The Nation
Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said Thursday that the Cabinet will not deliberate a project to grant aid worth Bt31 million to Cambodia.
The project was initially scheduled to be considered by the Cabinet on Tuesday.
Suthep said the project would be indefinitely suspended.
The project was initially scheduled to be considered by the Cabinet on Tuesday.
Suthep said the project would be indefinitely suspended.
6 comments:
HAHAHH FUCKING THAILAND ARE A BUNCH OF GIRLS....SUCH FUCKING CRYBABYS HAHHAHAHAHHA.....FUCK THAILAND LOOK AT YOU SCUMS OF THE EARTH....FUCKING BUNCH OF PUSSY , WHY DIDNT YOU FUCKING IDIOTS ASK DUBAI TO EXTRADITE THAKSIN, FUCKING SACRED BITCHES........JUST TAKE CAMBODIA OFF YOUR BUDDY LIST ALREADY BITCHES.....FUCKING GIRLS
Once gain, as metioned several times that aid from Siam/Thailand is worthless. As an ordinary Khmer citizen, I would suggest the RGC would or must not ever accept any grants and/or loan from neighbouring countries, this will impact both directly and/or indirectly the country's sovereignty in the long-term. This an example now when Siam/thai cancelled the MOU/MOA regarding the grant to support and build the National road in Cambodia....
Once again, any chances and circumstance, the RGC please do not accept such aid from neighbouring countries...
Thai cabinet means to stop HIV\AIDS.
Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, is it okay for thai to refuse to extradite a Russian to the U.S.
August 12, 2009
Thailand Blocks Extradition of an Arms Dealing Suspect
By THOMAS FULLER
BANGKOK — A Thai court stunned American officials here on Tuesday by rejecting the extradition of Viktor Bout, a Russian businessman who is accused of global arms trafficking.
The United States says Mr. Bout agreed to sell millions of dollars worth of weapons to agents posing as Colombian rebels intending to kill American pilots patrolling in the drug war.
A three-judge panel said that the case did not fall under Thailand’s extradition treaty with the United States for two main reasons. One, the country recognizes the rebels — the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC — as a political organization, not a terrorist group. Two, on the charge that Mr. Bout was conspiring to kill American citizens, one of the judges, Jitakorn Patanasiri, said, “A Thai court cannot judge a case regarding aliens killing aliens outside of Thailand.”
Thai government prosecutors, acting as proxies for their American counterparts, immediately said they would appeal. Mr. Bout would be freed only if an appeal was not filed within 72 hours.
James Entwistle, a diplomat in the United States Embassy in Bangkok, said he was “disappointed and mystified” by the decision. “We think the facts of the case, our extradition treaty and the relevant Thai law all clearly support extraditing Viktor Bout to the United States to stand trial on serious terrorism charges.”
Mr. Bout has denied any links to arms trafficking and told the judge during the proceedings earlier this year that he was being held in “extremely inhumane” conditions. He has argued that the undercover agents violated Thai law by apprehending him before calling the Thai police and carrying firearms in violation of Thai law.
After the ruling was read, Mr. Bout, 42, hugged his wife, and shook hands with his two lawyers. But he said little to reporters in the courtroom. “I’m not allowed to say anything,” he said.
Wearing a soiled prison uniform and leg irons that clanked across the courtroom floor, Mr. Bout hardly fit his accuser’s portrayal of him as one of the world’s most notorious weapons traffickers — or the Nicolas Cage character he supposedly inspired in the 2005 film “Lord of War.”
According to legal papers, Mr. Bout told undercover agents for the Drug Enforcement Administration that he could deliver 700 to 800 surface-to-air missiles, 5,000 AK-47 assault weapons, millions of rounds of ammunition, land mines, C-4 explosives and unmanned aerial vehicles, and that the weapons would be airdropped into the jungles of Colombia “with great accuracy.”
Thai officials say they have come under pressure from Russia, which has asked for custody of Mr. Bout, and the United States over the case. Judge Jitakorn prefaced the reading of the decision with what sounded like an apology: “Today there must be someone happy and someone sad.” The reading took so long — more than an hour — that Judge Jitakorn gestured to Mr. Bout to sit down halfway through.
2:07 PM
Anonymous Anonymous said...
2:07 PM
Thank you for your posting.
2:49 PM
Anonymous Anonymous said...
See! This is the reason why HUN SEN wouldn't respect Thai's court!!!!!!!!!!
8:15 PM
Abhullshit shot himself in the foot!!!
bt31millions vanished, is it a gain to Cambodia?
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