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Friday, September 10, 2010

Hunt begins for Somali pirates


Armed task force sets sail on security mission
Published: 11/09/2010 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: News

Two Thai navy ships with 351 sailors and 20 special warfare troops on board have set sail for the Gulf of Aden to take part in the hunt for pirates off the coast of Somalia.

The mission marks the first time Thailand has sent forces overseas to protect its own interest.

The HTMS Pattani and HTMS Similan left yesterday with two helicopters lashed to the decks from Chuk Samet port at Chon Buri's Sattahip naval base to join a 28-country effort to police the shipping lanes off the Somali coast, which has become a piracy hotbed.

"The key mission of this 98-day operation is to protect Thai cargo ships and fishing vessels in those waters," said Adm Supakorn Buranadilok, Commander of the Royal Thai Navy Fleet.

The navy expects up to 60 Thai ships to pass through the Gulf of Aden during the course of the operation.

The navy's SEALs unit will be part of the fleet involved in the mission.

The budget for the mission has been set at 270 million baht.

The ships are expected to take 17 days to reach the Gulf of Aden on a journey covering 4,573 nautical miles.

The ships are expected to return about Dec 12.


Two navy ships with 371 sailors and special warfare marines on board set sail from Thailand to take part in international operations to protect ships from pirates in the Gulf of Aden and off Somalia. JETJARAS NA RANONG
Political chaos and civil war in Somalia have allowed piracy to flourish off the country's 3,100km coastline.

Somali pirates were involved in more than half of the 406 reported pirate attacks worldwide last year.

They mounted 217 attacks in 2009, hijacking 47 ships and taking 867 crew members hostage with ransoms believed to total US$50 million (1.6 billion baht).

A number of Thai ships have been hijacked by Somali pirates over the past five years.

According to the Thai Shipowners' Association, there were 32 attacks on Thai ships last year.

In the latest incident which occurred in April, three fishing boats, the MV Pran Talay 11, 12 and 14, were hijacked, and are still being held by pirates. Efforts are under way to negotiate their release.

Defence Minister Gen Prawit Wongsuwon said pirate attacks, particularly in Somalia, must be addressed urgently as they are a major issue of international concern.

The Thai government is proud to contribute to the mission, he said.

Navy personnel will receive a daily allowance of 2,100 baht each for the mission.

Rear Adm Chaiyos Sunthornnak, commander of the 2nd Fleet tasked with the anti-piracy mission, said the HTMS Similan is a logistics support vessel built in China in 1996, while the HTMS Pattani is an offshore patrol vessel built in China in 2005.

Rear Adm Suppachai Jaiyen, commander of the navy's special maritime warfare unit, said specially trained soldiers from the navy's underwater demolition team (UDT), better known as the SEALs (Sea-Air-Land), will be part of the navy's anti-piracy mission.

Pornpoj Ngamviriyatham, manager of the Thai Overseas Fisheries Association, applauded the government's decision to send the vessels to protect Thai boats.

The pirates' operating base has now extended to up to 1,931km from coast, and is not under the control of any one state and thus difficult to police. Somalia has been ravaged by 18 years of civil war and is without a functioning central government or a working justice system since the removal of former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. Illegal fishing and exploitation of marine resources off the coast of Somalia has also been blamed for giving rise to piracy.

Meanwhile, foreign vessels are accused of dumping toxic waste in waters off Somalia, jeopardising the livelihood of Somali people and prompting them to take action against foreign vessels.

Rear Adm Chaiyos said the Somali people had previously tried to protect their marine resources from foreign exploitation by demanding fees from fishing trawlers and cargo ships that might dump toxic waste.

They later turned to piracy and hijacked the ships for ransom.

Somalia is divided into five semi-autonomous regions of Somaliland, Puntland, Northland, Galmudug and Maakhir. Somaliland has declared itself a separate independent state but has not been internationally recognised.

Fighting is still rife in Maakhir between forces of the caretaker government and rebel groups.

More than 1,000 pirates are reportedly based in Puntland, divided into more than 10 different groups.

They are equipped with AK-47s, and rocket-propelled grenades.

Iran Says American's Planned Release Is Result of Intervention by President Ahmadinejad


TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- An Iranian news agency says Saturday's planned released of one of three Americans jailed for more than a year is a result of intervention by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Sarah Shourd and two friends were arrested along the Iran-Iraq border in July 2009, and Iran has accused them of illegal border crossing and spying. Their families say they were hiking in Iraq's scenic north and that if they crossed the border, they did so unwittingly.

Iran said Thursday it will free Sarah Shourd, one of three Americans jailed for more than 13 months, as an act of clemency to mark the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

There was no word on the fate of the other two Americans, Josh Fattal, 28 and Shane Bauer, 28, to whom she got engaged to while they were in prison.

The gesture could be a calculated move by Iran to soften international criticism of its judiciary. Iran has faced a growing storm of protest over a stoning sentence for a woman convicted of adultery that has been temporarily suspended.
Iran's Mehr news agency on Friday quoted the Foreign Ministry as saying the president intervened in part because of the "special viewpoint of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the dignity of women."

The 31-year-old Shourd has been held in solitary confinement, and her mother says she's been denied treatment for serious health problems.

Once the American is released, normal protocol would be to turn the person over to Swiss diplomats to be taken to the embassy.

There are direct commercial flights to Geneva a few times a week. While flights to Dubai, such as the one taken by the Americans' mothers, are much more frequent, they are probably all booked because of the holidays.

If the released American requires medical care, Geneva would also be the more attractive option.

The imprisonment of the Americans has deepened tensions between the U.S. and Iran, a relationship already strained over Washington's suspicions that Tehran is trying to manufacture nuclear weapons -- something Iran denies.

White House Aides Owed More Than $800G in Back Taxes

President Obama might want to audit his own staff as he sets out to close the deficit. Turns out he could shake them down for close to a cool million in back taxes.

According to a Washington Post analysis of IRS data, a total of 41 White House staff members owed back taxes worth more than $831,000 at the end of 2009.

The data did not show how much of that has since been repaid, if any, but it was just a piece of the $1 billion owed by federal workers across the country.

Some top-level Obama nominees ran into tax problems when the president was assembling his staff in early 2009. Former Sen. Tom Daschle's nomination to head Health and Human Services was derailed over a litany of tax problems. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner cleared confirmation in spite of the fact he once had to pay $34,000, plus interest, in back taxes to the IRS.

The latest IRS data does not name the individuals who owed money last year, but there are plenty more beyond the White House.

Inside the Treasury Department, which houses the IRS, 1,204 employees owed more than $7.6 million.

Three workers at the Office of Government Ethics owed $75,304. At the Department of Homeland Security, 4,856 workers owed in excess of $37 million.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Monday, April 26, 2010

Old Beijing disappearing under the steamroller of modernization

Beijing, China (CNN) -- Chairman Mao had a dream. A few years after he led the Communist Party to victory, Mao stood on the Tiananmen rostrum and, talking to his comrades, expressed his wish to one day see Beijing's skyline dotted by chimneys -- his idea of a modern socialist China. Now his dream has come true. Beijing's sky is lined, not just by chimneys, but by skyscrapers too.

Not long ago, many Chinese thought the only way to modernize China was to "destroy the old and build the new." In the 1990s, when Deng Xiaoping's reform program was in full swing, Beijing's old city came under attack from the big wrecking ball of modernization.

That was around the time when Wang Jun, author of two best-selling books on urban history and planning in China, moved from his hometown of Guizhou to Beijing to start his career as a Xinhua News Agency reporter. His beat was city planning and development. In 1993, he remembers, Beijing's city planning office decreed that all new buildings near the Forbidden City would be subject to height restrictions in the interests of the historical city. For Wang, this regulation highlighted the importance of protecting old Beijing and made him want to do his part.

Since then, Wang has become an outspoken advocate of saving old cities and their cultural and architectural legacies. To Beijing residents, whose houses are threatened with demolition or who have been forced to relocate to make way for real estate developers, Wang Jun is a kind of folk hero. To scholars of traditional architecture, he is a fearless fighter. But to officials who wish to boost GDP figures through property development, he is a troublemaker.

Wang Jun spent ten years collecting materials for "Beijing Records," his first book published in 2003. "Writing a book is like building a house," he says. "You cannot cheat and cut corners in labor and materials." His second best-seller, "Cities in the Reporter's Notebook" was published in 2008.

Over a cup of tea in his apartment in suburban Beijing, Wang Jun talked with CNN's Jaime FlorCruz and Chen Xiaoni about how Beijing has changed over the years.

Some people say they felt nostalgic about the Beijing of the 1950's and 60's after reading "Beijing's Records." But after reading "Cities in the Reporter's Notebook" they felt sorrow for today's Beijing. Is that the message you wished to convey?

As a journalist, I have no intention to provoke negative feelings. "Beijing's Records" was about Beijing's history in the 50's and 60's. I wanted to answer one question: How was the old town of Beijing, a city with more than 3,000 years of history, destroyed in a few years during the second half of the 20th century? "Cities in the Reporter's Notebook" is about the current situation in Chinese cities, including Beijing. In it, I tried to answer what is pushing the biggest urbanization in human history? How did it happen? Many problems mentioned in these two books are not unique to China. Beijing was a densely populated city that was suitable for walking. And yet more roads, gated communities and giant shopping centers are being built. People have to drive around to get things done. I'm just trying to show the readers how their lives have been changed, like it or not.

So are you happy or sad about the state of contemporary Beijing?

All cities are facing and dealing with their own set of problems. Beijing is no different. Since the 1950s, Beijing's government has built a new town over the old one, using the same city center, surrounded by ring roads and expanding it concentrically. Most of the jobs are in the city center so the suburbs have virtually become "dormitory towns" for hundreds of thousands of people. Commuting between job and home causes tremendous traffic congestion. When the new China was founded [in 1949], some Chinese scholars foresaw these serious problems due to development. They suggested separating the old city and the new city in order to balance employment and residential needs. Regretfully, Chinese decision-makers didn't heed their advice.

When Beijing began preparations for the 2008 Olympics, various sectors -- the community, the central and city government officials -- finally realized that many of Beijing's problems are caused by its single-centered city structure. They decided to make an urban planning adjustment by separating the new and old cities to protect Beijing's old town, focusing on developing three new towns in the east -- Tongzhou, Yizhuang and Shunyi. The State Council approved it and it's included in Beijing's 2020 master plan. If the goal is realized, many problems like traffic and conflict between development and protection can be solved.

Do you have any suggestions for Beijing's urban planners?

The problem is how to achieve the new city master plan, which now emphasizes public involvement. This is a good approach. In recent years, public opinion has increasingly been taken into consideration in Beijing's city development, although there are still problems.

In your first book, you seem to say Beijing's hutongs (traditional neighborhoods) are dead and gone. But since the population in Beijing has increased so dramatically in recent years, how do you expect people to be housed if the hutongs are not torn down to make way for high-rises?

I didn't say Beijing's hutong has died. It's still panting. I do want to write a book called "The Death of the Hutong" and answer these questions: Why have Beijing's traditional hutongs and courtyards disappeared so rapidly during the peacetime and economic development period? Why are the left-over courtyards so dilapidated? Why is nobody taking care of them? And how has the urban fabric changed?

The population increase is not the reason for the decline of the hutongs. In Beijing, the old city occupies less than 6 percent of the total area. The increasing population could live outside the old town, so it's not necessary to tear down courtyards and build high-rises there. The courtyards are worth preserving. They are important examples of the oriental housing culture. Even though they are low-rise structures, they can comfortably house large numbers of people because of their dense design and efficient lay-out. In Beijing in 1949, for example, more than 20,000 people lived in one square kilometer of space. It worked fine.

How do you find Beijing's new landmark architecture, such as the new CCTV tower, the National Opera Theater and the "Bird's Nest"? What do they say of contemporary Beijing?

Those so-called new landmarks are all important Chinese projects and they are all designed by Westerners. This demonstrates China's openness. In Chinese history, only Russian architects enjoyed such an opportunity in the 1950s. These new landmarks have provoked widespread discussion in Chinese society to a degree never seen before. This also shows that Chinese society has become more diversified and open. As a developing city, of course Beijing needs modern architecture. It's difficult for me to say whether or not Beijing needs buildings with interesting shapes like the New CCTV tower, National Opera Theater and the Bird's Nest. They are already completed and have become part of Beijing. Many people don't like them.

How do old cities like Beijing balance and blend the styles of the old buildings with new architecture?

It's important that we protect the old city while developing a new town. Let's stop destroying the old town and concentrate on developing new cities. Beijing's new master plan, approved by the State Council in 2005, says so.

Last year, some people tried to self-immolate to protest against forced relocation from their homes. Land grabbing is causing social disharmony. What is the key to solving this problem?

The key is to change local governments' financial and taxation systems. In 1998, China started housing reform. Public housing was privatized. Real estate exchange markets were established, but still today, there's no property tax. City governments invest in public services that drive up land prices, but the city governments cannot benefit from such investment. China's constitution, promulgated in 1982, says the government owns land. An amendment in 1988 says the rights to use land may be transferred. From then on, a big chunk of the city governments' revenue came from selling land after relocating people. It's the only way to return the cost of investing in public services, but it causes serious social problems. How do you impose property tax when land belongs to the State? That's an urban planning issue with Chinese characteristics.

You say: "China's city planning should go side by side with China's democratic process." Can you explain?

The Chinese society has gone through profound changes. Some 80 percent of Chinese housing is privatized. Housing has become the Chinese people's most important property. Since the privatization of housing in 1998, a common theme has been home owners protecting their rights. This has prompted the government to pass in 2007 a landmark "Property Law" protecting legal rights of property owners. City planning must consider public opinion and allow the community to self-manage in order to push China's democratic development forward.

Democrat dissolution case to court

The Election Commission on Monday submitted a petition to the Constitution Court seeking to dissolve the Democrat Party in connection with the alleged misuse of the 29 million baht political development fund, said EC deputy secretary-general Thanis Sriprathes.

The 8,000-page petition was accompanied by the individual judgement on the case of each of the five election commissioners.

The Democrat Party's proposed dissolution is based on two allegations.

The first involves the 29 million baht political development fund allocated by the EC. The party is alleged to have misused it.

The second case concerns an allegation that the party has unlawfully received a donation of 258 million baht from TPI Polene, a listed company, in violation of the Politcal Party Act.

Mr Thanis said the petition on the 258 million baht donation case, which also recommends dissolution of the Democrat Party, was being drafted and expected to be forwarded to the Office of the Attorney General in early May.

Govt claims plot targets King Network members include politicians Published: 27/04/2010 at 01:14 AM Online news: Local News

The Centre for the Resolution to Emergency Situations claims to have uncovered a plot to overthrow the monarchy.

The CRES said the network behind the plot included key leaders of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship, members of the Puea Thai Party and former banned politicians, academics and hosts of community radio programmes.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said yesterday the CRES had put together the pieces of the “political jigsaw”. He said people involving in the network could face legal action.

The prime minister and the armed forces have long suspected the UDD rally had a higher purpose than just forcing a dissolution of the House of Representatives.

CRES spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said the demonstration, which started in mid-March, had attacked the higher institution through UDD leaders and the red shirts’ media.

The CRES yesterday ordered red shirt protesters to walk away from road blockades or face a crackdown by a joint police-military operation. Col Sansern Kaewkamnerd said any attempts by UDD supporters to obstruct convoys of security authorities would face the same action taken yesterday at Wang Noi district in Ayutthaya.

Police from the Regions 1 and 7 and soldiers from the 1st Calvary Battalion decided to break up a checkpoint set up illegally by the UDD late yesterday afternoon. The operations prompted some UDD members to flee the area.

The centre decided to take action after buses, taxies and other vehicles were checked by nearly 400 UDD members, causing heavy traffic congestion on Phahon Yothin Road near the outer ring road in the district.

The latest operation came as political tension shifted from the capital to the provinces where red shirt members blockaded soldiers and police assigned for reinforcement in Bangkok.

UDD leaders are concerned more police and soldiers are part of the government’s plan to launch another effort to clamp down on the demonstrators at Ratchaprasong intersection.

The capital was rocked by grenade attacks in front of the house of Chart Thai Pattana Party chief adviser Banharn Silpa-archa on Sunday night and a bomb threats in front of Chulalongkorn Hospital and a car showroom.

UDD protesters yesterday gathered in Pathum Thani, Saraburi, Chachoengsao, Phitsanulok and Ayutthaya.

Ayutthaya appeared to bear the brunt of separate UDD rallies in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya district, where they seized five police vans and detained six soldiers, police officers said.

A group of nearly 100 UDD protesters, led by Puea Thai MP for Ayutthaya Surachet Chaikosol, used motorcycles and tuk tuks to block a road in Phra Nakhon Si Ayutthaya district to prevent Lop Buri police reportedly travelling in 14 vans to Bangkok.

Five vans were seized by the group while the rest managed to flee from the blockade to other routes.

In Saraburi’s Nong Khae district, about 200 UDD protesters blocked a section of Phahon Yothin Road to inspect vehicles heading to Bangkok.

Many motorists became angry while they were inspected by the protesters. Meanwhile, in Chachoengsao, about 200 UDD protesters used 15 songthaew passenger trucks and motorcycles to block entrances and exits at Chachoengsao police station to prevent officers from travelling to Bangkok.

Their blockade prompted Chachoengsao police chief Monton Mianan to call an urgent meeting on a way to take 300 officers from the station to join other security officers in Bangkok.

Police used road spikes on Chachongsao- Kabin Buri road.

Police in Phitsanulok also faced a similar blockage when the 31st Border Patrol Police division at Fort Phraya Chakri was surrounded by the UDDlinked Red Shirt Phitsanulok 51. More than 150 officers were prevented from leaving their base for a mission in Bangkok as about 100 protesters placed logs, rocks and objects across a road in front of the division.

However, border patrol police decided to go through the protesters who used women as their front line and had men throw stones and wood at the officers. The police, equipped with batons and shields, eventually managed to get out of the area although the action sparked a clash in which some protesters were injured.

Meanwhile, UDD leader Natthawut Saikua said the UDD was planning to move today from the Ratchaprasong stronghold to undisclosed locations.

“It’s time for another an offensive drive,” he said. “The government has been trying hard to crack down on the red shirt demonstration and we want them to know that we remain firm on our goal to oust the Abhisit Vejjajiva government.”

Friday, April 23, 2010

Red shirts soften their demands



Published: 24/04/2010 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: News
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Red shirt leaders have softened their stance and proposed to the government a new deadline - that it dissolve the House in 30 days, in a move which has drawn both scepticism and hope.

The compromise offer made yesterday came after red shirt leaders allowed a group of foreign diplomats to observe their rally base at Ratchaprasong intersection in the afternoon.
UDD leader Veera Musikhapong told the diplomats that the UDD was proposing a new stance, that it dissolve the House in 30 days and that new elections be held 60 days after that. This should give the government 90 days to prepare.
He was to hold informal talks with the government last night on the proposal of a new election time-frame of 90 days.
He said that UDD leaders had reached a consensus on a new time frame out of concerns for the safety of the public following Thursday night's M79 grenade attacks in Silom which killed one woman and wounded more than 80 others.
"We are open to negotiation. We want to save lives and are ready to make sacrifices and negotiate," he said.
"This is a compromise time frame and the government should find it acceptable," he said.
Mr Veera said the UDD also wanted the government to end all forms of intimidation and set up a committee to investigate the April 10 and April 22 attacks and to take responsibility for the deaths.

"If the government can accept the conditions, we will negotiate. When an agreement is made, we will disperse and peace will return to the country," he said.
Red shirt co-leader Jatuporn Prompan accused the government of waging a proxy war and manipulating people to pursue its course.
"We just want to tell the world we are sensible and we know when to back down," he said, citing the meeting with the foreign diplomats.
"It pains me when people say that when there is an incident, it is the leaders who always survive.

So we think there should not be any more deaths even though we are willing to fight until death ourselves," he said.
While the government has yet to formally react, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said he would not be "intimidated" into finding political solutions.
"I have a duty to solve the problem. If I can't I should not be here," he said.
Before the red shirts' compromise offer, pressure was mounting for the government to take action and strictly enforce the law following the Silom grenade attacks.
Some Thai people said that if the government could not do anything, then it should resign. A coup was also a tempting choice.
"End the protest, dissolve the House, or stage a coup. I don't care, but I want action. There will be damages no matter what, but it is better than this ambiguity," said Manusak Laparojkij, one of the South's largest motorcycle distributors.
Ruam Chart Pattana MP Somchai Chatpattanasri said if the prime minister did not resign he should negotiate with the red shirts about a House dissolution.
Insisting that he was speaking as an individual and not on the party's behalf, he said the prime minister had no time to waste.
Army chief Gen Anupong Paojinda yesterday ruled out use of force to disperse the protest - to avoid huge losses on both sides.
A source said the army chief told a meeting of 200 unit commanders that the red shirts were armed and dangerous.
About 400 of them were armed and several thousand were trained in combat.
Their artillery included M79 grenades, M67 grenades, rocket propelled grenades, and assault rifles, some of which were seized in April 10 clashes.
The source said a dispersal could also trigger the red shirt movement in the provinces, and violence could escalate.
Army deputy spokeswoman Sirichan Ngathong quoted the army chief as saying that the uprising now had two objectives - to return to the corridors of power, and overthrow the monarchy.UDD co-leader Natthawut Saikua dismissed claims that the UDD was linked to the bomb attacks on anti-red shirt demonstrators on Silom Road. He insisted the UDD had stuck to a non-violent approach.
Mr Natthawut said the UDD felt regret for the families of the dead and injured.
He called on the government to step up efforts to find and punish those involved in the grenade attacks.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

ไทย is for `Thailand' * Published: 25/03/2010 at 03:52 AM * Online news: Local News

NEW YORK – Thailand is among four countries and two territories which have won preliminary approval to have Internet addresses written entirely in their native scripts as early as July.

However, proposals for Internet addresses that would say "China" and "Taiwan" in Chinese will require a few more months of technical review. The delay is not over political disputes, but rather because the Chinese language can be written in two ways - using simplified and traditional scripts. Rules are being developed to make sure that addresses in either script go to the same Web sites.

Since their creation in the 1980s, Internet domain names such as those that end in ".com" have been limited to 37 characters: the 10 numerals, the hyphen and the 26 letters in the Latin alphabet used in English. Technical tricks have been used to allow portions of the Internet address to use other scripts, but until now, the suffix had to use those 37 characters.

With the addition of non-Latin suffixes, Internet users with little or no knowledge of English would no longer have to type Latin characters to access Web pages targeting Chinese, Arabic and other speakers.

In January, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) paved the way for an entire domain name to appear in Cyrillic for Russia and Arabic for Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Added to the list this week are suffixes in Chinese for Hong Kong; Sinhalese and Tamil for Sri Lanka; Thai for Thailand and Arabic for Qatar, Tunisia and the Palestinian territories.

Hong Kong, a territory of China, didn't have to go through a further review as China and Taiwan did because "Hong Kong" appears the same in both simplified and traditional Chinese.

House boycott fails badly Puea Thai MPs 'strike' over heavy security * Published: 25/03/2010 at 12:00 AM * Newspaper section: News


The opposition Puea Thai Party's attempt to derail a session of the House has ended in futility after coalition MPs managed to push through three key pieces of legislation.
ngered by the heavy deployment of troops and barricades, more than 100 Puea Thai MPs boycotted the session yesterday and some stood in front of a main security checkpoint blocking access to the building.

The blockade held up the meeting for a while before it was eventually convened. The Puea Thai MPs dispersed after learning House Speaker Chai Chidchob had begun the meeting.

Despite the boycott, it was the first time in weeks that a House session had a quorum.

In a smooth two-hour session with 245 MPs present, including two from the opposition, the House passed three draft bills - on forming a body governing telecommunications and radio and television broadcasting, on land appropriation for an expressway construction project and on the setting up of a national farmers' council.

"Three draft bills are fine," said Mr Chai, who raised three fingers and drew laughter from the chamber as he brought the session to a close.

The House is expected to convene again today amid tight security.

Hundreds of police and troops are being deployed with barbed wire fencing, concrete barriers and trucks placed around the compound.

The heightened security follows two grenade attacks at the Public Health Ministry on Tuesday where a cabinet meeting was held.

There is also concern that red shirt demonstrators camping out at Phan Fa Bridge might seize the compound and cause a repetition of the Oct 7, 2008, violent confrontation in which two people died and scores were injured.

Puea Thai MPs have filed a complaint against Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban and Mr Chai in connection with the heavy military presence.

In their complaint with the Crime Suppression Division, they said the layers of barricades had prevented them from entering the parliament compound and deprived them of their freedom to do their jobs properly.

They are expected to boycott today's meeting of the House as well.

A group of coalition MPs plan a counter move by seeking the impeachment of Puea Thai MPs who obstructed others from entering parliament.

The coalition MPs are also considering filing a complaint with police against the opposition MPs who blocked access to the parliament entrance.

Mr Abhisit yesterday denied accusations the government had violated the MPs' rights, saying the security measures were to ensure smooth and safe legislative work in parliament.

He said as long as the red shirt leaders continued to make threats against cabinet ministers, the government was required to consider and take the security measures it deemed appropriate.

"We will get things back to normal this week. The cabinet meetings and parliament meetings should proceed unhindered."

Mr Abhisit said he was concerned about Deputy House Speaker Apiwan Wiriyachai's address to the red shirts' rally. He said Mr Apiwan's remarks indicated a dissolution of the House was not the red shirts' ultimate goal.

Mr Apiwan called on the prime minister to hold talks with Privy Council president Prem Tinsulanonda to find a solution to the political impasse.

"There is an indication that it is not going to end [with a dissolution of the House]. Their demand goes from one to another. First they want to talk to the prime minister only. Now they want to involve the privy council president. What next?

"If we are to have talks, we have to be clear about what we are going to talk about," the prime minister said.


Tuesday, March 9, 2010

NGOs call for delay on Cambodia graft debate



Rights groups in Cambodia say an anti-corruption law that parliament will debate this week, won't stop graft the problem.A coalition representing about 245 local non-governmental organisations told a news conference the debate on the anti-graft law should be delayed for a month so the public could be consulted.The groups want the assets of state officials to be declared publicly and protection for people who report corruption The President of rights group Licadho, Pung Chhiv Kek, says if witnesses can't have protection, then no one is going to come forward and report problems.A Cambodian government spokesman, rejected the criticism saying the anti-corruption law will make the country an equitable society. The main opposition Sam Rainsy Party joined the civil society groups in asking for a delay to the parliamentary debate.

Shinawatras flee country before rally

Members of Thaksin Shinawatra's immediate family have left or are leaving the country ahead of this weekend's rally by supporters of the fugitive former prime minister.
Thaksin's former wife Potjaman na Pombejra and their son Panthongtae Shinawatra left for Hong Kong on Monday while their two daughters Ms Pinthongta and Ms Paethongtan fly out today for Berlin.
A source from the Puea Thai Party said yesterday the trips were organised in the expectation that there could be unrest at the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship protest at the weekend. There were also concerns they might be taken hostage if the situation turned violent.
The UDD is hoping to attract one million red shirts to the demonstration but security authorities say they may be over-estimating.
Army chief Anupong Paojinda is confident the Internal Security Act, which was endorsed by the government yesterday and transfers the role of maintaining law and order from the police to the Internal Security Operations Command (Isoc), will be adequate to deal with the rally without recourse to emergency rule.
Gen Anupong said there was no need at this stage to fall back on the Executive Decree on Public Administration in Emergency Situations, which gives officers more sweeping powers to deal with protesters.
The internal security law will cover all areas of Bangkok, all districts of Nonthaburi and 21 other districts in Ayutthaya, Chachoengsao, Nakhon Pathom, Pathum Thani, Samut Prakan and Samut Sakhon from tomorrow until March 23.
Isoc, chaired by Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, will meet today to find ways to coordinate efforts to handle the rally.
The prime minister said the government would not use force to quell the demonstration. But he ruled out dissolving parliament, saying this option would not put an end to the problem.
Mr Abhisit urged supporters of Thaksin to rethink their ideas now that Khunying Potjaman and her children would not be in the country during the rally. He said red shirt supporters should now realise that while they are fighting hard for the interests of the Shinawatra family, the Shinawatras were living in the lap of luxury. It was irresponsible to leave their supporters in the lurch.
In addition to the ISA, the cabinet has also decided to place 17 other laws under the authority of Isoc instead of the usual agencies. They include laws on disaster prevention, medical emergencies, road traffic, water transport and radio operations.
Puea Thai MP for Samut Prakan Pracha Prasopdee said the government plan to impose the ISA would not discourage pro-Thaksin supporters upcountry who have vowed to go ahead with their demonstration in the capital.
At least 100,000 people will travel to Bangkok from the Northeast, according to UDD co-leader Nisit Sinthuprai, a former MP for Roi Et.
The People's Alliance for Democracy stressed yesterday that its members would not counter the UDD rally. But the PAD would stay alert and wait for orders from its leaders for future moves, it said in a statement.
Deputy chief of the Metropolitan Police Bureau Piya Uthayo said at least 8,000 city police, including 41 crowd control units, would be on standby to support security operations.
Ayutthaya police chief Jaruwat Waisaya said he had received reports that the UDD planned to use at least 120 boats to carry red shirt supporters from Ayutthaya, Pathum Thani, and Nonthaburi provinces along the Chao Phraya River to Bangkok. They would disembark at the Tha Phra Chan pier, Pol Maj Gen Jaruwat said.
He said boat skippers could face legal action if the boats carried too many passengers.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Court to sentence Thai man for laying mines near border

THAI national accused of laying land mines along Cambodia’s border with Thailand is set to be sentenced by a military court this week, his lawyer said Monday, renewing questions over whether either country has been involved in placing new mines in disputed areas.Suphap Vong Pakna was arrested last February in Oddar Meanchey province after he allegedly entered Cambodian territory and planted land mines.In a hearing last week, Suphap Vong Pakna confessed to planting at least five explosive devices, saying Thai soldiers paid him to do so, his Cambodian lawyer said.“He tried to lay the land mines because he wanted to kill Cambodian people who patrol the border,” said Sam Sokong, a court-appointed lawyer with the Cambodian Defenders Project.Sam Sokong said his client was among a group of at least seven people, but was the only one arrested. “He confessed he entered Cambodia twice. The second time, he was arrested and then sent to military court,” Sam Sokong said.Suphap Vong Pakna faces charges – including attempted murder, endangering national security and entering the country illegally – that could see him sentenced to between 15 and 30 years in prison if convicted, Sam Sokong said.
Our policy is to work together ... to remove these land mines. we don't have a policy to lay more."
However, the lawyer said he plans to ask for leniency when the court reconvenes as expected on Friday.“Suphap is like a victim,” Sam Sokong said. “Due to his poverty and low education, he sacrificed his life for money without knowing that laying mines is criminal.”Thai accusationsIn October 2008, the Thai government said two of its paramilitary rangers were severely injured after stepping on land mines in territory near Preah Vihear temple that Thailand claims as its own.A Thai investigation reportedly found Russian-made land mines in the area – devices the Thais said were recently planted and of a type that Thai soldiers have never used. Thai authorities said the findings suggested that Cambodia may have been guilty of breaking the 1997 Ottawa Treaty, which bans signatories from using antipersonnel mines.“The Royal Thai government views the sad land mine incident with great alarm, as it indicates violation” of the Ottawa Treaty, an October 17, 2008 statement from Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated.Cambodia, however, said any land mines in the area were remnants of three decades of war. Foreign Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong said Monday that Thailand has yet to respond to a diplomatic note rejecting the allegations.“Cambodia has never planted fresh land mines. We are trying to clear the mines,” Koy Kuong said.“Even Cambodian people right now suffer from land mines. Cambodia has been committed to demining, not only in the country, but also abroad in areas like Sudan.”He said the Thai government should respond to the allegations raised by Suphap Vong Pakna’s prosecution.“The Thai side should acknowledge what happened, if a Thai national confessed he planted land mines along the border,” he said.Thai government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn declined to comment on the court case, saying the issue should be decided through “normal legal channels”.Thailand, he said, has not been involved in planting new land mines.“The area has a lot of land mines to be retrieved. Our policy is to work together with the Cambodians to remove these land mines,” he said.“We don’t have a policy to lay more land mines.”Leng Sochea, deputy secretary of the Cambodian Mine Action Authority, said that officials are not aware of any other allegations that new land mines are being planted in the area.The heavily mined areas between Cambodia and Thailand represent the highest concentration of land mines in the Kingdom, according to the group Landmine Monitor.

Court to sentence Thai man for laying mines near border

THAI national accused of laying land mines along Cambodia’s border with Thailand is set to be sentenced by a military court this week, his lawyer said Monday, renewing questions over whether either country has been involved in placing new mines in disputed areas.Suphap Vong Pakna was arrested last February in Oddar Meanchey province after he allegedly entered Cambodian territory and planted land mines.In a hearing last week, Suphap Vong Pakna confessed to planting at least five explosive devices, saying Thai soldiers paid him to do so, his Cambodian lawyer said.“He tried to lay the land mines because he wanted to kill Cambodian people who patrol the border,” said Sam Sokong, a court-appointed lawyer with the Cambodian Defenders Project.Sam Sokong said his client was among a group of at least seven people, but was the only one arrested. “He confessed he entered Cambodia twice. The second time, he was arrested and then sent to military court,” Sam Sokong said.Suphap Vong Pakna faces charges – including attempted murder, endangering national security and entering the country illegally – that could see him sentenced to between 15 and 30 years in prison if convicted, Sam Sokong said.
Our policy is to work together ... to remove these land mines. we don't have a policy to lay more."
However, the lawyer said he plans to ask for leniency when the court reconvenes as expected on Friday.“Suphap is like a victim,” Sam Sokong said. “Due to his poverty and low education, he sacrificed his life for money without knowing that laying mines is criminal.”Thai accusationsIn October 2008, the Thai government said two of its paramilitary rangers were severely injured after stepping on land mines in territory near Preah Vihear temple that Thailand claims as its own.A Thai investigation reportedly found Russian-made land mines in the area – devices the Thais said were recently planted and of a type that Thai soldiers have never used. Thai authorities said the findings suggested that Cambodia may have been guilty of breaking the 1997 Ottawa Treaty, which bans signatories from using antipersonnel mines.“The Royal Thai government views the sad land mine incident with great alarm, as it indicates violation” of the Ottawa Treaty, an October 17, 2008 statement from Thailand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated.Cambodia, however, said any land mines in the area were remnants of three decades of war. Foreign Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong said Monday that Thailand has yet to respond to a diplomatic note rejecting the allegations.“Cambodia has never planted fresh land mines. We are trying to clear the mines,” Koy Kuong said.“Even Cambodian people right now suffer from land mines. Cambodia has been committed to demining, not only in the country, but also abroad in areas like Sudan.”He said the Thai government should respond to the allegations raised by Suphap Vong Pakna’s prosecution.“The Thai side should acknowledge what happened, if a Thai national confessed he planted land mines along the border,” he said.Thai government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn declined to comment on the court case, saying the issue should be decided through “normal legal channels”.Thailand, he said, has not been involved in planting new land mines.“The area has a lot of land mines to be retrieved. Our policy is to work together with the Cambodians to remove these land mines,” he said.“We don’t have a policy to lay more land mines.”Leng Sochea, deputy secretary of the Cambodian Mine Action Authority, said that officials are not aware of any other allegations that new land mines are being planted in the area.The heavily mined areas between Cambodia and Thailand represent the highest concentration of land mines in the Kingdom, according to the group Landmine Monitor.

PM skips Tamone temple on border trip


RIME Minister Hun Sen concluded his high-profile tour of the Thai-Cambodian border on Monday, continuing his harsh rhetoric against the Thai government, but avoiding visiting a temple in Oddar Meanchey province that both sides claim as their own.Speaking at Royal Cambodian Armed Forces Base 42 in Oddar Meanchey’s Banteay Ampil district, Hun Sen again accused Thailand and Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva of invading Cambodian territory, pointing in particular to Thailand’s occupation of the Wat Keo Sekha Kirisvarak pagoda, near Preah Vihear temple, that began on July 15, 2008.“Abhisit, will you swear on having all your family members be killed in a plane crash ... that your soldiers did not come to invade Cambodia at Wat Keo Sekha Kirisvarak?” Hun Sen said.“Do you dare to swear on magic that could break your neck, on a plane crash or a dissolution of the countries, that your soldiers did not invade Cambodia’s territory on July 15, 2008?”Hun Sen, who visited Preah Vihear temple on Saturday, also accused Abhisit of stealing the premiership in Thailand, saying the Thai leader had “no family honour”.“You attacked me, so I have to defend, and will continue with counter-attacks on you,” Hun Sen said.Despite these confrontational remarks, Hun Sen chose to forego a visit to nearby Tamone Thom temple, just a few kilometres away in Banteay Ampil district. Chawanon Intharakomansut, secretary to the Thai foreign minister, said Monday that Cambodian leaders had been in talks with Thailand about a potential visit to Tamone Thom, but scuttled their plans after Thailand demanded that Hun Sen’s escorts travel unarmed.“We asked them to [discard] their weapons if they want to come into the area, that’s the only condition, and I think they changed their minds,” Chawanon said.In a statement released on Monday, Cambodia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Tamone Thom was “clearly situated in Cambodian territory”, citing maps from 1908 as proof of the Kingdom’s claim. Accompanied by this statement was a copy of a note written by Minister of Foreign Affairs Hor Namhong in 2008 to then-Thai foreign minister Tej Bunnag in which Hor Namhong accused Thai troops of occupying Tamone Thom illegally, ordering their immediate withdrawal.Chawanon declined to comment on these documents, and said that Tamone Thom is indisputably a Thai possession.“The fact is that we’ve controlled the area for so long … so there’s no question,” he said. In a press conference on Monday afternoon at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Hor Namhong denied that Hun Sen had ever planned to visit Tamone Thom. Hun Sen “had no plan to visit [Tamone Thom], and I knew before it before the visit”, Hor Namhong said, rejecting media reports to the contrary.The foreign minister reasserted Cambodia’s claim to the land around Preah Vihear temple as well as Tamone Thom, criticising Thai media outlets and politicians for blowing Hun Sen’s border visit out of proportion“Why were they really surprised about the visit of Samdech Techo? The reason is that they want to take Cambodian land,” Hor Namhong said.Chawanon dismissed the idea that Hun Sen’s visit had stoked further tensions between the two nations, arguing that it in fact represented a positive development in their relations.“For the past few days, I think some good signs have been shown between two countries, that we play by the rules of engagement in the area. That’s a good step for our relationship,” he said.

Kor Muoy families remain in limbo


A group of 50 families says the government relocation plan for the P Vihear site excludes them

Photo by: HENG CHIVOAN A boy pauses on Friday to speak with a former resident of Kor Muoy village who was recently sent to a relocation site some 30 kilometres away. Fifty families from the village, located at the bottom of the mountain on which Preah Vihear temple sits, say they have been excluded from housing at the new site.
Now, when the roads are good, they are asking us to resettle...."
Preah Vihear ProvinceAS political observers waited to see how Prime Minister Hun Sen’s weekend visit to Preah Vihear temple would affect relations with Thailand, a group of 50 families who have been living near the site for years hoped for the answer to a more concrete question: Where would they be forced to move come March? The families are among the 473 currently living in Kor Muoy village, below the ridge where the temple is located. When fighting first broke out near the temple following its listing as a UNESCO World Heritage site in July 2008, the government set in motion plans to relocate residents to a site some 30 kilometres away, citing concerns for their safety as well as a desire to develop the area as a “cultural heritage site”. But representatives of 50 families say they have not been included on a list of those to receive housing at the new site, to which Kor Muoy residents are scheduled to move in March, according to notices recently placed in the village by local authorities. Pov Narith, the 40-year-old owner of the Prasat Preah Vihear Manrith guesthouse in Kor Muoy, said the families had been looking to Hun Sen’s visit as an opportunity to clarify what will happen to them after they are forced to move. He said the payment of 2 million riels alone – without a new plot of land – would not be sufficient compensation. “When I first came here in 2001 there was nothing. Life was difficult back then,” he said. “There were bad roads, and there was no telephone network. Now, when the roads are good, they are asking us to resettle, but it is not easy to tear down my guesthouse, and I’m worried that life will become difficult again.”Government officials said they could not confirm why the families had been left off the housing list, but Pov Narith and others interviewed for this story said it was because of their support for opposition political parties. He said he led a trip to Phnom Penh last April to submit petitions to the Senate and the National Assembly, and that the Senate responded in May that they should be entitled to live on the land.

Photo by: HENG CHIVOAN Mom Nay, 41, (left) and Ngin Yong, 54, are among the residents of Kor Muoy village who have moved to a relocation site some 30 kilometres away.But when representatives tried to press their case to the premier on Saturday, they were rebuffed by security, he said. “We knew Samdech Techo would visit this village, and we tried to see him and submit a petition about this partisan discrimination, but we were detained on the day of his visit and have now become targets of discrimination by the local authorities,” he said.Heng Sreypov, 46, who has lived in a large wooden house in Kor Muoy since 2002, is also among the villagers who have been left off the list at Techo Hun Sen Natural Village. She said she was detained by a bodyguard of provincial governor Sar Thavy for five hours on the day the premier visited. “I did nothing wrong, but the bodyguard of the governor pulled me out from the crowd and pushed me into the car as a criminal. I was ashamed, but I didn’t have any idea what I did wrong,” she said. Sar Thavy could not be reached for comment on Monday. Ham Sokha, one of the village chiefs at the relocation site, said the 50 families would need to wait to receive their plots of land because it was still being cleared. “Everyone will receive land and a house of the same size,” he said, adding that he did not know why just 50 families had thus far been excluded. In his speech at the relocation site on Saturday, Hun Sen said a total of 792 families would ultimately be able to live at the relocation site: the 473 from Kor Muoy as well as the 319 families who moved from the market at the base of the temple after their homes were destroyed by Thai rocket fire during a skirmish last April. “Even if you did not vote for me, it is still my duty to resolve the problem for you, and I would like to confirm that in the long term the area around Preah Vihear will become a development site. I will no longer isolate this area such as before, and it will be linked by road to the border of Thailand and Laos so we can keep improving the conditions,” Hun Sen said. Hang Sot, director of the Preah Vihear National Authority, declined to comment on specific plans for the cultural heritage site at the temple.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Kao Bunheng sends Loek Vibol packing Sunday


Kao Bunheng sends Loek Vibol packing Sunday
Tuesday, 09 February 2010 15:00 Robert Starkweather

Kao Bunheng knocked off veteran Loek Vibol to secure a spot in the semifinals of the light-middleweight tournament

Kao Roomchang (right) outpointed Sarim Vonthon in their inconsequential light-middleweight tournament bout Sunday at TV5 boxing arena. AFP KAO Bunheng outpointed Loek Vibol Sunday to clinch a semifinal spot in the light-middleweight tournament at the TV5 boxing arena in Takhmao. Kao Bunheng kicked relentlessly and used his superior fitness to power past the 32-year-old veteran, who started strong but faded and fought the final two rounds largely in survival mode. The eight-man light-middleweight (63.5 kilograms) tournament began in January. Group A concluded the opening stages Sunday. Kao Bunheng and Kao Roomchang will advance. Loek Vibol and Sarim Vonthon will not. For Kao Bungheng and Loek Vibol, who both entered the ring with 1-1 tournament records, the Sunday bout was do-or-die. Loek Vibol, a southpaw, came out strong early, attacking in the first round with hard jab-low kick combinations, and by the end of the round Kao Bunheng’s left leg was red and welted above and below the knee. Kao Bunheng responded in the second, pressing forward with kicks to the body and forcing Loek Vibol to fight from the back foot. Loek Vibol tried to retake the momentum with a series of head-snapping left hands to open the third round. But Kao Bunheng, among the most durable fighters in the division, dismissed the attack with a nod of the head and a continued assault of kicks. By the fourth Loek Vibol looked tired, and his offensive output dwindled to nearly nothing. In the final round he stood at times with his gloves at his side, visibly spent. “I’m exhausted,” he said afterward, his shoulders slumped with disappointment. Sarim Vonthon goes fighting In the second tournament match Sunday, Sarim Vonthon lost a decision to Kao Roomchang in a bout of little significance. Kao Roomchang had secured a spot in the semifinals two weeks earlier with a win over Kao Bunheng, and Sarim Vonthon, winless in two tournament fights, had no chance of advancing. Still, Sarim Vonthon, bleeding from a cut on his chin before the fight even started, refused to go quietly. With the crowd behind him, he caught Kao Roomchang with flush overhand lefts and hard knees in every round, and made Kao Roomchang battle until the final second of the fight. Kao Roomchang showed little trouble maintaining the pace. He thrilled the crowd with flashy spinning back kicks and surprising displays of power. A front push kick in the second round sent Sarim Vonthon across the ring and crashing into the turnbuckle so hard he nearly tumbled to the canvas. A face kick at center ring in the fourth landed with such ferocity that Sarim Vonthon ended up halfway through the ropes. Sarim Vonthon took it all and kept coming. Even in the final minutes, with the fight largely decided and little on the line but pride, he gave an inspired fifth-round charge, scoring with hard lefts and strong clinch work, and forcing Kao Roomchang to defend until the final bell. There are no tournament fights scheduled for next week. Group B returns Feb 21.

Kao Bunheng sends Loek Vibol packing Sunday


Kao Bunheng sends Loek Vibol packing Sunday
Tuesday, 09 February 2010 15:00 Robert Starkweather

Kao Bunheng knocked off veteran Loek Vibol to secure a spot in the semifinals of the light-middleweight tournament

Kao Roomchang (right) outpointed Sarim Vonthon in their inconsequential light-middleweight tournament bout Sunday at TV5 boxing arena. AFP KAO Bunheng outpointed Loek Vibol Sunday to clinch a semifinal spot in the light-middleweight tournament at the TV5 boxing arena in Takhmao. Kao Bunheng kicked relentlessly and used his superior fitness to power past the 32-year-old veteran, who started strong but faded and fought the final two rounds largely in survival mode. The eight-man light-middleweight (63.5 kilograms) tournament began in January. Group A concluded the opening stages Sunday. Kao Bunheng and Kao Roomchang will advance. Loek Vibol and Sarim Vonthon will not. For Kao Bungheng and Loek Vibol, who both entered the ring with 1-1 tournament records, the Sunday bout was do-or-die. Loek Vibol, a southpaw, came out strong early, attacking in the first round with hard jab-low kick combinations, and by the end of the round Kao Bunheng’s left leg was red and welted above and below the knee. Kao Bunheng responded in the second, pressing forward with kicks to the body and forcing Loek Vibol to fight from the back foot. Loek Vibol tried to retake the momentum with a series of head-snapping left hands to open the third round. But Kao Bunheng, among the most durable fighters in the division, dismissed the attack with a nod of the head and a continued assault of kicks. By the fourth Loek Vibol looked tired, and his offensive output dwindled to nearly nothing. In the final round he stood at times with his gloves at his side, visibly spent. “I’m exhausted,” he said afterward, his shoulders slumped with disappointment. Sarim Vonthon goes fighting In the second tournament match Sunday, Sarim Vonthon lost a decision to Kao Roomchang in a bout of little significance. Kao Roomchang had secured a spot in the semifinals two weeks earlier with a win over Kao Bunheng, and Sarim Vonthon, winless in two tournament fights, had no chance of advancing. Still, Sarim Vonthon, bleeding from a cut on his chin before the fight even started, refused to go quietly. With the crowd behind him, he caught Kao Roomchang with flush overhand lefts and hard knees in every round, and made Kao Roomchang battle until the final second of the fight. Kao Roomchang showed little trouble maintaining the pace. He thrilled the crowd with flashy spinning back kicks and surprising displays of power. A front push kick in the second round sent Sarim Vonthon across the ring and crashing into the turnbuckle so hard he nearly tumbled to the canvas. A face kick at center ring in the fourth landed with such ferocity that Sarim Vonthon ended up halfway through the ropes. Sarim Vonthon took it all and kept coming. Even in the final minutes, with the fight largely decided and little on the line but pride, he gave an inspired fifth-round charge, scoring with hard lefts and strong clinch work, and forcing Kao Roomchang to defend until the final bell. There are no tournament fights scheduled for next week. Group B returns Feb 21.