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Search Result for “underpass”

Showing 1 - 9 of 9

OPINION

City needs to do more

Oped, Editorial, Published on 30/05/2024

» Halfway into his term as city governor, Chadchart Sittipunt still rates himself a five out of 10, which is the same as last year's self-appraisal. Judging from that, we can only hope there is room for improvement.

OPINION

Unfortunate accident

Oped, Postbag, Published on 09/05/2024

» Re: "Motorcyclist dies after falling down drain", (BP, May 7).

OPINION

Lessons to learn

Oped, Postbag, Published on 19/04/2024

» Re: "Plugging in", (PostBag, April 16).

OPINION

Asean solidarity

Published on 15/04/2024

» Re: "Asean juggles triangular power game", (Opinion, April 9).

OPINION

Root for city workers

Oped, Postbag, Published on 03/02/2024

» Re: "High-perched garbos killed as truck enters underpass", (BP, Jan 24).

OPINION

Drug resistance

News, Postbag, Published on 14/08/2022

» Re: "Lift antiviral drug curbs," (Editorial, Aug 8).

OPINION

Protests follow a predictable path

News, Veera Prateepchaikul, Published on 20/09/2021

» Din Daeng intersection has been transformed into a small battleground between crowd control police and hardcore protesters of the Talugas group for about a month.

OPINION

HK protests: Behind the barricade

News, Dave Kendall, Published on 18/11/2019

» On the night of Nov 13th in Hong Kong, I heard there was a protest in the city centre of the area of the New Territories I was staying in, Sha Tin. After crossing the bridge over the Shing Mun River, I notice four protesters talking beneath a pedestrian underpass. Walking through the megamalls that constitute the city centre, I see workers clearing up broken glass but see no protesters. But on my way back across the bridge to my hotel, I encounter a crowd of about 50 people yelling and screaming abuse, and working my way through them, see a line of riot police advancing from the other direction. After several minutes of shining torches and bellowing warnings through a megaphone, the police raise the black flag warning that tear gas will be fired. The crowd retreats as one or two canisters are fired.

OPINION

The joke of law

News, Published on 01/12/2018

» The impressively slow progress on Premchai Karnasuta's case for alleged poaching in a national wildlife sanctuary can surprise no one (Editorial, Nov 30). It exemplifies perfectly why Thai people do not trust Thai justice, or rather, Thai rule of law posing as justice. Even when the law manages to be just, it is applied with seemingly blatant discrimination to protect corrupt hi-so types who are members in good standing of the old boys club while coming down mercilessly on the poor and powerless, who correctly see it as being created by traditional hi-so types to keep the masses in their place underfoot. We need not imagine where Premchai would be today had he been an aged peasant picking mushrooms illegally.