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Human Rights Commission see Thai Judiciary as “real loser”

The Asian Human Rights Commission called the recent development in Thailand a loss to the Thai Judiciary as Thailand’s senior judges participated in a farce [proceeding] that was not of their making. They claim that the judgement has been made well before the 19 September 2006 coup. It has warned that it has tarnished Thailand’s judicial institutions, with far-reaching consequences. 

The Hong Kong-based group explained that the judiciary was trying to uphold a democratically established rule based on the authority they’ve received from unelected and antidemocratic military regime. It contend that it should have not taken the case in the first place. 

The regional non-governmental organization has likened the case to the United States Supreme Court’s action to decide on the legal winner of the US 2001 Presidential election. The US court, then, was aware that they should have not taken the case as it has put the integrity of the impartiality of the judiciary to test.

The AHRC quoted the US Supreme court decision: 

The endorsement of that position by the majority of this Court can only lend credence to the most cynical appraisal of the work of judges throughout the land. It is confidence in the men and women who administer the judicial system that is the true backbone of the rule of law. Time will one day heal the wound to that confidence that will be inflicted by today’s decision. One thing, however, is certain. Although we may never know with complete certainty the identity of the winner of this year’s Presidential election, the identity of the loser is perfectly clear. It is the Nation’s confidence in the judge as an impartial guardian of the rule of law.

The AHRC said that the current development is very clear with Thailand today as the judiciary seemed to be wielding a Damocles’ sword and unwittingly justifying an unjustified regime. 

By appointing a new tribunal in the stead of the Constitutional Court and setting it upon the former ruling party, the coup group cynically called upon the tribunal members not only to endorse the army’s displacement of the preceding political order, but also its attack on a nascent legal order that may in time have posed a threat to its interests. By complying, the judges have wounded their own authority and greatly risked lasting damage to public confidence in their integrity. Whether or not time will one day heal the wounds in Thailand remains to be seen, but as in the United States seven years earlier today the identity of the real loser is perfectly clear.

Related link: Full statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission

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Assassin speaks out

The Muslim insurgency in Southern Thailand has initially been fought because of the desire of most Muslim to gain independence from Thailand. Along the way, Thailand implied that Malaysia is supporting the Muslim insurgents, which it denied. Malaysia has since tried to broker talks between various Muslim groups and the Thai government to come up with a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

The recent conflict started in 2001 and recently no group has ever claimed responsibility on the sporadic attacks on Muslim and Buddhist civilians and military in the South, which have become deadlier than previous ones. Thailand is faced with a hard nut to crack as opposed to the Philippine Muslim Insurgency where there is a defined group with a definite purpose.

Many people have contributed their two cents analysis as to the roots of the Muslim insurgency in Southern Thailand but the attacks have continued and with no signs of stopping–as to what purpose, nobody still has any idea. However, these incidences have succeeded in dividing public opinion in Southern Thailand, sometimes pitting Buddhist against Muslim (one incident when Muslim suspects were arrested).

Here’s a rare look at the mind of a confessed Thai Muslim militant, who was recently arrested.

ASSASSIN SPEAKS OUT

Inspired by Mideast jihadists, local militants add beheadings to arsenal

Story by AMBIKA AHUJA (From the Bangkok Post, printed last 4 June 2007, page 1)

It took two days for the young Muslim assassin to calm his nerves before the slaying. Then, Mohama Waekaji says, he walked to a rice mill, carrying a knife and following orders from a guerrilla commander to behead the 72-yearold Buddhist owner.

He asked the elderly man, Juan Kaewtongprakam, for some rice husks. As he turned to collect them, Mr Mohama says, he slashed the blade through the man?s neck.

“I didn’t dare to disobey,” the 23-year-old said in an interview with the Associated Press the first time a Thai militant accused of a beheading is thought to have spoken to the Western media. “I knew they would come after me if I did not do what I was told.”

The killing in February was one in a spate of beheadings in Thailand that has fuelled fears that the brutal terrorist tactics of the Middle East are spreading in Asia.

Twenty-five beheadings ‘including 10 already this year’ have been reported in the South since an Islamic-inspired insurgency erupted in 2004.

“Beheadings are certainly on the rise outside of the Middle East proper,” said Timothy Furnish, professor of Middle Eastern history at Georgia Perimeter College. “These groups do take their cues from … hardcore Islamic thought coming out of the Arab world. Beheading infidels not only shocks, but also demonstrates Islamic bona fides to other groups.”

The authorities say jihad videos from the Middle East, captured from rebel training camps, may be inspiring young men like Mr Mohama. One clip said to have come from Iraq shows a woman lying on her side on a patch of grass as a man slowly cuts her throat with a knife. Blood spurts from the wound, the screaming finally stops and her head is completely severed.

“The inspiration is clearly coming across the internet or through DVD clips,” said Zachary Abuza, an expert on terrorism in Southeast Asia at Simmons College in Boston. “Islamist militants in Southeast Asia are frustrated that the region is considered the Islamic periphery.”

“Militants of the region are actively trying to pull the region into the Islamic core. They want people to understand that their jihad is a part of the global jihad.”

Mr Mohama’s account of his journey ‘from a quiet, average student to a confessed killer’ offers insights into how young Muslims fall under the influence of militant Islam.

He was attending a private Islamic school in Pattani when a school friend persuaded him to join a religious event at a mosque. There, “ustad,” or teachers, told him about an organisation to liberate southern Thailand, asking him to take an oath to become a servant of Allah, obey the teachers and take the secrets of the organisation to his grave.

Although confused and with little knowledge of politics, he took the oath and began secret training at age 19. His teachers stressed the sufferings of Palestinian Muslims and those in Afghanistan and Thailand, where many Muslims feel they are secondclass citizens in a Buddhist-dominated land.

The teachers talked about the Tak Bai tragedy of 2004 when security forces confronted Muslim protesters, resulting in the deaths of 85.

“I was shaken when I heard the story. I did hate them, those who did this to us Muslims,” Mr Mohama said at the prison in Pattani’s tambon Na Pradu.

During rigorous training, he learned how to do knuckle push-ups, wield knives, swords and guns and how to take a life by squeezing an opponent?s Adam?s apple with his hands or breaking a victim’s neck.

After two years, he was sent out to burn tyres and spread nails on roads to puncture tyres and distract police before attacks staged by his comrades.

“They recruit responsible, tightlipped and trouble-free teenagers … people who can carry out orders and who don’t attract attention to themselves,?? said Col Shinawat Mandej. When the order came to slay the mill owner ‘a person he had seen but didn’t know’ Mr Mohama said he was frightened, both by the orders and what his leaders would do to him if he failed.

Police found the man?s headless body at the rice mill and his head in a nearby field. Mr Mohama was arrested and charged with the killing two months later.

“It was too late to want out,” he said, his eyes closed and his head downcast. “It was either me or him.”

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Life Musings News Philippines

“Sir you have to pay the toll fee”

It was another day of crime in the Philippines but this recent event was different than the others–the police had a chance to pursue vigorously the suspects (hats off to the galant officers), however, five were killed in the subsequent hostage drama.

The amazing part of the story is not the high speed car chase or the shoot-out between the robbers and policemen–it was the encounter of the policemen with the toll gate keeper at the private North Luzon Express way. If this is confirmed to be true, I am aghast at the implication of this to the services that Filipinos are receiving. Here’s the excerpt of the news:

The passengers were able to get away from the suspects who ordered at gunpoint the driver of the car to drive towards the North Luzon Expressway.

The car drove through the toll gates past the barricade while pursuing cops were delayed when NLEX toll keepers reportedly insisted that they pay the toll.

Mobile patrol units from the Motorcycle Anti-Street Crime Operations, the QCPD, and the Caloocan City Police waited for 10 minutes until NLEX security officers raised the barricade.

How stupid can these people get????!! all because of money. This reminded me of reports when some patients are turned away in some hospitals (both private and public) because the patient has no deposit (one movie by a late Filipino actor highlighted this practice in his movie and gave the doctors what they fully deserve–a gun on their forehead). Enough said.

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Journalism News Thailand Weblog

Judgement Day (UPDATED)

Jittery times indeed as Bangkok prepares for the court verdict on two of its major political parties’s election fraud allegations. The military appointed Constitution Court will hand a verdict on the Democrat Party (the opposition) at 1330hours (GMT+7) while Thai Rak Thai’s (former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s political party) verdict will be handed at 1430hours (GMT+7).

Several bus have already trooped the two parties’ headquarters and around 100,000 people are expected to gather at the Sanam Luang. The king of Thailand has voiced concern on the effect of the verdict on the nation and reminded the judges that either way, they’ll be criticized. But as to whether the verdict, be pro or against the parties, would be for the best interest of Thailand–one would never know or it is still an event to watch.

A policeman uses an explosives sniffer to check all areas in and around the Constitution Court on Chakkraphet road in Phahurat yesterday. — APICHART JINAKUL/Bangkokpost.com
A policeman uses an explosives sniffer to check all areas in and around the Constitution Court on Chakkraphet road in Phahurat yesterday. — APICHART JINAKUL/bangkokpost.com

If you happen to be here in Thailand, the Royal Thai Police has advised to avoid the following places as possible trouble areas:

  • Sanam Luang, from today (30 May)
  • The Royal Plaza, from 31 May
  • Headquarters of the two main parties involved located at Rama VI road (Democrat Party HQ, near Chatuchak Market) and Navasorn Building at Rama III road

The police has placed various checkpoints around the areas of concern to limit the number of people joining the gatherings to a manageable level. If the situation deteriorates, a state of emergency might be declared (like the one that was declared down south), the Junta suggested.

Schools have been closed as precaution and most UN staff and foreign nationals were advised to avoid the said areas.

There’s also circulating email messages among Thais that Gen. Sonthi, leader of the Council for National Security, might do a Nepal. The email message argued that since Gen. Sonthi is a muslim, he might opt to transform Thailand into an Islamic country and scrap the monarchy. Most Thais that I talked to see the email message as crap but the email has still been widely circulated.

Related links

UPDATE:

1750: The Constitution Tribunal found the Democrat Party NOT GUILTY of election fraud by conniving with smaller parties to lure Thai Rak Thai into illegally funding them.

22:30: The Constitution Tribunal found the Thai Rak Thai Pary (former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s party) guilty of election fraud. The party will be disbanded and its executives will be banned to run for public office for five years.

The Constitution Tribunal also found leaders of smaller parties guilty of being in cahoots with the TRT to fool the public that there were a number of parties running for the April elections last year.

The verdict marks the end to a prolonged uncertainty in the country’s political arena. What will happen tomorrow, though, remains to be seen.

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Life Musings Politics Thailand Weblog

Jittery times in Thailand


The September coup last year resulted in the scrapping of Thailand’s 1997 constitution. The move was in response to the alleged abuses of the former prime minister by capitalizing on the various loopholes of the constitution for his wealth gains. A new constitution is being drafted by a military appointed committee. Elections were promised in December 2007. 

Thailand is considered as one of the last bastions of democracy here in the Greater Mekong Subregion being the only country with a democratically elected government until the coup. Now most of the GMS countries are under military rule from Burma, Lao PDR, Cambodia and Vietnam. The latter three are not technically ruled by the military but are socialist/communist governments.

Early this evening, I was surprised to see the king of Thailand speaking on TV. He seldom do that unless there’s a very significant event in Thailand. So I waited for the news.

Indeed, he did said something on the state of Thailand. He wasn’t happy at the course Thailand is going. However, news in Thailand showed a different angle of the news while still having the worst case scenario warning.

The political parties here in Thailand are being prosecuted after alleged fraud in the April 2006 election. The said election was boycotted by most parties and eventually was won by the former minister’s party, the Thai Rak Thai (Thai Loves Thai) Party. The election was later nullified after probable evidence of fraud (fielding ghost candidates to avoid failure of election since the opposition was boycotting it).

Individual judges are expected to issue their opinion on the case on 29 May and the constitutional tribunal will meet to hand a verdict on 30 May.

Next week is a critical time–the judgement, the absence of the prime minister (for an official trip) and the expected rallies in support of TRT party and the opposition Democrat Party. To make matters worse, rumours of elephants joining the rallies are persisting (I’m not kidding). Previous rallies by monks were marked with the involvement of these giant pachyderms, which caused traffic and confusion (and posed danger to the public).

If the two parties are convicted, they will be dissolved with senior party officials forbidden to run for office for five years. The military has promised an election come December 2007 but if the parties are dissolved and prominent politicians are excluded in the election, the coming election might as well be a staged one and not a true, fair and free election.

Most people here are growing uneasy with the military’s seemingly tight hold on power. As of now, let’s wait and hope for the best for this country.

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Life Musings Philippines Technology Weblog

Blogbastic’s Top Blogs (UPDATED)

I was meaning to do this long before but fruityoaty beat me to it. Well, she joined a writing project by Janette Toral–The Top 10 Emerging Influential Blogs in 2007. After reading about it, you’re now reading my take on this and I said I think this IS the time! 🙂 (feels like the tag game that I got into).

Anyway, I’m very flattered on Massa P’s nomination of Blogbastic as one of this year’s emerging influential blogs. It came at a right time when I realized the calling of blogbastic! Though inside me I was almost shouting… I’m not worthy!!! I’m not worthy!!! (with both hands up in the sky and bowing to Massa P.–eheheh! :D). Massa P. was nominated and I believe she deserves it more with the following she’s getting over at fruityoaty considering that she just started a few days after I went blogbastic!

And now for Blogbastic’s top ten, blogs that I regularly visit and read (arranged in no particular order, drumroll please!….)…

You can read further information about this Filipino blogging project here (this is open to everybody!). Only blogs created between 1 August 2006 and to date are qualified to be nominated though. Now that feels nice to spill the beans and let you know what new blogs make blogbastic tick.

Oh yes, this is a writing project and it comes with a possible cash prize! weeeeh! 🙂

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Humor Journalism Life Musings Philippines Politics

Pacquiao loses to rival and a few million pesos

Filipino boxing champ Manny Pacquiao’s decision (to agree to the prodding of Pres. Arroyo) to join the congressional race proved to be a wrong move for Pacman. He was reportedly ‘sad,’ ‘depressed’ over poll results and was also reported to have lost some cash. Aggravating the situation is the circulating manipulated photo that went around as soon as the results became apparently clear.

Poor Pac-Man, he should have stuck to holding his gloves rather than trying to put on those dirty barong!

Pacquiao after the elections

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World Bank President won’t leave without a bang

This hasn’t hugged the headlines in Southeast Asia and not much in the Americas but the significance of the news is the institution involved–the World Bank.

The saga started when World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz unwittingly gave her girlfriend a pay raise. The raise was too much that it made a number of staff and even outsiders howl in disgust. We’re talking about US$194,000 annual salary–tax free! This is roughly US$16,166.67 a month–how sweet is that?!

Wolfowitz came on board World Bank on a rough start. Being one of Iraq War’s acknowledged architects, his nomination was not welcomed, as usual by most developing world. His girlfriend, Shaha Riza, worked at the bank before Wolfowitz’s appointment in 2005. As a communications adviser in the bank’s Middle East department, she was earning close to US$133,000. She was transferred to the State Department to avoid a conflict of interest but remained on the bank’s payroll.

Wolfowitz insisted that the Bank ethics committee knew all about the details about his action on her girlfriend’s pay raise and acted in good faith. In good faith, he acted to increase Ms Riza’s salary to US$180,000 then finally to US$193,590–tax free.

The bank ethics committee, however, is acting on a whistleblower’s complaint on Wolfowitz ethical lapses with one identifying Riza’s pay raise. Wolfowitz insisted that the ethics committee knew of the pay raise (so, as to who’s saying the truth one will never know).

World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz. Photo from Aljazeera.net/english

The EU once supported Wolfowitz appointment but it is now one of the group strongly calling for his firing. Bush, as expected, threw his support behind his man but eventually said that the investigation should take its course

Still trying to fight for his job, Wolfowitz even threatened  the panel that his firing would be that bad, as in very bad, for the bank. He cited that policies he started and his campaign against corruption among others.

In the end, Wolfowitz saw that the only way out of the mess is OUT. So, he’s now trying to broker a deal with the bank for his graceful exit (well so he can dupe another organziation, company or country–maybe the UN might want to take him in?).

The World Bank has not come out always as a good guy ever since it was established and this recent development is not helping it in anyway. But I am aghast to know that Wofowitz won’t take this matter as is. If he’s coming down, others should also go down or take the blame. And now, he’s trying to negotiate a financial package for his departure??? I just can’t take how intelligent people like Wolfowitz could be so slyly witty to go around the system and still have his last laugh–I guess the package won’t be lower than US$500,000?? enough said. grrrrrrr.

Related links:

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Google stands down

In an unexpected twist, Google recently promised Thailand that it will now remove all anti-monarchy videos from [its] YouTube.com website according to a report by Bangkokpost.com. Google.com earlier rejected repeated calls from the Thailand Ministry of Information and Communication Technology to remove the said clips saying that some clips have attacked President Bush far more harshly than the Thai king had been mocked.

The original offensive clip was eventually removed by the user but subsequent video clips were uploaded to the site in protest to what was deemed an attack on freedom of expression. There was a strong feeling in Thailand that Google and the offenders were culturally insensitive to the request that Thailand blocked access to the popular video sharing website.

The Thai government claimed that it will not proceed to filing of criminal charges against Google while it is still not known whether the Royal Thai Police will proceed with charging Google with lese majeste.

MICT Minister Sitthichai Pokaiyaudom said that Google’s vice president Kent Walker assured him in the letter that they would remove all offensive clips but claimed “that it would take time to find all the video clips uploaded to YouTube, but said the clips could be removed,” The Bangkok Post reported.

The Bangkok Post claimed that volunteers monitoring Youtube, however, were able to find the offensive video clips in seconds. They are wondering now how Youtube technicians “would need more time” in removing all the offensive video clips.

It is not yet clear whether Thailand would eventually allow access to Youtube in the country.

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Life Musings Science

Chocolate for health, anyone?

I meant to post this entry on the dateline of the Daily Express below but I was engulfed with so many things and this draft was overtaken by a number of drafts that I wrote after that. Anyway, here it goes.

A blog entry over fruityoaty inspired me to blog, finally, about this business idea that I was dreaming about since I started hanging out with my coffee-addict colleagues and friends back when I started working, well after my Jollibee days.

Whenever I go to cafes I was a bit frustrated to end up with just one choice of chocolate drink, be it hot or cold, when coffee drinkers have lines of coffee to choose from. I said to myself, why not have a parallel line of chocolate drinks. I discussed this idea/dream with a French friend and told him that I wish to pursue this business idea with a big cafe, possibly with Starbucks or other cafe companies, given a chance.

He told me that it’s a good one and revealed that they have their own way of preparing their chocolate drink. He also told me that Spanish also have their own way of preparing their chocolate drinks. To my surprise I excitedly told him that Filipinos, too, seem to have a different way of preparing chocolate drink. As I’m writing this I’m starting drool and crave for chocolate eh! Well, the discussion certainly confirmed my business idea might actually have some basis or a good one, I mean there are certainly lot of chocolate drinkers around, I suppose, aside from me.

As with coffee, chocolate drinks when prepared in a certain can have that certain taste, texture when you drink it. I like it when it is warm enough first thing in the morning that you can feel it flushing down your throat and washing your heart and feel the lining of your stomach. 🙂 

Well, as for my dream venture either with Starbucks, Black Canyon, Coffee World or any cafe, I still have to save up some money and save those recipes until it becomes a reality. 🙂 Anyone of you can pick this business idea, I’d be a willing customer! But the news below about chocolate made me more of a chocolate drink fanatic and want to pursue lines of chocolate drinks for the masses. So, anybody for a chocolate drink? For health! 🙂


CHOCOLATE CAN SAVE YOUR LIFE
By Nick Fagge
Daily Express
19 Feb 2007

CHOCOLATE, supercharged with plant compounds, can boost brain power while fighting heart disease and cancer. Scientists have discovered that substances in certain cocoa beans can dramatically improve learning and memory. They boost blood flow to the… read more…Tech Tags: