Former police captain sentenced to three years in prison

Former Vietnamese policeman turned self-styled corruption buster Le Chi Thanh has been sentenced to three years in prison for defaming an unnamed deputy minister of public security

This was the second sentence for the former captain, who was an officer at Ham Tan prison camp.

The People’s Court of Ham Tan district in Binh Thuan province opened the trial on Wednesday, sentencing Thanh the same day.

The defendant was charged under the crime of “abusing democratic freedoms to infringe upon the interests of the State, the legitimate rights and interests of organizations and individuals,” under Article 331 of the Criminal Code.

Thanh was found guilty and sentenced to three years in prison.

According to lawyer Dang Dinh Manh, who defended Thanh, the prosecution relied on videos posted by the accused on Facebook as evidence against him:

“The prosecution agency relied on clips allegedly made by Le Chi Thanh himself, and posted on the social network Facebook with content that was ‘distorted and untrue’ infringing on state agencies such as courts, the police, a deputy minister of public security and an individual who is his former supervisor.”

Mr. Thanh’s former supervisor is Col. Le Ba Thuy, chief of Ham Tan prison, who was accused of corruption by Thanh.

According to the online news site VnExpress, Thanh claimed that Col. Thuy, the superintendent of Z30D Prison, had land and properties worth tens of billions of dong which he had received from an unknown source. Thanh reportedly asked the Central Party Committee of Public Security and Government’s Inspectorate to investigate his claims of corruption and confiscate the assets.

The police said that Col. Thuy and his wife only had a house in Tan Duc commune, Ham Tan district and that his family bought property in An Phu ward, Thu Duc city in 2014 with money accumulated from wages, livestock farming, and grocery trading.

The trial panel also said that a video posted on Facebook by Thanh, in which he claimed a deputy minister of public security abused his power to discipline Thanh, was misleading and untrue.

Thanh was disciplined by the Prison Management Department (Ministry of Public Security) for the allegation and expelled from the police force in July 2020.

After being sacked Thanh became active on social media, making live broadcasts monitoring the activities of the traffic police.

On April 14, 2021, he was arrested under the charge of “resisting on-duty state officials” and later sentenced to two years in prison by the Thu Duc city court in January 2022.

With the new sentence, Le Chi Thanh will serve two sentences at the same time with a total of five years in prison.

Commenting on the outcome of the trial, lawyer Dang Dinh Manh said, although the sentence was lighter than could have been handed down under Article 331, his view was that using articles such as 331 or 117 in the Criminal Code was unjust: “because I think it goes against the freedom of speech that Article 25 of the Constitution provides.”

“In the case of [the accused making] statements that unjustly affect the reputation, honor and dignity of agencies, organizations and individuals, they have the right to initiate civil lawsuits to request compensation for damage and that is enough. This is also consistent with the treatment given in many countries in the region and around the world,” he said.

Thanh’s mother, Le Thi Phu, said he would not file an appeal. Instead she plans to continue lobbying high-level officials in the police agency to reduce her son’s prison term.

Interview: Nury Turkel to ‘call China out’ for atrocities against Uyghurs, others

Uyghur-American lawyer Nury Turkel was unanimously elected chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), a bipartisan and independent federal government body. In a long career in advocacy, Turkel, who also serves as chairman of the board for the Uyghur Human Rights Project in Washington, he has played a major role in raising global awareness of the plight of the 12 million Uyghurs in the Chinese-controlled Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR). China’s targeting of Uyghurs in XUAR in a crackdown on the minority group and its language, religion, and culture that intensified in 2017, has been declared a genocide by the United States and other western governments. The 50-year-old Turkel, who was born in Kashgar in a detention camp during China’s Cultural Revolution and in 2020 became the first Uyghur-American appointed to the USCIRF, was welcomed as “a tremendous asset to both USCIRF and the mission of protecting religious freedom,” in a statement by Campaign for Uyghurs Executive Director Rushan Abbas.  He spoke with RFA Uyghur Director Alim Seytoff about his goals as 2022-23 USCIRF chair.

RFA: As a Uyghur American who’s elected as the USCIRF Chair, what does this position mean to you?

Turkel: It’s simply humbling to be elected by my fellow commissioners to lead the US government agency.  But, on the other hand, I feel incredibly proud and privileged to be a citizen of this wonderful country that has given me so much– freedom and now a leadership role that is both substantive and symbolic.  It is one of the great American stories for someone with my background—an immigrant and indirect victim of the Uyghur genocide. 

RFA: What are USCIRF plans to address China’s destruction of Uyghur Islam and genocide against Uyghurs?

Turkel: As part of our legislative mandate, we will continue to monitor China’s atrocities against the Uyghurs and other vulnerable ethnic and religious groups, making sure that our government continues to call China out for the ongoing Uyghur genocide and advocate for a strong policy response to stop the atrocities committed against the Uyghurs and others in communist China. 

RFA: Will the USCIRF work with its counterparts in other democracies to address the Uyghur Genocide?

Turkel:  USCIRF has advocated for multilateral and bilateral responses to the Uyghur crisis in light of its complex and global nature. As a result, the U.S. has led the efforts to raise awareness and press China to end persecution, shut down the camps, and end the enslavement of the Uyghurs. 

RFA: Will the USCIRF reach out to the Muslim countries and ask them to raise China’s genocide against Uyghur Muslims?

Turkel: We have [worked with] our State Department counterparts to engage with Muslim majority countries to speak out against China’s atrocities and join the US-led efforts to end the Uyghur genocide.

End of Mission Statement: Thomas Andrews, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar (23 June 2022)

KUALA LUMPUR The UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, today expressed his appreciation for Malaysia’s increasing leadership on the crisis in Myanmar, and urged States in the region to adopt a similar approach to the human rights catastrophe unfolding under military rule.

“Too much is at stake for Myanmar and its people to accept complacency and inaction by the international community,” Andrews said in a statement at the end of an eight-day visit to Malaysia.

“Junta forces have killed more than 2,000 civilians, arrested more than 14,000, displaced more than 700,000, driving the number of internally displaced persons well over one million, and plunged the country into an economic and humanitarian crisis that threatens the lives and wellbeing of millions.

“The military’s attacks on the people of Myanmar constitute crimes against humanity and war crimes. No one has been spared the impact of the military’s violence.”

Andrews said that even before the coup, the Myanmar military had committed atrocities against the people of Myanmar. “The Rohingya faced genocidal attacks by Myanmar security forces. I have learned that there are over 104,000 registered Rohingya in Malaysia who have fled from Myanmar seeking safe haven with untold numbers who are unregistered.

“My mission here provided me with a unique opportunity to sit face to face with dozens of courageous men and women and children .who fled the horrors that have engulfed many areas of Myanmar, including those who have recently arrived in Malaysia. They provided me with firsthand accounts of what they witnessed or directly experienced. These stories, without exception, emphasized the terror that is raging across the country

“A young woman told me: ‘You are walking on a path that you don’t know, towards a place you don’t know, and you could die on the way but you still go forward, because the persecution is worse behind you’.

Those who fled Myanmar also told Andrews about the challenges they faced in Malaysia, citing fears of being sent to migration detention, insufficient education opportunities for their children, and instances of extortion by police officers.

“Let me be clear, refugees from Myanmar are here because they were forced to come here. Their inability to return to their homes in Myanmar is directly linked to the military junta’s human rights violations and war against the people of Myanmar. It is impossible to address issues related to those seeking refuge in Malaysia and other nations in the region without directly and effectively addressing the crisis inside of Myanmar.,” Andrews said.

Malaysia not only recognizes this fact, it has been willing, through the words and actions of Foreign Minister Saifuddin, to challenge ASEAN to reexamine their current policy on Myanmar, the UN expert said, adding that Foreign Minister Saifuddin had called on ASEAN to move from a policy of “noninterference” to, in his words, one of “non-indifference”.

“Malaysia has given voice to the obvious fact that after more than one year, nothing has moved and since nothing has moved, more people are being killed and more people are being forced to flee the country,” Andrews said.

He has not only called for ASEAN to engage with the Myanmar National Unity Government, he has begun engaging with the National Unity Government’s Foreign Minister Zin Mar Aung, Andrews said.

“I look forward to working to support Malaysia’s foreign policy leadership on Myanmar, to affirm the human rights of a people under siege and to reduce the incredible scale of human suffering in Myanmar.”

Source: UN Human Rights Council

ICC Urged to Investigate China’s Treatment of Uyghurs

A group of lawyers has urged the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate China’s treatment of Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslim populations in the Xinjiang region.

The United States and other countries accuse China of subjecting those groups to genocide and crimes against humanity, including mass arbitrary detention, forced labor, torture, forced sterilization, separation of children from parents and destruction of minority culture. Beijing vehemently denies all accusations of human rights abuses in the region and says that all ethnic groups in Xinjiang live happily.

The lawyers, who represent Uyghurs in exile, say that on Monday they presented the ICC with new evidence of Beijing’s efforts “to round up Uyghurs in neighboring countries, including an ICC member state, and elsewhere, to force them back” to China.

“It also very sadly shows what happens to them once back in detention camps,” lead lawyer Rodney Dixon said in a statement emailed to VOA. “The ICC has jurisdiction over these crimes that commence on ICC territory and continue into China, and is urged to act immediately to open an investigation.”

This is the third dossier of evidence submitted to the ICC by the legal team since it filed an initial complaint two years ago.

That complaint was submitted June 6, 2020. Additional evidence was submitted July 10, 2021; November 2021; and this past Monday, according to the legal team.

After the first submission of evidence, ICC prosecutors said the court was unable to take up the case because the alleged abuses happened in China, which is not an ICC member state.

According to the lawyers, the last submission of evidence to ICC includes “firsthand evidence from a witness” who was deported to China, detained in internment camps and subjected to “interrogation and torture” before escaping from China in 2018.

“It shows that the Chinese government is implementing a policy of rounding up Uyghurs and other ethnically Turkic people from outside China, including ICC member states such as neighboring Tajikistan, and forcefully deporting them back to China,” the legal team said in a statement provided to VOA.

The lawyers want the ICC to follow a precedent set when it investigated cross-border crimes committed by nonmember state Myanmar after thousands of Rohingya people were forced to flee to Bangladesh, an ICC member state.

“The gravity of mass deportations and disappearances has rightly been recognized by the ICC prosecutor in stating that his office will gather evidence of Ukrainians being sent into Russia – similarly such evidence should be assembled and reviewed by the ICC for Uyghurs and others being forced into China from ICC territories,” Dixon said.

Other Uyghur witnesses who fled from Tajikistan to Turkey in 2018 described how China pressured police and immigration officials in Tajikistan to deport Uyghurs back to China.

Source: Voice of America

MAN CHARGED FOR POSSESSING MONIES SUSPECTED TO BE BENEFITS FROM PARCEL SCAM AND FOR FORGERY

On 23 June 2022, Lim Kok Tiong Danny, a 54-year-old man, was charged in court for two counts of possessing monies totalling $28,500, suspected to be the benefits of criminal conduct, in two of his bank accounts. The two bank accounts were purportedly used by criminals to launder proceeds of crime derived from Parcel Scams. He was also charged for allegedly forging an invoice for the purpose of cheating. The invoice is alleged to have been submitted to remittance agents when he arranged to remit money overseas.

On 12 August 2021, the Police received a report from a victim of a Parcel Scam who was defrauded into transferring $10,000 to a bank account as requested by her ‘online friend’.

Preliminary investigations revealed that the victim had befriended an unknown person over a social media platform. Within a month of meeting this person online, she was promised that she would receive a parcel containing money and jewellery from her friend. Subsequently, she received messages from a purported delivery company that her parcel had arrived at customs, but she was required to pay $10,000 in order not to subject her parcel to investigations for money laundering. The victim did as instructed and transferred $10,000 to a bank account specified by the delivery company. She only discovered that she had been cheated when police officers contacted her. Further investigations revealed that the bank account belonged to the 54-year-old man and it was operated by him.

Separately, police investigations further discovered $18,500 transferred by another Parcel Scam victim to the man’s other bank account.

The offence of possessing property reasonably suspected to be benefits of criminal conduct under Section 55 of the Corruption, Drug Trafficking and Other Serious Crimes (Confiscation of Benefits) Act carries an imprisonment term not exceeding 3 years or a fine not exceeding $150,000, or both.

The offence of forgery for the purpose of cheating under Section 468 of the Penal Code is liable to punishment with imprisonment for a term which may extend to 10 years, and a fine.

The Police take a serious view of the offences and will not hesitate to take action against any individuals involved in arrangements allowing their companies to be used for illegal purposes such as the laundering of criminal proceeds. To avoid being involved in money laundering activities, members of the public should always reject requests to share the use of their banking facilities to receive and transfer funds.

For more information on scams, members of the public can visit www.scamalert.sg or call the Anti-Scam Hotline at 1800-722-6688. Anyone with information on such scams may call the Police Hotline at 1800-255-0000 or submit information online at www.police.gov.sg/iwitness. All information will be kept strictly confidential.

Source: Singapore Police Force

Malaysia govt extends condolences to people of Afganistan following deadly earthquake

PUTRAJAYA, The Government of Malaysia extends its deepest condolences and sympathies to the people of Afghanistan following the devastating earthquake that struck the country on June 22.

The 6.1 magnitude earthquake in Afghanistan’s Paktika and Khost provinces resulted in heavy loss of lives with thousands of people injured and huge destruction to properties and public infrastructures.

The Foreign Ministry in a statement Thursday said the people of Malaysia were in solidarity with the people of Afghanistan during this difficult period.

“Our profound thoughts and prayers are with them particularly with those affected by the disaster.

“We pray that Allah SWT gives Afghanistan the strength and fortitude to overcome this calamity and a speedy recovery to those injured,” the statement read.

At least 1,000 people were killed while 1,500 others were injured in the quake – the deadliest to strike Afghanistan in two decades.

Source: Nam News Network