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Arrest Warrant Issued Over Saudi Murder


sriracha john

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  • 2 weeks later...
Another Saudi businessman, Mohammad al-Ruwaili, mysteriously went missing on Feb 14, 1990.

Very high level policemen have been implicated:

DSI asks OAG to seek indictment against defendants in missing Saudi case

BANGKOK, 10 December 2009 (NNT) - The Department of Special Investigation has asked the Office of the Attorney-General (OAG) to indict Police Lieutenant-General Somkid Boonthanom and four others involved in the disappearance of Saudi businessman Mohammad al-Ruwaili since 1990.

Police Colonel Suchart Wong-anantachai, Deputy Director-General of the DSI in charge of the investigation, has presented a 2,000-page case report concerning the request for indictment against the five accused people to Mr Ruj Khuansuwan, a special case prosecutor for further consideration.

Apart form Police Leutenant-General Somkid Boonthanom, Chief of Provincial Police Region 5, the four others charged are Police Colonel Soralak or Somchai Jusanit, Chief of Sop Moei police in Mae Hong Son province; Police Colonel Prapas Piyamongkol, Chief of Nam Khun police in Ubon Ratchathani; Police Leutenant-Colonel Suradet Udomdee, former Chief of Nakhon Thai district police in Phitsanulok; and Police Sergent-Major Prasong Thorang, retired.

The five were charged with unlawfully detaining Saudi Arabian businessman Mr al-Ruwaili, premeditated murder and intentional attempt to cover up the victim's corpse.

The OAG is scheduled to decide whether to lay charges against the five suspects or not on 29 December.

On the other hand, Police Lieutenant-General Somkid, one of the suspects in the case said he had submitted a petition seeking justice to the OAG while expressing confidence over his innocence and existing evidence to defend himself from the allegation.

http://thainews.prd.go.th/en/news.php?id=255212100048

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so, the police are looking for a man called Abu Ali.

If you know any arabic that means son of Ali.

how many son of ali are in the world?????? :)

Everyone know where to look for the murder but he is protected by lese ....

just another spin, this spin has turned into a vacuum.

Abu Ali doesn't mean the son of Ali, it means the FATHER of Ali

IBN Ali means the son of Ali

Reason for edit: Capiltalized IBN and ABU

Edited by pampal
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Everyone knows who has it, there were videos of her wearing it at a public function.

Cannot discuss it here though.

The Thai Police at the centre of things as usual; torture, theft, murder, even killing a 14 year old boy and trying to pass it off as a motor accident to cover their tracks.

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  • 1 month later...
Court asked to declare Saudi businessman "missing"

The Office of the Attorney-General on Wednesday asked the South Bangkok Criminal Court asking it to declare a Saudi business who disappeared in 1990 a "missing person".

The missing man was seen in a car with Saudi consul Abdullah al-Besri on Feb 12, 1990, and was reported missing three days later.

It was widely suspected that al-Ruwaili was kidnapped by police investigating the Saudi consul's murder, and that he was tortured and later killed by his captors to cover up their brutal actions.

The businessman's disappearance and the consul's murder followed the killing of three other Saudi diplomats were in separate shootings on Feb 1, 1989. One of the diplomats, Saleh Abdullah al-Maliki, third secretary at the Saudi embassy in Bangkok, was shot dead in front of his home in soi Pipat 1.

Thailand indicts five police officers in Saudi blue diamond case

DPA

Jan 12, 2010, 5:44 GMT

Bangkok - Thailand's attorney general on Tuesday indicted five serving and former police officers in the murder of a Saudi businessman allegedly linked to the theft of a prince's 50-carat blue diamond and other jewelry.

'The new evidence we have is sufficiently strong to believe the officers have done wrong,' said Thampitch Moonlapuk, executive director of the Office of the State Attorney Commission.

The five officers were charged with involvement in the murder of Mohammad al-Ruwaili, who went missing in Bangkok in 1990.

The 20-year statute of limitations on the case was due to run out next month. Failure to prosecute the police officers would have likely led to further deterioration in Thai-Saudi relations.

Diplomatic ties have been poor for the past two decades because of Thailand's failure to solve the al-Ruwaili case and the murders of three Saudi diplomats. The Saudis are also awaiting the return of millions of dollars of jewelry stolen from the home of Prince Faisal Bihn Abdul Ra-ish in Riyadh in 1989, including the blue diamond.

From June to August 1989, Thai janitor Kriangkrai Techamong stole an estimated 502 million baht (15 million dollars) of jewelry from the prince's Riyadh palace and managed to post it to Thailand before returning home himself. The theft prompted a Saudi investigation in Bangkok that has been linked to the slaying of three Saudi diplomats and the disappearance of al-Ruwaili from 1989 to 1990.

Thai police arrested Kriangkrai, who confessed to the thefts and went to prison, and Thai authorities retrieved much of the stolen jewelry, but when it was returned to Saudi Arabia, many of the items proved to be imitations, including the blue diamond.

Thai Police Lieutenant General Chalor Kerdthes, who was originally in charge of the investigation, has been sentenced to death for abducting and murdering the wife and son of a Thai jewelry dealer allegedly involved in the case.

Saudi Arabia downgraded diplomatic relations with Thailand in 1990 over the unsolved cases, refusing to allow Thai labourers to work in the country and barring Saudi tourists from visiting Thailand.

In a recent statement, the Saudi Arabian government said it expected Thailand to tackle the unsolved murders and return the blue diamond before relations could return to normal.

http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/asi...ue-diamond-case

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Thai policemen charged over Saudi gem murder

(AFP) – 1 hour ago

BANGKOK — Thai authorities Tuesday charged a senior policeman and four other police officers with murder over the disappearance of a Saudi businessman that was linked to the theft of Saudi royal jewelery.

The charges came a day after the Saudi charge d'affaires in Bangkok met with Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to seek an end to the bloody 20-year saga sparked by the theft of the gems from a Saudi prince's palace.

The deaths of three Saudi diplomats, the wife and daughter of a jewelery dealer, and Saudi businessman Mohamamad al-Ruwaili have all been linked to the case, which has soured relations between Thailand and Saudi Arabia.

Lieutenant General Somkid Boonthanom, police commander of Thailand's northern region, and four fellow officers had been indicted with the murder of al-Ruwaili in 1990, the office of the Thai attorney general said.

"Somkid and four accomplices were indicted today at the criminal court for premeditated murder, illegal detention and concealment of wrongdoing," said Thanapich Mulapruk, a senior official at the attorney general's office.

All five suspects denied the charges and the court set March 29 as the opening date of the case, he said.

The case -- one of Thailand's biggest mysteries -- began when a Thai janitor was jailed for stealing gems worth 20 million dollars in 1989 from the Saudi palace where he worked, before smuggling them back to Thailand.

Police recovered most of the jewelery but much of what was returned to the Saudi owner proved to be fake and many pieces are still missing.

As the Saudis pressed Thai authorities to find the rest of the hoard, the three Saudi diplomats were shot dead in two separate incidents in a single day in 1989.

The indictment accuses Somkid, who at the time ran Bangkok's southern district, and the other four policemen of abducting al-Ruawaili in 1990 because they thought he was connected with the deaths of the envoys.

In October Thailand's Supreme Court upheld a death sentence for another former senior policeman who in 1994 abducted and murdered a gem merchant's wife and son as he investigated the theft of Saudi royal jewelery.

The merchant, Santi Srithanakhan, had bought some of the jewelery stolen in the heist.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/artic...k3jCD8urDbOi48w

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