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Brazil Nabs 10 IS Backers in Olympics Anti-Terror Swoop

A federal police agent leads a handcuffed suspect who authorities say was arrested on terrorism-related charges in Brasilia, Brazil, Thursday, July 21, 2016. Photo: Associated Press

RIO DE JANEIRO — Ten Brazilians who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State militant group were arrested Thursday, authorities announced, describing them as “amateurs” who discussed on social media the possibility of staging attacks during next month’s Olympics.

Justice Minister Alexandre de Moraes said in the capital, Brasilia, that the 10 were being held on two terrorism-related charges and that two more people were being sought.

Authorities said any attack plan would have had little chance of coming to fruition, citing the group’s lack of resources and skills.

But officials and security experts argued that police were justified in being aggressive in light of “lone wolf” attacks staged in the U.S. and Europe by men with little or no training.

Moraes said police acted because the group discussed using weapons and guerrilla tactics to potentially launch an attack during the Olympics, which begin in Rio de Janeiro on Aug. 5. They will remain in police custody for at least 30 days.

“They were complete amateurs and ill-prepared” to actually launch an attack, Moraes said. “A few days ago they said they should start practicing martial arts, for example.”

He said that there were no specific targets for an attack, but that even disorganized groups have to be taken seriously.

The possibility of an attack is not so “far-fetched” even though Brazil has never been a target for terrorism, said Alex Kassirer, a counterterrorism analyst at Flashpoint, a New York-based intelligence group.

“The Olympics is a really unique opportunity to be able to target a concentration of all of the enemies in one area,” she said.

Kassirer pointed out the Islamic State group launched a channel in May on the messaging app Telegram to disseminate jihadi propaganda specifically in Portuguese. On Sunday, another channel vowed allegiance to IS, although its authenticity has not been determined, she said.

The arrests were made in 10 different states, including Sao Paulo and Parana in the southern part of the country, and it was not clear whether the suspects knew each other beyond their online contacts.

Moraes said authorities seized computers, cellphones and other equipment, but no weapons.

Authorities said the investigation that began in April showed the suspects had all been “baptized” as Islamic State sympathizers online but none had actually traveled to Syria or Iraq, the group’s stronghold, or received any training. Several were allegedly trying to secure financing from IS.

Investigators said none of the suspects was of Arab descent, but released no details on their religion. They were described as being between the ages of 20 and 40, except for one minor.

Newton de Oliveira, a professor and security specialist at Mackenzie Presbyterian University in Rio de Janeiro, applauded authorities for detecting the group, saying recent world events raised worries about terrorism during the sporting event.

But he cautioned it was hard to say how serious this threat was.

“It’s not clear whether we are talking about young people getting carried away or if they were going to move forward with actions,” Oliveira said.

The justice minister said one of the suspects communicated with a store in Paraguay via email in an alleged attempt to buy an AK-47 assault rifle, apparently the most concrete action taken toward a possible attack. The email communication was intercepted by police.

Brazilians are allowed to possess small firearms but must have a license and training to do so. Only members of the military may possess assault weapons like the AK-47, although those and other firearms are common in the country, especially in slums controlled by drug gangs.

Last week the top military aide for Brazil’s interim government said concerns over terrorism had “reached a higher level” after the truck attack that killed 84 people in Nice, France.

Officials did not raise the country’s terror alert level Thursday following the raids.

Security has emerged as the top concern during the Olympics, including violence possibly spilling over from Rio’s hundreds of slums. Authorities have said 85,000 police officers and soldiers will be patrolling during the competitions.

Story by: Mauricio Savarese, Adriana Gomez Licon

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Wife of Foreign Critic of Monarchy Held Incommunicado

Noppawan Bunluesilp and her 3-year-old son as they were taken Friday to the Crime Suppression Division in Bangkok.

Update: Marshall posted just after 3pm on Friday that his wife Noppawan Bunluesilp had been released but he remained “very concerned.”

BANGKOK — Police raided the Bangkok home of a well-known British author and monarchy critic’s Thai family Friday morning, taking away his wife, 3-year-old son and father-in-law along with computers and other materials.

The raid took place about 7am at the home of the parents of Noppawan Bunluesilp, the 38-year-old wife of former Reuters reporter Andrew MacGregor Marshall, author of a banned book critical of the monarchy, one day after he shared images from foreign media on Facebook that were unflattering to a member of the royal family.

Marshall and his wife have not lived in Thailand since 2011, but she was visiting with their young son when the raid took place on the Thonburi side of Bangkok. Marshall continues to frequently post comments critical of the institution on social media.

Twenty officers holding a court-approved search warrant took away a MacBook computer, iPad, Iphone, seven passports and other documents inside nine transparent sealed bags, according to a friend of Noppawan’s present at the scene this morning.

“Her face was in fright, but later she manage to compose herself,” said Vee, who asked that his full name not be published for fear of reprisal by authorities.

Noppawan, their 3-year-old son Charlie and Noppawan’s father were taken to the Crime Suppression Division in Bangkok’s Lat Phrao district.

A photo of Andrew MacGregor Marshall, his wife Noppawan Bunluesilp and their son Charlie in a May 2014 photo posted to Facebook. Photo: Andrew MacGregor Marshall / Facebook
Andrew MacGregor Marshall, his wife Noppawan Bunluesilp and their son Charlie in a May 2014 photo posted to Facebook. Photo: Andrew MacGregor Marshall / Facebook

Human rights lawyer Weeranan Huadsri said that as of noon, police had refused to let him speak to Noppawan, saying it was because she was not yet charged with any crime.

“Police want to know if she sent some lese majeste content or pictures to her husband or not,” he added.

Weeranan said police were looking for anything on Noppawan’s computer, iPad or iPhone deemed defamatory to the royal family.

Police said the images, published Thursday by a German tabloid and later shared by Marshall were doctored by the 45-year-old Briton. He denied the claim.

Weeranan said he was concerned that without any witness or lawyer present, evidence might be tampered with.

Chatting online from Hong Kong, Marshall this said his 39-year-old wife, who used to work for Reuters and NBC, was okay earlier.

Bagged evidence taken from the family home of Andrew MacGregor Marshall Friday morning in Bangkok.
Bagged evidence taken from the family home of Andrew MacGregor Marshall Friday morning in Bangkok.

“She is okay, dealing with the situation as best she can. Some friends and lawyers are at the house,” he said.

Marshall said he believed the raid had to do with his work.

On Thursday he brought attention on social media to stories in foreign media about a member of the royal family.

“The police raid appears connected to my work on Thailand. She has done nothing wrong. If Thai authorities believe I broke the law they should seek to extradite me, not harass my family.”

Ed. note: Certain details of this story have been withheld due to the legal ramifications of discussing the royal family.

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Thai Police Arrest Russian, Uzbeki For Alleged Cybertheft

Police arrest two people allegedly involved in cybertheft. Photo by: www.utv.com

BANGKOK — A Russian man and an Uzbek woman were arrested at beach resorts and accused of stealing more than $28.5 million (around 100 million baht) by planting malware on the victims’ computers and depleting bank accounts in the United States and other countries.

Tourist Police announced Thursday that in collaboration with the U.S. FBI it had arrested Dmitry Ukrainsev, 44, in the beach resort town of Pattaya, east of Bangkok, where he ran yacht rental businesses. His alleged accomplice, Olga Komova, 25, was arrested in the beach resort of Koh Chang.

Police Maj. Gen. Surachet Hakphan said U.S. law enforcement had begun investigating in 2014 after suspicious large-scale money transfers were made into Thailand from the United States, Australia, Japan, England, Italy and Germany.

The Anti-Money Laundering Office found and closed 50 bank accounts the two suspects had in Thailand, the police announcement said.

Surachet said other suspects in the same network have been arrested in the U.S. but he was uncertain Ukrainsev was the mastermind.

It is not rare for foreign fugitives from justice to hide out in Thailand, and there are several arrests each year in the beach resort towns of Pattaya — which is a very popular destination for Russian visitors — and Phuket.

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Rwandan Security Forces Accused of Detaining Poor People

A street in Rwanda's capital Kigali, May 11, 2016. Photo by: Reuters

KIGALI, Rwanda — Human Rights Watch says members of Rwanda’s security forces are arresting poor people who are arbitrarily detained in “transit centers” described as harsh and inhuman.

The rights group reported Thursday it received information about several people who died during or just after their detention in a transit center in Rubavu in Rwanda’s Western Province as a result of a combination of injuries from beatings, poor conditions, and lack of medical care.

It said the police and the military arrest poor people such as beggars, sex workers, vendors and street children as part of an unofficial government practice to remove “undesirables” from the streets of the capital Kigali.

Rwandan Justice Minister Johnson Busingye told Human Rights Watch the matter will be investigated.

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Alleged Bomb Courier Found Hanged in Custody

Security officers stop and search travelers on July 15, 2016, at a roadside checkpoint in Yala province.

YALA — A 51-year-old Muslim man accused of delivering a bomb to an army outpost in the southern province of Yala and found hanged in his cell room was ruled as suicide Thursday by police.

Somjit Jarae was arrested Saturday in Yala’s Yaha district after it turned out the parcel he was delivering was actually a bomb equipped with a remote detonator. Security officers defused it before it exploded. By Tuesday, Somjit was dead, found hanging from a shower hose, authorities said.

“We believe stress was the cause of his action,” Lt. Gen. Dusadee Chusangkit, regional police commander, announced Thursday.

Per the emergency law imposed in the region, Somjit had been held for questioning at a police station in Yala without charge. Media reports quoted Somjit saying he was asked by an anonymous person to deliver the parcel to the base, and he was unaware it was a bomb.

When a guard inspected Somjit’s cell around 10.30pm on Tuesday, the occupant was already dead, according to Dusadee.

Somjit’s family has been informed of his death.

“As for … civil society that would like to investigate this issue, officials will welcome them, as we are transparent. We have clear details,” Dusadee said.

Somjit, who worked as public van driver, was the latest suspect to die in custody in the southern provinces, where security officers are routinely accused of using heavy tactics in their attempt to stamp out local Muslim separatists.

Civil rights lawyer Sitthipong Chantharawirote said he finds Somjit’s death suspicious and urged police to investigate what happened.

“It looks sketchy. It’s strange,” said Sitthipong, sec-gen of the Muslim Attorney Center, which regularly campaigns for transparency in the Deep South. “What is their protocol about detention? These things happen again and again. He wasn’t the first one.”

The previous death in custody in the region took place in December at a Pattani army base. Before that, it had been some years since a 25-year-old bombing suspect reportedly hung himself in 2010 while held at the same facility.

The security forces in the Deep South are often accused by advocacy groups of violating human rights in their attempt to end a dozen years of insurgent violence there, by using emergency powers to search homes and detain people without warrant.

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Sydney Flight Diverted as Drunken Passengers Throw Punches

Flight from Sydney to Thailand was diverted to Indonesia on Wednesday to offload six rowdy passengers. Photo by: www.plane-mad.com

SYDNEY — A flight from Sydney to Thailand was diverted to Indonesia to offload a group drunken Australian traveling companions who started throwing punches at each other, officials said on Thursday.

Jetstar Flight 27 was carrying 314 passengers when it diverted to Bali on Wednesday night after the six who were traveling together to the tourist island of Phuket became “extremely disruptive among themselves” and refused requests from the crew, the Australian budget airline said in a statement.

The airline said all six were forced off the plane, but Bali officials said only five men were held by airport security and faced deportation to Australia.

It is not clear what happened to the sixth passenger.

Bali airport manager Trikora Harjo said an investigation determined that the only reason men started fighting was because they were under the influence of alcohol.

“There were not seriously injured, just bruised,” Harjo said.

Nine Network television showed video of one of the men with a black eye being escorted by security guards from the plane. Nine reported another man had bled heavily in the plane from a broken nose.

Bali airport official Yusfandri Gona said the men would undergo health checks before they are deported.

“They drank too much beer and liquor on the aircraft. Some of them started fighting, yelling and punching each other and ignored other passengers and the cabin crew’s requests for calm and order,” Gona said.

Nine reported the fighting broke out five hours into the nine hours and 20 minute flight to Phuket. Bali is less than seven hours from Sydney.

“The other customers on board supported the decision to offload the group in Bali and thanked the crew,” Jetstar said.

The plane continued on to Phuket an hour after landing in Bali.

The airline did not say whether it will pursue the troublemakers for the cost of the diversion.

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51 People Injured in Clashes in Armenia

Armenian protesters run away from a light grenades as they clash with police officers near the area around a police station in Yerevan, Armenia, Wednesday, July 20, 2016. Photo: Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia — More than 50 people have been injured in clashes near a police station in Armenia’s capital where armed men have been holding hostages for four days and protesters erected barricades on a nearby avenue.

Police moved in late Wednesday night to clear out the protest camp. The health ministry said Thursday morning that 51 people have been hospitalized, 28 of whom were police.

The country’s interior ministry said some 30 protesters have been detained.

The police station in the capital Yerevan was seized on Sunday by a group of gunmen seeking the release of an opposition figure who was arrested in June for illegal weapons possession.

Investigators claimed he and his supporters were planning to seize government buildings.

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Citing Ethical Lapses, Ultraconservative Newspaper Quits Media Council

A pile of newspapers in Thailand in a photo from Feb. 20, 2014. Photo: Connie Ma / Flickr

BANGKOK — A newspaper known for its staunch royalist stance announced Thursday it has resigned from a national media association for its failure to enforce ethics and impartiality.

In an online statement, the editorial board of Naewna said the National Press Council, comprised of editors from different print media organizations, turns a blind eye to media agencies that take political sides and disregards ethics, though it did not name any specific incidents.

“The newspapers of each [council] agency clearly choose sides, don’t comply with ethical standards in news coverage [and] have been used as instruments of those who harbor ill will toward the nation,” said the statement, adding that Naewna’s resignation was effective immediately.

Someone answering the phone at Naewna twice said Thursday that none of the editors was available.

Chai Patakamin, the council’s secretary-general, declined to comment.

“We are still discussing the matter,” said Chai, who works on the editorial board of Daily News newspaper. “I do not have the full details with me, so I cannot make any comment at this time.”

Naewna, which has been business for 36 years, often makes clear its support for the current military government and the protests against the former elected government which preceded it.

In its editorials and columns, the newspaper consistently calls for broader powers for the junta and tougher measures against those who insult the monarchy or challenge the military regime.

“There are ‘ant armies’ mobilizing villagers, using word of mouth, to distort and mislead the people to reject the constitution in the upcoming referendum. They may have been hired or motivated by money in their actions,” read the latest Naewna editorial on the Aug. 7 referendum.

It was the second high-profile resignation to hit the National Press Council. In 2011, Matichon Group, the parent organization of Khaosod English, quit the federation in protest, saying the council failed to promote media freedom and impartiality.

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Trump Hedges on NATO Protection Against Russian Aggression

Trump says U.S. may not come to defense of NATO states attacked by Russia in an interview with the New York Times in July. Photo: Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump says the United States under his leadership might not come to the defense of some NATO members if Russia were to attack them.

Trump said he would decide whether to protect the Baltic republics against Russian aggression based on whether those countries “have fulfilled their obligations to us.”

He made the comments in an interview with The New York Times on Wednesday, a night before he is to formally accept the Republican nomination for president.

Trump’s remarks about U.S. obligations under NATO to come to the aid of other members of the 28-nation alliance are in line with his views questioning the United States’ global role.

In 2014, the 28-member alliance created a rapid-reaction force to protect the most vulnerable NATO members against a confrontation with Russia.

Trump also said in the Times interview that he would not criticize Turkey for cracking down on political opponents and restricting civil liberties following last week’s attempted coup.

Of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Trump said: “I give great credit to him for being able to turn that around. … Some people say that it was staged, you know that. I don’t think so.”

The U.S. has no “right to lecture” Turkey and other countries when “people are shooting policemen in cold blood,” Trump said.

With decades in business and no prior political experience, Trump cast the projection of American military might abroad in economic terms.

For example, he said it might not be necessary to station American troops abroad, though he agreed it’s preferable.

“If we decide we have to defend the United States, we can always deploy” troops from the U.S., Trump told the newspaper, “and it will be a lot less expensive.”

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Junta Denies Ordering 2,000 Teak Trees for New Parliament

An architectural rendering of the new 12 billion baht parliament building along the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok. Image: Arsomsilp Institute of the Arts

BANGKOK — The junta Wednesday denied ordering 2,000 northern teak trees cut down for the construction of an elaborate new parliament building in the capital.

Following fierce criticism to news spread online, government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd denied such an order was given for trees to be chopped down at a commercial teak plantation in Chiang Mai’s Doi Saket district.

In fact, Sansern said, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha is now seeking to save the trees by ordering the plantation returned to protected status rather than renew its lapsed license.

“The license that allowed the [Forest Industry Organization] to use the protected forest expired July 24, 2015, and they are now seeking renewal,” Sansern said.

The government spokesman said since community members wanted the teak trees preserved, the junta chief ordered the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment to return the Mae Ho Phra forest to protected status.

Sansern echoed the same statement as a forestry official who said the land was legally approved for commercial use.

Both Sansern and Pralong Damrongthai of the Forest Department said the developer of the new parliament building asked the Forest Industry Organization for tons of teak planks. The organization later determined that more than 2,000 trees in the Mae Ho Phra forest were available, but no order to cut them down had gone through yet.

The uproar over the teak was the latest in a series of contentious issues to plague the 12 billion baht project to build a riverside parliament building near Bangkok’s Kiak Kai intersection.

The Sappaya Sapasathan complex being built by Sino-Thai Engineering & Construction PCL was to be completed next year, but a series of problems such as a battle over land ownership and concern about its high cost may delay completion until 2019.

Sappaya Sapasathan, which means “peaceful parliament,” was also slammed for its temple-like design. The design team said they wanted to remind politicians of “Thainess” and morality.

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