Six foreign nationals found dead in Bangkok hotel, Thai PM orders probe

Six foreign nationals found dead in Bangkok hotel, Thai PM orders probe
Thailand Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin speaks during a presser at Grand Hyatt Erawan hotel, where six foreign nationals were found dead, in Bangkok, Thailand, July 16, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 16 July 2024
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Six foreign nationals found dead in Bangkok hotel, Thai PM orders probe

Six foreign nationals found dead in Bangkok hotel, Thai PM orders probe
  • Group — three men and three women — checked into different rooms but their bodies were found in one room, which did not show any signs of struggle
  • Thai PM Srettha Thavisin, who visited the hotel late on Tuesday with senior police officials, has ordered a swift investigation

BANGKOK: Thai police are investigating the deaths of six foreign nationals whose bodies were found in a room at an upmarket hotel in Bangkok on Tuesday, including looking for a seventh person in connection with the incident.
All six, who were of Vietnamese descent, with two carrying US passports, checked into Bangkok’s Grand Hyatt Erawan hotel at two separate times after arriving on Saturday and Sunday, police official Thiti Saengsawang told reporters.
The group — three men and three women — checked into different rooms but their bodies were found in one room, which did not show any signs of struggle, he said.
“This was not self harm, but someone caused the deaths,” said Thiti, adding that police were looking for a seventh person connected with the group.
“We are tracing every step since they got off the plane.”
Police officers found the bodies after a call from the hotel staff at around 5.30 p.m. (1030 GMT) reporting that there had been deaths, the Thai police said in a statement.
Thai prime minister Srettha Thavisin, who visited the hotel late on Tuesday with senior police officials, ordered a swift investigation on the matter, the government said in a statement.
“The prime minister has ordered all agencies to urgently take action to avoid impact on tourism,” it said.
The US and Vietnamese embassies in Bangkok did not respond to calls from Reuters.
The Grand Hyatt Erawan, which has over 350 rooms and is located in a popular tourist district in the Thai capital known for luxury shopping and restaurants, also did not immediately respond to calls or an email seeking comment.
Tourism serves as a key driver for Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, with the government expecting 35 million foreign arrivals this year after 28 million visited the country in 2023, spending 1.2 trillion baht ($33.71 billion).
The tourism sector was shaken last October by a shooting spree at a luxury shopping mall, close to the Hyatt, in which two foreigners were killed, prompting government measures to improve confidence, including ramping up security at popular locations.
To woo more visitors, the government has offered longer visa stay periods and waivers for several nationalities.


Nearly 300,000 Bangladeshis in emergency shelters after floods

Nearly 300,000 Bangladeshis in emergency shelters after floods
Updated 11 sec ago
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Nearly 300,000 Bangladeshis in emergency shelters after floods

Nearly 300,000 Bangladeshis in emergency shelters after floods
  • The floods were triggered by heavy monsoon rains and have killed at least 42 people in Bangladesh and India since the start of the week
Feni: Nearly 300,000 Bangladeshis were taking refuge in emergency shelters Saturday from floods that inundated vast areas of the low-lying South Asian country, disaster officials said.
The floods were triggered by heavy monsoon rains and have killed at least 42 people in Bangladesh and India since the start of the week, many in landslides.
“My house is completely inundated,” Lufton Nahar, 60, told AFP from a relief shelter in Feni, one of the worst-hit districts near the border with India’s Tripura state.
“Water is flowing above our roof. My brother brought us here by boat. If he hadn’t, we would have died.”
The nation of 170 million people is crisscrossed by hundreds of rivers and has seen frequent floods in recent decades.
Monsoon rains cause widespread destruction every year but climate change is shifting weather patterns and increasing the number of extreme weather events.
Highways and rail lines were damaged between the capital Dhaka and the main port city of Chittagong, making access to badly flooded districts difficult and disrupting business activity.
The flooding also comes just weeks after a student-led revolution toppled its government.
Among the worst affected areas is Cox’s Bazar, a district home to around a million Rohingya refugees from neighboring Myanmar.
Tripura state disaster agency official Sarat Kumad Das told AFP that 24 people had been killed on the Indian side of the border since Monday.
Another 18 had been killed in Bangladesh, according to disaster management ministry secretary Md Kamrul Hasan.
“285,000 people are living in emergency shelters,” he said, adding that 4.5 million people in total had been affected.
When the floods hit, Bangladesh was recovering from weeks of civil unrest that culminated in the August 5 toppling of autocratic ex-leader Sheikh Hasina.
With an interim government led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus still finding its feet, ordinary Bangladeshis have been crowdfunding relief efforts.
They have been organized by the same students who led the protests that sparked the ouster of Hasina, who remains in India after fleeing Dhaka.
Crowds visited Dhaka University on Friday to offer cash donations as students loaded rice sacks and crates of bottled water onto vehicles for areas affected by the deluge.
Much of Bangladesh is made up of deltas where the great Himalayan rivers, the Ganges and the Brahmaputra, wind toward the sea after coursing through India.
Several tributaries of the two transnational rivers were still overflowing.
However, forecasts showed rain was likely to ease in the coming days.

Zelensky signs law banning Russia-linked Orthodox Church

Zelensky signs law banning Russia-linked Orthodox Church
Updated 1 min 58 sec ago
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Zelensky signs law banning Russia-linked Orthodox Church

Zelensky signs law banning Russia-linked Orthodox Church
  • Ukraine’s has been seeking to distance itself from the Russian church since 2014
  • The Ukrainian Orthodox Church officially broke away from the Moscow patriarchy in 2022
Kyiv: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday signed a law banning the Russian-linked Orthodox Church in Ukraine, with the decision published on Ukraine’s parliament website.
Ukraine’s has been seeking to distance itself from the Russian church since 2014 and the efforts have accelerated since Russia’s 2022 invasion.
Zelensky approved the bill, slammed by Russia, on Kyiv’s independence day from the Soviet Union and two and a half years into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Ukrainian leader said the move will strengthen his country’s independence and in an address on Saturday declared: “Ukrainian Orthodox (church) today is taking a step toward liberation from Moscow’s devils.”
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church officially broke away from the Moscow patriarchy in 2022, but Ukrainian officials repeatedly accuse its clerics of staying loyal to Russia.
Russia’s invasion has been backed by the country’s Orthodox Church leader Patriarch Kirill, a staunch ally of President Vladimir Putin.

Roadside bomb kills at least 2 children and wounds 15 people in restive southwest Pakistan

Roadside bomb kills at least 2 children and wounds 15 people in restive southwest Pakistan
Updated 32 min 13 sec ago
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Roadside bomb kills at least 2 children and wounds 15 people in restive southwest Pakistan

Roadside bomb kills at least 2 children and wounds 15 people in restive southwest Pakistan
  • No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack that happened on Saturday in Pishin, a district in Balochistan province
  • Baluchistan has been the scene of a low-level insurgency by groups demanding independence from the central government in Islamabad

QUETTA: A roadside bomb went off near a police office in restive southwestern Pakistan on Saturday, killing at least two children and wounding 15 people, authorities said.
Police officials said the wounded included policemen and passersby.
Local police official Mujirbur Rehman said some of those wounded were hospitalized in critical condition, adding that the bodies of the dead were also transported to a nearby hospital.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack that happened in Pishin, a district in Balochistan province. However, suspicion is likely to fall on separatist groups who have stepped up attacks on security forces and civilians in recent months.
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi denounced the bombing in a statement and mourned the slain children, saying those behind the attack “do not deserve to be called humans.”
For years, Baluchistan has been the scene of a low-level insurgency by groups demanding independence from the central government in Islamabad. Although the government says it has quelled the insurgency, violence in the province has persisted.


Uganda confirms two more cases of mpox

Uganda confirms two more cases of mpox
Updated 40 min 40 sec ago
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Uganda confirms two more cases of mpox

Uganda confirms two more cases of mpox
  • World Health Organization declared the recent outbreak of the disease a public health emergency after the new variant

KAMPALA: Uganda has confirmed two more mpox virus infections, bringing the number of cases in the east African country to four, according to the health ministry. The two new patients were infected with the clade 1b strain of the virus, health ministry director general of health services Henry Mwebesa told Reuters, a new offshoot that has triggered global concern.

The World Health Organization declared the recent outbreak of the disease a public health emergency after the new variant, which appears to spread more easily between people, was identified. Health authorities in Uganda first reported an outbreak of the disease in the country on July 24 when lab tests of samples from two patients at a hospital near the border with Democratic Republic of Congo returned positive for mpox virus.
The latest two cases were confirmed this week, health ministry spokesperson Emmanuel Ainebyoona said, adding that one of the patients was a truck driver. He did not give details of the second patient.
Both patients were isolated at a hospital at Entebbe, a town about 50 km south of the capital Kampala.
Mpox infections cause flu-like symptoms and pus-filled lesions, and transmit through close physical contact. While usually mild, the disease can be fatal. Uganda borders Congo, where the current outbreak began in January 2023.


Putin ‘shakes the nuclear weapons and threatens, but he is no fool,’ says ex-Iraq weapons inspector Blix

Putin ‘shakes the nuclear weapons and threatens, but he is no fool,’ says ex-Iraq weapons inspector Blix
Updated 24 August 2024
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Putin ‘shakes the nuclear weapons and threatens, but he is no fool,’ says ex-Iraq weapons inspector Blix

Putin ‘shakes the nuclear weapons and threatens, but he is no fool,’ says ex-Iraq weapons inspector Blix
  • Says Putin will not risk a catastrophe at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant
  • He called Russia’s invasion of Ukraine an “aberration,” adding: “Putin committed a mistake, and I’m sure he regrets it”

STOCKHOLM: Former UN weapons inspector Hans Blix told AFP he believes Russian President Vladimir Putin will not risk a catastrophe at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant amid mounting international concern over its safety.
The Kremlin leader is “very rational” and “knows what he’s doing,” said the former Swedish foreign minister, who repeatedly insisted that Iraq was not developing nuclear weapons before the Gulf War of 1990.
Blix, 96, who headed the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) from 1981 to 1997, spoke to AFP on a range of issues in an hour-long interview at his apartment in central Stockholm.
Blix later headed a team of UN inspectors tasked with determining whether Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction.
He was never able to confirm that.
His findings contradicted claims made by US president George W. Bush, who ordered the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
“It was a terrible mistake on the part of the US, based on erroneous information and a hubris that the US intelligence knew better than what we did,” Blix told AFP. “The Iraq War was an aberration.”
At the time, the US was not at risk of Russia or China intervening, Blix said, and the US and Britain took it upon themselves “to be the world’s sheriffs.”
Blix is today more optimistic about the future of global conflicts.

Former UN weapons inspector Hans Blix, 96, speaks during an interview with AFP at his home in Stockholm, Sweden on August 20, 2024. (AFP)


The former diplomat last year published a book called “A Farewell to Wars” — a title he admitted was “very provocative” given the “headwind right now,” with wars raging in Ukraine and Gaza.
Like the US invasion of Iraq, Blix called Russia’s invasion of Ukraine an “aberration.”
“Putin committed a mistake, and I’m sure he regrets it,” he said.
The IAEA warned on August 17 that the safety situation at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant was “deteriorating” following a nearby drone strike.
The plant, which was seized by Russia’s forces early in the war, has come under repeated attacks that both sides have accused each other of carrying out.
But Blix, who headed the IAEA during the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, doesn’t think Russia would attack the site on purpose.
“I don’t think the Russians would do it deliberately, no.”
“I would be very surprised if the Russians had not instructed their military to stay away from severe damage.”

This file video grab taken from handout footage released by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Service on August 11, 2024, shows a fire at a cooling tower of the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Energodar, eouthern Ukraine. (AFP)

And he isn’t concerned either about Putin’s repeated threats to the West of nuclear warfare.
“He scrambles, he shakes the nuclear weapons and threatens, but he is no fool.”
“As long as there exists the possibility of a second strike, there is the fear of escalation.”
“The big powers — the US and Russia and China — don’t want to get into a situation of direct confrontation with each other.”
Looking ahead to a future after the war in Ukraine, Russia will eventually “have to come back to the world and to Europe,” Blix said, though “it will take time.”
“Maybe,” he said, “there will also be a feeling that now we have to somehow patch up and improve the situation.”
“I’m a multilateralist,” he said, smiling.
“There are so many problems in the globalising world that you cannot manage (if you are) isolated.”
Blix said the international community needed to work together to tackle its biggest challenges, including global warming — which he was “more worried” about than the spectre of war — as well as pandemics and the fight against international organized crime.