2017年2月27日 星期一

WEEK 2 

Obituary: King Bhumibol of Thailand

 King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand was the world's longest reigning monarch.
He was viewed by his subjects as a stabilising influence in a country that saw numerous military coups during his reign.
Despite being seen as a benign father figure who remained above politics, he also intervened at times of heightened political tension.
And although he was a constitutional monarch with limited powers, most Thais regarded him as semi-divine.
Bhumibol Adulyadej was born in Cambridge in the US state of Massachusetts on 5 December 1927.His father, Prince Mahidol Adulyadej, was studying at Harvard when his son was born.The family later returned to Thailand, where his father died when he was just two years old.His mother then moved to Switzerland, where the young prince was educated.
As a young man he enjoyed cultured pursuits, including photography, playing and composing songs for the saxophone, painting and writing.
The status of the Thai monarchy had been in decline since the abolition of its absolute rule in 1932, and there was a further blow when his uncle, King Prajadhipok, abdicated in 1935.The throne passed to Bhumibol's brother, Ananda, who was just nine years old.
Figurehead
In 1946, King Ananda died in what remains an unexplained shooting accident at his palace in Bangkok. Bhumibol acceded to the throne when he was 18 years old.
His early years as king saw Thailand ruled by a regent, as he returned to his studies in Switzerland. While on a visit to Paris he met his future wife, Sirikit, daughter of the Thai ambassador to France.
The couple married on 28 April 1950, just a week before the new monarch was crowned in Bangkok.

For the first seven years of his reign, Thailand was ruled as a military dictatorship and the monarch was little more than a figurehead.
In September 1957, Gen Sarit Dhanarajata seized power. The king issued a proclamation naming Sarit, military defender of the capital.
Under Sarit's dictatorship, Bhumibol set about revitalising the monarchy. He embarked on a series of tours in the provinces, and lent his name to a number of developments, particularly in agriculture.
For his part, Sarit reinstated the custom that people crawled on their hands and knees in front of the monarch. and restored a number of royal ceremonial occasions that had fallen into disuse.
Overthrow
Bhumibol dramatically intervened in Thai politics in 1973 when pro-democracy demonstrators were fired on by soldiers.
The protesters were allowed to shelter in the palace, a move which led to the collapse of the administration of then-prime minister, Gen Thanom Kittikachorn.
But the king failed to prevent the lynching of left-wing students by paramilitary vigilantes three years later, at a time when the monarchy feared the growth of communist sympathies after the end of the Vietnam War.

There were to be further attempts to overthrow the government. In 1981, the king stood up to a group of army officers who had staged a coup against then prime minister, Prem Tinsulanond.
The rebels succeeded in occupying Bangkok until units loyal to the king retook it.
However, the tendency of the king to side with the government in power caused some Thais to question his impartiality.
Bhumibol intervened again in 1992, when dozens of demonstrators were shot after protesting against an attempt by a former coup leader, Gen Suchinda Kraprayoon, to become prime minister.
The king called Suchinda, and the pro-democracy leader, Chamlong Srimuang, to appear in front of him, both on their knees as demanded by royal protocol.
Suchinda resigned and subsequent elections saw the return of a democratic, civilian government.
During the crisis that erupted over the leadership of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in 2006, the king was frequently asked to intervene but insisted this would be inappropriate.

However, his influence was still viewed as pivotal when the election Mr Thaksin had won that April, was annulled by the courts.
Mr Thaksin was eventually deposed in a bloodless coup, in which the military pledged their allegiance to the king.
In the years that followed, the king's name and image were invoked by factions both for and against Mr Thaksin, as they jostled for power.
The entire country joined lavish celebrations to mark King Bhumibol's 80th birthday in 2008, reflecting his unique status in Thai society.
Reverence
Gen Prayuth Chan-ocha seized power in a coup in May 2014 and was made prime minister by the military-appointed parliament a few months later.
He promised far-reaching political reforms to prevent a return to the instability of recent years.
But critics suspected his real priority was to destroy the party of Mr Thaksin and to ensure that the royal succession took place smoothly.

The public reverence for King Bhumibol was genuine but it was also carefully nurtured by a formidable public relations machine at the palace.
There were harsh "lese-majeste" laws that punished any criticism of the monarchy and which restricted the ability of foreign and domestic media to fully report on the king.
During his long reign, King Bhumibol Adulyadej was faced with a country continually racked by political upheaval.
It said much for his skills as a diplomat, and his ability to reach out to ordinary people in Thailand, that his death leaves the country's monarchy far stronger than it was at his accession.
WHO:King Bhumibol
WHERE:Thailand
WHEN:2016.10.13
WHAT:Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej dead at 88
KEY WORD:
obituary 訃聞
coup 政變
constitutional 憲法的
monarchy 君主國 
abolition 廢除 
throne 王位
benign 慈善的


2017年2月13日 星期一

WEEK 1

US Supreme Court rules gay marriage is legal nationwide


The US Supreme Court has ruled that same-sex marriage is a legal right across the United States.
It means the 14 states with bans on same-sex marriage will no longer be able to enforce them.
Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that the plaintiffs asked "for equal dignity in the eyes of the law. The
 Constitution grants them that right."
The ruling brings to an end more than a decade of bitter legal battles.
Same-sex couples in several affected states including Georgia, Michigan, Ohio and Texas rushed to wed on Friday.However officials in other states, including Mississippi and Louisiana, said marriages had to wait until procedural issues were addressed.
President Barack Obama said the ruling was a "victory for America".
"When all Americans are treated as equal, we are all more free " he said.

However, Christian conservatives condemned the decision.
Former Arkansas governor and presidential candidate Mike Huckabee called it "an out-of-control act of unconstitutional, judicial tyranny".
And Kellie Fiedorek, a lawyer for an anti-gay marriage advocacy group, said the decision "ignored the voices of thousands of Americans".
Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, a state where marriages licences will now be issued to same-sex couples, said the justices "have imposed on the entire country their personal views on an issue that the Constitution and the Court's previous decisions reserve to the people of the states".
Loud cheers erupted outside the court after the ruling was announced, and there were tears, hugs, and cheers of "USA USA USA!".
A sea of rainbow flags overwhelmed the few anti-gay marriage activists who reacted in disbelief, and the demonstration seemed to turn into a street party.
A tour bus drove past honking as hundreds cheered the decision.
One of the demonstrators, Jordan Monaghan, called his mother from his mobile phone amid the celebrations."Hey mom, I'm at the Supreme Court. Your son can have a husband now," Mr Monaghan said.Minutes after the ruling, couples in one of the states that had a ban, Georgia, lined up in hope of being wed.
In Texas, Yasmin Menchaca and her partner Catherine Andrews told the BBC that they are "trying to round up our parents" in order to get married on Friday.The two have been together for six years, and had attempted to marry in Washington state - but decided to wait because of the financial burden of flying their parents across the country.
On social media, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton merely tweeted the word "proud" and the White House changed its Twitter avatar into the rainbow colours.
The case considered by the court concerned Jim Obergefell, an Ohio resident who was not recognised as the legal widower of his late husband, John Arthur."It's my hope that gay marriage will soon be a thing of the past, and from this day forward it will simply be 'marriage,'" an emotional Mr Obergefell said outside the court.
WHERE:USA
WHAT:Gay Marriage
WHEN:June 26, 2015