitors: 27 May 2023 10:00am to 8:00pm
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Taiwan Goes On The Sustainable Health Development In The Post-pandemic Era

Dr. Chuang Suo-Hang, a representative of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Thailand, wrote the article “Sustainable Health Development in the Post-pandemic Era” to explain how Taiwan would continue to play a role in world health, according to the following message:

As the world enters the fourth year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the situation is gradually improving. Most border restrictions have been lifted and global health governance has shifted from pandemic response to post-pandemic recovery. Countries worldwide have stepped up efforts to achieve health and well-being for all and further the realization of United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) whose progress was impacted by the pandemic. 

Taiwan fully supports health-related SDGs and the World Health Organization’s triple billion targets. Indeed, Taiwan is committed to building a more resilient and equitable health service supply chain, maintaining an inclusive and equitable universal health coverage system, and providing disease prevention and management through a robust primary healthcare system.

Taiwan is willing and able to share its experience in creating a cross-sectoral, innovative, and people-centered health approach to help the international community work toward the realization of the SDGs related to health and well-being.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Taiwan effectively mitigated the spread of the disease, leveraging its comprehensive public healthcare system, well-trained antipandemic personnel, and epidemiological surveillance, investigation, and analysis systems. Taiwan’s antipandemic response model included advance deployment and rapid response mechanisms. Other measures included border control policies, coordinated distribution of medical resources, and a patient transfer system to prevent and contain the pandemic at a time when vaccines and antiviral drugs were unavailable.

The Taiwanese people have played a pivotal role in the success of Taiwan’s antipandemic model by wearing masks, practicing social distancing, avoiding crowded areas, following quarantine regulations, and getting vaccinated. When compared with the 38 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development member states and Singapore, Taiwan ranks sixth-lowest in COVID-19 mortality and case-fatality rates. Taiwan also ranks fourth-highest for coverage rates of at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose and third-highest in terms of vaccine boosters administered.

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Dr. Chuang Suo-Hang, a representative of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Thailand

Promoting health for all

Last year, WHO’s Director-General outlined five priorities for the subsequent five years, which are promoting health, providing health services, protecting health, powering progress, and performing. Moreover, WHO’s Achieving well-being: A draft global framework for integrating well-being into public health utilizing a health promotion approach further demonstrates its commitment to health for all.  

Taiwan established a universal healthcare insurance system in 1995. Since that time, the government has continued to provide disease prevention and healthcare services so that people of all ages can enjoy the right to health. Taiwan provides prenatal checkups, gestational diabetes screening, anemia testing, and three ultrasound examinations to reduce pregnancy risks and promote maternal and infant health.

To assist infertile couples and reduce the financial burdens of in-vitro fertilization, the government has continued to expand subsidized infertility treatment programs. Taiwan also aims to create a breastfeeding-friendly environment and provide preventive pediatric healthcare and health education.

What’s more, Taiwan has established a number of prevention and management programs for noncommunicable diseases. For instance, programs targeting chronic metabolic diseases assist at-risk groups, providing services such as diet and exercise guidance as well as smoking and betel nut cessation information to empower people to take control of their own health. Such initiatives improve lives and reduce the prevalence of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and high blood sugar, which often lead to chronic disease.

Taiwan also supports the global fight against cancer and WHO’s goal of reducing cancer mortality 25 percent by 2025. In line with WHO’s Cervical Cancer Elimination Initiative, Taiwan subsidizes cervical screenings and human papillomavirus vaccinations. HPV vaccines have been administered to female students aged 12 to 15 since 2018. By December 2022, a coverage rate of 92.1 percent had been achieved.  

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Innovative technology and universal health coverage

Taiwan’s National Health Insurance (NHI) is a prime example of universal health coverage, offering financial protection and access to a wide range of essential services. The COVID-19 pandemic helped the international community recognize the importance of regional cooperation and digitization in healthcare. Taiwan is committed to promoting digital health and innovation to enhance the accessibility and quality of healthcare services, including plans for a next-generation NHI program.

Taiwan has introduced innovative healthcare services, utilizing real-time telehealth consultations for patients residing in remote areas and outlying islands, and is exploring applications for artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies. During the pandemic, Taiwan issued 13 export licenses for its herbal formula NRICM101 (Taiwan Chingguan Yihau) to help countries in the region combat the pandemic.

Taiwan is currently implementing preventive measures for the postpandemic era, such as strengthening the domestic production of critical drugs and active pharmaceutical ingredients to avert future drug shortages. Understanding how important it is to work with the international community, Taiwan will further share innovative technologies and best practices with partners around the world to advance universal health coverage.

Taiwan can help, and Taiwan is helping

Taiwan has not been invited to the World Health Assembly since 2017. Now that the COVID-19 pandemic is abating and dialogue on strengthening health systems worldwide is accelerating, Taiwan should not be left out. Taiwan can help, and Taiwan’s inclusion would make the world healthier, more sustainable, and more equitable.

 Taiwan urges WHO and all relevant stakeholders to support Taiwan’s inclusion in the World Health Assembly as an observer, as well as Taiwan’s full participation in WHO meetings, mechanisms, and activities. Taiwan will continue to work with the world to help ensure the fundamental right to health enshrined in the WHO Constitution. In the spirit of the SDGs, no country should be left behind—especially not Taiwan, which has made significant contributions to global public health.

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