The Dugong Show: 24-hour webcast shows star Thai sea cows
Bangkok: A round-the-clock webcast starring two beloved baby dugongs in Thailand named Mariam and Jamil went live Sunday, allowing a more in-depth look at the celebrity sea cows. Mariam captured hearts in viral social media posts last month showing her playfully nuzzling up to rescuers in shallow waters off southwestern Thailand, while Jamil washed ashore further up the coast a week ago. The orphaned dugong duo are being held separately, but anyone with an internet connection can now see them through a 24-hour livestream that uses eight camera angles and scheduled feeding times. “We show them live because we don’t want people to disrupt them by going to see them at the current locations,” said Kongkiat Kittiwatanawong, director of the Phuket Marine Biological Center. He added cameras will also help with monitoring their recovery. A little after 2pm Jamil was seen splashing away in a small pool in the Phuket center. Normally dugongs don’t leave their mothers until they are a little more than a year. Mariam is female and believed to be about six months old, while Jamil is half her age. Experts say interest in the dugongs has helped galvanise awareness in ocean conservation. Both were found in southern Thailand, home to about 250 dugongs, which are closely related to the manatee and classified as vulnerable. The slow-moving mammals feed on sea grass but are at risk from habitat loss, water pollution, and nets used in fishing. A Thai Princess gave Jamil his name, which means “handsome sea prince” in the Yawi language used in southern provinces by Malay Muslims. (AFP)
Man ordered to pay USD 172K for disrupting flight from Honolulu
Honolulu: A man whose behaviour on a Hawaiian Airlines flight to South Korea forced it to return to Honolulu has been ordered to pay the air carrier more than USD 172,000. Kyong Chol Kim was sentenced Wednesday to six months in jail for interfering with flight attendants and crew members on the flight in February. Prosecutors say the 48-year-old South Korean man drank a bottle of whiskey before the flight and later bothered a child seated next him. Prosecutors say he lunged at a flight attendant after the employee confronted him about his behaviour. US service members on board helped restrain Kim as the flight turned around. Kim was ordered to pay Hawaiian Airlines the cost of returning the flight and accommodating passengers waiting for the plane in South Korea. (AP)