Saturday, 11 October 2014

Lawyers want DNA tested by UK police


KOH TAO KILLINGS

NHRC sending a team to investigate crime scene as suspects retract confession

THE MYANMAR lawyers of the two men charged with the Koh Tao murders of two British tourists have asked Thailand's National Human Rights Commission and the Myanmar Embassy in the Kingdom to push for British police to conduct independent DNA tests in the case, as they believe their clients are innocent.

Myanmar nationals Zaw Rin and Win have retracted their earlier confessions to police. Their lawyers are confident the charges against the two men will be dropped.

The NHRC, meanwhile, is sending a team to examine the crime scene.

The latest twist in the murder case came after Myanmar President Thein Sein asked visiting Prime Minister General Prayut Chan-o-cha on Friday to ensure a "clean and fair" investigation.

On social media sites, many users refused to accept the result of the police investigation and raised the possibility that the two Myanmar nationals may be scapegoats in the murders of David Miller, 24, and Hannah Witheridge, 23. Their bodies were found on the island on September 15.

Police chief General Somyot Pumpanmuang has insisted many times that police did not frame the accused.

The NHRC is seeking to have forensic experts dispatched to Koh Tao to examine the case in detail.

Pol Maj-General Pavin Pongsirisin, the head of the investigation, said yesterday that he was confident everything was fair and police had submitted all the papers relating to the investigation to the Office of the Attorney-General.

In a related development, British Ambassador to Thailand Mark Kent urged Thai social media users not to spread disturbing photos relating to the case or passport photos and details of the victims, saying their families had already suffered a lot. He made the request via his Thai-language blog on Friday. He also urged the Thai mainstream mass media not to prejudge the accused and let the justice process run its course.

Kent said the Thai media, including the social media, should be "responsible as well as free".

Regional Public Prosecution 8 deputy director-general Thawatchai Siangjaew said he had not been informed yet about the police's additional interrogation of the two suspects in prison while a deputy chief of Provincial Police Region 8 denied the suspects had retracted their confession. Thawatchai said prosecutors would consider for indictment mainly the evidence in the case, including CCTTV footage from the crime scene and witness testimonies. The retraction of confession by suspects would not influence their decision to indict them, he added.

Prosecutors are still waiting for the police investigators' submission of the amended case report. He said once the report is submitted, the prosecutors should be able to make a decision within seven days.

Meanwhile, tourists continue to flock to Koh Tao under the watchful eye of tourist police and volunteers. The number of tourists is not high but it is still the low season, with strong ocean currents and monsoon rains.

Sunday, 5 October 2014

Book links Iskander, Altaf to 1995 Purulia arms drop



Sunday, 29 June 2014

In modern life,there are a lot of competitions.Without hard work,nothing can be had.
Gone are the days of our past when we depended on bounties of God.

However, the world is a place to be share equally by all.Co-operation is the basic of
civilized. Everyone has a duty to honour the feeling and sight of others.

The development of morden life world has very little contributed to this basic of civilized.
There is a big gap between the haves and haves not.There are the people who live in nation
have everything and even enough to share but there are also people who despite work hardly
cannot be comfortable.

The rich and poor is increasing day by day and so-called God’s world has become absolutely
enjoyable for some and  inferno or a hell for others.


Saturday, 29 March 2014

Arakanese protesters dispersed with police firing

( Narinjara News: 28 March 2014)


The Sittwe police fired several bullets into the air to disperse a crowd of local residents on Wednesday evening who demonstrated against a foreign NGO named Malteser.
The demonstrations took place in front of Malteser office in the Arakan capital city following an American woman worker belonged to Malteser was seen wearing a Buddhist religious flag as the skirt (or sarong) in the office, said a police source.
“When the local residents heard about it, they rushed to the Malteser office located at Baukthisu ward of Sittwe and demonstrated their furies towards the American woman,” said U Maung Hla, a social activist based in Sittwe.

Teenager killed in Sittwe firing

( Narinjara News: 28 March 2014)

Teenager killed in Sittwe firingThe firing incident of Sittwe on 27 March evening has clamed the first victim today. A teenage girl named Ma Nee Ma fell prey to the incident in the Arakanese capital city, while she was preparing to have dinner at home.

Saturday, 8 March 2014

Half of Oz’s asylum patrol boats out of service

Nearly half of the Australian navy patrol boats used to detect asylum-seekers have been confined to port with structural cracks, a report said Tuesday, but the government insisted its Operation Sovereign Borders continued as normal.
Under Canberra’s hardline immigration policy, would-be refugees arriving by boat can be turned back at sea to Indonesia where many board rickety vessels to make the perilous crossing to Australia.
Large cracks were discovered in six of the 14-strong Armidale fleet 10 days ago, forcing the ships back to port in Darwin, The Australian newspaper reported. But Australia’s Immigration and Border Protection Minister Scott Morrison said the military-run operation was unaffected by the problem

Thursday, 20 February 2014

Gov’t commission questions Du Chee Yar Tan villagers


daily11-feb20-akk04
Investigation commission inquires Bengalis lived at Nurular village (Photo-EMG)
MAUNGDAW – A government commission set up to investigate reports of mob killings in Du Chee Yar Tan village has questioned villagers and officials in Maungdaw Township, in western Rakhine State.
The investigation commission visited Du Chee Yar Tan village and met with 15 ethnic Rakhine and 20 Muslim villagers on February 16 to investigate reports of mob killings in retaliation to the attack and disappearance of a police officer.
The commission also visited Kayay Myaing police outpost, the duty station of the police sergeant who is still missing after a police patrol was attacked on January 13. They also visited King Chaung cemetery to look for clues with the aid of criminological and legal experts.
In February 18, the commission went to Gaw Du Thara village where villagers are still hiding after villagers attacked  and killed police sergeant and torched their own village. They also went to Nurular village to ask whether there were any causalities.
The commission met with delegates from United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and Doctors without Borders (MSF) separately at Maungdaw district administration office on Tuesday.
MSF reported giving medical attention to 20 people who were wounded in Du Chee Yar Tan village, some by bullet wounds. The commission also went to Maungdaw police station to question 16 suspected Muslims villagers who were detained after the incident.
The president appointed Chairperson of the Myanmar Red Cross Association Dr. Thar Hla Shwe as the Chairperson of the commission, Dr. Kyaw Yin Hlaing as a secretary for the commission and eight members team on February 8.
The commission will seek clarification on the alleged culprits of the fire that broke out in Du Chee Yar Tan (west) on January 20, as well as investigating false and fabricated news.
The commission will report its findings to President Thein Sein directly on February 28.

Myanmar's constitutional crisis reaching boiling point

Under the current military-drafted charter, Aung San Suu Kyi is banned from becoming president.
Under the current military-drafted charter, Aung San Suu Kyi is banned from becoming president.

An uprising looms unless the military releases its grip on power and allows Suu Kyi to run for president next year

Big questions loom about the future of Myanmar (Burma). Will the country allow changes to its constitution that lead to democratic reforms - or will it return square one? This is an issue of huge interest both in Myanmar and abroad.

Sometimes history repeats itself. The army could simply take political power again, before the election in 2015. In 1960, after two years of leading a caretaker government, army chief General Ne Win allowed an election and gave power back to an elected administration. But when ethnic minorities demanded genuine federal states and separation of political power, the military claimed the nation was at risk of disintegration and staged a coup in March 1962.

Mizoram starts lifting FCI rice for distribution among 40,000 refugees, displaced

  Aizawl: Mizoram food, civil supplies & consumer affairs (FCS&CA) dept has started lifting FCI rice for distribution among 40,000 r...