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Disgraced Palace Official Faces Death Penalty, Police Say

The residence of Montri Sotangkul, a former palace official facing charges of lese majeste, in southwestern Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A senior police commander confirmed that the assistant to ex-princess Srirasmi, a former wife of Thailand's Crown Prince, is facing the death penalty for allegedly abusing his royal rank for personal gain.

The suspect, Montri Sotangkul, has been charged with a number of offences, including insulting the monarchy (lese majeste), bribing state officials, and malfeasance in office. The latter crime carries a maximum penalty of death, a deputy spokesperson of the Bangkok Metropolitan Police told reporters yesterday.

"The maximum penalty the suspect is facing is execution," said Pol.Col. Ekkarak Limsangkart. "But how he will be punished depends on the judgment of the court." 

Montri, 53, was arrested last week after police accused him of claiming close ties to Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn in order to win positions on the boards of several state agencies. Montri also allegedly abused his royal connections to secure the rights to buy and sell land in Bangkok.

Montri is facing up to 15 years in prison for violating Section 112 of the Thai Penal Codes, which outlaws defaming the monarchy, and a possible death sentence for violating Section 148, which criminalizes using one’s position as a state official to seek personal gain.

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Montri Sotangkul (R) apologizing to his father for his alleged crimes, 14 June 2015.

Yesterday, Montri was escorted by police to his home in Bangkok, where officers searched for evidence of his alleged crimes. Police also interrogated the former chamberlain's parents. Reporters were not allowed to observe the discussion. 

Pol.Lt.Gen. Prawuth Thawornsiri, spokesperson of the Royal Thai Police, said police have seized more than 10 million baht worth of assets from Montri as a part of the criminal investigation. He said police are requesting the Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) formally freeze and confiscate the assets, which include bank accounts, a condominium, and some vehicles. 

"The case will be finalized by 25 June, and then we will separate the files and send them to prosecutors’ offices in each district of the wrongdoing," Pol.Lt.Gen. Prawuth said. 

Montri has been held at an undisclosed location since the court ordered on 12 June that he be detained while he awaits trial. 

Montri is the latest person close to former Princess Srirasmi who has been charged with lese majeste in the past year. Her brotherssisterparents, and uncle are all serving time in prison after being convicted of the crime, which carries a heavy stigma in Thai society. 

Srirasmi has not been seen in public since she resigned from the royal family in December 2014 amidst the scandal. 

Last week, police chief Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang told reporters that former Princess Srirasmi personally appointed Montri to her entourage, and that the Crown Prince was not involved in her decision. 

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China Lifts Entry Permit Requirements for Taiwan Citizens

Soldiers fold Taiwan's naitonal flag during the flag-lowering ceremony at Liberty Square in Taipei, Taiwan, 10 May 2015. EPA/DAVID CHANG

BEIJING (DPA) — China on Sunday said it will grant visa-free entry and introduce other measures to simplify procedures for citizens of Taiwan to enter mainland China.

China's senior political advisor Yu Zhengsheng announced the plan during a speech opening the seventh Straits Forum for cross-strait exchanges in Xiamen, Xinhua news agency reported. 

"We'll continue to expand people-to-people exchanges across the Strait and engage more Taiwan compatriots in the trend of cross-strait interaction," Xinhua cited Yu, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, as saying. 

Currently, Taiwan citizens are required to apply for a visa-like entry permit in order to visit mainland Chia. 

The permit will be replaced with a card-format Taiwan Compatriot Certificate, according to Xinhua.  

Reports did not mention whether Yu set a time table for implementation of these two measures.   

In 2014 Taiwan citizens made 5.37 million visits to the mainland, up from 4.36 million in 2008. Mainland Chinese citizens made 4.04 million visits to Taiwan last year, compared with 280,000 in 2008, according to official statistics cited by Xinhua. 

(Reporting by Joanna Chiu and Dennis Engbarth)

 

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BKK Taxi Driver Returns 41,000 Baht to Indian Passenger

Taxi driver Surasih Butaraprom (R) returns money and other belongings to Ankur Gumber at FM 91, 13 June 2015.

BANGKOK – A Bangkok taxi driver teamed up with a local radio station to return 41,000 baht and a passport to an Indian man who left the belongings behind in his taxi on Friday.

The driver, 43-year-old Surasih Butaraprom, contacted FM 91, a radio station that covers traffic and helps coordinate lost-and-found efforts among taxi drivers, after he discovered the Indian man had left behind one bag in his car.

"I was very unhappy. I was worried for him and his family," said Surasih, who has been working as a cab driver for 16 years. 

The radio station then contacted the hotel where Ankur Gumber and his family were staying, and managed to return the bag, said Jaiton Sriwangpol, an operator of FM 91.

Ankur met with Surasih at FM 91 radio station yesterday to thank him in person, and gave the taxi driver some money as a token of his gratitude.

Speaking via an interpreter at the station, Ankur said he visits Thailand with his family every six months to buy textiles for his business in India. He added that Surasih's action has saved him from "a lot of trouble." 

 

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5 Thai Students Still Under Pakistani Custody, Govt Says

A photo of Faruk Suthok, one of the five students detained in Pakistan, provided by his family.

BANGKOK — The five students arrested for trying to smuggle a firearm and some ammunition onto an aircraft in Pakistan are still being held under police custody there, a Thai government spokesperson said, reversing an earlier statement that some of them had been released.

The students were arrested at Allama Iqbal International Airport in Lahore on the night of 8 June, shortly before they boarded a Thai Airways flight bound for Bangkok. Thai officials said they were informed by Pakistani authorities that the five men attempted to carry a handgun, its magazine, and some ammunition onboard the aircraft.

On 12 June, Anusith Kunakorn, secretary-general of Thailand’s National Security Council, said four of the five students had been released and were on their way back to Thailand. He told reporters they were expected to arrive in Bangkok on Friday. 

However, Sek Wannamethee, spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said yesterday that the five students had not been released and are still under investigation by Pakistani authorities.

"The Royal Thai Embassy is still coordinating with and following any developments from the Pakistani authorities," Sek told reporters.

Maj.Gen. Sansern Kaewkamnerd, spokesperson of the government, confirmed that the five are still being held in Pakistani custody. "I'd like the people to follow the news carefully, in order to prevent any misunderstanding or cause a pressure on officials of both countries," Maj.Gen. Sansern said. 

According to the government, the five students have been studying at Islamic schools in Pakistan for the past two years.

Suwan Songlong, the father of one of the five students, 18-year-old Sakkariya Songlong, told reporters he was very disappointed when he realized that the previous news about his son's release was false.

"I would like to plead to the government and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to help my son and his friends to return home as soon as possible," Suwan said. "I believe my son didn't do anything wrong. I am ready to pick up my son at the airport."

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Petroleum Tanker Goes Missing in Malaysian Waters

A file photo shows the Malaysian oil tanker MT Oriental Glory. A different tanker carrying 6,000 metric tons of high-grade petrol has gone missing in Malaysian waters, a senior official said Sunday. EPA/MALAYSIAN ROYAL NAVY

KUALA LUMPUR (DPA) – A tanker carrying 6,000 metric tons of high-grade petrol has gone missing in Malaysian waters, a senior official said Sunday.

The vessel went missing Thursday while sailing off Tanjung Sedili town in the state of Johor, about 300 kilometres south of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Maritime Enforcement Agency first admiral Ibrahim Mohamed said.

He said search teams were looking for the vessel and 22 crew that had been en route from the state of Malacca to Pahang state, and has 22 crew members on board.

Earlier this month, armed pirates hijacked a tanker in eastern Malaysia, siphoned off oil and robbed the crew before fleeing, according to the International Maritime Bureau Piracy Reporting Centre.

The Kuala Lumpur-based Piracy Reporting Centre said one tanker is hijacked by pirates in South-East Asian waters every two weeks, adding that the region accounted for 55 per cent of global piracy incidents in the first quarter of 2015.

 

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Thai Junta Dismisses Counter-Coup Rumor

Soldiers guarding Chang Wattana Road in Bangkok after the military staged a coup on 22 May 2014.

BANGKOK — Thailand's ruling military junta has dismissed a rumor circulating among supporters of the Redshirt movement about an impending counter-coup.

"Let me insist that it is not true," said Col. Winthai Suvaree, a junta spokesperson. "It's an attempt to release news that is not constructive. And I believe that it is an attempt by certain people who want to sow confusion in society. They have ill intentions toward the country."

He was referring to a rumor spread on social media among the Redshirts, who supported the government toppled by the junta last May, about a group of disgruntled senior military commanders poised to overthrow junta chairman Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha. 

The rumor asserted that the conspirators were backed by Gen. Prem Tinsulanonda, a former Prime Minister who is currently a top adviser to His Majesty the King, and who many Redshirts believe has a rocky relationship with Gen. Prayuth.

Although Col. Winthai did explicitly not address the claim, he said yesterday that "in the present time, all bureaucratic and military units have unity and a close relationship with one another."

"Therefore, the society should not give importance to news that is untrue, and be careful in their news consumption," continued Col. Winthai. "They have to exercise their judgment carefully. Don't simply believe untrue messages." 

The spokesperson also clarified the document issued by an army unit instructing all fight forces not to move out of their bases, which has been spread on social media by many Redshirts as evidence of the junta's knowledge about an imminent coup attempt.

According to Col. Winthai, the document was recently published by Second Region Army to remind all armed forces in the region that they must seek permission from their commanding officers or the junta before any armament can be moved. 

He said the document is a reminder of Announcement no. 1/2014, which was issued by the junta when it staged the coup on 22 May 2014, and forbids deployment or relocation of any combat-related equipment without the junta's permission. 

"It is an order that is still effective and has not be repealed," Col. Winthai said. 

 

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Singaporean Officials Name Orchid Species After Thai Junta Leader

Gen. Prayuth and Narapon Chan-ocha pose with the orchid species named after them at the Singapore Botanic Gardens, 12 June 2015.

BANGKOK — Government officials in Singapore have honored Thai junta chairman and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha by naming an orchid species after him and his wife, Thai officials told reporters today.

Today Gen. Prayuth and his wife Naraporn Chan-ocha visited the Singapore Botanic Gardens, where one of the orchid species on exhibition has been renamed Dendrobium Prayuth Naraporn Chan-ocha, according to a statement released by the Government House.

Gen. Prayuth arrived in Singapore yesterday for a two-day state visit aimed at strengthening ties between the two nations. The general met with Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong for bilateral talks.  

Maj.Gen. Weerachon Sukhonthapatipak, a spokesperson of the Thai military government, told reporters that Gen. Prayuth thanked the Singaporean leader for his confidence in the Thai economy and its potential. Gen. Prayuth also assured Lee that Thailand will organize a national election by next year, according to Maj.Gen. Weerachon. 

"He then invited Singaporean investors to come join the development and invest in Thailand," Maj.Gen. Weerachon said. 

Gen. Prayuth seized power from a democratically-elected government in Thailand last May. He has since ruled the country with an autocratic touch, banning political activities and protests, censoring the media, and appointing governing bodies stacked with military allies. 

Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who headed the government that was toppled by Gen. Prayuth, also had an orchid species named after her – the Ascocenda Yingluck Shinawatra – when she visited the city-state in 2011. 

 

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Former Assistant of Fallen Thai Princess Confesses to Defaming Monarchy

Police bring Montri Sotangkul to the Ministry of Energy for a 'crime reenactment,' 12 June 2015.

BANGKOK — A close aide to the former wife of Thailand's Crown Prince has confessed to abusing his royal ties to secure top positions in state agencies.

Montri Sotangkul, former chamberlain to ex-princess Srirasmi, was arrested on 10 June on charges of lese majeste (insulting the monarchy) and bribing state officials.

Police say Montri exploited his position as a senior official in the Royal Household Bureau to win seats on the executive boards of several state enterprises, and to secure the rights to buy and sell land in Bangkok.  

After being detained and interrogated at the police headquarters in Bangkok, Montri was taken for a "crime reenactment" at CAT Telecom – a state-owned telecommunication agency – and the Ministry of Information, Communication, and Technology today. At each building Montri pointed to the seats in the meeting rooms where he allegedly pressured officials into appointing him as an executive board member.

Montri was later taken to the Ministry of Energy where he similarly pointed to the spot where he allegedly asked officials to name him an executive of PTT, a state-owned petroleum enterprise. 

"I have indeed committed the wrongdoing," Montri told reporters. "I confess to all charges. Now I feel repentant. I regret what I have done."

Once Montri completed his "crime-reenactment" sessions, he was handed over to the court, where a judge ordered him to be remanded. Montri was not accompanied by a lawyer. 

Pol.Maj.Gen. Sriwarah Rangsipramnakul, commander of Bangkok Metropolitan Police, said Montri will be held at an undisclosed location – and not Bangkok Remand Prison – while he awaits trial "for the sake of safety of the suspect."

Montri is facing up to 20 years in prison, as defaming the monarchy alone carries a maximum penalty of fifteen years under Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Codes, a law known as lese majeste. 

Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang also told reporters today that authorities will confiscate or freeze Montri's assets if they are proven to be related to his alleged wrongdoing. 

Montri is the latest person close to former Princess Srirasmi who has been charged with lese majeste in the past year. Her brotherssisterparents, and uncle are all serving time in prison after being convicted of the crime, which carries a heavy stigma in Thai society. 

Srirasmi has not been seen in public since she resigned from the royal family in December 2014 amidst the scandal. 

Earlier this week, Pol.Gen. Somyot told reporters that former Princess Srirasmi personally appointed Montri to her entourage, and that the Crown Prince was not involved in her decision. 

 

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Former Assistant of Fallen Thai Princess Confesses to Defaming Monarchy

Police bring Montri Sotangkul to CAT Telecom for a 'crime reenactment,' 12 June 2015.

BANGKOK — A close aide to the former wife of Thailand's Crown Prince has confessed to abusing his royal ties to secure top positions in state agencies.

Montri Sotangkul, former chamberlain to ex-princess Srirasmi, was arrested on 10 June on charges of lese majeste (insulting the monarchy) and bribing state officials.

Police say Montri exploited his position as a senior official in the Royal Household Bureau to win seats on the executive boards of several state enterprises, and to secure the rights to buy and sell land in Bangkok.  

After being detained and interrogated at the police headquarters in Bangkok, Montri was taken for a "crime reenactment" at CAT Telecom – a state-owned telecommunication agency – and the Ministry of Information, Communication, and Technology today. At each building Montri pointed to the seats in the meeting rooms where he allegedly pressured officials into appointing him as an executive board member.

Montri was later taken to the Ministry of Energy where he similarly pointed to the spot where he allegedly asked officials to name him an executive of PTT, a state-owned petroleum enterprise. 

"I have indeed committed the wrongdoing," Montri told reporters. "I confess to all charges. Now I feel repentant. I regret what I have done."

Once Montri completed his "crime-reenactment" sessions, he was handed over to the court, where a judge ordered him to be remanded. Montri was not accompanied by a lawyer. 

Pol.Maj.Gen. Sriwarah Rangsipramnakul, commander of Bangkok Metropolitan Police, said Montri will be held at an undisclosed location – and not Bangkok Remand Prison – while he awaits trial "for the sake of safety of the suspect."

Montri is facing up to 20 years in prison, as defaming the monarchy alone carries up to fifteen years under Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Codes, a law known as lese majeste. 

Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang also told reporters today that authorities will confiscate or freeze Montri's assets if they are proven to be related to his alleged wrongdoing. 

Montri is the latest person close to former Princess Srirasmi who has been charged with lese majeste in the past year. Her brotherssisterparents, and uncle are all serving time in prison after being convicted of the crime, which carries a heavy stigma in Thai society. 

Srirasmi has not been seen in public since she resigned from the royal family in December 2014 amidst the scandal. 

Earlier this week, Pol.Gen. Somyot told reporters that former Princess Srirasmi personally appointed Montri to her entourage, and that the Crown Prince was not involved in her decision. 

 

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Four Thais Freed After Caught With Gun at Pakistani Airport; One Still Detained

Reporters speaking to the mother of Abhisit Mhad-ad, one of five Thais arrested in Pakistan for attempting to bring a gun on board a plane, Songkhla, 12 June 2015.

UPDATE: 5 Thai Students Still Under Pakistani Custody, Govt Says

BANGKOK — Pakistani authorities have released four of the five Thai students who were arrested for trying to smuggle a firearm and ammunition past a security checkpoint at an airport in Pakistan, a Thai official said. 

The students were reportedly arrested at Allama Iqbal International Airport in Lahore on the night of 8 June, shortly before they boarded a Thai Airways flight bound for Bangkok. Thai officials say they were informed by Pakistani authorities that the five men attempted to carry a handgun, its magazine, and some ammunition onboard the aircraft. 

Anusith Kunakorn, secretary-general of the National Security Council, said four of the five students have been released and are on their way back to Thailand. He said they are expected to arrive in Bangkok today.

Pakistani authorities are reportedly still investigating the fifth student.

According to Anusith, all five students arrived in Pakistan in 2013 to study at Islamic schools.

He declined to give further information about why they were attempting to carry the firearm onboard the aircraft, telling reporters that there has been a lot of speculation about the incident that he is unable to verify.

"I haven't talked to them [the five students]," Anusith said. "But when the four students arrived, I will speak with them. I expect that we will have many more clues and information." 

The five students are from Pattani, Trang, Chachoengsao, Songkhla, and Krabi provinces. 

Asked whether the students are related to the Islamic State (IS) movement, as the Bangkok Post reported, Anusith replied, "I don't think they are related. Their families are not related neither. But in terms of an in-depth investigation, I cannot verify that. We are expanding our investigation." 

There is also no information that links the students to the Islamic insurgency in Thailand's southern border provinces, Anusith said. 

"Thai students have been travelling to study in Middle Eastern countries for some time now," said Anusith. "A majority of Thai Muslim students that I have met and visited tell me they expect to return to their homes in the three southern border provinces and develop the region."

He continued, "A majority of them are lovely. They don't understand why people interpret that anyone who goes to study abroad wants to train for combat or have certain ideologies. In reality, it isn't like that."

 

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