Historic restaurant among shock losers in 2019 Michelin

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362689

  • File photo : Danielle Baumann Haeberlin
  • File photo : Marc Veyrat//AFP

Historic restaurant among shock losers in 2019 Michelin

Breaking News January 22, 2019 01:00

Paris – A restaurant that has held three Michelin stars for half a century was pushed down a rank Monday in one of the biggest shocks of the French culinary guide for 2019.

Ahead of the new edition’s unveiling Monday afternoon, manager Danielle Baumann Haeberlin confirmed the bad news for the Auberge de L’Ill, calling it “a sad day for the Alsace” region where the family has run an inn for 150 years.

“After 51 years of three stars, I learned Sunday that I had lost the third,” her brother, chef Marc Haeberlin, told France 3 Alsace television.

“It’s hard for the team, it’s hard for everyone — the customers, the family — it’s very hard,” said the chef, a champion of contemporary Alsatian cuisine.

“I don’t know how to explain this loss,” said Haeberlin, whose culinary mentor, the legendary chef Paul Bocuse, died a year ago.

Haeberlin is not the only shock loser of the 2019 guide.

Marc Veyrat, known as much for his ever-present wide-brimmed black hat as his love of mountain ingredients, confirmed that his Alpine restaurant the Maison des Bois had also lost its third star.

“I’m terribly disappointed. I can’t understand it at all,” said Veyrat, who only earned the third star last year. “I will stay combative and present with the team in my kitchen,” Veyrat said, blasting the decision as “unfair”.

Pascal Barbot, whose Parisian restaurant l’Astrance has held three stars for 11 years, is also dropping down a notch to two stars in 2019.

The guide’s new international director Gwendal Poullennec had promised to breathe new life into its pages, celebrating more female chefs and young talent.

A record 75 restaurants have earned new spots in the one, two or three star rankings in 2019, he told AFP last week.

Michelin’s feared reviewers have “managed to unearth talents in all corners of France” for the new edition, he promised.

A large number of foreign chefs working in France are also set to be honoured in the full guide, due to be revealed from 1400 GMT in Paris.

The ceremony was due to pay tribute to Joel Robuchon, the giant of French cuisine who died last year.

The Siem Reap gallery preserving the Kingdom’s cultural treasures

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362690

Founded by former Artisans d’Angkor art director Lim Muoy Theam, the gallery offers an exploration of Khmer art history and aims to promote the beauty of Khmer handicrafts, lacquerware and silk.// Pha Lina
Founded by former Artisans d’Angkor art director Lim Muoy Theam, the gallery offers an exploration of Khmer art history and aims to promote the beauty of Khmer handicrafts, lacquerware and silk.// Pha Lina

The Siem Reap gallery preserving the Kingdom’s cultural treasures

ASEAN+ January 22, 2019 01:00

By The Phnom Penh Post
Asia News Network

For almost a decade, Theam’s House art gallery has promoted the beauty of Khmer art and handicrafts, lacquerware and silk to visitors from around the world.

Theam’s House is owned by former Artisans d’Angkor art director Lim Muoy Theam and offers an exploration of Khmer art history as he travels the country searching for unique cultural artwork to buy from different communities to display in the gallery.

He also has apprentices producing Khmer traditional artwork at his home that he uses as a gallery cum workshop.

Theam, who was born in Cambodia but fled to France as a young boy during the Khmer Rouge era – where he studied interior design and art at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris – told The Post he does so not for money but to “keep Khmer art alive”.

Theam added that the market in Cambodia sculptures and crafts was very weak until about ten years ago, but with rising income and tourism, the many apprentices he employs to produce replica artwork are now constantly busy.

“I have sculptures, paintings, lacquerware, and handicrafts, some of which are made by my more than 30 apprentices and some are bought from various communities nationwide.”

“At first I didn’t want to make replica objects and only stick to authentic Khmer artwork. But in order to allow tourists to take home a souvenir and promote Khmer culture, I decided to hire apprentices to make replicas. Of course we stay true to the original designs, which are beautiful,” he says.

Content image - Phnom Penh Post

– Theam’s House offers an intimate tour of the 5,000sqm gallery featuring the collection of work Theam has been amassing since 1998. The tour takes between 20 and 40 minutes, with numbers on the tour kept low to preserve the space.: Pha Lina –

Theam’s House also offers an intimate tour of the 5,000 square metre gallery featuring the collection of work Theam has been amassing since 1998. Sok Lok, an English guide at the gallery, told The Post that the tour takes between 20 and 40 minutes, with numbers on the tour kept intentionally low to preserve the space.

“We aren’t so concerned about tourist high or low seasons as we can only accept a small amount of people in our gallery at one time. I work only with a small group of tourists between two to four people at a time,” Theam said.

Theam’s House is located in Siem Reap’s Veal village, Road 30. It is open from 8am to 6pm daily.

Vietnam seeks UN recognition of Xoe Thai dance

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362691

Comprising about 30 different dances in total, Xoe Thai is usually performed during community festivals. dulichdienbien.vn
Comprising about 30 different dances in total, Xoe Thai is usually performed during community festivals. dulichdienbien.vn

Vietnam seeks UN recognition of Xoe Thai dance

ASEAN+ January 22, 2019 01:00

By Viet Nam News
Asia News Network

AUTHORITIES in Vietnam’s northern mountainous province of Dien Bien will implement a plan to promote the recognition of Xoe Thai dance as a Unesco intangible cultural heritage of humanity.

The provincial People’s Committee recently sent a document to the government, the National Commission for Unesco Vietnam, the National Cultural Heritage Council and the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) to show their determination to follow an assignment by MCST on seeking the title of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity for Xoe Thai dance of the province’s Thai ethnic people.

In the document, the authority stated that after consulting cultural experts about the artistic value of Xoe Thai dance, the People’s Committee pledged to embark on the construction of a national profile for the dance.

Xoe Thai art is a unique type of traditional dance that is associated with and plays a significant role in Thai communities in the northwest of Vietnam, especially in the provinces of Lai Chau, Dien Bien, Son La and Yen Bai.

Thai ancestral spirits

It depicts the daily lives of Thai ethnic people in Vietnam and shows their wish for a peaceful and prosperous life.

Comprising about 30 different dances in total, Xoe Thai is usually performed during community cultural festivals, funerals and cultural exchanges.

The dance has been developed, protected and handed down through generations intact over hundreds of years in many different forms including xoe quat (xoe dance with a fan), xoe khan (xoe dance with a scarf), xoe non (xoe dance with a conical hat) and many others with contents reflecting community activities and expressing the Thai people’s emotion and ancestral spirits.

With gentle and alluring rhythms, dancers usually form a circle around a festive flame and move to the sound of melodic traditional music.

The elegant dance has been named on the government’s intangible heritage list to be submitted to Unesco in the 2012-16 period. The provinces hoped the dance will receive Unesco recognition this year.

The Unesco title is expected to elevate the position of the dance to national and international levels, thus promoting Vietnamese traditional arts and cultural diversity.

Thai political development on table at Asean-EU meeting : Source

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362629

Thailand's Minister of Foreign Affairs Don Pramudwinai (C) chairs the ASEAN Foreign Ministers' Retreat in Chiang Mai province, northern Thailand, 18 January 2019. // EPA-EFE PHOTO
Thailand’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Don Pramudwinai (C) chairs the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ Retreat in Chiang Mai province, northern Thailand, 18 January 2019. // EPA-EFE PHOTO

Thai political development on table at Asean-EU meeting : Source

ASEAN+ January 21, 2019 12:39

By The Nation

3,207 Viewed

Ministers from Asean and European Union were meeting in Brussels on Monday to review past cooperation and further strengthen ties between the regions.

They will discuss implementation of the Asean-EU Plan of Action for 2018-2022, which covers security, trade and investment, connectivity and sustainable development, according to a Thai Foreign Ministry press statement.

The ministers are also expected to discuss the situation in Myanmar’s strife-torn Rakhine state, notably the stalemate in repatriating Myanmar refugees from Bangladesh, and political developments in Thailand, according to an official involved in the meeting who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Other topics include climate change, transnational crime, cyber security, border management and illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing, the ministry said.

The discussion will end with all ministers and representatives signing the Joint Statement of the 22nd Asean-EU Ministerial Meeting to affirm the agreed-upon commitments.

Attendees include the foreign ministers of all member states, the Asean secretary-general and the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and vice president of the EU.

Thai Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai is speaking for Asean, which Thailand is chairing this year.

Death toll from Mexico fuel explosion rises to 85

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362625

  • Citizens participate in a search for the remains of the people who died at the site of a gasoline pipeline explosion in Tlahuelilpan, Mexico on January 20.//EPA-EFE
  • Citizens participate in a search for the remains of the people who died at the site of a gasoline pipeline explosion in Tlahuelilpan, Mexico on January 20.//EPA-EFE

Death toll from Mexico fuel explosion rises to 85

ASEAN+ January 21, 2019 12:10

By AFP

2,226 Viewed

Tlahuelilpan, Mexico – The death toll from a fiery explosion in central Mexico rose to 85 on Sunday as authorities vowed to hold accountable those responsible for a deliberate fuel-line puncture that drew hundreds of people looking to gather gasoline before it ignited.

The search for human remains at the site of the explosion in the state of Hidalgo ended late Saturday. While families began to bury the dead, officials indicated the death toll could still rise.

Health Minister Jorge Alcocer said 85 deaths were confirmed and that another 58 people were hospitalized in Hidalgo, while others in worse conditions had been moved to Mexico City for specialized treatment.

Family members of the victims have called on the government to continue looking for remains and to bring back forensic experts for that purpose.

Funerals already have begun, but the handover of remains has been slow because many of the victims were burned beyond recognition.

The Hidalgo state prosecutor said 54 of the dead could not be readily identified, and require DNA analysis.

Mourners began arriving little by little at the home of one of the victims, while in the adjacent street a hearse carried another corpse.

“He’s gone forever,” sobbed a woman as the remains of Cesar Jimenez were transferred to a church for a funeral mass attended by dozens of relatives and friends.

At a cultural center, loved ones publicly displayed pictures of the missing. “We are sick and tired of searching around in every hospital,” said Moises Mejia, trying to find his missing wife Karina Ugalde and her sist”We gave some DNA from their dad to see if they are in (nearby) Tula. We want them to search more (near the blast and fire). Why did they go and move all that dirt over there?” he asked.

Another man, Antonio Garcia, wandered about searching for his nephew Lupillo, 17.

“I don’t know what he was thinking going over there,” he said. “I would always see him buying his gas (at stations). I don’t understand why he’d go over there to steal it.”

– A torrent of fuel –

Hundreds of people had been drawn to the place where suspected fuel thieves tapped into a pipeline in the town of Tlahuelilpan.

Images captured by local media showed a torrent of fuel escaping from a pipeline as people converged on the site with buckets and jerrycans to collect gasoline.

A massive explosion engulfed the area in flames, and local media showed images of people screaming as they fled, their clothes in flames, some with severe burns.

Asked whether those hospitalized would be considered suspects, Attorney General Alejandro Gertz said investigators do not seek to “victimize the communities.”

“We are going to find those responsible for actions that generated this tragedy,” he said. “Victimizing the whole population is not (the investigation’s) function nor is it established in the law.”

The disaster came during a crackdown by the new government of President Manuel Lopez Obrador on the lucrative illegal business of fuel thefts, which triggered shortages of gasoline.

On Friday, when authorities heard that fuel traffickers had punctured the pipeline, about 25 soldiers arrived and attempted to block off the area, Defense Secretary Luis Crescencio Sandoval told reporters.

But the soldiers were unable to contain the estimated 700 civilians — including entire families — who swarmed in to collect the spilled gasoline, witnesses said.

The armed soldiers had been moved away from the pipeline to avoid any risk of confrontation with the crowd when the blast occurred, about two hours after the pipeline was first breached, Sandoval said.

Lopez Obrador, a leftist who took office only weeks ago, traveled to the scene on Saturday.

He did not fault the soldiers, saying: “The attitude of the army was correct. It is not easy to impose order on a crowd.” He vowed to continue fighting the growing problem of fuel theft.

“I am deeply saddened by the suffering in Tlahuelilpan,” Lopez Obrador wrote on Twitter. He called on his “whole government” to extend assistance.

British PM turns to Brexit ‘Plan B’

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362616

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May (L) and husband Philip May (R) arrive at church near High Wycombe, Britain, 20 January.//EPA-EFE
Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May (L) and husband Philip May (R) arrive at church near High Wycombe, Britain, 20 January.//EPA-EFE

British PM turns to Brexit ‘Plan B’

Breaking News January 21, 2019 09:47

By AFP

British Prime Minister Theresa May unveils her Brexit “Plan B” to parliament on Monday after MPs shredded her EU divorce deal, deepening the political gridlock 10 weeks from departure day.

Britain will leave the European Union on March 29 without a deal unless MPs can force a delay or get their act together in time and come up with an alternative plan that Brussels is also happy with.

The world’s fifth-biggest economy could lose preferential access to its largest export market overnight, affecting every sector, leading to rising costs and disruption at British ports.

London and Brussels have spent the best part of two years working on a divorce agreement but MPs in parliament’s lower House of Commons comprehensively rejected it on Tuesday.

May’s government then survived a confidence vote on Wednesday and set about talks with figures from rival parties.

But the main opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn stayed away, saying a “no-deal” departure must be ruled out first — something May says is impossible.

May spoke to Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday, and to EU leaders Jean-Claude Juncker and Donald Tusk by telephone Friday to discuss where to go next on Brexit.

EU chiefs have so far ruled out renegotiating the agreement, but have signalled they could postpone the withdrawal if May changes her “red lines” on leaving the EU’s customs union and blocking free movement of citizens.

– Amendments –

After May sets out her plans for the way ahead, lawmakers are set to table a series of amendments, to be voted upon on January 29.

At least two cross-party groups of MPs are planning to table amendments to enable backbenchers to delay or frustrate May’s proposals.

One would suspend the withdrawal process if there is no new deal with Brussels by the end of February.

A second would enable backbenchers to choose to debate and vote on Brexit issues, one day a week — breaking the convention that the government controls the parliamentary timetable.

May’s Downing Street office has called them “extremely concerning”.

“You’ve got a Leave population and a Remain parliament,” said International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, one of the senior Brexiteers in May’s cabinet.

“Parliament has not got the right to hijack the Brexit process… and in fact steal the result from the people,” he told BBC television.

Britain voted by a 52-48 margin in favour of leaving the EU in a referendum in 2016 that exposed deep divisions in British society.

– Irish backstop –

One of the most problematic areas of the divorce deal is the so-called backstop on the Irish border — a legal guarantee that the frontier would remain free-flowing if Britain and the EU cannot agree a long-term free trade pact.

Britain could not unilaterally pull out of the backstop.

The Sunday Times newspaper claimed that May would propose a separate arrangement with Dublin.

“She wants to offer a bilateral treaty to Ireland that would remove the hated ‘backstop’ from the EU withdrawal treaty and prevent a hard border by other means,” the weekly broadsheet said.

Aides believe that would help win over Conservative eurosceptics on her backbenches, and the party’s Democratic Unionist Party allies — counted upon for a majority. The DUP are Northern Ireland’s biggest party.

Graham Brady, who chairs the Conservative backbenchers’ group, said he thought May could get her Brexit deal past Conservative rebels if the Irish backstop “can be sorted out”.

“So much of the vote against was from people who simply cannot support a potentially permanent backstop, if that can be sorted out then I think we might get that withdrawal agreement through,” he told BBC radio.

He said it was in Ireland’s interests to help Britain leave the EU with a deal, saying they would be far more hurt by a no-deal Brexit that Britain as most of their trade comes through the UK.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said Sunday that he and Prime Minister Leo Varadkar were in no mood to support alterations to the withdrawal agreement (WA) or the backstop.

“We remain united and focused on protecting Ireland,” he said.

“That includes continued support for the EU/UK agreed WA in full, including the backstop as negotiated.”

Left to fend for themselves

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362597

Six months after her home was washed away in the collapse of the dam, a woman cooks dinner behind her tent in Pindong camp. // Visarut Sankham
Six months after her home was washed away in the collapse of the dam, a woman cooks dinner behind her tent in Pindong camp. // Visarut Sankham

Left to fend for themselves

national January 21, 2019 01:00

By PRATCH RUJIVANAROM
THE NATION
ATTAPEU, LAOS

3,336 Viewed

Victims of Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy dam collapse in Laos languish in shelters, staring at an uncertain future.

Even six months after the collapse of the Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy shelters dam, which washed away numerous homes in southern Laos, the victims are still having to live in temporary shelters with no certainty about their future.

The camp residents are suffering from a severe shortage of basic necessities as donations have dropped drastically after the incident stopped making headlines. They said they had to make do with what little they get from the authorities.

It is a sunny afternoon in the Sanamxay district of Attapeu province, and people are seen leading their lives as normal, shopping in the local market while students ride motorbikes to school. However, a few kilometres up the dirt road toward a cluster of villages along the Xe Pian River, the view is totally different.

Though the sun has dried up the mud left by the deadly flash flood on the night of July 23, the destroyed houses remain untouched and the wreckage of vehicles can be seen everywhere.

Up the hill from the disaster zone are temporary camps where the homeless villagers now live. While the residents of two out of five camps have moved into their temporary new homes already, hundreds of families still have to live in tents.

Vieng Sianpongsai, one of the displaced villagers at the Pindong refugee camp, told The Nation that it was difficult to make a livelihood and they could not even repair their homes as the government and the dam-project owners still cannot reach an agreement on the compensation amount for the victims.

“We have been living in tents for six months now because the temporary houses the dam company is building for us are not ready yet,” Vieng said.

“It is unbearably hot inside the tents during the day, and very cold at night, so we have had to build wooden shelters outside to rest. However, the camp is more pleasant at night as the authorities have already installed electricity.”

Despite the tough living conditions, she said the even greater hardship was not being able to earn a living as they are not allowed to leave the camp to find work, while aid and supplies have stopped trickling in.

Several sources, including locals and international agencies, confirmed that each camp resident was given a monthly subsidy of 100,000 kip (Bt400), a daily allowance of 5,000 kip (Bt20) and 20 kilograms of rice per month.

“We don’t know how to survive. We don’t have jobs or anywhere to go. The allowance from the government is too small to survive on and we only get rice with nothing to eat it with,” Vieng said.

“In the first few months, we got plenty of donations and supplies from international agencies and the private sector, but after our problems stopped getting media attention, we were forgotten.”

She said the greatest need now was for food and seasoning, cooking equipment, supplies for newborns as well as farming equipment and essential tools to repair their homes

Katouk Singsouvong, owner of “Attapeu One Love” restaurant and a local volunteer, confirmed the scarcity of supplies at refugee camps and said her charity group was one of very few that still provided aid.

“Another problem we have observed is uneven distribution, as some camps that are farther and tougher to access, such as Pindong and Tamoryord, get a lot less than other camps, such as Hadyao, that are closer to the city,” Katouk said.

She revealed that though the Lao government and the private sector have done their best to provide for the victims, it was still not enough as the owners of the dam project are providing little or no compensation and donations have more or less stopped.

The collapse of Saddle Dam D of Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy Dam last July completely destroyed six villages, killed at least 40 people and displaced more than 4,500 others.

This is the first in a series of reports related to the fallout of the disaster at Xe Pian-Xe Namnoy Dam in southern Laos. The next report, focusing on the struggles of the dam disaster victims, will be published on Wednesday.

Malaysian dead in New York hammer attack

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362610

Malaysian dead in New York hammer attack

Breaking News January 21, 2019 01:00

By The Star
Asia News Network

PETALING JAYA: A 60-year-old Malaysian restaurant owner, who was attacked with a hammer in a racist attack in New York last Tuesday (Jan 15), has died.

A Wisma Putra official confirmed that Ng Tan Kheong succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced dead by hospital authorities in New York at about 4am local time (4pm Malaysian time) on Friday (Jan 18).

“The New York police had confirmed that the victim had passed away at the hospital at about 4am on Jan 18 due to serious injuries.

“The authorities there also managed contact a next-of-kin of the deceased who said that the family will make the necessary arrangements for the body to be brought back to the country,” the official said when contacted here on Sunday (Jan 20).

It is learnt that there was difficulty in locating the deceased’s family here in Malaysia as he was separated from his wife and was childless.

Earlier attempts by authorities here to contact his next-of-kin at the deceased’s last known address in Pulai, Johor also proved futile.

It was reported by the New York Post that Ng and two other workers were viciously attacked by an assailant armed with a hammer at his Seafood Buffet restaurant located in Emmons Avenue in Brooklyn.

The attack left Ng brain dead while restaurant employee, 34-year-old chef Fufai Pun, died from his injuries. Restaurant manager Tsz Mat Pun, 50, is in critical condition.

According to the report, the attacker was identified as 34-year-old Arthur Martunovich.

The incident happened on Jan 15 at around 5pm local time when the eatery was packed with customers.

It was reported that the suspect burst into the restaurant and began bashing Ng and his staff on their heads with a hammer.

Martunovich, who was arrested shortly after the attack, reportedly told police officers that he was inspired to carry out the attack by a Chinese movie he had watched in which “men were mistreating women”.

The report quoting a law enforcement officer said that Martunovich claimed he has a problem with Asian men while going on a rant at a local police station.

Fuel pipeline blaze in Mexico kills at least 73

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362592

Flames burn at the scene of a massive blaze trigerred by a leaky pipeline in Tlahuelilpan, Hidalgo state, on January 18, 2019. // AFP PHOTO
Flames burn at the scene of a massive blaze trigerred by a leaky pipeline in Tlahuelilpan, Hidalgo state, on January 18, 2019. // AFP PHOTO

Fuel pipeline blaze in Mexico kills at least 73

Breaking News January 20, 2019 19:08

By AFP
TLAHUELILPAN, Mexico

An explosion and fire in central Mexico killed at least 73 people after hundreds swarmed to the site of an illegal fuel-line tap to gather gasoline amid a government crackdown on fuel theft, officials said.

Hidalgo state governor Omar Fayad announced that the toll had increased to 73 after the discovery of five additional bodies.

The blast — which Fayad said injured 74 people — occurred near Tlahuelilpan, a town of 20,000 people about an hour’s drive north of Mexico City.

As soldiers guarded the devastated, still-smoking scene, forensic specialists in white suits worked among the blackened corpses — many frozen in the unnatural positions in which they had fallen — and grim-eyed civilians stepped cautiously along in a desperate search for missing relatives.

    The pungent smell of fuel hung in the air. Fragments of burnt clothing were strewn through the charred brush.

When the forensic workers began attempting to load corpses into vans to be transported to funeral homes, some 30 villagers tried to stop them. They demanded their relatives’ bodies, saying funeral homes were too expensive. The bodies were ultimately taken to a morgue, authorities said.

On Friday, when authorities heard that fuel traffickers had punctured the pipeline, an army unit of about 25 soldiers arrived and attempted to block off the area, Defense Secretary Luis Crescencio Sandoval told reporters.

But the soldiers were unable to contain the estimated 700 civilians — including entire families — who swarmed in to collect the spilled gasoline in jerrycans and buckets, witnesses said.

The armed soldiers had been moved away from the pipeline to avoid any risk of confrontation with the crowd when the blast occurred, some two hours after the pipeline was first breached, Sandoval said.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a leftist who took office only weeks ago, traveled to the scene early Saturday.

He did not fault the soldiers, saying, “The attitude of the army was correct. It is not easy to impose order on a crowd.” He vowed to continue fighting the growing problem of fuel theft.

“I am deeply saddened by the suffering in Tlahuelilpan,” Lopez Obrador wrote on Twitter. He called on his “whole government” to extend assistance.

The US Secretary of Homeland Security, Kirstjen Nielsen, tweeted that her department “stands ready to assist the first responders and the Mexican government in any way possible.”

Video taken in the aftermath showed screaming people fleeing the scene as an enormous fire lit up the night sky.

“I went just to see what was happening, and then the explosion happened. I rushed to help people,” Fernando Garcia, 47, told AFP. “I had to claw through pieces of people who had already been burned to bits.”

The tragedy comes during a highly publicized federal government war on fuel theft, a problem that cost Mexico an estimated $3 billion in 2017.

Acting attorney general Alejandro Gertz described the latest disaster as “intentional” because “someone caused that leak. And the fire was a consequence of the crime.”

But he acknowledged that investigators would be hampered by the fact that “the people closest to the explosion died.”

Federal and state firefighters and ambulances run by state oil company Pemex rushed to help victims with burns and take the injured to hospitals.

Local medical facilities struggled to cope with the flood of arriving victims, said AFP correspondents at the scene.

The fire had been brought under control by around midnight Friday, the security ministry said.

Firemen extinguish the smoldering fire over the bodies of burned victims at the scene of a massive blaze trigerred by a leaky pipeline in Tlahuelilpan, Hidalgo state, Mexico, on January 19, 2019. // AFP PHOTO

Pemex said it was also responding to another fire at a botched pipeline tap in the central state of Queretaro, though in that case there were no victims.

Mexico is regularly rocked by deadly explosions at illegal pipeline taps, a dangerous but lucrative business whose players include powerful drug cartels and corrupt Pemex insiders.

Fayad said that two hours after the pipeline was punctured, “we were informed that there had been an explosion” and the flames “were consuming everything around.”

About 15 oil pipeline explosions and fires causing more than 50 fatalities each have occurred around the world since 1993. Most were in Nigeria, where in 1998 more than 1,000 people died in such a blast. A fire after a pipeline rupture in Brazil killed more than 500 people in 1984.

 

– Rampant fuel theft –

The tragedy comes as anti-corruption crusader Lopez Obrador presses implementation of a controversial fuel theft prevention plan.

The government has shut off major pipelines until they can be fully secured and deployed the army to guard Pemex production facilities.

But the strategy to fight the problem led to severe gasoline and diesel shortages across much of the country, including Mexico City, forcing people to queue for hours — sometimes days — to fill up their vehicles.

The president, who took office on December 1, has vowed to keep up the fight and asked Mexicans to be patient.

At the scene, some locals blamed the shortages for the tragedy.

“A lot of people arrived with their jerrycans because of the gasoline shortages we’ve had,” said Martin Trejo, 55, who was searching for his son, one of those who had gone to collect the leaking fuel.

He also lashed out at the army for failing to stop the looters.

“These lives would have been saved if they had done their jobs to remove people and not let them get close. They never did anything.”

Tanker trucks are being used to deliver fuel, but experts say there are not nearly enough of them.

Mexican bank Citibanamex estimated Wednesday that the shortages would cost Latin America’s second-largest economy around $2 billion, “if conditions return to normal in the coming days.”

The roots of the fuel theft problem run deep in Mexico, where the practice — known locally as “huachicoleo,” or moonshining — is big business for some communities.

Anastasia Vashukevich trial

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/asean-plus/30362578

// EPA-EFE PHOTO
// EPA-EFE PHOTO

Anastasia Vashukevich trial

ASEAN+ January 20, 2019 16:45

By EPA-EFE

3,309 Viewed

Anastasia Vashukevich attends hearing of investigation motion on her arrest at the Nagatinsky district court in Moscow, Russia, 19 January 2019.

// EPA-EFE PHOTO

Belarusian citizen, model Anastasia Vashukevich (also known as Nastya Rybka) was detained 17 January on charges on engaging into prostitution organized by a group of people, at the Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow upon her arrival by a flight from Thailand during her deportation from Bangkok to Minsk after spending nine months in Thai prison.

While being arrested in Thailand on charges with prostitution, Nastya Rybka applied to the United States for help to free her from prison in exchange of information of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election.

// EPA-EFE PHOTO

// EPA-EFE PHOTO