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Thai Worker Reported Missing in Tokyo

Image: Find Sumeth / Facebook

Update: A Facebook page set up by Sumeth Lerthirunwong’s friends said on Friday afternoon that he’s been located alive and well. 

BANGKOK — Friends and family of a missing Thai expat in Tokyo were pleading for information Thursday about his whereabouts, three days after he went missing.

Sumeth Lerthirunwong was last seen leaving the bank where he worked Monday evening in Tokyo’s Roppongi district, according to a Facebook page created to call attention to his disappearance. Sumeth had not shown any signs of distress before he went missing, the post said.

“He’s a cheerful and sociable man. His health is normal. There were no sign of any problem that would prompt him to run away on his own,” said the post, which was updated Wednesday night.

The page said police and the Thai embassy in Tokyo have been alerted, and so far no hospital in the area has admitted Sumeth, who works at Barclays Capital. His credit cards had not been used since his disappearance, according to the page. His passport was reportedly left at his residence.

Sumeth’s brother said he had no previous history of mental illness, drug use or conflict with anyone. Nipon Lerthirunwong said he’s attending a meeting with Thai consulate in Japan on Thursday, and his family remains hopeful.

“Of course we still have hope,” Nipon said in an online chat, adding that it was Barclays who informed him of his brother’s disappearance.

Anyone who has information of Sumeth’s whereabouts is urged to contact his friends and family in Japan at 080-4679-2685 or 080-5501-8120.

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Melvin Laird, Vietnam War Secretary, 94

Former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington. Photo: John Duricka / Associated Press

MADISON, Wisconsin — Melvin Laird, a former Wisconsin congressman and U.S. defense secretary during years when President Nixon struggled to find a way to withdraw troops from an unpopular war in Vietnam, died on Wednesday, his family said. He was 94.

His grandson, Raymond Dennis Large III, said that Laird died in Florida.

Laird left a legacy that included a telephone call that eventually played a role in one of the biggest political stories of the century  the Watergate scandal that drove Nixon from office.

Laird was Nixon’s counselor on domestic affairs in October 1973 when Nixon had to replace Vice President Spiro Agnew, who had resigned in scandal. Laird called his good friend, Michigan Rep. Gerald Ford, to ask if he would be interested in replacing Agnew.

“Frankly, the question came like a bolt out of the blue,” Ford said in 1997, recalling his conversation with the “can-do conservative” from Wisconsin.

Ford accepted. About a year later, Nixon resigned because of Watergate and Ford became president. Ford pardoned Nixon, and two years later, Ford lost the presidential election to Jimmy Carter.

“I thought Ford was the right person to bring the country together after the Watergate fiasco,” Laird once said, taking credit with Bryce Harlow for persuading Nixon to pick Ford.

Ford once praised Laird as a patriot before a partisan.

His grandson Large, who is the son of Alison Laird Large, called his grandfather “one of the lions of our republic.”

“He truly was someone that worked across party lines,” Large said. “He was a very dedicated Republican but he was able to see the human in everyone. His work speaks for itself.”

Former Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat, is married to Laird’s niece Jessica. He said that Laird remained engaged with public issues until the end of his life.

“Even at the end Jessica would get two, sometimes more, letters a week from him, handwritten letters. I think last week she had one discussing the election, public issues, his views of things.”

Laird, the son of a Presbyterian minister, was 30 when he was elected to the U.S. House in 1952. He represented Wisconsin’s 7th District  mostly dairy-farming or lumber-producing counties in central Wisconsin  for nine terms, and was credited with helping spearhead the vast expansion of medical research and health facilities in the U.S.

Nixon appointed Laird as the nation’s 10th defense secretary in 1969 and the first to come from Congress. The Vietnam War raged, with no end in sight for the 550,000 troops stationed in the Southeast Asian country as America lost its resolve for the fighting.

Laird coined the term “Vietnamization” to describe Nixon’s policy of assigning an ever-increasing combat role to South Vietnamese troops, allowing the pullout of U.S. forces.

When Laird stepped down as defense secretary in January 1973, there were about 69,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam.

“As a consequence of the success of the military aspects of Vietnamization, the South Vietnamese people today, in my view, are fully capable of providing for their own in-country security against the North Vietnamese,” he said at the time.

However, Saigon fell under communist control in 1975. But the problem, Laird wrote later, was not Vietnamization but the United States’ failure to provide continued financial support while the Soviet Union was sending Hanoi far more than the limit it had agreed to.

“We grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory … when Congress cut off the funding for South Vietnam that had allowed it to continue to fight on its own,” he wrote in 2005 in the publication Foreign Affairs.

While at the Pentagon, Laird ended the military draft and established the all-volunteer force. “It’s been a very successful program,” he said in 1997. “I am very proud that I was there as secretary of defense to start it.”

Doyle said Laird will be viewed “through the crucible of Vietnam” but it shouldn’t be lost on people that he ended the draft. He was also proud to be a politician and viewed it as an honorable profession, Doyle said.

“He was a Republican that really believed government was a worthy cause, that politics was a worthy effort,” he said.

In 1973, Nixon brought Laird to the White House as counselor on domestic affairs. Several months later, the Watergate crisis deepening, Laird resigned.

The Laird Center, a complex for medical research at Marshfield Clinic in Marshfield, Wisconsin, is named after Laird, who grew up in Marshfield.

Laird often said Marshfield Clinic doctors encouraged him to get involved in health issues after he was elected to Congress, including his involvement in legislation that made health maintenance organizations possible.

Laird was born in Omaha, Nebraska, on Sept. 1, 1922, and the family moved to Marshfield when he was a young child. He graduated from Carleton College in Minnesota in 1942 and served aboard the Navy destroyer U.S.S. Maddox in the Pacific during World War II.

Laird was elected to his first political office in 1946, when he succeeded his late father, Melvin Sr., as a state senator in the Wisconsin Legislature. At the time, Laird, only 23, was the youngest state senator in the United States.

When the Laird Center was dedicated, Henry Kissinger recalled the many power struggles he had, as Nixon’s national security adviser, with Secretary of Defense Laird, needling him on a day when political nostalgia and good humor filled the air.

“I always sent deputies to deal with him, and I would give them several pieces of advice,” Kissinger said in his deadpan voice. “First, you must remember Mel Laird is extremely smart. Second, he knows he is extremely smart. Third, he will let you know he is extremely smart. Fourth, it is much less painful to let him do what he wants. Fifth, when he says, ‘You know what I mean,’ there is no conceivable way you could know what he means. And sixth, when he calls to complain about a newspaper story, you know he has put it out himself.”

Story: Scott Bauer

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Malaysia Asks Japan to Convince Trump to Support TPP

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, left, is shown the way by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe Wednesday prior to a meeting at Abe's official residence in Tokyo. Photo: Shizuo Kambayashi / Associated Press

TOKYO — Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak asked his Japanese counterpart on Wednesday to try to convince U.S. President-elect Donald Trump to support the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement when they meet in New York this week.

Najib told Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that Malaysia has cleared the way to ratify the agreement. Japan, also part of the 12-nation deal, is in the final stages of getting parliamentary approval for the necessary legislation. But U.S. ratification is unlikely before President Barack Obama leaves office, and Trump has expressed strong opposition to the pact.

Najib urged Abe to explain the significance of the agreement to Trump when they meet Thursday.

“We hope that the TPP agreement will come into force,” Najib told a joint news conference after their talks, adding that Abe’s meeting with Trump is “very much awaited” by the rest of TPP participants. “Hopefully the strategic importance of TPP will be recognized by the incoming (Trump) administration as well as by all the participating countries.”

Abe told a parliamentary session Tuesday that he hopes to build trust with the next leader of the United States, Japan’s top ally. Japanese officials are concerned about possible changes in U.S. trade and security policies under Trump and their impact on Japan and the rest of the Asia-Pacific region.

“When I meet with Mr. Trump, I would like to frankly exchange views on the economy, trade, security and Japan-U.S. relations and our alliance, and build a relationship with trust,” Abe said.

Japan also announced that it is providing two patrol vessels to Malaysia to increase its maritime security.

Abe, pushing for exports of infrastructure projects as part of his growth strategy, also promoted Japan’s Shinkansen high-speed railway system for a planned Malaysian rail project.

Story: Mari Yamaguchi

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A Glance at the International Courts Around the World

The exterior view of the headquarters of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands. Photo: Mike Corder / Associated Press

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Russia says it won’t have anything to do with the International Criminal Court, while three African nations say they will withdraw from it.

The ICC is one of a number of international courts set up since the end of World War II to prosecute war crimes and other atrocities in conflicts around the world.

Here is a rundown of some of the various courts and tribunals meting out international and local justice:

 

International Criminal Court

Established in 2002, the Hague-based ICC is the world’s first permanent criminal court with a global reach. It was set up to prosecute suspects considered the most responsible for the worst crimes, including war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

It currently has 124 member states, although three African nations recently announced plans to quit. The U.S., Russia, China and Syria are among countries that haven’t signed up to the court.

So far, all of the court’s trials have focused on crimes in Africa, but the court is conducting preliminary probes around the world, including the examination of allegations of atrocities in Afghanistan and the use of harsh interrogation techniques there by U.S. forces and the CIA that a prosecution report says may amount to war crimes.

 

Nuremberg and Tokyo Tribunals

The two tribunals set up by the victorious allies after World War II laid the foundation for modern international tribunals.

They prosecuted political and military leaders from Germany’s Nazi regime and Japan’s wartime establishment.

Unlike more recent tribunals, which seek to prosecute crimes committed by all sides in conflicts, the Nuremburg and Tokyo courts only indicted suspects from the losing sides.

 

International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia

Based in a former insurance company office in The Hague, the U.N. court was set up to prosecute the worst atrocities of the wars that erupted as Yugoslavia crumbled in the 1990s.

The court indicted 161 suspects and is currently trying the last of them, former Bosnian Serb military commander Gen. Ratko Mladic, on genocide and other charges.

It also has convicted former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic of genocide. The man alleged to have fomented conflicts throughout the former Yugoslavia, former Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic, was put on trial but died before his case finished.

 

International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda

The U.N. court established to deal with the 1994 genocide in Rwanda indicted 93 suspects. Eight of them remain fugitives.

The tribunal, which had its headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania, convicted dozens of people for their roles in the slaughter of some 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus. A former prime minister, Jean Kambanda, pleaded guilty and was given a life sentence.

The tribunal formally closed its doors last year, passing on any remaining legal cases to a mechanism set up in The Hague to deal with legacy issues from both the Rwanda and Yugoslavia tribunals.

 

Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

A U.N.-backed court set up in 2006 to bring to justice leaders of the notorious Khmer Rouge.

The court applies both local and international law in its cases, which deal with the Khmer Rouge’s brutal 1975-79 reign that led to the deaths of 1.7 million Cambodians though execution, starvation and inadequate medical care.

The tribunal has convicted suspects including Khieu Samphan, the regime’s head of state, and Nuon Chea, the right-hand man of the group’s late leader, Pol Pot, and sentenced them to life imprisonment.

 

Special Courts for Sierra Leone

Set up in 2002 to prosecute atrocities in Sierra Leone’s brutal 1991-2002 civil war, it finished its work in 2013.

The U.N.-backed court was funded by voluntary contributions and was the first international tribunal to be based in the country where the crimes it prosecuted were committed.

The court put 10 suspects on trial and convicted nine of them, including former Liberian President Charles Taylor, who was sentenced to 50 years for his role in the conflict.

 

Special Tribunal for Lebanon

Another court based in the Netherlands, the Special Tribunal for Lebanon opened in 2009 to prosecute those responsible for a truck bombing in Beirut on Feb. 14, 2005, that killed former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri and 21 others.

The court has a mix of international and Lebanese judges and works using Lebanese law. The court is currently trying in absentia four suspected members of the Hezbollah militia on suspicion of carrying out the assassination of Hariri. The case against one other suspect was halted earlier this year after he was killed in Syria.

 

Kosovo Specialist Chambers

Dealing with crimes against humanity, war crimes and other crimes committed in Kosovo between 1998 and 2000, the European Union-backed chambers are part of the Kosovo system, applying Kosovo law, but based in The Hague.

The chambers haven’t yet publicly issued any indictments.

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Run, Run, Run For Health and Fun in 5 Upcoming Races

Runners pass the Grand Palace in Bangkok in May 2015. Photo: WingNaiDee / Facebook

Top: Runners pass the Grand Palace in Bangkok in May 2015. Photo: WingNaiDee / Facebook

 

BANGKOK Running isn’t only for obsessive health-types, but can promote good causes or just be for fun. Here’s a list of interesting running events to join this month and in weeks to come.

Five events large and small are on the horizon, but first, this weekend, has three events to join:

 

 

 

Thai Give – Saturday

14124291 1192988987418266 6056328432928397431 oMost interesting is an opportunity to run with young inmates early Saturday morning. Thai Give will take off from the Public Health Ministry on the Nonthaburi side at 4am. Runners will be joined by youth from a juvenile detention center in a program to get them exposed to exercise and socialization. The routes are 3K and 10K. Runners can register on the morning of the event at the Public Health Ministry for 500 baht. Proceeds will go to support activities for the youth at the detention center.

 

coverBangkok 10 KM International Run – Sunday
O
n Sunday, the postponed run sets out at 5:30am from the United Nations office on Ratchadamnoen Nok Road in 4.5K and 10K races. Runners can register on the morning of the event or online. Registration is 400 baht for the 10K, 300 baht for the 4.5K and is free for children who join the 1K mara-fun. The event is dedicated to the Late King, and runners are encouraged to wear muted colors. Headbands printed with the Thai No. 9 representing King Rama IX will be provided.

 

Run For Life – SundayCover RFL 1702 x 800 px 01
Also Sunday, Run For Life events are being held in many countries by multi-level marketer Herbalife. Bangkok will hold a 5K and 10K which start at 5:30 am at Wachirabenchathat Park in the Chatuchak district. Tickets are 450 baht and can only be purchased online. Some portion of the funds will be donated to support construction of a new building at Maharat Nakhon Ratchasima Hospital.

 

event image5BDMS Bangkok Marathon – Feb. 5
Back with a new sponsor and date after
last year’s embarrassment, the Bangkok Marathon is set for midnight on Feb. 5. Registration for non-Thai runners is USD$45-80 and can be made by email to [email protected]. Thai nationals can register for 500 – 1,500 baht.

 

Bangkok Women’s Run – Feb. 19

13769573 1814725605480531 210384357475285753 nBilled as the most stylish and beautiful race, women are invited bring the runway to the running way at the Bangkok Women’s Run starting at 6am on Feb. 19 at the Rama VIII Bridge with 5K and 10K routes. Registration will open later this month.

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More Bodies in Israeli Murder Suspect’s Past

Yaakov Shimon Sakira Bitton, 50, Saturday arrested for the murder of Eliyahu Cohen, who he buried under concrete.

BANGKOK — Police said Wednesday they are trying to piece together the dark criminal past of a man accused of murdering a fellow Israeli and former policeman, as they try to figure out what happened to his missing wife.

Investigators have pinned the grisly murder of 63-year-old Eliyahu Cohen, whose body was found under freshly poured concrete Saturday on Yaakov Shimon Sakira Bitton, who they say was aided by his 17-year-old son. Since then, investigation into his background landed on a trail of other bodies, another family, and missing wife.

Read: Missing Israeli Found Buried Under Fresh Concrete

After running Bitton through the Criminal Records Division, police found this morning he was an accomplice in the murder and disposal of a body in a Kanchanaburi river in 1997.

He served jail time before being booted out of the country, only to return years later under an assumed name to fetch the son he had with Nantiya Saengurai and return to Israel with him. In 2015, he returned to Thailand and began living with her.

Soon after that, she went missing.

Anant Saengurai, 62, files a missing persons report for his daughter Nantiya Saengurai on Sunday.
Anant Saengurai, 62, files a missing persons report for his daughter Nantiya Saengurai on Sunday.

On Sunday, her 62-year-old father filed a missing person report for his daughter. Anant Saengurai believes she is dead. There has been no activity on her phone or financial records for months.

Anant said that he last heard from his daughter in November 2015 when she was busted at the Nong Khai border crossing with drugs. He contacted the Laos embassy but received no help. When he heard his son-in-law was arrested, he decided to contact the police to look for his daughter.

Police found no clues Tuesday when they searched the last residence Nantiya was known to live with Bitton and their son in the Bang Kruai district of Nonthaburi.

“At the moment, we are trying to find information from witnesses and other people close to Nantiya or ‘Aoi,’” said police Col. Arun Vachirasrisukanya, referring to her nickname. “There’s very little information to go on.”

One person of interest is Bitton’s 35-year-old ex-wife.

Officials exhume the remains of Eliyahu Cohen on Saturday at the Nonthaburi home where he was allegedly murdered and buried by Yaakov Shimon Sakira Bitton and his son.
Officials exhume the remains of Eliyahu Cohen on Saturday at the Nonthaburi home where he was allegedly murdered and buried by Yaakov Shimon Sakira Bitton and his son.

“The perpetrator had two houses, like how guys do,” the police chief said.

On Wednesday the unidentified woman told police she knew nothing about Cohen or Nantiya, and did not know Bitton was married. She said Bitton, who she shacked up with, was never violent, but that she did not know him well. She claimed he received 20,000 baht to 30,000 baht every month from a relative.

Police believe Bitton killed Cohen because he owed him money. They say he and his son cut Cohen into three pieces and put them in bags they buried with a lot of mothballs under some bricks near his bathroom.

They poured some concrete over it all, but officials exhuming the body said an unbearable stench permeated the whole house.

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Chinese Tourist Dies After Going on Rampage

Police and rescue workers inspect the body of Lee Chen Gang on Pracha Rat Bamphen Road early Wednesday morning in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Police detained a number of people Wednesday for allegedly beating a belligerent and possibly disturbed Chinese man to death in the Huai Khwang district.

Lee Chen Gang, 61, died shortly after rescue workers and police were called to the scene early this morning at a shop he had allegedly broken into on Pracha Rat Bamphen Road. The chief of Sutthisan police said the man likely died from wounds received by the men who confronted him, but they were waiting for autopsy results

“As far as I talked to the doctor, he said the injuries could have been fatal,” Termphao said by telephone. “Right now we are trying to make the matter clearer. We are questioning every witness involved.”

Lee had reportedly broken into the gas shop at about 5am and shouted incoherently at the staff who were asleep inside. One of the employees, Kiew Wadee, told reporters Lee punched at them, so they tried to subdue him.

But when police arrived at the scene, Lee was already on the verge of death. Termphao said the store employees were placed under arrest for questioning, though he would not say how many. No one has been charged yet, he said.

Lee entered Thailand on a tourist visa with a tour group and was due to return to China on Monday, Col. Termphao said. But the tourist suddenly started acting “mad” recently, according to the tour company, so they let him stay at their office until he recovered, the officer said. The man apparently fled the company office before breaking into the shop.

The Chinese Embassy has been contacted, Termphao said.

He added that police are trying to determine whether Lee had any history of mental illness, or whether he has a record of drug usage.

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Rohingya Advocates Say Myanmar Deaths Exceed 100

Myanmar police officers patrol along the border fence between Myanmar and Bangladesh Oct. 14 in Maungdaw, Rakhine State, Myanmar. Photo: Thein Zaw / AP

BANGKOK — Advocates for Myanmar’s Muslim ethnic Rohingya community say more than 100 members of the minority group have been killed in government counterinsurgency sweeps in the western state of Rakhine.

Ko Ko Linn of the Arakan Rohingya National Organization said by phone Wednesday that according to villagers, at least 150 people had been killed by security forces since Saturday. He alleged that the government sought to cover up the killings by barring the media and aid groups from the area.

The government has acknowledged the deaths of 69 “violent attackers” and 17 members of the security forces. The attackers weren’t identified, but the army has aligned with Rakhine Buddhists against the Rohingya.

The government says the attackers burned down hundreds of homes, but rights groups blame the army for such actions.

 

Related stories:

Suu Kyi in Japan as Myanmar faces pressure on Rohingya

Reports Emerge of Army Attacks on Myanmar’s Rohingya

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Bangkok Bombing Trial Halted Until March

Suspect Adem Karadag, aka Mohammed Bilal, is led to the location near Bangkok's Hua Lamphong Railway Station where police say he was handed the bomb later planted at the Erawan Shrine by bombing suspect Yusufu Mieraili during a police "re-enactment" on Sept. 26, 2015.

BANGKOK — A day after the trial got underway of two men accused of carrying out Thailand’s worst single terror attack, the court announced Wednesday it will not convene again until March.

The military court Wednesday said it will continue hearing from its first witness, a police investigator, on March 6.

More than a year after the bombing of the Erawan Shrine killed 20 people on Aug. 17, 2015, Lt. Col. Somkiat Ploytubtim was finally called to testify Tuesday and Wednesday.

A lawyer for defendant Yusufu Mieraili said the decision to suspend the trial four months was agreed to by the judges, prosecutors, defense lawyers and interpreters. They settled on the next date all parties would be available, he said.

“I did not have any problem. It can be whenever,” said Chamroen Panompakakorn. “But the military court and the prosecutors said they are busy during the year-end, as there are many cases concerning national security to be finished.”

The military courts have been inundated with cases ever since the junta began using them to prosecute civilians and dissidents on charges of sedition and insulting the royal family.

The case was previously delayed months due to the lack of an interpreter for the Uighur defendants. The first was arrested on drug-related charges in June.

It finally got underway with Somkiat’s testimony Tuesday after the military court approved two interpreters provided by the Chinese embassy.

Schoochart Kanpai, who represents suspect Adem Karadag, said he expected the end date to be pushed to mid-2018.

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Gov’t to Honor Late King With Nationwide Event

Mourners line up at sunset on Tuesday to pay respect to the royal coffin of His Majesty the Late King at Grand Palace in Bangkok

BANGKOK — The military government on Wednesday called on provincial authorities to organize mass events Tuesday in honor of His Majesty the Late King.

The nationwide ceremony is meant as a demonstration of enduring love for King Bhumibol, who died one month ago at 88, according to government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd. The private sector was also encouraged to participate in the public display of loyalty and grief.

Read: Sea of Voices Rise in Tribute for Late King

The event will be broadcast live on national television, Lt. Gen. Sansern said.

According to a schedule released to the media, the ceremony in Bangkok will start at 8am in all state buildings, such as the Government House and public schools. Officials and mourners are to recite Buddhist prayers and swear oaths of allegiance to the late monarch in front of his portraits.

“Although His Majesty has already passed on to the heavens, he is still residing in the hearts of all Thai people, with sorrows and griefs that will never fade,” part of the script reads.

Hourly schedules for provinces outside Bangkok will be decided locally, Sansern said.

The event is part of the national mourning declared by the government in the wake of King Bhumibol’s death Oct. 13. The mourning will last for a year and end with the cremation the late king’s cremation.

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