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Thailand: Why was Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin removed from office?

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Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin was removed from office by the country’s constitutional court. The court found Srettha guilty of an ethics violations. What is this case all about?

Hundreds of Thais inoculated with Sinovac are infected as cases spike in Southeast Asia

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Quiet streets on Monday in Bangkok, where coronavirus restrictions were recently tightened. (Lillian Suwanrumpha/AFP/Getty Images)

More than 600 Thai medical workers who were fully inoculated with the Sinovac vaccine were infected by the coronavirus, which is now raging through Southeast Asia.

The 618 cases were among the 677,348 medical staff who had received two doses of the Chinese-developed coronavirus vaccine between April to July, government data show. Among those infected are a nurse who died and a health-care worker in critical condition.

A Thai health official said Sunday that an expert panel has recommended administering a third dose to at-risk medical workers, adding that the booster shot would be either one from Oxford-AstraZeneca or a messenger RNA vaccine made by either Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna. The country is set to receive 1.5 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine from the United States this month.

(source: washingtonpost)

‘Extremely evil misconduct’: Thailand’s palace intrigue spills into view

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Purges in King Vajiralongkorn’s court have electrified the normally anodyne royal gazette.

King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida during their wedding ceremony in Bangkok in May 2019. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

The denunciations have swirled through Thailand’s gilded palaces with the rhetorical extravagance of a Shakespearean history. The official consort to the king was accused of trying to upstage the queen and “undermining the nation”, leading to the stripping of her royal titles after less than three months on the job.

A grand chamberlain was removed for “severely immoral acts” that allegedly included forcing a paramour to undergo an abortion. And last week, four more courtiers, two of whom were described as bedchamber pages, were removed for “extremely evil misconduct”

Nearly half a year ago, King Maha Vajiralongkorn was crowned in a lavish spectacle culminating in the placement of a 7kg crown on his head. Since then the 67-year-old king has assembled a court whose intrigue frequently spills onto the pages of the Royal Thai Government Gazette, which normally records more anodyne matters.

The explosive details of the palace purges stand in contrast to the reserved tenor of the seven-decade reign of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, his father. At the time of his death in 2016, Bhumibol was the world’s longest-serving royal. He did not leave Thailand for decades, and he was often pictured in rice paddies or factories with his subjects.

Vajiralongkorn spends much of his time in Germany and has not continued the tradition of communing with ordinary Thais, at least in photos that have been made public. The king has taken high-profile steps that appear to have bolstered his authority.

Last year, he assumed oversight over the Crown Property Bureau, whose fortune, believed to be upward of €30 billion, helps make him one of the world’s wealthiest royals. In February, he quashed the political candidacy of his elder sister, Ubolratana Rajakanya Sirivadhana Barnavadi, calling her attempt to run for prime minister “highly inappropriate”.

Last month, he ordered two infantry units in Bangkok, the capital, moved from normal military command to that of his royal corps.

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‘Under Swami’s spell’: 14 tourists claim sexual assault by guru at Thai yoga retreat

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In the beginning, Agama Yoga was paradise for most who walked through its gates; a haven on the Thai island of Koh Phangan that embraced ancient tantric teachings under the watchful eye of its charismatic leader, the guru Swami Vivekananda Saraswati.

But beneath the surface, it seems this was no ordinary yoga school. Sixteen former pupils and staff who have spoken to the Guardian have said they felt a “sex cult” was operating inside Agama.

The 14 women and two men claim that for 15 years the retreat facilitated sexual assault, rape and misogynistic teachings, allegedly “brainwashing” hundreds of women into having sex with the Swami – whose real name is Narcis Tarcau – in the name of helping them achieve enlightenment.

After 31 women submitted testimonials alleging abuse to Agama, the school first tried to deal with it internally, but have now launched an independent inquiry .

Tarcau is understood to have left Koh Phangan in July, when several women went public with the allegations of abuse at Agama, and is no longer in Thailand. He could not be reached directly for comment.

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