Philippine Death Toll From Christmas Rains and Floods Rises to 13

The death toll from Christmas Day rains in southern Philippines has risen to 13, authorities said on Tuesday, with the search still on for 23 people as floods started to recede.

 

Most of the deaths were caused by drowning from flash floods after two days of heavy rains disrupted Christmas celebrations and forced more than 45,000 people to take shelter in evacuation centers, the disaster agency said.

 

Images on social media show coast guard, police and fire personnel wading through waist-deep floods and carrying residents along landslide-hit areas. Some roads were flooded by overflowing rivers nearby.

Rescue operations continued and damage to agriculture was being assessed, Carmelito Heray, head of the disaster agency in Clarin town in Misamis Occidental province, told DZBB radio station.

 

There was no tropical storm in the mostly Catholic nation’s most important holiday. But a shear line, an area where warm and cold winds meet, caused rain clouds to form in southern Philippines.

 

“The big damage here is livestock because their adult pigs, chickens, goats and cows are now gone,” Clarin town mayor Emeterio Roa said on radio.

 

Source: Voice of America

‘Serpent’ Serial Killer Charles Sobhraj Arrives in France After Release

PARIS — French serial killer Charles Sobhraj, responsible for multiple murders in the 1970s across Asia, arrived in France on Saturday after almost 20 years in prison in Nepal.

 

Nepal’s top court ruled on Wednesday that he should be freed on health grounds and deported to France within 15 days.

 

On Friday, he was released and put on a flight at Kathmandu airport to take him to Paris via Doha. While on the flight to Doha, he insisted to an AFP journalist that he was “innocent.”

 

Sobhraj’s life was chronicled in the series “The Serpent,” co-produced by Netflix and the BBC.

 

Posing as a gem trader, he would befriend his victims, many of them Western backpackers on the 1970s hippie trail, before drugging, robbing and murdering them.

 

“I feel great… I have a lot to do. I have to sue a lot of people. Including the state of Nepal,” Sobhraj told AFP on Friday onboard the plane.

 

Asked if he thought he had been wrongly described as a serial killer, the 78-year-old said: “Yes, yes.”

 

He landed in the French capital Saturday morning, an AFP reporter confirmed.

 

On arrival at Paris, he was taken away by border police for extra “identity checks,” according to an airport source.

 

The airport source said he was “not wanted” by the authorities in France and that once all the checks had been carried out, he would be able to leave the airport.

 

‘Bikini killer’

 

Born in Saigon to an Indian father and a Vietnamese mother who later married a Frenchman, Sobhraj embarked on an international life of crime and ended up in Thailand in 1975.

 

Suave and sophisticated, he was implicated in the murder of a young American woman, whose body was found on a beach wearing a bikini.

 

Nicknamed the “bikini killer,” Sobhraj was eventually linked to more than 20 murders.

 

He was arrested in India in 1976 and ultimately spent 21 years in jail there, with a brief break in 1986 when he drugged prison guards and escaped. He was recaptured in the Indian coastal state of Goa.

 

Released in 1997, Sobhraj lived in Paris, giving paid interviews to journalists, but went back to Nepal in 2003.

 

‘Karma’

 

He was spotted in a casino playing baccarat by journalist Joseph Nathan, one of the founders of the Himalayan Times newspaper, and arrested.

 

“He looked harmless… It was sheer luck that I recognized him,” Nathan told AFP on Thursday.

 

“I think it was karma.”

 

A court in Nepal handed Sobhraj a life sentence the following year for killing U.S. tourist Connie Jo Bronzich in 1975. A decade later, he was also found guilty of killing Bronzich’s Canadian companion.

 

Talking to AFP among bemused fellow Qatar Airways passengers on Friday, Sobhraj insisted he was innocent of the killings in Nepal.

 

“The courts in Nepal, from (the) district court to high court to supreme court, all the judges, they were biased against Charles Sobhraj,” he said.

 

“I am innocent in those cases, OK? So I don’t have to feel bad for that, or good. I am innocent. It was built on fake documents,” he added.

 

Thai police officer Sompol Suthimai — whose work with Interpol was instrumental in securing the 1976 arrest — had pushed for Sobhraj to be extradited to Thailand and tried for murders there.

 

But Thursday, Sompol told AFP he did not object to the release, as both he and the criminal he once pursued were now too old.

 

“I don’t have any feelings towards him now that it’s been so long,” said Sompol, 90.

 

“I think he has already paid for his actions.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Former Judge on China’s Top Court Suggests End to Prosecution of ‘Zero-COVID’ Violators

A former judge of the Supreme People’s Court, the highest court in China, is calling for the suspension or revocation of cases against some 80 people found guilty of violating “zero-COVID” policy regulations since the advent of omicron, a less deadly variant that began spreading in December 2021.

China implemented the zero-COVID policy in January 2020, the month after the virus was first detected in humans in Wuhan. Anyone convicted of obstructing the prevention and control of COVID-19 faced a prison sentence of three to seven years, according to regulations set forth by the National Health and Medical Commission of China on January 20, 2020.

Offenses included leaving home during lockdown

The offenses included violations such as leaving home during a lockdown without official authorization and concealing travel plans. Both made it difficult for authorities to trace contacts and contain the virus. Other offenses included avoiding quarantine, concealing close contact history and refusing to perform duties related to COVID containment.

Huang Yingsheng, the former judge, posted on December 10 on the Chinese blogging platform Baidu Baijiahao that because Beijing has relaxed its zero-COVID policy, it is no longer appropriate to prosecute, convict and punish people for violating containment regulations. He posted on the topic again on Monday.

In an interview published Tuesday in the Economic Observer Network, a weekly government-run newspaper, Huang emphasized that since COVID mutated into the less deadly omicron strain in November 2021, “cases where people have been criminally or administratively punished for spreading the virus should also be corrected.”

In cases that originated after the advent of omicron but that are still in progress, Huang said, the trial should be terminated, the accused acquitted, and the case withdrawn without further prosecution. For cases in which a sentence has been imposed, the verdict should be overturned and those who are imprisoned should be freed. And, like those whose sentence was a period of probation, their record should be cleared.

Wang Quanzhang, a Chinese human rights lawyer, said that the Law on the Prevention and Control of Infectious Diseases fails to specify exactly what is illegal.

“The law is defined by specific law enforcement officers and judiciary,” Wang told VOA Mandarin. “The scope of attack is very large. Even if someone’s travel code has an error, or he fails to report his travel history truthfully, he may be arrested and charged for this crime.”

Cases still under investigation

Cai Fan, a retired associate professor of law at Wenzhou City University in Zhejiang, suggested that it would be difficult for authorities to adopt Huang’s recommendations, saying, “After three years of COVID prevention, some people have been detained and sentenced. If you delete all the cases of these people, then the country will have to pay compensation. How can that be possible?”


Zero-COVID criminal cases in Sichuan, Hunan and Shanxi provinces and elsewhere are still under investigation. At least three infected people in Hunan were being investigated for not reporting their infections to the community, not wearing masks when they entered and exited multiple public places, or for infecting other people, according to a local news network run by the government.

Wang, the human rights lawyer, believes it may be difficult to change the course of prosecution.

“Excessive reliance on the law makes it difficult to correct unjust, false and wrongly decided cases even if new situations arise,” he said. “But [the] mechanism is top-down. New regulations need to be issued and a systematic correction needs to be adopted. By then, some innocent people may have been locked up for a long time.”

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Nine Dead, Two Injured From Coal Mine Explosion In Western Indonesia

JAKARTA, A coal mine exploded in Indonesia’s western province of West Sumatra yesterday, leaving nine workers dead, two others injured and one missing, an official said.

 

The explosion in the mine, located in Sawahlunto town, occurred at about 8: 30 a.m. local time, press officer of the provincial search and rescue office, Arief Pratama said, via the phone.

 

“Nine people were killed by the blast. Two others sustained serious wounds,” Pratama said.

 

The wounded persons have been sent to a nearby hospital for treatment, according to him.

 

A search and rescue operation for the missing person is being carried out now, he said.

 

Source: Nam Network

Violence, Despair in Bangladesh’s Rohingya Camps Driving Spike in Deadly Sea Crossings

Rising despair and violence in Bangladesh’s teeming refugee camps are driving what the United Nations calls a “dramatic increase” in ethnic Rohingya risking perilous journeys across the Andaman Sea in search of better lives abroad, refugees and rights groups have told VOA.

 

More than a million predominantly Muslim Rohingya now live in the camps after being driven from their homes in Buddhist-majority Myanmar by decades of persecution, including a 2017 campaign of murder, rape and arson by security forces that the U.N. called “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

 

Earlier this month the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees issued a public “alert” to warn of the sharp rise this year in the number of people, mostly Rohingya, fleeing both Bangladesh and Myanmar by boat. Most head for Muslim-majority Malaysia or Indonesia, and many who board the old and overcrowded boats die or are lost along the way.

 

According to the December 2 alert, some 1,920 people have made the trip since January, and 119 of them are reported to have died or gone missing. That compares with fewer than 300 people who made the trip and 29 reported dead or missing in 2021.

 

“The sense of desperation is growing,” Babar Baloch, a spokesman for the UNHCR told VOA.

 

Most of the Rohingya in the camps arrived in 2017, but some have been there for decades.

 

Muhammed, a Rohingya refugee living in the camps and who asked that his last name not be used, said more and more of them are losing hope of returning to Myanmar, where they are denied citizenship and the military, which orchestrated the 2017 pogroms, toppled the country’s elected government in a 2021 coup.

 

“We had hope that one day we can go back to our country with the support of the international community,” he said.

 

“But right now … we don’t know how many years we will need to wait to go back to our country. No one is putting to the Myanmar government strong pressure to take [us] back,” he added. “So right now what should we do?… We try to go to some country like Malaysia and Thailand … because we are losing hope.”

 

He said he tried leaving for Malaysia by boat himself but was caught by local authorities before reaching the coast and sent back to the camps.

 

Muhammed and rights workers familiar with camp conditions say life for the refugees in Bangladesh is also getting tougher, with rising gang violence and mounting restrictions on their movement outside and even between the camps, limiting their ability to work, and shrinking opportunities for an education.

 

“If you were 8 years old and now you are 13 and you want to study and there is no education opportunity in Bangladesh … and when you were 15 when you [fled] from Burma [Myanmar’s former name] and you are now 20 and you want to have a life of your own and these things are not there, the future seems very, very, very dark,” said Aung Kyaw Moe, an ethnic Rohingya and adviser to Myanmar’s so-called National Unity Government, a shadow government in hiding and self-exile aiming to topple to junta.

 

A few hundred thousand Rohingya still live in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state, many of them in guarded and fenced-off camps built by the military after a 2012 wave of deadly communal violence between local Muslims and Buddhists.

 

Those Rohingya are now caught in the middle of renewed clashes between the military and the Arakan Army, one of several ethnic minority armed groups in Myanmar fighting for autonomy. Rights groups say dozens of civilians have died in the crossfire.

 

That, too, is driving growing numbers of Rohingya to take to the Andaman Sea from Rakhine, said John Quinley of the research and advocacy group Fortify Rights.

 

The fighting in Rakhine is “creating major difficulties for villagers living in those parts of the country, and a lot of those villagers are Rohingya people, and so they’re taking really risky journeys to try to access more opportunities in Malaysia and Thailand and other places,” he said.

 

UNHCR spokesman Baloch said the smugglers and human traffickers organizing the boat trips are also growing more sophisticated, finding new ways to reach and entice potential passengers via social media, and boarding them onto smaller, more evasive boats before transferring them onto larger ships once out at sea.

 

The ultimate hope and goal of most refugees, aid agencies and governments is to create the conditions in Myanmar under which the Rohingya feel safe to return, including full citizenship rights. Most analysts and advocates say that remains a long way off.

 

Until then, Baloch said the UNHCR is trying to bring the numbers of people fleeing Bangladesh and Myanmar by boat down again by helping the countries ringing the Andaman Sea coordinate their efforts to stop the smuggling and trafficking networks moving them. He said the agency is also urging more governments to help Bangladesh shoulder more of the burden of hosting the more than 1 million refugees.

 

Quinley and Aung Kyaw Moe said Malaysia and Thailand must also stop their reported practice of sometimes ignoring the Rohingya-loaded boats that break down in their waters or even pushing them further out to sea, although the governments have disputed those accounts.

 

This year’s numbers are still well below what the U.N. has called the “crisis” levels of 2013 to 2015, when tens of thousands of Bengalis and Rohingya were crossing the Andaman Sea each year and several hundred died or went missing.

 

Unless conditions in Rakhine and the refugee camps of Bangladesh start improving soon, though, the numbers of Rohingya taking the dangerous journeys and dying along the way are expected to continue rising.

 

“If the situation remains like this, definitely there will be more people going, and people wouldn’t care much whether they will be alive or whether they will be dying,” said Aung Kyaw Moe. “These people are betting with their life because the land is much more catastrophic than the sea that they’re jumping in.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Indonesia Set to Pass New Criminal Code That Will Ban Sex Outside Marriage

Indonesia is expected to ratify sweeping changes to its criminal code Tuesday, senior officials confirmed, in a legal overhaul that critics say could wind back hard-won democratic freedoms and police morality in the Southeast Asian nation.

Among the most controversial revisions to the code are articles that would penalize sex outside of marriage with up to one year in jail, outlaw cohabitation between unmarried couples, insulting the president, and expressing views counter to the national ideology, known as the Pancasila.

Deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, Sufmi Dasco Ahmad, and Bambang Wuryanto, head of the parliamentary commission overseeing the revision, told Reuters Monday that parliament would hold a plenary session on Tuesday to ratify the new code.

The government and House of Representatives have agreed on the draft code, clearing a hurdle to its passage.

Decades in the making, the revision of the country’s colonial-era penal code has sparked mass protests in recent years, although the response has been considerably more muted this year.

Parliament had planned to ratify a draft new code in September 2019, but nationwide demonstrations over perceived threats to civil liberties halted its passage.

Legislators in the world’s third-largest democracy have since watered down some of the articles deemed most contentious.

Revised articles on sex outside marriage and cohabitation, for example, now state such complaints can only be reported by close relatives such as a spouse, parent or child, while insulting the president can only be reported by the president.

But legal experts and civil society groups say the changes don’t go far enough.

“This criminal code is a huge setback for Indonesia,” said Bivitri Susanti, a law expert from the Indonesia Jentera School of Law.

“The state cannot manage morality,” she said. “The government’s duty is not as an umpire between conservative and liberal Indonesia.”

Articles on customary law, blasphemy, protesting without notification and expressing views divergent from the Pancasila were all legally problematic because they could be widely interpreted, she said.

Once ratified, the new code will come into effect after three years as the government and related institutions draft related implementing regulations.

 

 

 

Source: Voice of America