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Japan | Hakamada found religion, but then felt under attack by ‘the devil’

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Editor's note: This is the last in a four-part series on letters that Iwao Hakamada wrote while on death row. About a decade after cursing God, Iwao Hakamada was baptized Catholic at the Tokyo Detention House on Dec. 24, 1984. “Since I have been given the Christian name Paul, I am keenly feeling that I should be aware of the greatness of Paul.” (June 1985)

Thailand: Death Sentence for Thai ‘Death Island’ Defendants a Mockery

Htun Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo
The Thai Supreme Court’s August 28 decision upholding the death sentence for 2 Myanmar migrants for the 2014 murders of British tourists Hannah Witheridge and David Miller on the island of Kho Tao is regarded by critics as a travesty of justice to protect the clan that controls the island, which has long been considered little more than a criminal gang.

RELATED Thai court upholds death penalty for Myanmar workers in British tourist murders

The two defendants, Htun Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo, were found guilty of killing the 2 backpackers and raping Witheridge in December of 2014. The 2 were beaten to death with garden tools.

A Dark Side


While the island has been called a paradise for skin-divers and backpacker tourists, it has a dark side. At least nine European tourists have died or disappeared on Kho Tao since the deaths of the 2 backpackers, beginning with a 32-year-old British IT consultant who died in 2012. 

In June of 2018, a 19-year-old British tourist allegedly became the latest victim of violence charging that she had been raped. Police denied the rape had occurred. After pressure was brought by the British press and authorities, police opened an investigation and interviewed the victim in the UK, but said they had found no evidence to support her claim of rape and closed the case.

That, critics say, is evidence of the clout of the clan, which is believed have links to Thai Mafiosi connected to powerful southern Thailand politicians Prawit Wongsuwan, the former minister of defense and army commander-in-chief, who is now deputy prime minister, and Suthep Thaugsuban, a former deputy prime minister and former secretary-general of the Democrat Party.

The 2015 verdict against the Myanmar migrants drew widespread criticism from human rights groups given a long list of flaws in the case. 

After being given access to human rights organizations, the two immediately recanted their confessions, describing in graphic detail how the admissions were beaten out of them and that they had been scalded, tortured and threatened with electrocution.

‘Is it really safe to go to Thailand?’

“With their shoddy handling of cases like the Koh Tao murder case and the Bangkok bombing, the Thai police are rapidly becoming laughingstocks in international justice circles,” a representative for a western NGO told Asia Sentinel at the time of the original sentencing. “At this rate, is it a wonder that tourists from around the world are asking a new question – ‘is it really safe to go to Thailand?’ When are the powers that be in Bangkok going to figure out that jailing scapegoats while real culprits go free is not a persuasive answer to that question?”

RELATED Thailand: Murderer is sentenced to death for killing a German backpacker after raping her

Ko Tao islandThe police and courts reportedly ignored testimony by Pornthip Rojanasunand, chief of the Central Institute of Forensic Science, that her agency’s inspection of the weapon used to kill the backpackers actually contained traces of DNA from unknown individuals, and that the agency didn’t find any from the 2 accused. 

There were neither fingerprints nor other evidence that tied the two to the murders. Nonetheless, the prosecution came up with DNA samples that did match.

“Police investigators are solely relying on their claim that the DNA in the sperm found on Hanna Witheridge is that of the 2 Burmese defendants but they have not produced any independent corroborative evidence linking them to the murder,” said the NGO representative.

Thai police, he said, “had no proper and adequate chain of custody documents for the court; no photos of any of the DNA analysis processes, no case notes, no written description of testing processes,” the source said. “Originally they just had charts of DNA profiles. No DNA information was presented at all on the cigarette butts (found near the bodies), just a piece of paper saying they matched. The defense further highlighted the fact that the DNA sperm data was written, crossed out, and revised and dates and times were clearly wrong.”

Police Under Pressure to find Scapegoats


Htun Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo were collected up by Thailand’s notoriously corrupt and inept police two weeks after the murders were committed. 

Critics have said the suspects were arrested because the police, under enormous international pressure to solve a heinous crime, had to find killers and picked out the two youths, who had migrated from Rakhine state in Myanmar to work in the tourist trade.

Hannah Witheridge (left), 23, and David Miller, 24,
The police investigation was a mess, with media and onlookers allowed to trample the murder scene and with a wide range of suspects targeted before the police settled on the Myanmese. 

The two were forced to reenact the murders at the crime scene while being filmed by television cameras.

It has long been Thai police practice to collect up luckless suspects, usually foreigners, and charge 1 or 2, especially if a politically powerful figure or his relatives had actually committed the crime instead. 

Police initiated blanket DNA testing of the migrant community living on Koh Tao, leading to well-justified fears that migrants would be arrested.

RELATED Royal Pardon Last Hope For Burmese Migrant Workers Sentenced to Death For Koh Tao Murders

There were procedural problems connected to police incompetence. Dozens of people wandered through the crime scene. Collection of DNA evidence was badly handled. When the two defendants’ confessions fell apart because they said they were tortured, the police and the prosecutors showed no interest in investigating their claims.

Lawyers for the 2 said they would request a royal pardon, which is allowed under Thai law. 

The country retains the death penalty but rarely employs it.

Source: asiasentinenl.com, Staff, August 30, 2019


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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

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