• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Tonychat's favourite Country - Girl, 13, raped and killed on a train in Thailand

eErotica69

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Girl, 13, raped and killed on a train in Thailand

Police say the body of a 13-year-old Thai girl has been found after she was raped and killed aboard an overnight train.

The attack has caused a huge uproar in the Southeast Asian nation, where social media users have called for rapists to be executed.

Police Col. Napanwut Liemsa-nguan said rescuers found the girl's body on Tuesday near the train tracks in Prachuap Khirikhan province, three days after she went missing.

He said police arrested a railway worker who confessed he assaulted and raped the girl before throwing her out of the moving train.

The girl had been traveling from southern Thailand to Bangkok with her two sisters in a sleeping coach. The train is also popular among backpackers traveling back from Thailand's island and beach resort destinations. AP

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...nd-killed-on-a-train-in-thailand-9591555.html
 

Jah_rastafar_I

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Editorial: Death Penalty Is Not The Solution To Rape
By Khaosod English

x14048273731404828783l.jpg.pagespeed.ic.7FzYBB9sDZ.jpg

Rape and murder suspect Wanchai Saengkhao (blue shirt) at the police press conference on 8 July 2014

BANGKOK: -- Punishing convicted rapists with the death penalty will not address the root causes of the problem.

This morning, an employee of State Railway of Thailand confessed to raping a 13-year-old girl on a night train from Surat Thani to Bangkok before throwing her body out the window.

Since then, 22-year-old Wanchai Sangkhao’s Facebook has been flooded with comments like “We won’t let you go to jail. You have to only be executed,” and "You only deserve execution, you scum. You should be publicly shot by firing squad."

An online petition on calling on Thai authorities to punish all rapists with the death penalty has already reached over 16,000 signatures.

While Mr. Wanchai’s actions — if his confession proves to be genuine — are indeed deplorable, we believe that Thais must not channel their outrage into calls for the death penalty.

There are many reasons why death penalty is not the solution, including:

- The death penalty has not been proven to be an effective deterrent against crime. Thai laws use the death penalty against drug criminals, murderers, and coup planners (Section 113 of Criminal Code), yet these offenses remain rampant.

- Criminology experts have warned that using the death penalty in rape cases may put victims in even greater danger, as it may lead perpetrators to murder victims in an effort to cover up the crime. Women rights groups have also argued that equating rape with murder is psychologically harmful to rape victims because it contributes to the view that “rape is a fate worse than death” and that victims are “permanently damaged.”

- Thailand's justice system is not reliable enough to be responsible for decisions about life and death. Thai courts have an extensive history of falsely convicting defendants and police have been known to force suspects to confess to crimes they did not commit.

The most notorious case is the 1986 murder of Thai-American teenage girl Sherry Ann Duncan, for which four men were falsely convicted and imprisoned. Although the Supreme Court acquitted the defendants six years later, one defendant had already died in prison.

- Thailand does not need a greater punishment for rape; it just needs better law enforcement. Putting rapists in prison is sufficient. Making their punishment more severe will do nothing to prevent rape as long as law enforcement authorities are apathetic about pursuing cases of sexual assault.

According to Yanee Lertkrai, director of the Department of Social Development and Welfare, many sexual assault victims say police have done little to follow up on their complaints. Furthermore, the lack of convictions by authorities has discouraged victims from pursuing cases against perpetrators because they think there's little chance of achieving justice.

- Lastly, it is especially unwise to normalise the use of the death penalty while the country remains under the military rule of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO). Without secure human rights, there is dangerous potential for capital punishment to be gravely abused.

In an effort to shore up support, the NCPO has extensively publicized its effort to stamp out crime. It is conceivable that the NCPO could follow in the footsteps of Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat and use corporal punishment to bolster its "tough-on-crime" image.

Field Marshal Sarit ruled Thailand with an iron fist from 1958 to his death in 1963, and is still praised among older Thais for his harsh crackdown on crime, which involved publicly executing scores of suspected criminals without proper trials. To avoid a repeat of this history, it's important not to grant the NCPO greater powers of punishment.

In conclusion, punishing convicted rapists with the death penalty will not address the root causes of the problem, may worsen the experience of victims, and could lead to irreversible tragedies for innocent people in Thailand.

Source: http://en.khaosod.co...73&section=0200


-- Khaosod English 2014-07-09
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Editorial: Death Penalty Is Not The Solution To Rape
By Khaosod English

x14048273731404828783l.jpg.pagespeed.ic.7FzYBB9sDZ.jpg

Rape and murder suspect Wanchai Saengkhao (blue shirt) at the police press conference on 8 July 2014

i seem to notice that the Thai police who caught the criminals , always took family photo with them.. why they need to do that? i dun understand.
 
Top