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Thai politics Thailand

Thailand’s finance minister appears on soap opera (cross posted to Siam Voices)

Note: This is cross-posted to Siam Voices, the new group-run Thailand blog at Asian Correspondent.

Thailand’s finance minister, Korn Chatikavanij, appeared on a Thai soap opera Tuesday night to deliver a message about the government’s efforts to help citizens pay off debts to loan sharks.

AP has the story:

“Vanida” is a sappy drama set in World War II Thailand that revolves around a love triangle between a colonel, his aristocratic fiancee and the daughter of a merchant. Debt is central to the story line, in which the colonel’s money problems get him into all kinds of trouble.

Korn has cited the show on his Facebook page to explain illegal debt collection practices, and the Finance Ministry collaborated with the show’s producers for a three-minute short that followed the main show Tuesday night.

It begins with the three main characters talking about someone who owes money and the colonel says, “Nowadays the government is helping with debt.”

Cue Korn, who enters in gray trousers, a white shirt, striped tie and suspenders.

“The Abhisit Vejjajiva government has already helped about 500,000 people tackle illegal debts,” he says heroically, as the show’s two starlets smile and bat their eyes. “For those who have registered but have yet to receive help, you can call our hot line at 1689.”

Here’s the clip, embedded below. Korn appears at about the 1:35 mark:

Korn is no stranger to the media — and he is particularly adept at social media. His Facebook page has been “liked” by more than 130,000 people. And he has nearly 55,000 followers on Twitter.

Regarding the soap opera cameo, Bangkok Pundit, in a recent tweet, says simply: “Cheesy but effective.”

(Emphasis mine.)

(Via @thaitvnews)

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Thai politics Thailand

Thaksin on Foreign Policy’s list of “Bad Exes”

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Thailand’s exiled former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra is one of five ex-heads of state on Foreign Policy‘s Bad Exes list. A snippet:

Old job: Prime minister of Thailand, 2001-2006

New image: Since being deposed in a 2006 coup amid allegations of graft and human rights abuses, Thaksin has lived a peripatetic existence. The former billionaire businessman has served as a “special ambassador” for Nicaragua and an economic advisor in Cambodia, and was briefly owner of the Manchester City* soccer club. Thaksin reportedly lived under a false name in Germany for more than a year and has used illegally received passports from a number of other countries as well. He now makes his home in Dubai.

(Via Saksith at Siam Voices.)

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Thai politics Thailand

More on last week’s deadly explosion in Nonthaburi

Last week I mentioned, briefly, the deadly explosion in the Bangkok suburb of Nonthaburi. Four people were killed in what seems to have been an accidental detonation of a bomb that was being assembled by a reported red shirt supporter.

Here’s a detailed post from Bangkok Pundit that examines the facts and provides some analysis. Worth a read. From the conclusion:

There is evidence that Samai was a red shirt whether he was a guard or not and to link to the explosion – his room, he signed the rental papers (as per a copy shown on Channel 3’s Sahm Miti news program), he has experienced with fixing electrical appliances, and he was in the room at the time. It does not suggest a very sophisticated operation – the rent on the apartment was a mere 1,000 Baht a month and the equipment shown on TV looks very rudimentary. Nevertheless, there is evidence and circumstantial evidence to support the government’s continued position that the red shirts are behind some of the various explosions. Where to now?

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Bangkok Thailand

Krispy Kreme arrives in Bangkok

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The Financial Times: Krispy Kreme opens on a high in Bangkok:

As western corporations scratch their heads to work out how to make the most of Asia’s growth, it is sometimes worth remembering the tried and tested, like the combination of an established brand, lashings of sugar and a pinch of hype.

Krispy Kreme Doughnuts opened its first Bangkok franchise shop last week, and every day the crowds are still queuing around the block to get their hands on the saccharine treat. On Tuesday the longest wait was five and a half hours, which is better than the 27-hour marathon put in by hard-core doughnut fans on opening day.

Related: Dwight Turner’s blog post: “The Best of Bangkok’s Krispy Kreme Grand Opening Twitter Buzz.

See also, for background info: my post from Oct. 2009: “Krispy Kreme: Coming to Thailand.

Humorous tweet from @BKKApologist that reflects my feelings, having discovered Krispy Kreme at a shop in Charleston, South Carolina, as a 14-year-old:

I grew up an hour away from Krispy Kreme HQ in North Carolina. I can tell you where “donut mania” leads: a wardrobe full of sweatpants.

(Emphasis mine.)

(FT item via @jonrussell)

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Bangkok Thailand

Explosion in Nonthaburi kills 3, injures 10, Bangkok Post says

A developing story: Bangkok PostExplosion kills 3, injures 10 in Nonthaburi:

At least three people were killed and 10 injured in a huge explosion which occurred in Nonthaburi’s Bang Bua Thong district on Tuesday evening.

Nonthaburi is a Bangkok suburb. It’s unclear, at this point, what caused the blast.

As I just tweeted, @tulsathit & @pranot are posting updates and images.

Categories
Bangkok Thai politics Thailand

State of emergency in Bangkok renewed for 3 months

This just in from the Bangkok Post: Emergency decree renewed for 3 months:

The cabinet meeting has decided to renew the emergency decree in Bangkok, Nonthaburi, Samut Prakan and Pathum Thani for another three months, deputy government spokesman Suphachai Chaisamut said on Tuesday.

The emergency law declared three months ago is still in force in the capital and the three adjoining central provinces, but will expire on Wednesday. It has already been lifted throughout the North and Northeast.

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Thai politics Thailand

More on Viktor Bout’s delayed extradition

A quick update to my earlier post. The NYT/IHT has this story:

Suspected Arms Dealer Seems Closer to Extradition

This bit caught my eye:

Mr. Bout engaged in a particularly heated exchange with the presiding judge over his demand for a Russian interpreter, a request denied by the court.

Mr. Bout, a graduate of a prestigious Soviet language institute, turned to the gallery full of reporters and said in English: “This is due process of law or what? Gentlemen, you are all witnesses!”

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Links

11 Links

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Some Thailand-related, some not:

  1. Understanding Shakespeare: Towards a visual form for dramatic texts and languagewww.understanding-shakespeare.com
  2. 10 Tips on How to Write Less BadlyThe Chronicle of Higher Education
  3. Never Ending Pencilwww.yankodesign.com
  4. It’s Back-to-School Season for the Water Buffalo, TooWSJ
  5. Wine: Self-Serve Filling Stations Arrive at French Supermarkets — GOOD
  6. Mattel introduces new Journalism Barbie — Boing Boing
  7. The implications of coloured movementsBangkok Post
  8. The Hamster Wheel: Why running as fast as we can is getting us nowhereCJR
  9. Small Change: Why the revolution will not be tweetedThe New Yorker
  10. Debate Over Meaning of Standoff in EcuadorNYT
  11. What Really Happened in Ecuador: Eyewitnesses deny police kidnapped the president, and there’s no evidence a coup was in the making. — WSJ

Image above: Clouds, Birds, Moon, Venus, by Isaac Gutiérrez Pascual — Astronomy Picture of the Day

Categories
Thai politics Thailand

Viktor Bout’s extradition to the U.S. delayed — again

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The extradition of alleged Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout — who has been imprisoned here in Thailand since 2008 — has been delayed again.

AP has the story: Viktor Bout extradition stalled by Thai ruling:

A Thai court has rejected a request to drop a second set of charges against alleged Russian arms smuggler Viktor Bout, a decision that stalls his long-awaited extradition to the U.S.

The BBC has more.

For the backstory, see previous posts here and here.