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Woman injured after being stabbed by ex-boyfriend in Chonburi following a domestic dispute


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PHOTO: Panapong Humtong

 

By Goong Nang(GN)

 

Chonburi – A 39-year-old woman has sustained injuries after she was reportedly stabbed by her ex-boyfriend in the Mueang Chonburi district.

 

The Don Hualor Police was notified of the incident at 2:00 A.M. yesterday, Thursday, March 24th, at a dormitory in the Don Hualor sub-district.

 

Emergency responders and police arrived at the scene to find Ms. Tipaphon Siaru, 39. She had sustained severe injuries from a stab wound to her belly.

 

Another man, who was identified by Don Hualor police only as Mr. A, had sustained injuries from a knife wound to his shoulder. They were both taken to a local hospital for medical assistance. The relationship of the injured man to the couple was not immediately made clear by any party involved.

 

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Full story: https://thepattayanews.com/2022/03/25/woman-injured-after-being-stabbed-by-ex-boyfriend-in-chonburi-following-a-domestic-dispute/

 

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-- © Copyright The Pattaya News 2022-03-26
 

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1 hour ago, Skeptic7 said:

Only a couple days without such reports of angry Thai male knife-wielding and gun-slinging murderous violence...but right back to it already. Hope this dangerous mental midget piece of ???? gets many years behind bars to contemplate his irrational, unstable and violent actions. But TIT, so doubtful he'll do any significant time at all. 

Don’t kid yourself, we only see the tip of the iceberg on here. I agree with the years behind bars which should be life for attempted murder. But also as you stated, he’ll probably be out in 5 years, kill someone, then be out in 3 years for admitting guilt.

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4 hours ago, mrwebb8825 said:

She was injured AFTER being stabbed? Really? Then she sustained those injuries? Whoda thunk ????‍♂️

I thought the same thing.  I expected the story to say that after she was stabbed she was hit by a car or something.  The writing in these news articles leaves a lot to be desired most of the time.  Not sure where they get their writing staff from, presumably from the pool of retirees.

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46 minutes ago, Bert got kinky said:

 

I am not saying a sugar relationship is wrong but in this case it might be a factor in the incident.

 

From the sugar relationships that I have seen, the younger girl usually come out of the relationship better than the younger man.

In a sugar mother relationship, the young man tends to fall in love with the mother figure and then takes it very badly when sugar mommy gets bored and moves on.

 

I am not saying that this is the case every time but I have seen enough male sugar babies who have been so wound around their sugar momma’s finger that the (mostly) inevitable split has left them not knowing whether they are coming or going.

 

just my personal observations.

 

Definitely an interesting observation with relevance to the story.

 

Certainly a different dynamic based on the genders.  Despite what people think, the man often becomes far more attached to the woman than the woman does to the man, even in a sugar daddy/mommy relationship.  An average woman can far easily replace an average man than an average man can replace an average woman also. 

 

The woman in this story probably got bored and replaced the younger man with someone her own age, while the young man was still very much hung up on her.

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1 hour ago, BangkokReady said:

I thought the same thing.  I expected the story to say that after she was stabbed she was hit by a car or something.  The writing in these news articles leaves a lot to be desired most of the time.  Not sure where they get their writing staff from, presumably from the pool of retirees.

Sorry but I see nothing wrohg here.  What about ' He went to hospital after being hit by a car '.

He wouldn't go to hospital before being hit by a car . What makes more sense to you ' He went to hospital FROM being hit by a car'.

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37 minutes ago, toofarnorth said:

What about ' He went to hospital after being hit by a car '.

Those are two separate events.  1, being hit by a car, then 2, going to hospital.

 

Being stabbed and being injured are not two separate events in this story.  The stabbing is the injury.  There is no second event.  When she was stabbed she was injured.  She wasn't stabbed then injured, as the headline suggests.

 

It would make sense if "injured" was being used as an adjective, but then they would have had to have written "woman left injured after being stabbed...".  They could have also used the stabbing as a noun "woman injured in stabbing", but they did not.  The way they have written it, both are in the verb form, which suggest two events, a stabbing then an injury. 

 

Does that make sense now?

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4 hours ago, mikebell said:

After a life-time of being cossetted by mummy and Grandma, this is how Thai men react to a woman who says no to him.

Agree and have railed in depth about this very thing for years. And been call a Thai basher and hater. 555

 

However it's not only women whom they react to like this. It's women and men...friends as well as foes, mothers as well as fathers (many times both), girlfriends as well as guy friends, aunts as well as uncles. Co-workers and employers regardless of gender.

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I had to read through a good amount of the posts to find the first that actually focused on the scourge of socialised Domestic Violence (DV) rather than musings about age gaps and other sickening (to my gut) trivia.

A woman was assaulted by a man with superior physical power and obviously extreme malicious intent with an object and could have died.

(Please please don't reply to me with predictable stuff about the woman somehow 'deserving, or making' what happened to her because she might have provoked him to stab her, be of low moral character, or some sort of harpy (which are all predictable mysogynist responses in tacit defence of violence towards women by the way).

 

This event, yet again another (male to female) act of violence must be addressed by all of LOS society (us who live her included) not just governmental and policing bodies, and not as is almost always the case; as a post assault response, or when someone yet again dies.

DV rarely involves a singular violent event for the victim. It in nearly always shown in socially obvious pattern of escalation which can and does all too often end in murder, often involving children who too become murder victims.

 

I first witnessed DV from my drunk stepdad towards my mum at the age of 13. It had been going on for almost a year and was accompanied by (as is always the case) psychological assault/torture.

I was been 'sheltered' from it by being sent to my grandparents for the weekend every Friday arvo after school let-out (which I was so happy to do as they loved me so and had a great home and spoilt me ????), and so never saw the assaults or bullying until I stayed home on a weekend and saw the ....

He never touched her again I made sure of that. 

 

The issue of patriarchally misogynist based DV both here and in many countries across the globe is at shocking levels, as is the denial, tacit approval, and socialised enabling of it.

 

I ask all male posters here this question;

Have you ever known of a man who was emotionally and or physically violent to a woman/women and done nothing about it?

Indeed the issue of Communal Violence (CV) which is my preferred, 'truer' name for DV violence in community is not only widely tacitly accepted but actually approved, celebrated, and admired by patriarchal LOS society, and of the world.

I saw Aussie 'SBS Evening News' feed on my phone today ... a woman was stabbed and killed in Newcastle NSW by her ex today.

She had left him as she had been a victim of increasing domestic violence from him which was known to police, courts, the local community, and the assailants family and friends.

But like women everywhere (and this lady we are reading about) there is little to no mechanisms in place to provide secure, anonymous, safe-places for them to flee to, and so often the women stays in the same house, or village or nearby region where the offender can gain access to her whenever he feels like it.

The Aussie woman had a 3 year old child.

 

 

Edited by Tropposurfer
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6 minutes ago, Tropposurfer said:

I had to read through a good amount of the posts to find the first that actually focused on the scourge of socialised Domestic Violence (DV) rather than musings about age gaps and other sickening (to my gut) trivia.

A woman was assaulted by a man with superior physical power and obviously extreme malicious intent with an object and could have died.

(Please please don't reply to me with stuff about the woman 'deserved' what happened to her because she might have provoked him to stab her, be of low moral character, or some sort of harpy (which are all predictable mysogynist responses in tacit defence of violence towards women by the way).

 

This event, yet again another (male to female) act of violence must be addressed by all of LOS society (us who live her included) not just governmental and policing bodies, and not as is almost always the case; as a post assault response, or when someone yet again dies.

DV rarely involves a singular violent event for the victim. It in nearly always shown in socially obvious pattern of escalation which can and does all too often end in murder, often involving children, who too become murder victims.

 

I first witnessed DV from my drunk stepdad towards my mum at the age of 13. It had been going on for almost a year and was accompanied by (as is always the case) psychological assault/torture.

I was been 'sheltered' from it by being sent to my grandparents for the weekend every Friday arvo after school let-out, and so never saw the assaults or bullying until I stayed home on a weekend and saw the <deleted>.

He never touched her again I made sure of that. 

 

The issue of patriarchally misogynist based DV both here and in many countries across the globe is at shocking levels, as is the denial, tacit approval, and enabling of it.

I ask all male posters here; Have you ever known of a man who was emotionally and or physically violent to a woman and done nothing about it?

Indeed the issue of Communal Violence (CV) which is my preferred, 'truer' name for DV violence in community is not only widely tacitly accepted but actually approved, celebrated, and admired of by the patriarchal nature of LOS society and that of the entire world.

I just saw Aussie SBS evening news feed on my phone ... a woman was stabbed and killed in Newcastle NSW by her ex today. She had left him as she had been a victim of increasing domestic violence from him which was known to police, courts, the local community, and the assailants family and friends.

But like women everywhere (and this lady we are reading about) there is little to no mechanisms in place to provide secure, anonymous, safe-places for them to flee to, and so often the women stays in the same house, or village or nearby region where the offender can gain access to her whenever he feels like it.

The Aussie woman had a 3 year old child.

 

 

It is a worldwide epidemic of DVF , and other violence and harassment  even in government and other workplaces.

 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-03-21/qld-hannah-clarke-children-inquest-death-domestic-violence/100913608

 

This a particularly sickening example.

 

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4 hours ago, Tropposurfer said:

I had to read through a good amount of the posts to find the first that actually focused on the scourge of socialised Domestic Violence (DV) rather than musings about age gaps and other sickening (to my gut) trivia.

A woman was assaulted by a man with superior physical power and obviously extreme malicious intent with an object and could have died.

(Please please don't reply to me with predictable stuff about the woman somehow 'deserving, or making' what happened to her because she might have provoked him to stab her, be of low moral character, or some sort of harpy (which are all predictable mysogynist responses in tacit defence of violence towards women by the way).

 

This event, yet again another (male to female) act of violence must be addressed by all of LOS society (us who live her included) not just governmental and policing bodies, and not as is almost always the case; as a post assault response, or when someone yet again dies.

DV rarely involves a singular violent event for the victim. It in nearly always shown in socially obvious pattern of escalation which can and does all too often end in murder, often involving children who too become murder victims.

 

I first witnessed DV from my drunk stepdad towards my mum at the age of 13. It had been going on for almost a year and was accompanied by (as is always the case) psychological assault/torture.

I was been 'sheltered' from it by being sent to my grandparents for the weekend every Friday arvo after school let-out (which I was so happy to do as they loved me so and had a great home and spoilt me ????), and so never saw the assaults or bullying until I stayed home on a weekend and saw the ....

He never touched her again I made sure of that. 

 

The issue of patriarchally misogynist based DV both here and in many countries across the globe is at shocking levels, as is the denial, tacit approval, and socialised enabling of it.

 

I ask all male posters here this question;

Have you ever known of a man who was emotionally and or physically violent to a woman/women and done nothing about it?

Indeed the issue of Communal Violence (CV) which is my preferred, 'truer' name for DV violence in community is not only widely tacitly accepted but actually approved, celebrated, and admired by patriarchal LOS society, and of the world.

I saw Aussie 'SBS Evening News' feed on my phone today ... a woman was stabbed and killed in Newcastle NSW by her ex today.

She had left him as she had been a victim of increasing domestic violence from him which was known to police, courts, the local community, and the assailants family and friends.

But like women everywhere (and this lady we are reading about) there is little to no mechanisms in place to provide secure, anonymous, safe-places for them to flee to, and so often the women stays in the same house, or village or nearby region where the offender can gain access to her whenever he feels like it.

The Aussie woman had a 3 year old child.

 

 

Welcome to Asia.

 

"In 2015, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on violence against women issued a call for all countries to establish a "femicide watch" or a "gender-related killing of women" watch. To date, no country in Asia has responded to that request."

 

https://www.boell.de/en/2021/11/23/thailands-silent-pandemic-domestic-violence-during-covid-19?dimension1=ds_asean_en

 

 

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