Jump to content
TorJay

Suspects arrested in beheading

Recommended Posts

TorJay
Suspects arrested in beheading
 
Tue, 30 June 2015

Two men suspected of beheading a man in Preah Vihear province’s Rovieng district were arrested on Sunday and are due to be sent to Preah Vihear Provincial Court today.

 

According to provincial police chief Si Kiri, suspects Ou Oddom, 18, from Rovieng, and Thon Borey, 19, from Kampong Thom’s Baray district, will be questioned over the killing of Eur Un, 40, a farmer from Tbong Khmum province.

 

“Both suspects admitted everything and [confessed] the murder was driven by spite,†Kiri said.

 

“The suspects will be punished if the court figures out that they are guilty.â€

 

Un had moved to Svay Phat village, where the murder occurred, and bought land from Oddom’s father.

 

On 16 June, Oddom had borrowed Un’s motorbike, causing the two men to argue.

 

The following evening, Un and the suspect’s father had shared a bottle of wine.

 

After drinking, Un drove to buy meat but was followed by suspects Oddom and Borey, who allegedly pursued and beheaded him.

 

It took 10 days for authorities from Rovieng district to discover the victim’s body.

Source:  http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/suspects-arrested-beheading

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
TorJay

On reading the (be)heading I was quit to conclude who the culprits were.  I was wrong.
How many of you, on reading the title of this topic, jumped to the wrong conclusion as well??? :D

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • If you would like to join to begin posting and become an active member, feel free to click on THIS LINK, to register. If you have any questions, feel free to post them in the Forum Operations / Issues forum. If you register, but then are unable to log in, please feel free to post concerns in the Having Problems Logging In? forum. We will address any and all questions, comments, or concerns, as quickly as possible. Welcome to the Living In Cambodia Forums! 

    Welcome to the forum!

  • Similar Content

    • Parrothead
      By Parrothead
      What a horrible thing to happen. I heard about this yesterday, from a guy who came up from Kep / Kampot.
       
    • TorJay
      By TorJay
      Child sex-tourism plan earns Alaskan 18 years   Mon, 28 March 2016 Erin Handley   As Alaskan man has been sentenced to 18 years behind bars for attempting to arrange a child sex tourism trip to Cambodia for himself and others, and for sexually exploiting children in Cambodia over a four-year period, the US Justice Department announced on Friday.
       
      Jason Jayavarman, 45, was found guilty and convicted of the crimes in March last year, after an anonymous tip-off triggered an FBI and police investigation, said a statement from the department.
       
      According to trial evidence, he planned a trip for himself and others to engage in illicit sexual conduct with Cambodian children as young as 12.
       
      Jayavarman told potential clients – including an undercover FBI agent – how to groom a child for sex and avoid arrest.
       
      Trial evidence also proved he made 12 trips to Cambodia between 2010 and his arrest in 2013, where he made multiple pornographic videos of himself engaging in sexual acts with someone he believed to be a child.
       
      US district judge Sharon Gleason of the District of Alaska on Thursday sentenced Jayavarman to 18 years’ jail and a lifetime term of supervised release.
       
      Nget Thy, executive director at the Cambodian Centre for the Protection of Children’s Rights, said the sentence “set an example†to opportunistic foreigners angling to exploit children in the Kingdom.
       
      “The children are very vulnerable, especially the poor … it is happening more and more in Phnom Penh,†he said.
       
      “It is very easy for them to be exploited, so we have to protect them.â€
       
      Source:  http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/child-sex-tourism-plan-earns-alaskan-18-years
    • TorJay
      By TorJay
      Drug-posting couple gets 25 years jail   Fri, 25 March 2016 Niem Chheng   A Nigerian man and his Vietnamese wife were sentenced to 25 years jail by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court yesterday for mailing 1.5 kilograms of heroin to Australia.
       
      The couple was arrested on July 15, 2014, after Australian authorities told Cambodian anti-drug police they found 1,550 grams of heroin in eight packages hidden in backpacks sent from Cambodia. Hearings began on February 5 this year.
       
      Judge Than Leng sentenced Okeke Amedi Samuel, 34, and his 28-year-old wife, Ho Thi Hu Thuy, to 25 years along with fines of 50 million riel (about $12,400) each “on the charge of illegally transporting drugs [through the] Dangkor district branch post office on May 5 and 21, 2014â€.
       
      A Honda CRV automobile, eight passports, the backpacks and sewing materials would remain confiscated as per Article 92 of the Criminal Code, the judge continued, adding that “finger rings, necklaces, earrings, and motorbikes must be returned to the ownersâ€.
       
      Asked if he accepted the verdict after the trial, Okeke maintained his innocence.
       
      “Accept what, if I don’t know, accept what?†he said.
       
      Source:  http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/drug-posting-couple-gets-25-years-jail
    • TorJay
      By TorJay
      SIM cards used to be easy to come by. Sovan Philong   SIM registration set for showdown: official   Fri, 25 March 2016 Kali Kotoski and Catherine Harry   Six months after the government claimed that they would delete unregistered mobile phone lines, the Telecommunications Regulator of Cambodia (TRC) said they are gearing up to make good on that promise after the March 27 deadline expires; with the exception of the upcoming Khmer New Year that would disrupt their ability to reimpose a law that has existed since 2012.
       
      Telecom operators had previously been given two three-month extensions since last September’s announcement. Im Vutha, director of the regulation and dispute unit at the TRC, said that time is now up, no more extensions would be given, and that he hoped that providers had complied with the law.
       
      “This is the last time. After this we will go check the [operators] to see if they have followed the law. And if the company or operator cannot show that they registered their customers, or if they have not cancelled them already, we will tell them to announce that they will be cancelled,†he said.
       
      Despite the original four-year old law that requires identification to purchase a SIM card – a law meant to manage the transaction and usage of telecommunications – Vutha said that fierce competition within the market previously made it impossible to implement oversight.
       
      The registration crackdown stems from concerns raised by the National Police last year that claimed that new measures need to be in place to combat terrorists, drug traffickers, extortionists, kidnappers and other criminals that exploit mobile and SIM anonymity.
       
      Sereroth, a student at a local university, recounted how a Facebook friend tried to lure her into a mobile scam. After exchanging numerous messages over the social platform with a man who promised that he would send her gifts and money that totaled $15,000, she gave out her phone number.
       
      Weeks later, she received a call from someone claiming that she needed to pay $1,500 to get her package cleared through customs.
       
      “I told them I don’t have that much money right now,†she said, adding that after a lot of negotiations, the caller agreed to settle for $400 to be wired through mobile money transfer service. However, when she contacted the customs office directly, she realized it was a ploy.
       
      “I don’t think they would’ve found the person behind this because they used an [unregistered] number,†she said, explaining that she blocked the number after repeated calls. “Most people trying to con others are unregistered and can simply destroy the SIM card after they harass somebody.â€
       
      A February 29 announcement by the TRC called on telco operators to inform their customers of the impending cancellation of subscriptions by reaching out to them through phone calls, text messages, social media messages, and information on their websites of how to properly register.
       
      Ian Watson, CEO of Cellcard, said that since September, the company has stepped up measures to inform their customers about the need to register. The company has sent out SMS texts, run a pop-up notification on their website, and sent out Interactive Voice Response (IVR) messages to non-registered subscribers.
       
      “Almost the entire subscriber base is already registered, but unfortunately not all customers see the benefits and threats of SIM registration. Cellcard keeps trying to touch base with all of them through indirect and direct communication channels to help them complete their registration process as stipulated by the law,†he wrote in an email.
       
      Thomas Hundt, CEO of Smart Axiata, said that the company was in full support of the government’s push for registration “for the purpose of national security and subscriber protectionâ€.
       
      “Smart requests prepaid subscribers to check their profiles and to register or update if not done yet, either online under simreg.smart.com.kh or by visiting any Smart Shop, to avoid numbers being barred and service affected,†he wrote in an email.
       
      The owner of Pheanu Rangsey, a phone shop and SIM card dealer near the Olympic Stadium, said that he is aware of the law after local commune officials warned him of the impending crackdown, and only sells registered SIM cards now – averaging four or five a day.
       
      “Sometimes people only buy the SIM card to access the Internet, so they don’t believe they need to register, or they do not have proper identification,†he said. “If their numbers are cancelled, it is their own fault.â€
       
      Vutha admitted that registration can be difficult as people generally have numerous SIM cards and lack proper identification cards. For this, he said, as long as a commune official or family member can vouch for a person’s identity, it would suffice for registration purposes. This, however, would still be problematic in practice.
      “On our side, it will take some time to check all the names of the subscribers. Especially when making sure they are properly registered in Khmer, or if they are changing names of the subscribers during registration,†he said.
       
      The National Police initially speculated that up to 70 per cent of the Kingdom’s 20.9 million SIM cards did not have adequate verification. Vutha believes that from the data that he has compiled over numerous meetings with industry stakeholders, this percentage has dropped.
       
      Nevertheless, he said that the crackdown is about to begin and there will be legal consequences for infractions – just not yet.
      “After Khmer New Year, we will go and start looking at the telcos’ data to make sure they have followed the law. We have given them plenty of time. It will take time for us to prepare a task force to address this issue. But it will happen sometime in April,†he said.
       
      Source:  http://www.phnompenhpost.com/supplements/sim-registration-set-showdown-official
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use & Guidelines. Here is our Privacy Policy.