Showing posts with label Kidnap and ransom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kidnap and ransom. Show all posts

Friday, August 03, 2012

[Viet] Students abducted to Cambodia for ransom [-Could the culprits be Vietnamese also?]

Mr. Dang, N’s father, reports the kidnapping to police (Photo: Cong An Nhan Dan Online)

Thu, August 2, 2012
Tuoitrenews

Police in Binh Phuoc Province are investigating a case in which two students reported that they had been kidnapped by a man to Cambodia for a US$8,000 ransom.

After V.V.N and N.V.L, who are both 16 years old and grade 10 students at a local school, were released to Vietnam on July 29, their fathers reported the case to police on July 31.

The victims’ families live in Tan Phu Town, Dong Phu District.

According to their reports, on July 26, when they were going out, N and L met a man, their acquaintance who is about 30 years old, in the town.

The man lured the students to visit Cambodia to gamble, but the students refused, saying they had no money. The man then said they “could gamble there without needing to have money.

Monday, December 05, 2011

Arrest warrant issued for Nguon Soeur in the kidnapping of General So Phorn's son

លោក ងួន សឿ - Nguon Soeur, the alleged mastermind in the kidnapping

ចេញ​ដីកា​ចាប់​ខ្លួន​ងួន សឿ​ ៖ បទ​ឧក្រិដ្ឋ​ចាប់​ជំរិត​ទារ​ប្រាក់​កូន​ប្រុស​លោក​សូ ផន ត្រូវ​បាន​លាត​ត្រដាង

ថ្ងៃសុក្រ ទី២ ខែធ្នូ ឆ្នាំ២០១១ ម៉ោង ១៧:១៥
ដោយ​ ៖ ប្រុសកោះ
កោះសន្តិភាព


Synopsis: On 02 December, The Phnom Penh municipal court issued an arrest warrant against Nguon Soeur for the kidnapping of the son of So Phorn and for collecting $400,000 to $500,000 in ransom money. The affair also involved a Lexus RX300 vehicle belonging to Nguon Soeur. Suth Sophy, the first man who was arrested in the kidnapping case, confessed that the top chief is Nguon Soeur. However before confessing about his chief, Suth Sophy asked the cops to protect his life because his chief is allegedly very cruel. According to Suth Sophy, his chief and his gang have access to guns equipped with laser pointer and silencer that can shoot and kill targets up to 150 meters away. Suth Sophy claimed that during meetings with Nguon Soeur, the latter made every promised that, in case of arrest, they will not reveal the names of others, otherwise all family members of the blabber mouth will be killed. Both Sao Bon, the other suspect arrested in this case, and Suth Sophy claimed that they received their orders from Nguon Soeur.

រាជធានីភ្នំពេញ ៖ សាលាដំបូង​រាជធានី​ភ្នំ​ពេញ​​ បាន​ចេញដីកា​ចាប់​ខ្លួន​ ងួន សឿ ជាផ្លូវ​ការ​ហើយ​កាលពី​ថ្ងៃ​ទី​២​ ធ្នូ បន្ទាប់​ពី​បាន​ត្រួត​ពិនិត្យ​យ៉ាង​ល្អិតល្អន់​​លើសំណុំរឿង​ចាប់​ជំរិត​កូន​ប្រុស​លោក​ សូ ផន ​ជារឿង​រ៉ាវ​ចាប់​ជំរិតគួរ​ឱ្យ​ភ្ញាក់​ផ្អើល​បំផុត​កាលពី​ខែតុលាកន្លង​មក​ ដែល​តាម​ព័ត៌​មាន​ថា ក្រុមជនចាប់​ជំរិត​ទារ​ប្រាក់​បាន​ក្នុង​ចន្លោះ​​ពី​៤០ទៅ​៥០​ម៉ឺន​ដុល្លារ​ ។ ទាក់ទង​នឹង​រឿង​រ៉ាវ​​មេ​ខ្លោង​ចាប់​ជំរិត​នេះ​ក៏​បាន​បែក​ធ្លាយ​បន្ទាប់​ពី​រថយន្តឡិច​ស៊ីសRX៣០០ ពណ៌​ស្ករ​មួយ​គ្រឿង​ដែល​ក្រុម​ឧក្រិដ្ឋ​ជន​ចាប់​ជំរិត​ប្រើ​ប្រាស់​គឺជា​រថយន្ត​លោក ងួន សឿ ។

ជន​សង្ស័យ​ឈ្មោះ​ស៊ុត សុភី​ ដែលជា​មនុស្ស​ដំបូង​តែម្នាក់​ត្រូវ​បាន​ចាប​់ខ្លួនដោយ​កង​រាជ​អាវុធ​​ហត្ថ​មុនពេល​ចូល​ពន្ធនាគារ​ព្រៃ​ស បាន​សារភាព​ថា ​មេខ្លោង​ធំជាង​គេ​ក្នុង​ករណី​ចាប់​លោក សូ​ អាកណូ កូនប្រុស​លោក​សូ ផន ​អនុ​រដ្ឋ​​លេខា​ធិ​ការ​ក្រសួង​មហា​ផ្ទៃ​គឺ​ឈ្មោះ​ងួ​ន តឿ ហៅ​ ​មេធំដែល​គ្មាន​នរណាក្រៅពី​ងួន សឿ ឡើយ​។ ​ងួន សឿ​ ត្រូវ​ក្រុម​របស់​គេ​ដាក់​នាម​ឱ្យ​ថា ជាមេ​ធំ​។
មន្ត្រី​សមត្ថកិច្ច​កងរាជ​អាវុធហត្ថ​លើ​ផ្ទៃ​ប្រទេស​បាន​ប្រាប់​កោះ​សន្តិភាព​ថា ជនសង្ស័យ​ឈ្មោះ​ស៊ុត សុភី​ បាន​សារភាព​អស់ពី​សកម្មភាព​ក្រុម​របស់​ពួក​គេ​ ក្នុង​ការ​ចាប់​ជំរិត​កូន​ប្រុស​លោក​សូ ផន ។ ជន​សង្ស័យ​ឈ្មោះ​ស៊ុត សុភី​ មាន​អាយុ​៣៨ឆ្នាំ ជា​អតីត​​យោធាការ​ពារ​ព្រំ​ដែន​ត្រូវ​សមត្ថ​កិច្ច​ការិយាល័យ​ស្រាវជ្រាវ​បទ​ល្មើស​ព្រហ្មទណ្ឌ​នៃ​ទី​បញ្ជាការ​កង​រាជ​អាវុធ​ហត្ថ​លើ​ផ្ទៃ​ប្រទេស​ឃាត់​ខ្លួន​កាលពី​ថ្ងៃទី​២៣ វិច្ឆិកា នៅ​ខេត្ត​មណ្ឌលគិរី ពាក់ព័ន្ធ​ក្នុង​ករណី​ចាប់​កូន​ប្រុស​លោក សូ ផន ជំរិត​ទារប្រាក់​ ។

Thursday, December 01, 2011

Plan to kidnap tycoon and son of 3-star general for millions of dollars in ransom failed - គ្រោងចាប់ជំរិតឧកញ៉ា និងកូនផ្កាយ៣ ទារ ប្រាក់រាប់លានដុល្លារតែត្រូវបរាជ័យ

Search conducted for the arrest of the former deputy national police commissioner who was the mastermind and his gang

28 Nov 2011
By Tep Mono
Dap-news
Translated from Khmer by Soch

Phnom Penh – Soon trans-border criminals will be revealed to the public after two of their accomplices were arrested one after another. Furthermore, the military police is also on active search for these criminals.

A source from the military police quoted one of the criminals as saying that if the kidnapping of the son of General So Phon was successful, they also plan to kidnap a tycoon who owns a beer company and [his family] would be asked to pay a ransom of $5 million. Next, they also plan to kidnap the son of a 3-star general during the upcoming election, but the plans hatched by the trans-border criminals failed after 2 of their accomplices were arrested and 6 are currently being searched by the cops after they fled.

The source indicated that the mastermind in the kidnapping of General So Phon, the undersecretary of state of the ministry of Interior, is Nguon Soeur, the former deputy national police commissioner and former president of the Khmer People Party. Nguon Soeur is a Cambodian expat who lived in France and a warrant was also issued for his arrest and his perpetual jailing (KI-Media note: How could he be sent to jail without proper trial. Ah, this is the Kingdoom of Wonder after all!). The accomplices of Nguon Soeur are: (1) Sem Sopheap, a Cambodian expat living in France, (2) Hun Vanna aka Leang Ban aka Lvea Chek aka Thy, (3) Vann, (4) Cheat Vichit, (5) Khly Sophy. The two accomplices who were arrested are: (1) 38-year-old Suth Sophy and (2) Sao Bon.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Another arrest in kidnap case

Tuesday, 29 November 2011
Kim Yuthana
The Phnom Penh Post

A second man was arrested yesterday over the kidnapping of Sau Akno, the son of General Sau Phan, deputy director of the general commissariat of the National Police, police said.

Sao Bon, 40, was charged with kidnapping Sau Akno on October 3 and faces up to 30 years in prison if convicted.

Sear Sambath, chief of the penal crime investigation office at national military police, said Sao Bon was arrested on Sunday in Kampong Trabaek district, Kandal province.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Peal Si Peal: Kidnapper mastermind escaped safely to France


http://www.box.com/s/v8zvdgqx6no2e3aqdcmx

Nguon Soeur was the mastermind in the kidnapping of So Phorn’s son

27 Nov 2011
By Soy Sopheap
DAP-News
Translated from Khmer by Soch

Phnom Penh – An anonymous source from the military police informed DAP-news in the afternoon of 27 Nov 2011 that Nguon Soeur, the former deputy police commissioner in the 90s, was the mastermind in the kidnapping of General So Phorn’s son. So Phorn was also a former deputy police commissioner.

The same military police officer above indicated that after the ransom for the kidnapping was successfully obtained, suspect Nguon Soeur, who is also a friend of So Phorn, fled to France by plane through the Phnom Penh airport on 08 October 2011.

The same source indicated that one of Nguon Soeur’s accomplices, Hun Vanna aka Leang Ban aka Lvea Chek, fled to Thailand. Another accomplice, Sem Sotheat, fled to Thailand through the Poipet international border gate and later went to France.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Kidnappers release three-star general’s son

Tuesday, 25 October 2011
Buth Reaksmey Kongkea
The Phnom Penh Post

Kidnappers freed the son of a three-star general yesterday in what his father claimed was a case of mistaken identity that led the assailants to drop a US$500,000 ransom demand.

So Akno, the son of Lieutenant General So Phan, the deputy director of the general commissariat of the National Police, was kidnapped on October 8 by a group of armed men who police said then demanded $1 million ransom for his release.

But So Phan said that, having already halved their demand, the kidnappers released his son yesterday at 2am without extorting a cent from him.

Kidnap Victim Released Unharmed, Father Says [-DAP news claimed that $500,000 ransom was paid for his release]

Monday, 24 October 2011
Heng Reaksmey, VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
So Ath No was recovering from his ordeal and would not speak to reporters, So Phon said.
So Ath No, the 49-year-old son of a senior government official, was released by kidnappers in the predawn hours Monday, nearly two weeks after his abduction.

The kidnappers had originally asked for a $1 million ransom from his father, So Phon, who is an undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Interior.

So Phon said Monday he had paid no ransom and did not know the reason his son was released.

So Ath No was taken by four men from his home in Phnom Penh’s Russey Keo district on Oct 8. He was released around 1 pm in Tuol Kork district and took a motorcycle taxi home, So Phon said.

So Ath No was recovering from his ordeal and would not speak to reporters, So Phon said. He said he wanted to thank the kidnappers for releasing his son unharmed.

It remains unclear whether police have any leads in the kidnapping. Kiet Chantharith, a spokesman for the national police, said he had not been informed of So Ath No’s release.

Other police officials were not available for comment.
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ក្រុមចាប់ជម្រិត បានដោះលែងកូន លោក សូរ ផន ជាថ្នូរនឹងប្រាក់ ៥០ម៉ឺនដុល្លារ

Monday, 24 October 2011
ដោយ ៖ សយ សុភាព-DAP-New

ភ្នំពេញ ៖ យោងតាមប្រភពពីមន្ដ្រីនគរ បាលក្រសួងមហាផ្ទៃ បានប្រាប់មជ្ឈមណ្ឌល ព័ត៌មាន ដើម អម្ពិលឱ្យដឹងថា នៅថ្ងៃចន្ទ ទី ២៤ ខែតុលា ថា ចំណាប់ខ្មាំង លោក សូរ អាកណូ អាយុ៤២ឆ្នាំ ដែលត្រូវជាកូនប្រុស លោក សូរ ផន មន្ដ្រីជាន់ខ្ពស់ក្រសួងមហាផ្ទៃ ដែលត្រូវបានក្រុមចាប់ជម្រិត ចាប់កាលពីប៉ុន្មានសបា្ដហ៍កន្លងទៅនេះ បានមានសេរី ភាពវិញហើយ បន្ទាប់ពីក្រុមគ្រួសារ យកប្រាក់ ៥០ម៉ឺនដុល្លារសហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក តាមការទាមទាររបស់ពួកគេ ។ ប៉ុន្ដែជាជំហានដំបូង ក្រុមចាប់ជម្រិត មកទទួល លុយមុនការដោះលែងនេះ បានធ្វើឡើង កាលពីវេលាយប់ថ្ងៃអាទិត្យ ទី២៣ ខែតុលា ម៉ោង ១០និង៤០នាទី នៅក្រោយមន្ទីរពេទ្យ របេង ក្បែរលូទឹកស្អុយ ស្ថិតក្នុងខណ្ឌ ចំការមន ។ រហូតដល់វេលាម៉ោង ១២យប់ ថ្ងៃអាទិត្យដដែល ទើបពួកក្រុមចាប់ ជម្រិតដោះ លែល ចំណាប់ខ្មាំងឱ្យធ្វើដំណើរ ទៅដល់ផ្ទះ ។

Saturday, April 03, 2010

Father searches for truth

Sam Bith (Photo: Reuters)
Chhouk Rin

April 3, 2010
SEBASTIAN STRANGIO
The Age (Australia)


Off a dusty track in Trapeang Chranieng village lies a half-finished Buddhist pagoda, its unpainted walls still exposed to the mid-afternoon sun. Like many across Cambodia, the new building - as well as a nearby shrine, built in 2007 - is dedicated to the spirits of those killed in the village while it was under the control of Khmer Rouge insurgents in the 1990s.

Now a small hamlet of thatch houses, there is little to hint at Trapeang Chranieng's tumultuous past. As a Khmer Rouge camp - part of the armed group's Phnom Voar (''Vine Mountain'') stronghold - the village was the last home of Melburnian David Wilson, Briton Mark Slater and Frenchman Jean-Michel Braquet, three tourists kidnapped when Khmer Rouge troops ambushed a Sihanoukville-bound train on July 26, 1994, killing 13 Cambodians.

Despite heated negotiations with Cambodian government officials to secure their release, the three were killed in early September as Phnom Voar came under fierce attack from government troops. When soldiers finally overran the area the following month, the bludgeoned bodies of the three men were found in a shallow grave at the foot of the hill.

At one hut, a former Khmer Rouge women's cadre recalled the "handsome" foreign men who arrived at the camp in July 1994. "When they came they were afraid at first, but after they [became at ease with] me, they always spent time with me and we talked a lot, even though I didn't understand what they said," said Keo Gnov, who cooked for the hostages during their six-week stay.

Upon their arrival, she said, Wilson, Slater and Braquet did not take well to the rice-based Khmer diet, but were able to survive on potatoes, sugar cane and coconuts that she foraged for them. The 63-year-old, now bent by years of back-breaking rural labour, giggled like a young woman when recalling an incident during their first days at the camp, when the captives scandalised local villagers by showering naked in the open. The three quickly learned to wear a cotton krama.

Although the captives were confined to the camp, they were not mistreated, Keo Gnov said, and they were largely free to walk about as they pleased. But her bright eyes dimmed when she recalled the government's frequent artillery offensives on the area, when the mood of the hostages fluctuated between relative relaxation and fear for their lives.

"When the Cambodian government soldiers opened fire, they put their arms around me and we hid in the trenches together, and at night we slept together in that wooded house," she said. "I loved them as my sons, and I saw that they loved me as their mother."

Keo Gnov said she was moved out of the area as the government forces intensified their assault on Phnom Voar and heard only several months later that the hostages had been killed. "I shed many tears when I got the news that they were killed. I wanted to help in their release, but I couldn't because the area was surrounded by Khmer Rouge and government soldiers," she said.

Fifteen years after the 1994 hostage affair, the Victorian Coroner's Court is preparing to reopen its inquest into Wilson's killing - adjourned in 2007 - after the delivery of a case file by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The "secret" file is believed to include hundreds of documents and diplomatic cables detailing the Australian government's day-by-day response to the crisis.

Alastair Gaisford, who was consul at the Australian embassy in Phnom Penh at the time of the kidnappings, says the file shows Canberra had foreknowledge of the Cambodian military's planned attack against Phnom Voar beginning in August 1994, but "did nothing" to stop it.

In an article published in The Age on February 8, he described the David Wilson case as a "a total failure" of the government's hostage policy. In particular, he said that then foreign minister Gareth Evans, who enjoyed a close personal friendship with senior Cambodian officials, particularly with co-prime ministers Norodom Ranarridh and Hun Sen, ignored the embassy's advice that he should travel to Cambodia in an effort to immediately ensure a halt to the offensive. "The Australian government already knew and approved of a Cambodian government plan for full-scale attack on the hostage mountain, which would place their lives in danger, only a week later," he wrote.

Gaisford said in an interview last month that the government-led negotiations - which were successful in negotiating the three captives' release in exchange for $US150,000 cash - crumbled under the government's subsequent military offensive. As a result, he said, two agreed releases scheduled for August 19 and 26 were aborted and led directly to the killing of the hostages at dawn on September 8.

Gaisford also cited the March 31 kidnapping of US national Melissa Himes, also by Khmer Rouge troops at Phnom Vour, as an example of the positive outcome that could have been reached in Wilson's case. After her kidnapping, then US ambassador to Cambodia, Charles "Chuck" Twining, put immediate pressure on the Cambodian government not to attack the mountain, threatening a withdrawal of promised military aid if they did not comply. Following negotiations with Family Health International, the non-government organisation that had employed her, Himes was released on May 10 for one truckload of food and building supplies costing only $US5000. All this happened, Gaisford said, despite the $US50,000 ransom payment demanded by General Nuon Paet, the head of the Phnom Voar base and commander of Khmer Rouge Division 405, for Himes' release - the same amount that would be demanded for Wilson, Slater and Braquet.

Not much remains today of the Khmer Rouge base at Phnom Voar. After the stronghold was overrun in late 1994, the remaining troops turned in their weapons and descended to the surrounding plains, returning to rural life. Chamkar Bay village, set inland from the palm-swept shores of the Gulf of Thailand, is today populated with former cadres who have taken a new turn as farmers, vendors, local government officials and cultivators of the famed Kampot pepper vine. Prak Sothy, 63, a former Khmer Rouge commander who once bore the nom de guerre Chum Nuong, still retains shades of the idealistic young man who took up then Prince Norodom Sihanouk's call to join the Khmer Rouge resistance in the mid-1970s. Dressed in a baggy military shirt and torn green trousers, Prak Sothy's former leadership role has secured him a prominent place in the community. Following the arrest in 1999 of General Nuon Paet for the killing of the hostages - and the subsequent arrest of his subordinates, Colonel Chhouk Rin and General Sam Bith - he is now the highest-ranking former cadre still living in the village.

During an interview at his home in Chamkar Bay last month, Prak Sothy confirmed that the Cambodian government's three-month siege of Phnom Voar divided the local Khmer Rouge leadership and led to the sudden, unplanned killing of the three hostages. He recalled first hearing of the killings when he arrived at the camp early in the morning after returning from the front line.

His said his wife told him that Angkar, as the Khmer Rouge "organisation" was known, had taken them to "a higher level" before she heard three shots to the west of the village. Prak Sothy, now a commune councillor, said he later learned that Nuon Paet had been in favour of a ransom exchange, but that two low-level officers - whom he identified only as Vorn and Bon - were angered by the attack and decided to execute the hostages themselves. Vorn and Bon were subsequently shot on Nuon Paet's orders, he said, for having sacrificed the $150,000 ransom payments.

You Yi, another former Khmer Rouge soldier living in Chamkar Bay, agreed that the three hostages were killed as a result of the intensifying government offensive on Phnom Voar. He added, however, that a dubious middleman had also contributed to the hostages' death by grossly misrepresenting ransom demands to their Khmer Rouge captors. "They wanted to cheat the Khmer Rouge soldiers. The victims' families agreed to give us $50,000 for each of the hostages, but [the middleman] told the Khmer Rouge soldiers the figure was only $7000. When they found out the real price, with the situation destabilised by the Cambodian government attack, they were killed," he said.

Last month, lawyers for Colonel Rin, the former regimental commander in Division 405, said their client would soon seek a royal pardon for his role in the killings, on the grounds of ill health. Both men said they sympathised with Chhouk Rin, who was handed a life sentence in 2002 for leading the train ambush that netted Wilson, Slater and Braquet.

"Chhouk Rin only arrested the three of them; he did not kill them. After he joined with the government he tried to negotiate their release," said Prak Sothy. While his efforts came too late to save the hostages, Prak Sothy said Chhouk Rin should be released as a token of goodwill.

As the government in Victoria prepares to reconvene its inquest after a three-year hiatus, Peter Wilson, David's father, expressed hopes the process might finally shed light on his son's death at Phnom Voar. Wilson said he did not level all the blame at the local Khmer Rouge; instead, pointing the finger at the political machinations of the Cambodian and Australian governments. "Politically, the Australian government was not willing to go in hard enough to do something about Hun Sen."

Despite 15 years of trying to obtain documents through freedom-of-information laws, he said the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade was still withholding large sections of the Wilson case file. "They don't want it to come out for many reasons - some maybe are justifiable, but others could be just to protect themselves from what they failed to do."

But following a February request from the Coroner's Court for 157 pages of top-secret documents to be released by the government, he said the full story may now be told. "It's the truth that we want," Wilson said. "David and his friends could have been saved."

Sebastian Strangio is a journalist on The Phnom Penh Post.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Chinese man arrested in Cambodia on terrorism charges

The hostage, a Chinese woman, was rescued by police and taken to hospital (Photo: Chulthea, Koh Santepheap)
The hostage taker stabbed himself while trying to commit suicide (Photo: Chulthea, Koh Santepheap)

Dec 22, 2008
DPA

Phnom Penh - A Chinese national was arrested and charged with kidnapping and terrorism offences in Cambodia, national media reported Monday.

Police on Sunday arrested Hour Ming, 33, after he allegedly held hostage Seang Youhour, 34, for 13 hours in his house in the capital Phnom Penh and threatened to set off a bomb if officers tried to raid the building, The Phnom Penh Post reported.

The man slashed the victim's face with a knife and stabbed himself in the chest as police raided the house early Sunday morning, officials said.

Police said the suspect and the victim were being treated in a Phnom Penh hospital.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

When it rains, it pours: 24 December - Another court hearing for Heng Pov

Saturday, December 22, 2007
Everyday.com.kh
Translated from Khmer by Socheata

The Koh Santepheap newspaper reported that on Monday 24 December, i.e. next week, the Phnom Penh municipal court will hold a hearing about the case of Heng Pov, the former police commissioner of the City of Phnom Penh, who imprisoned the owner of the Reatrey Rik Reay (Happy Evening) restaurant to demand a $300,000 ransom. Chheang Huot, the owner of the restaurant and victim, was imprisoned in 2002, and since the arrest of its owner, the restaurant, located near the former T3 prison, closed its door. Since his deportation back to Cambodia after fleeing overseas, Heng Pov was sentenced in several criminal cases, and his current sentence amounted to 40-year of jail time. In the hearing in this additional case which will take place next week, it is not known yet how many more years of jail sentence the court will hand him.