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Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

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Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Court to rule Tuesday on Koh Tao murder appeal

Zaw Lin, left, and Win Zaw Htun
Zaw Lin, left, and Win Zaw Htun
Koh Samui Court is scheduled to decide Tuesday whether to accept the appeal request against the death sentence handed down to the two Myanmar nationals convicted of murdering two British backpackers in Koh Tao in September 2014.

Amporn Sungthong, a lawyer for the two Myanmar nationals, submitted a 319-page document to the court, before the deadline Monday.

The court was too busy to make a decision on Monday and told the lawyer to return Tuesday for a decision.

If the court does not accept the appeal, it is expected the defendants may cite new reasons and request another counter-appeal to have the ruling reconsidered.

Zaw Lin and Win Zaw Htun, both 22, were sentenced to death in December 2015 for the rape and murder of Hannah Witheridge, 23, and the murder of David Miller, 24, on the resort island on Sept 15, 2014.

In March, the Appeal Court for Region 8 upheld the death sentence for the two.

The defence team, led by Nakhon Chomphuchat, believes police interrogations conducted on the two during the investigation were unlawful, citing that they did not have a lawyer present at the time of the questioning.

The defence team still hopes for justice, Mr Nakhon said.

The main arguments in the defence’s appeal comprise the investigations not being in line with “international standards of forensic science”, and the defendants not being provided an interpreter during the process.

Source: Bangkok Times, August 22, 2017 (local time)


Myanmar men given death penalty for killing 2 British backpackers in Thailand appeal against sentence


Koh Tao
Bar workers Zaw Lin and Win Zaw Htun were found guilty of murdering David Miller, 24, and raping and killing Hannah Witheridge, 23, in September 2014.

2 Myanmar men given the death sentence for murdering 2 British backpackers in Thailand in September 2014 have used their last life line and appealed to a court against the sentence.

Migrant bar workers Zaw Lin and Win Zaw Htun were found guilty of murdering David Miller, 24, and raping and killing Hannah Witheridge, 23, whose bodies were discovered on a beach on the diving resort of Koh Tao in Thailand.

Both the men had raped Witheridge and bludgeoned the pair over the head, a court had heard in December 2015.

Their death sentence was upheld by the Appeal Court in March this year when the pair lost an appeal to have their sentence overturned.

Lin and Htun submitted their final appeal on Monday (21 August).

"The deadline is today so we have to submit it. This is the final chance to appeal," Nakhon Chomphuchat, head of the Myanmar men's defence team, told Reuters.

The conviction of the men in 2015 was mired in controversy as they had claimed that the confessions they made during the questioning - which were later retracted - had been extracted through torture or abuse.

The workers earned some supporters who also claimed that the DNA evidence submitted by the Thai investigators was inadmissible as it had not been collected, tested or analysed as per international standards. They also alleged that questioning of the 2 men was unlawful as it had been done without the presence of the lawyers of Lin and Htun.

The bodies of murder victims Hannah Witheridge and David Miller were found on a beach on the southern island of Koh Tao in Thailand.

Reuters reported that some migrant rights groups also accused the Thai police of failing to properly seal off the area where the crime took place and of using the two Myanmar workers as scapegoats.

The Thai police denied the accusation. The families of the British tourists were also thought to have spoken in support of the police investigation.

There were huge protests outside Thailand's embassy in Myanmar's capital city, Yangon, which lasted a couple of days following the sentencing of Lin and Htun in December 2015.

Reuters noted that although Lin and Htun were given the death penalty, this mode of punishment has not been carried out in many years in Thailand.

Source: ibtimes.co.uk, August 21, 2017


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