Thumbs down for charter

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/politics/Thumbs-down-for-charter-30278120.html

DRAFT CONSTITUTION

Constitution Drafting Commission chairman Meechai Ruchupan holds up a copy of the CDC’s charter draft during a press conference to unveil details of his team’s draft at Parliament yesterday.

Constitution Drafting Commission chairman Meechai Ruchupan holds up a copy of the CDC’s charter draft during a press conference to unveil details of his team’s draft at Parliament yesterday.

 

Critics say CDC draft does not prescribe Meechanisms to deal with country’s many problems.

CRITICS HAVE questioned the potential of the charter draft to adequately address the country’s problems, including corruption and societal divisions, after it was released for the first time yesterday.

Constitution Drafting Commission chief Meechai Ruchupan held a press conference on the completion of the first charter draft after the CDC had spent around four months drafting it.

He stressed that it was principally aimed at curbing corruption but critics questioned whether the mechanisms introduced were enough to do so.

Suriyasai Katasila, director of Rangsit University’s Thailand Reform Institute, said the mechanisms – including the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) as well as tight screening of the qualifications of politicians and political office holders – responded merely to basic corruption.

The country, he said, was plagued with a complicated corruption problem, with big investors colluding with politicians and resulting in large-scale policy-based corruption and a fundamental inequity problem that needed to be seriously addressed. The draft did not do that, he said

He also said the draft did not clearly devise a specific mechanism needed to bring about reconciliation and reform that the country was in dire need of.

“No matter how good a constitution we might have, we could still fail if we remain deeply divided,” Suriyasai said.

Buntoon Srethasirote, a former member of the Constitution Drafting Committee, agreed. He said he could see efforts had been made to address issues, but they were still at a basic level, when the issues facing the country were much more complicated.

For instance, the charter draft tries to secure people’s rights and freedom via a state commitment.

Buntoon said that was no different from previous drafts and even this charter had toned down the state’s commitment to the people.

He said the previous charter’s Article 67, which secured the peoples’ right to a healthy environment, was absent in this charter. There is only a pledge by the state to utilise natural resources carefully, he noted.

Most importantly, Buntoon said, this charter draft hardly addressed a key component of civil-based politics that aimed to reduce inequality, prevent corruption and stop deep divisions occurring in society.

Satithorn Thananithichote, a political scientist from King Prajadhipok’s Institute, said combining the mechanisms in the draft served Article 35 of the charter very well.

He said it could solve the immediate problem of a parliamentary dictatorship facing the country, but that was not the fundamental problem in Thai politics.

The root of the problem, he observed, was that one party kept winning elections and others could not compete with it.

The scholar said to sustainably solve the issue political parties, as a political institution, must be reformed and developed to the point where they could compete effectively against one another.

In response to the criticism that the charter draft was rather tight in terms of limiting future governments’ power, CDC chief Meechai said it was in line with Article 35 of the 2014 interim charter. It stipulates clearly that the new constitution set out mechanisms to effectively curb graft and get corrupt people out of politics.

“Because of the framework established through Article 35, this charter draft focuses sharply on curbing corruption,” he said. “As long as the interim charter is in effect, no matter how many times the new constitution is written, all these mechanisms will persist. The new drafters might come up with something even harsher.”

The CDC chief stressed that independent agencies and the Constitutional Court, principal mechanisms to help keep corrupt politicians in check, had not been given more power.

Most of their authority remained the same as in the previous constitution, he said, adding that the new charter draft only stipulated more clearly what exactly was deemed to be corrupt and immoral.

The checks and balances process would also be undertaken among those bodies, he said, while the Constitutional Court could be examined by the NACC.

In regard to speculation over the delay in holding a national election, Meechai said it could be postponed for a couple of months more if relevant organic laws were not finished in time. Alternatively, the CDC would consider picking only necessary laws to work on first to meet the deadline.

The rest might be written later, he said, adding that it is necessary that a time frame be set for organic laws to be written or they would be neglected like before.

“The road map was the intention of the government. But if it’s not finished or there are no organic laws, the election will have to be put off for a couple of months, and that should not be a problem,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Pheu Thai Party branded the draft charter as undemocratic, saying it aimed to help the coup makers hand their power over to people they trust.

In a statement, the party warned that provisions in the new charter would weaken political parties and future governments.

It called on the charter drafters and those in power to revise the draft so it upholds democratic principles.

Pheu Thai also warned that if no revisions were made to the draft, it could give rise to more political crises.

 

Two options emerge if draft is rejected

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/politics/Two-options-emerge-if-draft-is-rejected-30278123.html

ANALYSIS

Govt could amend interim charter or attempt a third draft, if necessary.

PRIME MINISTER Prayut Chan-o-cha appears to be keeping his cards close to his chest on what he plans to do should the draft charter be rejected in the public referendum. He obviously has a back-up plan, but he certainly is not revealing it to anybody right now.

“If the draft fails to make it through the referendum, then it will be my business. I tied the knot, now I must learn to untie it. I will ensure a general election is held,” the premier said.

Prayut has been insisting publicly that he will not stay in power even if the draft is rejected. In fact, he keeps reiterating that his government will stick with its earlier timeframe to hold an election by next year.

Separately, Constitution Drafting Commission chairman Meechai Ruchupan landed in hot water when he bluntly stated that the interim charter would be adopted permanently should the draft written by his team not be accepted by the public. He later claimed that he actually meant the interim charter would only be used until a new charter is adopted.

CDC spokesman Amorn Wanitwiwat, however, has his own theory. He says if this draft charter is rejected, Thailand will end up with a constitution fashioned by the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO). He probably means that if this draft charter is rejected, then the NCPO will have to find the reasons why this happened, before amending the interim charter accordingly and then promulgating it permanently.

Prayut‘s remark that he has a plan at hand to ensure a general election is held if this draft is rejected could mean that he has another charter draft ready. However, it could also mean that the interim charter would be amended to pave the way for this draft to be adopted.

There is also another possible alternative; the interim charter will be amended to pave the way for a general election before the Meechai draft is brushed up and promulgated as an official constitution.

Under these two scenarios, there should be no need for a referendum.

The interim charter stipulates that the draft charter must get votes from more than half of the eligible voters.

Prayut said he has instructed the legal department to see if the government should amend the interim charter so it stipulates the draft must get more than half of the votes actually cast. If this point is amended, the constitution will have a better chance of being accepted, as fewer votes would be required for it to be passed.

Besides, it is not yet necessary for Prayut and the NCPO to reveal their plans should the draft be rejected, because the referendum is scheduled for the end of July. In fact, political observers say revealing their plans now would put the NCPO and Prayut‘s government at a political disadvantage.

Is the ‘angel’ doll here to stay?

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/politics/Is-the-angel-doll-here-to-stay-30278124.html

LIKE IT SHARE IT

LOOK THEP or “child angel” dolls became the talk of the town after Thai Smile Airlines announced last week that doll owners could purchase separate seats for their so-called angels.

Many people reacted to this by saying that the very idea of sitting next to a doll on a flight was creepy, while some members of the media jumped on the opportunity to provide scoops. Avid reporters began staking out temples where people take these dolls to invoke the soul of an angel, and interviewed some owners, who insisted that their beloved dolls were in no way harmful.

Whether real or imagined, news of other services being provided for these “angel” dolls began doing the rounds in social media – ranging from plastic surgery and computer classes to funeral and termination services.

Some people even used actor Thep Pho-ngam as the butt of a joke, by posting his picture with a caption claiming he was in trouble for having so many children with different women.

Phitak Siriwong “Tic Neverdie”, dean of Silpakorn University’s Faculty of Management Science, posted that he had no trouble with students bringing their dolls into class, provided the doll can submit an assignment and defend its paper individually like other students. If the doll fails, he said, the student will be held responsible.

Academic Pinkaew Luangaramsri wrote: “I believe that the ‘child angel’ cult of the middle class is not a doctrine of worshipping sacred things, but is the consumption of artificial things by those who do not care for originals or are unable to distinguish truth from simulacra.”

Chawisa Sethabuthra, who sells beauty and doll products, posted on Facebook: “As I have been in the ‘pretty doll’ business for some time now, I would like to say that dolls are just dolls. People enjoy playing with them and nobody really takes their dolls to a black magic ceremony. There is only a small minority of people who do this. Social media does not distinguish the truth from stories. The truth is that some people hold and take their dolls around with them, but there are some people who make up stories saying all these are ‘child angel’ dolls’, branding the owners as crazy. Please be mindful before you make judgements.”

Media academic Time Chuastapanasiri wrote: “We should stop calling them ‘child angels’ – they are baby dolls, not the children of any angels. Businesses in Thailand should also stop following all trends. Don’t serve those who bring these dolls to restaurants and flights, because it disturbs others visually as well as mentally and intellectually. In the future you will have to issue many measures to handle this. As for the media, please clarify that this is nonsense and do not let it take up too much space or dominate over other news stories.”

Wanchai Roujanavong wrote: “This ‘child angel’ craze will go away in no time and then nobody will care about it. Some Thais are good at picking up trends before getting bored. There was a time when the Jatukam Ramathep amulet was popular and people were ready to pay hundreds of thousands of baht for one. Now nobody will even spend Bt5 on one of them.”

Jak Panchupetch wrote: “I’ve never seen any prophet teach humans to become slaves to a doll. I’ve never seen any millionaire get rich from holding a doll. Please take care of your mental health before spending your money and time taking care of a doll. Take care of your parents, give them food and drinks, take them on a vacation, take good care of them – they are the real angels.”

@AkaravutTv9 tweeted that a “child angel” image made it to British newspaper Telegraph’s top shots, to which @zapience tweeted: “From the caption we already know that Westerners are stupid enough to say it was a result of politics and economy.”

Treat me fairly, Yingluck tells PM

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/politics/Treat-me-fairly-Yingluck-tells-PM-30278125.html

Yingluck met some 300 of her supporters in Nakhon Ratchasima

Yingluck met some 300 of her supporters in Nakhon Ratchasima

FORMER premier Yingluck Shinawatra has written to the prime minister and finance minister to protest over the government’s decision to seek several billion baht in damages from her over the rice-pledging scheme.

Yingluck said in an eight-page letter dated yesterday that the government order to have her cover the damages was unconstitutional and unlawful. She ended her letter with “please consider to ensure fairness”.

However, she said on Facebook yesterday that she did not think her protest would lead to any concrete action by the government.

“I know you won’t pay attention again. If you had, this would not have happened,” she said, adding that she had now sent six letters to both Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and Finance Minister Apisak Tantivorawong.

Yingluck noted that the criminal case against her over the rice-pledging scheme had yet to be completed.

She is being tried by the Supreme Court’s Criminal Division for Political Office Holders for alleged negligence involving the scheme, which was introduced by her government. The court is expected to deliver its verdict late this year.

She also argued that it was not right for the Finance Ministry to seek damages from her as the agency was not the damaged party in this case.

Yingluck said a fair and legally acceptable estimate of the damages was not yet available, and it was unfair to her that the damages were sought from her alone. The ex-PM said she had her lawyer submit the letter to Prayut and Apisak. A copy of the letter was posted on her Facebook page yesterday.

The controversial corruption-plagued rice-pledging scheme is estimated to have cost about Bt500 billion in state revenue.

In a related development, Yingluck met some 300 of her supporters in Nakhon Ratchasima yesterday. “Yingluck, fight, fight,” they chanted.

She appeared among the supporters before a statue of respected local heroine Thao Suranari, holding a sword in one hand and a red sheath in the other. Her fans were shouting “Fight, fight.”

The gathering was observed by some 30 police and military officers.

 

NRSA engages community networks to boost public input

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/politics/NRSA-engages-community-networks-to-boost-public-in-30278021.html

IN A bid to address a lack of public participation in the country’s reform, the National Reform Steering Assembly (NRSA) has announced it is expediting the forging of ties with networks nationwide.

The NRSA’s information centre has received little more than 100 comments so far – some of them duplicates, according to NRSA vice chairwoman Walairat Sriaran. As such, it has rated public feedback unsatisfactory.

“It has shown us that while we have been working in Bangkok, our work has barely reached the people. They do not yet have a high degree of awareness or participation in the reform work,” said Walairat.

The NRSA has met with representatives of commerce councils, which have agreed to lend a hand in reforming the country. The Community Organisation Network, which encompasses over 4,000 communities, has also agreed to help disseminate the NRSA’s reform work via its local radio networks.

The NRSA will today meet representatives from educational institutes to discuss a plan to expand its outreach there, said NRSA first vice chair Alongkorn Ponlaboot.

Alongkorn said the NRSA had adjusted its work with the National Legislative Assembly (NLA) to expedite amendments and implementation of at least 126 Acts identified as being in need of reform.

However, Alongkorn refused to elaborate on which areas needed changes in the law, saying the NRSA was in the process of reviewing all the Acts in question and working alongside the NLA to make the necessary alterations.

So far it has finished drafting action plans for the 12 principal reform agendas. It has also been assigned by the government to come up with a 20-year national strategy plan, covering long-term reform, which will operate in tandem with the national plan for long-term social and economic development, expected to cover a 20-year development period.

Polls likely delayed until late next year

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/politics/Polls-likely-delayed-until-late-next-year-30278030.html

NATIONAL ELECTION

Meechai

Meechai

Pheu Thai accuses CDC of colluding to keep NCPO in power.

THE NEXT general election will probably be postponed until late next year as the constitution drafters need more time to complete the organic laws regarding elections and political parties, the chief charter drafter said yesterday.

Meechai Ruchupan, chairman |of the Constitution Drafting Commission (CDC), said the new draft constitution’s transitional clauses state that elections of MPs and senators must be held within five months after the organic electoral laws take effect.

That meant the original plan that scheduled the next elections for July of next year, as was stated by Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, could be delayed.

Meanwhile, Pheu Thai Party politicians reacted angrily to the likelihood of a delay. They also accused CDC members of colluding to extend the time in power of the military’s ruling National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO).

Meechai said yesterday that the need to complete 10 organic laws in line with the draft charter’s transitional clauses would inevitably result in a further delay of the election, from July 2017 to later in the year.

He said he did not think drafters would be able to complete the task of writing the organic laws within eight months after the potential passage of the constitutional draft, as was stated in the junta’s “road map to democracy”.

“It’s a very tough job and the time given is so little. On average we need [time] to finish drafting important laws of at least one month,” Meechai said. The chief drafter said he thought the Election Commission (EC) would take the maximum five months, or 150 days, allowed to prepare for the election. He said the drafters had specified the five-month period to allow the EC ample time to hold a free and fair election.

The NCPO will remain in place until the new administration takes over from them, Meechai said, adding that the powers of NCPO chief Prayut would remain intact.

The CDC chief rejected opposition against the NCPO retaining its powers, saying that this was the “normal mechanism”.

Pheu Thai deputy spokesman Anusorn Iamsa-ard yesterday called the delay in elections a “bad joke” for the Thai people. He said Prayut, as head of the NCPO, had already announced that the next election would be held in July next year.

Anusorn warned that the likelihood of a delay might cause more voters to reject the draft constitution in the national referendum. “They will see that this is a clear attempt to extend [the NCPO’s] time in power,” he said.

Pheu Thai politician Worachai Hema said it appeared Meechai and his team wrote the draft constitution with provisions that would lead to it being rejected in a referendum so as to give the NCPO more time in power.

He warned that this could lead to further conflict in society.

Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam suggested yesterday that the CDC focus on writing the five organic laws that are directly related to the election so that the original schedule under the road map could be met.

However, he added that if the constitutional draft passed a national referendum, its provisions – including the new schedule for an election – must be abided by.

In a related development, the CDC will hold a press conference at Parliament this afternoon to reveal the details of the 270-article constitution draft.

HELLO PYEONGCHANG WINTER FESTIVAL

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/HELLO-PYEONGCHANG-WINTER-FESTIVAL-30278412.html

FESTIVAL DIARY

Hello Pyeongchang Winter Festival

Hello Pyeongchang Winter Festival

Part of the run-up to the PyeongChang 2018 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, the Hello PyeongChang Winter Festival takes place this week around Gangneung Dano Park.

HELLO PYEONGCHANG WINTER FESTIVAL

February 4 to 6, Gangwon-do, South Korea

Part of the run-up to the PyeongChang 2018 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, the Hello PyeongChang Winter Festival takes place this week around Gangneung Dano Park. It features various programmes including an opening ceremony with performances by K-pop singers, cultural and arts groups, traditional performances themed on Gangwon-do traditional culture, a World DJ festival, cultural art performance by EATOF (East Asia Inter-Regional Tourism Forum), and professional arts groups’ performances. Reservations for the festival are available through the official website. Visit http://www.HelloPyeongChang.com.

PENANGITES’ CNY CELEBRATION 2016

February 13, Penang, Malaysia

Penang’s government will hold a Chinese New Year celebration on the streets of George Town, partly to celebrate George Town’s recognition as a Unesco World Heritage city. More than 20 clan houses and temples within Penang’s historical district, which are normally closed to all except their members, will open their doors to visitors on February 13. Visitors will also enjoy wushu performances, fireworks displays, lion and dragon dances, Chingay parades and a wealth of red lanterns.

C3 IN HONG KONG 2016

February 19 to 21, Hong Kong

C3 in Hong Kong is an annual anime and manga event held at Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Centre for fans of Japanese anime and manga culture. Major anime publishers, retailers and production houses bring the authentic Japanese manga culture to Hong Kong with their latest creations while popular Japanese singers entertain the fans.

SAIDAI-JI EYO HADAKA MATSURI

February 20, Okayama, Japan

Every third Saturday of February some 9,000 men wearing only loincloths push and pull to win shingi, a pair of lucky sacred sticks measuring 4 cm in diameter and 20 cm in length, which are thrown into the crowd by the priest from a window 4 metres up. The one who gets hold of the shingi and thrusts them upright in a wooden measuring box full of rice is considered a lucky man and blessed with a year of happiness. On the day of the festival primary school boys compete for rice cakes and cylindrical treasures prior to the main event.

PENANG CHINESE NEW YEAR LANTERN FESTIVAL 2016

February 8 to 22, Penang, Malaysia

The event is the first ever Chinese New Year Lantern Festival in Penang and is being held at the Esplanade. More than 40 lanterns will be grouped into 20 giant lanterns throughout the 15 days of the Chinese New Year and will be lit nightly from 7.30 to midnight.

PRINTEMPS DES ARTS DE MONTE-CARLO FESTIVAL

March 19 to April 10, Monaco

Monaco’s spring starts with music in Printemps des Arts de Monte-Carlo festival. The festival began in 1984, at the instigation of Princess Grace and Antoine Battaini, then Director of Cultural Affairs in the Principality. Decades later, the adventure continues with more exciting performances than ever. Visit http://www.PrintempsDesArts.mc.

Within these walls

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Within-these-walls-30278418.html

HOTELS

Clink78, London. Photo/www.Clink78.com

Clink78, London. Photo/www.Clink78.com

Lloyd Hotel & Cultural Embassy, Amsterdam. Photo/www.lloydhotel.com

Lloyd Hotel & Cultural Embassy, Amsterdam. Photo/www.lloydhotel.com

Langholmen, Stockholm. Photo/WWW.langholmen.com

Langholmen, Stockholm. Photo/WWW.langholmen.com

Four Seasons Sultanahmet, Istalbul.

Four Seasons Sultanahmet, Istalbul.

Seven luxury prison hotels in which you’d love to serve a life sentence

In addition to bringing a ghastly colour shade into vogue, Netflix’s original series “Orange Is The New Black” has also managed to make prison life look cool. Longing for a prison-like experience like the Litchfield Penitentiary inmates? Then check out this list from Trivago.

Once correctional facilities, these buildings have been converted into luxury hotels, boasting unique architecture, comfortable rooms and fine dining. Many retain original features, making it possible to spend the night in a prison cell – with a little added comfort.

Here’s where to stay behind bars.

HET ARRESTHUIS, NETHERLANDS

Het Arresthuis is located in the quiet and picturesque Dutch town of Roermond, close to the German border. The building served as a house of detention and later a state prison until recent years, with the hotel opening in 2011. Guests can choose between comfort cells, made up of three former prison cells, and deluxe cells, which are housed in former recreation rooms.

Although the original bars still line the windows, guests will find the cells transformed to comfortable havens complete with flat screen televisions, tea and coffee making facilities, rain showers and dressing gowns and slippers. Staff are happy to arrange flowers, chocolate or Rituals beauty products for special occasions – a far cry from life in prison.

Visit http://www.HetArresthuis.nl.

FOUR SEASONS SULTANAHMET, ISTANBUL, TURKEY

Four Seasons Sultanahmet is housed in a century-old neoclassical Turkish prison in Istanbul’s Old City, with the 6th century Haghia Sophia and the 17th century Blue Mosque a few steps away. Views of these landmarks are best enjoyed from the A’YA Rooftop lounge, which specialises in wines from different regions of Turkey and traditional Turkish snacks.

Today, the inner courtyard houses a lush garden and alfresco dining area. The spacious rooms and suites bear little resemblance to the former prison cells, boasting private bars, large plasma televisions and marble bathrooms complete with deep soaking tubs.

Visit http://www.FourSeasons.com/istanbul

LANGHOLMEN, STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN

Like many parts of Stockholm, Langholmen is situated on an island, incorporating a hotel, hostel, conference centre, restaurant and prison museum. The prison, which operated between 1725 and 1975, was one of the largest in Sweden, housing over 500 cells. Guests can visit the museum to see how former inmates used to live, or alternatively check into one of the hotel rooms – which are housed in former prison cells.

Featuring flat-screen televisions and other amenities, rooms vary from single cells, double cells, family cells and even romantic cells, featuring sparkling wine, chocolate, dressing gowns and slippers.

Visit http://Langholmen.com/en

THE LIBERTY, BOSTON, UNITED STATES

The ironically named Liberty is housed in the former Charles Street Jail, constructed in 1851 and formerly housing inmates such as Malcolm X and World War II prisoners of war. Today, this architectural gem has been redesigned to house a luxury hotel with 298 rooms and suites and six different bars and restaurants.

Those wishing to see the original prison should head to Clink restaurant, where guests can sit in parts of the original cells while enjoying modern American cuisine.

Visit http://www.libertyhotel.com

LLOYD HOTEL & CULTURAL EMBASSY, AMSTERDAM, |NETHERLANDS

Not only is Lloyd Hotel located in a former prison, but it’s also the world’s first one-to-five star design hotel. This means the rooms range in comfort and price, from cosy one-star rooms to deluxe five-star suites, featuring grand pianos, swings, hammocks, milk bottle chandeliers and much more. Each room is unique, created using the inspiration of over 50 designers and artists, making the hotel an icon of Dutch design.

Visit http://www.LloydHotel.com

BEST WESTERN PREMIER |KATAJANOKKA, HELSINKI, FINLAND

Best Western Katajanokka was previously the Helsinki Country Prison, serving pre-trial criminals from Southern Finland between 1837 and 2002. Extensive renovations includes taking sets of two or three cells to create spacious and comfortable four-star hotel rooms, ranging from queen rooms to junior suites, accessible by the original prison corridor. Restaurant Jailbird has a prison theme, complete with exposed brick walls, barred windows and medieval-style chairs

CVisit http://www.bwkatajanokka.fi

CLINK78, LONDON, BRITAIN

Not technically a luxury hotel, but certainly a “posh hostel”, Clink78 is located in a 200 year-old courthouse. The Clerkenwell Magistrates’ Court previously housed The Clash, who were fined for shooting expensive racing pigeons and inspired the name of the hostel’s late-night bar: Clashbar. The former courtrooms now serve as a TV and film lounge and a computer room, complete with the judge’s podium and witness and usher stands.

Guests can also choose to sleep in one of the original prison cells, which accommodate one or two people in bunk beds. Original features such as the heavy metal door, barred windows and steel toilet (no longer in use) remain, but the cells have been refurbished to add colour, warmth and humour.

Visit http://www.ClinkHostels.com/london/clink78.

 

Monkey says, monkey does

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Monkey-says-monkey-does-30278410.html

AROUND THAILAND

Yaowarat, also known as Bangkok’s Chinatown, will be celebrating the Chinese New Year next Monday and Tuesday.

Yaowarat, also known as Bangkok’s Chinatown, will be celebrating the Chinese New Year next Monday and Tuesday.

Yaowarat, also known as Bangkok’s Chinatown, will be celebrating the Chinese New Year next Monday and Tuesday.

Monkey says, monkey does

Yaowarat, also known as Bangkok’s Chinatown, will be celebrating the Chinese New Year next Monday and Tuesday. The main roads and small sois will be closed to traffic and will instead feature gorgeous lanterns and stage shows. Festival-goers can pray for a harmonious and healthy year to the Ksitigarbha Buddha Image, which the Chinese Government is installing especially for the occasion.

Small steaks for a healthy lunch

Babette’s The Steakhouse Bangkok is offering a small lunch set that’s ideal both for business meals and relaxed dining with friends. Created by the restaurant’s new executive chef Tobias Schwarzendorfer, Babette’s set lunch has a choice of two or three courses and costs Bt449 and Bt599 respectively. The restaurant is located at Hotel Muse Bangkok on Lang Suan. Visit http://HotelMuseBangkok.com.

Thai tastes with a difference

After a four-year absence, Thai chef Tummanoon Pubchun returns to Mon Tri’s Kitchen restaurant in Phuket from tomorrow through February 20 and will be whipping up a nostalgic culinary feast that includes fish fillet with a tom yam coulis, Boneless Duck Breast with Five Chinese Spices and a rock lobster threesome.

Celebration, Chinese style

Enjoy a feast from February 6 to 8 at The Golden Palace Restaurant of Hotel Windsor Suites. The Chinese dining set, which is for 10 people, costs Bt8,888 and features eight dishes including Baked Abalone with Ginseng, Steamed Snow Fish with Salt & Chilli and Quick-Boiled Sliced Whelks served with Shrimp Paste Sauce. Book a table at (02) 262 1234 extension 1410.

Journey to the west

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/travel/Journey-to-the-west-30278419.html

Volcanic gases, urea and hot water bubble like a witch’s cauldron at Unzen Jigoku, creating a strong sulphuric odour and sending clouds of steam into the air.

Volcanic gases, urea and hot water bubble like a witch’s cauldron at Unzen Jigoku, creating a strong sulphuric odour and sending clouds of steam into the air.

Carp swim in the clear waterways of Shimabara city and offer a poplar spot for young students to paint the scenery.

Carp swim in the clear waterways of Shimabara city and offer a poplar spot for young students to paint the scenery.

Shimabara Castle

Shimabara Castle

The Yutoku Inari Shrine is a popular location for Thai dramas.

The Yutoku Inari Shrine is a popular location for Thai dramas.

The illuminations at the Huis Ten Bosch will remain switched on until April 18.

The illuminations at the Huis Ten Bosch will remain switched on until April 18.

Thai has been added to the fortune telling leaflet at the shrine to cater to the increasing numbers of Thai tourists to the area.

Thai has been added to the fortune telling leaflet at the shrine to cater to the increasing numbers of Thai tourists to the area.

Kyushu Island in Japan’s Southwest that is, where destinations like Shimabara, Unzen Jigoku, Takeo Onsen and Karatsu have much to offer the Thai visitor

A long-time favourite destination with Thais, Japan tends to see high concentrations of tourists in Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto as well as increasingly on Kyushu Island, where they favour smaller cities like Fukuoka, Beppu or Kumamoto.

Sometimes, though, it’s fun to venture out of our comfort zone and spend time off the grid, as our small group did last autumn when we travelled through Nagasaki and Saga Prefectures and spent time in Shimabara, Unzen Jigoku,, Takeo Onsen and Karatsu.

These semi-rural areas are understandably less impersonal than the country’s major cities. Local residents are friendly and hospitable, and more than willing to lend a helping hand despite the obvious language barrier.

Our group was there at the invitation of the Nippon Travel Agency, part of a trip that also took us to Busan in South Korea as part of a cooperative agreement on tourism between Fukuoka and Busan, which are separated by less than an hour by plane and three hours by ferry.

Our visit starts some two hours south of Fukuoka in the small and quiet town of Shimabara in Nagasaki Prefecture, which is so pristine that we can clearly see shoals of colourful carp swimming in the canals that run parallel with the streets. Old houses near the canals have been converted into resting places, among them Yusui Teien Shimeiso, where visitors can sip hot tea while listening to an elderly resident recounting the history of the house and the carp that frolic in the clear spring water in the garden.

The area is also an outdoor classroom for students who set up their easels along the footpath in the quiet city. We glance at their creations as we walk to nearby Shimabara castle with its five-layer tower where we are treated to a brief dance performance by a group of young people.

Shimabara is located in the Unzen Volcanic area and is thus blessed with a multitude of hot springs including one facility in the square where we are quick to refresh our tired feet.

Unzen Jigoku – “Jigoku” means hell – is perhaps the best known and it is easy to see how it got its name, as volcanic gases, urea and hot water bubble like a witch’s cauldron, creating a strong sulphuric odour and sending clouds of steam into the air.

The second morning sees us setting off for Saga Prefecture in the northwest corner of the island, which is bordered by the Genkai Sea and the Tsushima Strait to the north and the Ariake Sea to the south. We stop first at the hilltop Kagemiyama Observatory and take in the magnificent sight of Karatsu City spread out below and Karatsu castle in the distance before heading to Hado Cape Underwater Observatory where we watch fascinated as the fish try to swim against the strong tide.

Saga, though, is promoting a different kind of tourism, one that focuses on the attraction of movie and TV drama film sets. We start our journey into this world of make-believe by staying in Takeo Onsen, itself a popular film location.

Unlike in South Korea, which has an established tourist trail through the most famous of the sets that appear in its internationally popular local dramas, Saga Prefecture’s film commission has looked further afield, playing on its success in encouraging Thai film and TV dramas to shoot in the area to attract Thai visitors to spend more time here.

One of the most popular places is the Yutoku Inari Shrine in Kashima City, which we visit on our third day. Three major productions have been shot here: Nonzee Nimibutr’s 2013 movie “Timeline” and two TV dramas, Channel 3’s “Kol Kimono” and Line TV’s “Stay Saga”, directed by Songyos Sukmakanan.

Built in 1687, the Yutoku Shrine is one of the three largest Inari Shrines in Japan, the most famous being Fushimi Inari Shrine in Kyoto, and is venerated as home to the guardian deity of plentiful harvests, prosperity in business, and protection from automobile accidents.

The chief monk Nabeshia Asakotobuki welcomes our group with an enthusiasm that demonstrates how much he appreciates Thai tourists. He confirms that the number of Thai visitors has increased significantly since the shrine became the backdrop for Thai TV dramas and says he is impressed by the devoutness of visitors from the Land of Smiles, who rather than strolling around the ground floor and praying prefer to walk up to the top and pay their respect to the spirits.

He is now returning the favour by adding the Thai language to the leaflets detailing the visitor’s fortunes.

Our last stop is one that is already popular with Thai visitors – the theme park known as Huis Ten Bosch or “House in the Bush”, which is home to replicas of old Dutch buildings. Some 30 minutes away from Nagasaki Prefecture’s Sasebo city, it offers visitors a Thai language map and details of the attractions in their own tongue. The buildings and landscape give off the ambience of Amsterdam and visitors can have fun with the wealth of activities and games on offer, such as parades, the thriller zone, the Once Piece Ride Cruise that allows you to live in your favourite comic and, at night, the wonderful sight of the theme park lit up by 13 million light bulbs.

We spend the night at the adjacent Henna Hotel where we are welcomed by two robot receptionists, one a Japanese woman who can only speak Japanese and the other a T-Rex robot in a Santa costume, who speaks fluent English. A smart hotel where robots and high technology provide most of the service, the 72-room facility opened last year and is the ideal accommodation for anyone visiting the theme park. Rooms are accessed by a face-authentication system and the air-conditioned rooms are fitted with radiation panels that can save up to 20 per cent of energy, thus reducing the visitor’s carbon footprint.

IF YOU GO

< Thai International and Jetstar both offer daily flights between Bangkok and Fukuoka.