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/ 4 February 2005
A disgruntled Thai customer on Friday smashed up his allegedly defective Toyota pickup truck with a sledgehammer after failing to get the company to replace the offending vehicle with a deluxe Lexus sports car. Noraset Roonpraphan took a sledgehammer to his two-year-old Toyota Hilux Tiger pickup truck.
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/ 18 January 2005
A plan by Thailand’s prison service to broadcast the lives of death-row inmates on its website right up until the moment before execution has been axed, local media reported on Tuesday. The country’s justice ministry pulled the plug on the broadcasts planned by the Corrections Department after the idea sparked protests from human rights groups.
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/ 13 December 2004
Wild elephants in Thailand stumbled upon a feast when they found a tapioca delivery truck with a flat tire, officials said on Monday. The driver, Somkuan Sirisat, said he had gone for help to repair the tire on Sunday night — and when he returned, he found five or six elephants surrounding his truck and devouring its contents.
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/ 24 November 2004
Former anti-apartheid activist Valli Moosa of South Africa was elected the new president of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) on Wednesday. IUCN is deemed the world’s largest conservation network. Moosa, (47) born in Johannesburg, has served on the United Nations Environment Programme governing council, the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment, and the South African Business Trust.
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/ 12 November 2004
A heart-warming comic book about a stray dog on the streets of Bangkok who won the heart of Thailand’s much-loved King Bhumibol Adulyadej, hit the kingdom’s bookstores on Friday, said the publisher. The king himself penned the original story of Tongdaeng, or ”Copper” who was sent to the royal palace as a tiny puppy.
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/ 5 November 2004
Doctors on Friday urged that a television programme set to show a man eating live centipedes and cockroaches be cancelled, saying it might endanger the lives of copycat youngsters. Local newspapers published front-page photographs of Wek Srikhaimook — nicknamed ”Wek Cockroach” — eating the insects during a taping of the show, which is to be aired on Monday.
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/ 20 October 2004
Thai authorities will kill about 40 tigers believed to be sick with bird flu after 30 others died at a private zoo, officials said on Wednesday. The decision was made after seven more tigers suspected to have the virus died at Sriracha Tiger Zoo in central Chonburi province. The deaths of 23 other tigers were announced on Tuesday.
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/ 19 October 2004
Twenty-three tigers have died and 30 more are sick from bird flu at a private zoo in Thailand after eating the carcasses of infected chickens, but health officials said on Tuesday that there is little threat to humans. Thai veterinarians are checking for the disease at chicken farms where the zoo got the birds that were fed to the tigers.
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/ 18 October 2004
A young Thai man lost his penis to his knife-wielding wife and then forgot to bring his severed member with him to hospital, fatefully delaying a reattachment operation, news reports said on Monday. Sornlam Yotbanya (24) had a heated argument with his wife, Rungnapha Pongalee (32), on Sunday night about his mistress.
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/ 12 October 2004
Members of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) on Tuesday in Bangkok voted down — for the sixth time in a row — Japan’s proposal to legalise trade in minke whales. The 13th Cites conference of parties voted 67 against, 55 in favour and 14 abstentions on Japan’s proposal.
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/ 11 October 2004
Member states to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) on Monday adopted an ”action plan” that places further controls on the illegal ivory trade in Africa. The plan, Cites document 29,1, calls on African ”range states” with large elephant populations to prohibit unregulated domestic sales in ivory, placing the onus on sellers to prove that their sources are legal.
Aphrodisiacal qualities attributed to the horn of the rhinoceros have rammed a hole through protective international laws designed to conserve the animal. Conservationists are aghast at the way proposals from Namibia and South Africa, to allow export quotas for trophy hunting of the black rhinoceros, have been accepted at the 13th Meeting of the Conference of Parties to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites).
The European Union wants tighter trade restrictions on some marine species, but remains undecided about Namibia’s proposal to ease rules on ivory sales, officials said on Tuesday. The 25 EU countries will vote together on suggested changes to an international treaty on wildlife conservation, giving the bloc significant clout, said Julio Garcia Burgues, a European Commission environmental official.
Thai police have arrested the mother and three aunts of a 12-year-old girl who was killed in a ritual sacrifice to the Hindu God Indra ”to bring light to the world,” media reports said on Tuesday. Police raided the house of Kanchana Jiamcharoen (50) near Ratchburi’s ”Floating Market,” on Monday afternoon after neighbours said they had heard screams coming from the compound at about 2am.
Wildlife conservationists and government delegates on Monday approved proposals by Namibia and South Africa to kill and export as hunting trophies a small number of endangered black rhinos, protected under an international treaty. South Africa’s downscaled proposal was widely endorsed, but drew criticism from some countries and the World Wildlife Fund.
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/ 17 September 2004
Shoppers in Sukhumvit Road, Bangkok, are greeted by gleaming white ivory statuettes and whole elephant tusks, but what tourists don’t know is they have probably been made from illegal African ivory. Conservationists are concerned that loopholes in Thailand’s laws allow the ivory trade to flourish in that country.
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/ 3 September 2004
Complaints by feminist groups have forced Bangkok authorities to replace signs that called on women but not men to remain chaste on city buses where Thai youths are known to have sex, an official said on Friday. The Bangkok Mass Transit Authority on Friday began posting improved versions of the signs.
South African elder statesman Nelson Mandela, who turns 86 on Sunday.
The charisma of Nelson Mandela and the cheque book of Bill Gates joined forces at the International Aids Conference in Bangkok on Thursday to lay assault on tuberculosis (TB). Mandela branded TB a silent slayer in the HIV/Aids pandemic, while Gates’s charity unveiled a ,7-million grant.
Don’t forget about TB, says Mandela
Experts called on Thursday for urgent work on HIV-killing gels that could help protect women who can’t rely on condoms, while democracy icon Nelson Mandela told the world not to ignore tuberculosis (TB) in its battle against Aids. TB is a common diseases that attacks Aids patients after their immune systems have been destroyed.
South African activists on Wednesday decried the government’s decision against recommending the use of a key anti-Aids drug that can prevent the virus from being passed by infected mothers to their children. The South African government’s drug council has said it won’t recommend that nevirapine be used by itself.
An acute shortage of doctors trained to deliver life-saving drugs to people living with HIV/Aids in Asia is severely hampering treatment efforts, a report said as the 15th International Aids Conference entered its second day on Tuesday. India has only one trained doctor for every 10 000 people living with HIV.
The threat of HIV/Aids can be countered by abstinence, loving relationships and marriage instead of relying solely on condoms, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni told delegates at the International Aids Conference in Bangkok on Monday.
They have been boiled, fed to ducks, even attached to hot air balloons and cast into the night sky — when it comes to permanently depriving a cheating lover of a recently severed penis, the imagination of the wronged Thai woman knows few bounds.
The first summit meeting of national leaders on HIV/Aids in Bangkok next week has been called off because only one of the invited leaders is showing up. A Foreign Ministry spokesperson said only Ugandan President Lieutenant General Yoweri Museveni and United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan are now coming.
Part of an 11-storey department store collapsed on Wednesday in the Thai capital, injuring at least seven people including two seriously, police said. A section of the New World Department Store caved in from the eighth floor where workers had placed rubbish ahead of a planned demolition.
A huge fire on Friday razed a densely populated slum area in Bangkok near several Western embassies and luxury hotels, leaving thousands of Thais homeless, police said. The blaze, one of the biggest in Bangkok in recent years, destroyed virtually all 700 wooden houses in the Tungmahamek slum area.
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/ 20 February 2004
Bird flu’s grip on Asia tightened on Friday with new outbreaks in China as well as Thailand where the deadly virus was also detected in a leopard, a tiger and two domestic cats. China reported two new confirmed cases of bird flu, bringing the tally to 48 outbreaks in more than half its provincial-level regions.
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/ 18 February 2004
The death toll from Asia’s bird flu crisis rose to 21 on Wednesday, with confirmation that a four-year-old Thai boy had died of the virus, which has staged new outbreaks in several countries. As more cases broke out in Thailand, China and Japan this week, the United Nations warned Asia’s bird flu crisis was far from over.
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/ 16 February 2004
Asia’s bird flu crisis showed no sign of easing on Monday as new outbreaks of the disease that has left 20 people dead were reported across the region. Thailand, which on Saturday confidently predicted it would have eradicated the disease by the end of the month, saw its campaign to wipe out bird flu suffer a setback with nine new outbreaks.
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/ 14 February 2004
After killing millions of chickens and ducks across Asia, bird flu is feared to have jumped to more exotic species, possibly killing a leopard and cranes in Thailand and pheasants in Taiwan. The disease has killed 14 people in Vietnam and five in Thailand, and still has not been controlled in several Asian countries.
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/ 2 February 2004
Two additional people died from bird flu, bringing Asia’s death toll to 12 on Monday, while China said it suspected the virus has reached poultry in one of its most remote corners and United Nations officials warned that the outbreak was far from over.
First ‘human to human’ cases feared