Thailand s Queen Suthida is pictured as the motorcade drives towards the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand Oct 14, 2020. - Reuters
BANGKOK (AP): Prosecutors in Thailand indicted five pro-democracy activists on Wednesday (March 31) on changes of attempting to harm the queen during a street demonstration last October in which some protesters shouted slogans critical of the monarchy.
Queen Suthida, the wife of King Maha Vajiralongkorn, was not in any evident danger in the incident, which occurred when a limousine carrying the queen and the king’s son, Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti, passed through a small crowd of protesters mixed with supporters of the royal family.
Yasir Hussain addresses reliance on blunt honesty: ‘What s the harm in it?’
TV&Showbiz
Yasir Hussain addresses reliance on blunt honesty: ‘What s the harm in it?’
Pakistani star Yasir Hussain recently sat down for a chat and got candid about the entertainment industry’s double standards.
The actor touched upon the industry’s alleged hypnotical nature during his interview with BBC Urdu and was quoted saying, I went to three to four shows and all of them were quite similar. I was told if I am unable to answer, I d have to drink soya sauce, garlic ginger paste etc. What director should leave the industry, what actor is terrible, which actresses gossips too much.these were a few of the questions.”
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Denying Access to Safer Nicotine Products in Low- and Middle-Income Countries Will Endanger the Lives of 800 Million People
GENEVE, CH, Mar 17, 2021 - (ACN Newswire) - via NewMediaWire - The International Network of Nicotine Consumer Organisations (INNCO), a global association advocating for sensible tobacco harm reduction policies, today introduced a new position paper, 10 Reasons Why Blanket Bans of E-Cigarettes and HTPs in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) Are Not Fit for Purpose.
Available for download on the organisation s website (https://innco.org/why-bans-in-low-middle-income-countries-dont-work/), the policy report rebukes the overly simplistic and impractical bans on electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) and other tobacco harm reduction (THR) products in LMICs, warning organizations and governments that limiting options to reduce harm will only increase the number of people smoking tobacco, inevitably leading to illicit markets and increases in crime