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Crime CCTV Captures Suspect Stealing Road Warning Light Batteries in Phayao
Picture courtesy of Kaoded. Police in Phayao Province are pursuing a suspect caught on CCTV stealing four solar-powered batteries used to operate road warning lights at a highway construction site. The theft, which occurred on Highway 1202, has caused disruption to safety measures and prompted an active police investigation. Pol. Sub-Lt. Sonthaya Pattawee, Deputy Inspector (Investigation) at Mueang Phayao Police Station, received the report from Mr. Sengchai Na Lampang, 68, a representative of Chiang Mai SP Construction Ltd. Partnership. The stolen items, four solar cell batteries, were part of a traffic diversion warning system installed along kilometre markers 1+500 to 2 on the Phayao–San Ton Tan route, in the Huai Nam Khao area of Tha Wang Thong Subdistrict. Following the report, police investigators visited the scene and examined CCTV footage. The video shows a man arriving on a motorcycle, parking at the roadside and then removing the batteries from the solar-powered warning lights installed for a road and drainage construction project. The incident took place near the junction to Ban Ua-Arthorn 2 housing project and the entrance of Thananchon Hotel in Tha Wang Thong. Authorities have since identified a suspect and are currently compiling evidence to request an arrest warrant from the court. Legal proceedings will follow once the suspect is apprehended. Police urged the public to report any information that could assist in the investigation and reminded citizens of the vital role traffic safety equipment plays in protecting both workers and road users during infrastructure works. Adapted by Asean Now from Kaoded 2025-07-17 -
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FBU Manila setup a phone appointment and they didn't call.
They didn't call at the appointed time as well...so I called them after hours and someone picked up the phone and said they were still going thru the telephone appointment schedule and would call me later that day...and they did.... -
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Civil war in Europe?
The Crusades lasted between 1095 to 1291. The conflict was carried out in the Levant and Holy Land, so your allegation that it took part in Europe is wilfully incorrect. The Province of the Umayyad Caliphate was first established in 711. The Emirate of Grenada fell in 1492, a fact exposing your blatant lies and hoaxes. The Ottomans appeared in Europe around 1350. Ottoman rule in parts of Europe pretty much existed until the 1920s. Again, you are talking complete nonsense. Either you have complete ignorance of European history, or you are posting on the forum deliberate falsehood, to stir up trouble and to troll, I assume for racist reasons. -
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THAILAND LIVE Thailand Live Friday 18 July 2025
DSI Probes Alleged Illegal Runway Built Over Public Land at Private Airport Pictures courtesy of Matichon. The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) has launched an investigation into a private airstrip allegedly constructed over public land in Khanong Phra Subdistrict, Pak Chong District, Nakhon Ratchasima. The 1-kilometre runway is suspected of being built without official permission and in violation of public land use regulations. Ful story:https://aseannow.com/topic/1367068-dsi-probes-alleged-illegal-runway-built-over-public-land-at-private-airport/ -
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Crime DSI Probes Alleged Illegal Runway Built Over Public Land at Private Airport
Pictures courtesy of Matichon. The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) has launched an investigation into a private airstrip allegedly constructed over public land in Khanong Phra Subdistrict, Pak Chong District, Nakhon Ratchasima. The 1-kilometre runway is suspected of being built without official permission and in violation of public land use regulations. Pol. Lt. Col. Yuttana Praedam, Director-General of the DSI, authorised a team led by Pol. Lt. Col. Natthaphon Ditsayatham, Director of the Natural Resources and Environment Division and Pol. Lt. Col. Nimit Promma, Deputy Director of the same division, to meet with local officials in Khanong Phra to verify the legality of the airstrip. The inquiry was triggered by a formal complaint filed by Mr. Phattharaphong Supakson, following media reports alleging that a public road was being used as a runway for private aircraft. The road in question had long been used by local residents and is reportedly under the jurisdiction of the Khanong Phra Subdistrict Administrative Organisation (SAO). During a site inspection, officials found that the airstrip runs through public land. The runway itself is approximately 19 metres wide and 1,000 metres long, overlapping with a public thoroughfare roughly 3.5 metres wide and 450 metres long. The road is said to end at a private golf course. The DSI revealed that the land in question is officially managed by the Lam Ta Khong Self-Development Community (a government resettlement scheme), not by the local subdistrict authority. However, any construction, including a runway, falls under the jurisdiction of the Building Control Act B.E. 2522 (1979), which involves local administration during the permitting process. Notably, no application for permission to build the runway has been found in records dating back to 2007, according to the SAO’s engineering department. This suggests the runway may have been built illegally, raising concerns over safety and improper use of communal land. Further complicating matters, engineers from the SAO reported that although the public road appears to lead into the golf course, the path within has been covered in grass and landscaped features, effectively preventing access and removing its function as a public road. Pol. Lt. Col. Natthaphon and the inspection team are continuing to collect evidence and may expand the investigation to include the private golf course. The DSI has reiterated its commitment to protecting public land and environmental resources. Members of the public are encouraged to report illegal land use or environmental violations to the DSI’s Natural Resources and Environment Division via the website www.dsi.go.th or by calling the free nationwide DSI hotline. Adapted by Asean Now from Matichon 2025-07-17 -
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Current Status of Thailand's Cannabis Law Changes
The government currently seems in a state of total limbo and am starting to think something is seriously up.
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