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Thailand Live Tuesday 5 Aug 2014

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UPDATE:

 

Mass Theft On Train With 'Lady-Only' Sleeping Car
By Khaosod English
 
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Police officers investigating the reported theft on Southbound Express Train no. 37, 5 August 2014

SONGKHLA - Passengers on a southbound train were reportedly robbed in their sleep just metres away from the lady-only car installed in the wake of a deadly rape on the same rail route last month.

Full story: http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/749116-entire-car-of-train-passengers-drugged-thai-police-suspect/#entry8202350

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The Probation Department plans to have killer doctor Wisut Boonkasemsanti rehabilitate drug addicts during his parole in the next three years. /Bangkok Post

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UPDATE:

 

Australian government offers citizenship to Thai surrogate baby 'Gammy'
By Digital Content

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BANGKOK, Aug 5 -- The Australian government has granted citizenship to the disabled surrogate baby of an Australian couple to cover its treatment cost.

 

[b]Full story: [/b]http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/749034-australian-parents-reveal-their-side-of-the-surrogate-baby-story-thailand/page-4?p=8202394#entry8202394

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Satellite information to be used in forest conservation
By Digital Content

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BANGKOK, Aug 5 -- Thailand's Royal Forest Department and Geo-Informatics and Space Technology Development Agency (Public Organization) (GISTDA) joined forces in combating forest encroachment by using satellite image technology to inspect forest areas in Thailand.

[b]Full story: [/b]http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/749138-satellite-information-to-be-used-in-thai-forest-conservation/

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Council blocks Phuket mayor’s B449m budget
Darawan Naknakhon

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Mayor Chalermluk: 'Puzzled' by the Council’s decision

PHUKET: -- Mayor Chalermluk Kebsap stumbled at her first major hurdle yesterday (August 4) when the Patong Municipal Council failed to pass the B449 million 2015 budget proposed by her and her team.

[b]Full story: [/b]http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/749140-council-blocks-phuket-mayors-b449m-budget/

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Thai army urged to probe torture allegations

BANGKOK, August 5, 2014 (AFP) - Rights groups on Tuesday urged Thailand's military rulers to probe allegations a 'Red Shirt' activist was tortured during her near one-month detention by soldiers after the coup.


The army has summoned, detained and warned hundreds of political opponents including Red Shirt supporters of the toppled former government as they smother dissent across the country in the wake of their seizure of power on May 22.

In a video released on YouTube, Kritsuda Khunasen, 27, accused her captors of keeping her blindfolded, tied up and interrogating her under duress between May 27 and June 24.

She was held incommunicado and without charge for much longer than the seven days permitted under the martial law invoked by the army shortly before its power grab. Kritsuda was released without charge.

"I didn't see their faces," she said of her captors in the video believed to be filmed outside of Thailand.

"While I was tortured, they covered my eyes and tied up my hands so that I couldn't resist."

Human Rights Watch say she told them she was slapped, punched and suffocated during her detention.

The allegations are "further cause for alarm that rights protections are not on the military's agenda," said Brad Adams, HRW's Asia director, urging a swift, independent investigation.

The allegations are a "test case for the junta's respect for human rights," he added.

Thai-based rights group the Cross Cultural Foundation said it was "extremely concerned" by Kritsuda's allegations.

"There should be no secret locations, relatives must be notified and a detainee has the right to meet their relatives and lawyers," it said in a statement over the weekend.

The army, which obfuscated over Kritsuda's whereabouts for several days as concerns mounted for her safety, has denied torture.

Army spokesman Colonel Sunsern Kaewkumner said he met Kritsuda in detention and she was not "tortured or beaten as she says", adding he tried to convince her to "be patriotic and stop conflict" between political rivals.

"Was I wrong to do that?" he added.

The Thai junta has justified the coup and the subsequent detentions of hundreds of political opponents as necessary to restore peace and order after months of protests, pock-marked by violence, against the former government.

It released most of those detained after a few days, insisting they were treated well.

Thailand has been cleaved apart by political divisions since another coup in 2006 ousted billionaire former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

He lives in self exile and still draws loyalty from the populous but poor northern portion of the country, but he is loathed by the Bangkok-based establishment and its backers in the military, judiciary and south of the country.

[afp]2014-08-05[/afp]

RT @RichardBarrow: 5 meter 100 kilo python captured today in a house in Phitsanulok. It had eaten a dog (Via @Nalinee_PLE) #Thailand http://t.co/qu4EDY6wio

 

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German Reporter Decries Silence Over Assault Charges
 

By Khaosod Eng.

 

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BANGKOK - German photojournalist who was assaulted by anti-government protesters last year has urged the police to step up the investigation against his attackers.

 

Nick Nostitz, a freelancer, told Khaosod that he filed charge against anti-government protest leader and former Democrat Party MP Chumpol Jumsai on 26 November 2013, a day after Mr. Chumpol told a crowd of protesters to attack him, yet the police have not produced any progress in their investigation in the last eight months.

The journalist was covering an anti-government demonstration on Ratchadamnoen Avenue on 25 November when Mr. Chumpol spotted him among the crowd and urged the protesters to "expel" him from the protest site because he was "Redshirt reporter." Mr. Nostitz was promptly beaten by a group of protesters, forcing nearby police officers to intervene and rescue him.

"I gave them all kind of evidence, such as photos and videos at the moment of assault that other photographers have recorded," Mr. Nostitz said, "When I ask Dusit Police Station [where he filed the charge], they told me the case is being handled by the Division of Special Investigation, But no one can give me answers about the current stage of the criminal investigation, even though it's been eight months."

The journalist said he has also complained about the incident to the National Human Rights Commission, yet the agency has not taken any helpful action.

Mr. Nostitz compared the silence in his case to the arrests of the anti-government protesters who allegedly shot at and assaulted Royal Thai Army officer Col. Witthawat Wattanakul and pilot Surasak Sowattanakul during their campaign against the then-government.

"The police have already arrested the suspects in those two cases, so I ask the police to speed up the investigation in my case, too," Mr. Nostitz said, adding that he still feels unsafe even after the anti-government protests were ended in the 22 May military coup because supporters of that movement still harass him.

"I don't feel safe because I am constantly intimidated by supporters of PCAD who phoned me to berate me and my family," the journalist said, using the acronym of the People's Committee for Absolute Democracy With the King As Head of State, "Whenever I go out I have to be careful. I can't do my job as a reporter as normal. I can barely make a living these days."

He also demanded PCAD leaders like Mr. Chumpol to apologise to him for accusing him of being a "Redshirt reporter."

"What do they want from me? I am not a Redshirt or a Yellowshirt or any-shirt. I am a journalist. How can I accept reconciliation when I still have not received any justice?"

A veteran journalist who has been covering Thailand for more than a decade, Mr. Nostitz has reported extensively on the Red-Yellow political crisis that has been sharply polarising Thailand since the 2006 military coup.

Although Mr. Nostitz spent considerable time covering demonstrations and protests of both Redshirt and Yellowshirt factions, he eventually became a favourite target of intimidation from many Yellowshirt supporters who view him as a "Redshirt reporter."

In May 2014 Mr. Nostitz was nearly abducted by several PCAD guards as he was covering news at the Constitutional Court in Bangkok. The guards reportedly attempted to take him to PCAD leader Buddha Issara, a Buddhist monk who has a record of capturing and torturing undercover police officers.

 

Source: http://en.khaosod.co.th/detail.php?newsid=1407241687&section=11&typecate=06

 

[khaosod]2014-08-05[/khaosod]

Court grants bail for extortion suspects

 

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BANGKOK: -- The Bangkok South Criminal Court has granted temporary release on bails for the Army staff officer and four accomplices involving in the Patpong extortion case.

 

Full Story: http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/749164-court-grants-bail-for-extortion-suspects/

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