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<TABLE class=bodytext border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=560><TBODY><TR><TD class=bodytext height=7>>> ASIAONE / NEWS / THE NEW PAPER / STORY </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- start story details --><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=560><TBODY><TR><TD height=7 colSpan=3>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD class=content_subtitle align=left>Sat, May 29, 2010
The New Paper </TD></TR><TR><TD height=15>
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</TD></TR><!-- Story With Image End --><TR><TD class=bodytext_10pt colSpan=3><!-- CONTENT : start -->[Above: Pte Pritheevy was hurt on March 19 near Bangkok.]
By Arul John
SHOTGUN pellets were embedded in his face.
But full-time national serviceman (NSF) Pritheevy Raj, 19, did not even realise he had been shot at.
He thought someone had thrown a coconut at his face.
At about11pm Thai time (midnight Singapore time) on March 12, Private Pritheevy and First Sergeant Woo Teng Hai were accidentally shot by Thai villagers out hunting.
First Sgt Woo is an SAF regular from the 1st Commando Battalion.
The men were in a plantation in the Kanchanaburi province, west of Bangkok.
The night mission was part of the battalion's annual proficiency test, which is conducted by the Army Training Evaluation Centre (Atec), the unit where Pte Pritheevy is serving as a trooper.
Pte Pritheevy said that he, another sergeant from Atec, and 1st Sgt Woo had been lying prone in the plantation that night when the incident occurred.
He said: "I felt a blast in my face. At first, I thought someone had thrown a big coconut at me.
"Then I saw 1st Sgt Woo,who was beside me, bleeding badly from his face. I felt blood flowing from my face but no pain. The other sergeant from my unit was not injured."
His training kicked in. Pte Pritheevy took out his field dressing from his uniform and placed it on 1st Sgt Woo's face to stop the bleeding.
"He asked me if I knew what had happened to us. He said we had been shot and that was when I knew," he said.
Pte Pritheevy said the uninjured sergeant went to get help. Military officers and medics soon arrived on the scene. He and 1st Sgt Woo were treated and rushed to a Thai hospital.
Although Pte Pritheevy had surgery, he still has two pellets lodged in him.
Pte Pritheevy, who is particularly close to his mother, said: "While on the way to hospital, I kept saying that I want to meet my mother. I worry more about my mother than I worry about myself."
He had called his mother, Madam Isaac Kanaeswary, at least once a day from the time he was sent to Thailand for army training, on March 3.
On 3.40am on March 13, Madam Isaac got a different call. An SAF officer told her that Pte Pritheevy had been shot. Those words caused the 43-year-old, who works in sales, to panic.
She told The New Paper: "The officer told me that Pritheevy had been shot by some Thai villagers. I nearly fainted when I heard the news.
"But the officer assured me that my son was all right and let me talk to him. When I heard Pritheevy, he said he was calling from the hospital in Thailand.
"I was surprised he was able to talk to me as he had been shot. But he assured me he was all right."
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The New Paper </TD></TR><TR><TD height=15>





By Arul John
SHOTGUN pellets were embedded in his face.
But full-time national serviceman (NSF) Pritheevy Raj, 19, did not even realise he had been shot at.
He thought someone had thrown a coconut at his face.
At about11pm Thai time (midnight Singapore time) on March 12, Private Pritheevy and First Sergeant Woo Teng Hai were accidentally shot by Thai villagers out hunting.
First Sgt Woo is an SAF regular from the 1st Commando Battalion.
The men were in a plantation in the Kanchanaburi province, west of Bangkok.
The night mission was part of the battalion's annual proficiency test, which is conducted by the Army Training Evaluation Centre (Atec), the unit where Pte Pritheevy is serving as a trooper.
Pte Pritheevy said that he, another sergeant from Atec, and 1st Sgt Woo had been lying prone in the plantation that night when the incident occurred.
He said: "I felt a blast in my face. At first, I thought someone had thrown a big coconut at me.
"Then I saw 1st Sgt Woo,who was beside me, bleeding badly from his face. I felt blood flowing from my face but no pain. The other sergeant from my unit was not injured."
His training kicked in. Pte Pritheevy took out his field dressing from his uniform and placed it on 1st Sgt Woo's face to stop the bleeding.
"He asked me if I knew what had happened to us. He said we had been shot and that was when I knew," he said.
Pte Pritheevy said the uninjured sergeant went to get help. Military officers and medics soon arrived on the scene. He and 1st Sgt Woo were treated and rushed to a Thai hospital.
Although Pte Pritheevy had surgery, he still has two pellets lodged in him.
Pte Pritheevy, who is particularly close to his mother, said: "While on the way to hospital, I kept saying that I want to meet my mother. I worry more about my mother than I worry about myself."
He had called his mother, Madam Isaac Kanaeswary, at least once a day from the time he was sent to Thailand for army training, on March 3.
On 3.40am on March 13, Madam Isaac got a different call. An SAF officer told her that Pte Pritheevy had been shot. Those words caused the 43-year-old, who works in sales, to panic.
She told The New Paper: "The officer told me that Pritheevy had been shot by some Thai villagers. I nearly fainted when I heard the news.
"But the officer assured me that my son was all right and let me talk to him. When I heard Pritheevy, he said he was calling from the hospital in Thailand.
"I was surprised he was able to talk to me as he had been shot. But he assured me he was all right."
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