Tag Archive for 'Andrew-Chant'

British ‘magic wands’ accused of killing people in South Thailand

 

‘These British machines are falsely finding explosives in coconut trees. But people die when they give false negative reports ’.

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, Monday January 4th 2010
Pictures: Andrew Chant/WGPP

The Prime Minister of Thailand will this week be asked to order the  withdrawal of  British  explosives detection equipment known as ‘magic wands’  for testing amid claims they are killing members of the country’s security forces.

The move follows a similar controversy in Iraq two months ago where some 1,500 ‘magic wands’  sold under the name ADE165 by the British company ATSC were ridiculed  for their lack of capability by the US military.

coconut-treePremier Abhisit Vejjajiva will be asked to act on claims that similar  machines sold under the name GT-200 have given totally false readings which have led to several deaths in Islamic southern Thailand, the scene of separatist terrorism.

“They are falsely identifiying explosives at the top of coconut trees, but not finding when the bombs are real and people are dying,” said Angkana Neelapaijit,  a member of the parliamentary ad hoc  ‘Committee on the south’  which will make the demand formal for the machines to be withdrawn and tested.
She added: “Our scientific advisors have compared the GT-200 to bomb detecting with a Ouija board.”
Already the Working Group for Justice and Peace and the Asian Human Rights Commission have called for the detectors to be withdrawn until they have been scientifically tested in Thailand.

Thai military with GT-200

Thai military with GT-200

 
The latest controversy involves the Ashford, Kent, based company ‘Global Technical Co.Ltd.,’ which last year was asked by Quenton Davies, Minister for Defence Equipment and Support, to remove a suggested MoD  endorsement  for the GT-200 from its website.

The Thai Interior Ministry is also promoting the ‘Alpha 6′ detector and supplying some 800 to police nationwide at 555,000 baht each -11,000 pounds sterling to detect drugs.
But ‘magic wands’ known as GT-200 used by the Thai army and sold without cabinet approval under ‘a secret military deal’, according to the Asian Human Rights Commission, are the ones of main concern, because they are supposed to detect explosives.
The units allegedly work on the principal of ‘magnetic molecular resonance’ or ‘nano ionic resonance’ and or ‘dia/para magnetism’.
The US Justice Ministry, which issued a warning about similar machines, calls it ‘Molecular Frequency Distribution’ and states in a report: “None of these attempts to create devices that can detect specific materials such as explosives (or any materials for that matter) have been proven successful in controlled double-blind scientific tests”.
A ‘magic wand’ tested by the US Navy called the Sniffex,  could not detect 1000 lbs of explosives at 20 feet.
In theory the gadgets works like water diviners.  They all come with a wand which is supposed to point out whatever the operator is seeking.  If it’s TNT or C4 explosives the operator is looking for, the GT200, will supposedly point him to it. The units have no battery power but work off the power of the operator.
Slip other cards special cards into to the machines and they will detect cocaine, heroin, ice, and the drug of your choice – at 5oo metres, claim the distributors.
Angkana Neelapaijit,  also Chairman of Thailand’s Working Group for Justice and Peace said: “They have been compared to using ouija boards. In all cases when the machines fail the operators are blamed. The generals say the machines are good. The people who have to use the machines, the soldiers, say the opposite. They don’t work and can be deadly!
“ I have tried speaking to the Prime Minister and British Ambassador to Thailand.  The Prime Minister at the moment supports his Generals’ view.  The Ambassador Quinton Quayle did not want to talk.”

Aftermath of undetected bomb in Pattani

Aftermath of undetected bomb in Pattani

The WGJP blames the GT-200 for several deaths. In their report they claim that on October 6th last year near the Merlin Hotel, in Sungai-Golok  and October 19th at Pimonchai Market in Yala, bombs went off causing death and several injuries in a car and motorcycle, just a few minutes after the vehicles had been checked  with the GT-200  ‘magic wands’.
They also claim that on November 7th three Border Patrol officers were killed when a bomb exploded as they were investigating a suspicious object in Pattani. Again the GT-200 showed negative results.
And again in Pattani, South Thailand, when a bomb was hidden among the dead bodies of a murdered couple in Kok Pho district, officials used the GT200 to check the bodies . The equipment suggested nothing. When officials lifted the bodies up, the bomb went off, claim the WGJP
The WGJP pointed out: “The reading device is ambiguous and subjective. There is no clear indicator. It is vague enough to excuse the authorities’ ineffectiveness. If a false negative turns out they can just blame the operator”.
The MoD says the machines are not used by British forces and do not confirm to British forces requirements.
A spokesman said Global Technical had brought a machine to them for evaluation in 1999. But the machine was not subject to proper MOD testing. “The company cannot market the machine today stating the MoD has confirmed its capabilities.”
Gary Bolton of Global Technical Ltd said the company would be updating its website later this month.  Technical information provided by Global and Technical says its performance has been backed by the British Army.  However the machine cannot pinpoint explosive, rather narrow them down to an area of four cubic metres.

The full range of the GT-200's bomb detecting capabilities as shown in Thailand. Not everybody believes the claims.

The full range of the GT-200's bomb detecting capabilities as shown in Thailand. Not everybody believes the claims.

Phuket Bungy jump - the bare truth exposed

This is a blog only

Link to Daily Mail and Video

phuketbungy02So it’s off to Phuket as the London Daily Mail requests ‘colour’ for the story it is going to publish about British student Rishi Bavjeva, who took a flying leap this summer attached to a bungy cord – and never came up again.
The Phuket Bungy jump has been promoting its 100 per cent safety record heavily but Bavjeva suffered a ruptured spleen, torn liver, collapsed lungs, and severe bruising, after become detached from the cord.
Bungy manager Terry Pearce told Phuketwan: ”We’ve had 140,000 jumps here over 17-and-a-half years,” he said. ”And this is the only one that went wrong.”

He has watched the video more than once, and in agonising slow-motion, reported the Phuket website.

”The guy didn’t listen to the jumpmasters,” Mr Pearce said. ”He went feet-first and his knees go up. He was young enough and strong enough to kick his way free.

”We’ve changed a couple of things since. The leg-wrapping we now use grips like hell. I’ve tried it myself.”

Well that’s nice to know.  Maybe they should just attach pensioners to these bungy cords.

I mean their site advertises the following:

  • Bungy Jump
  • Tandem Bungy
  • Catapult Bungy
  • Backwards Bungy
  • Water Touch Bungy
  • Well we all saw the video and I saw no evidence of him trying to kick himself free.  I just saw a guy take a massive high dive.
    Anyway despite the fact that Phuket Bungy claims it is fully insured Rishi is not going to bother to sue or claim.
    Now back to last week when Andy Chant went to do some back up and scene setting pictures for the Daily Mail.
    Seems it was not a good time to go!  The US Navy was in port in strength and the new sport is of course ‘Naked Bungy jumping’.

    weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

    weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

    Well why do anything clothed when you can do it naked?  
    Poor old photo-journalist  Andy Chant had to sit around for hours photographing little more than flying bollocks.
    He also reported that the people actually fitting the punters into their feet harnesses were also all local.

    Look just let me hold my B*****ks

    Look just let me hold my B*****ks

    Look, they are probably fine, but with Thailand’s safety record its bound to make some people uneasy.
    “I thought the idea was that you just touched the water before the cord pulled you back up again,” said Andy.

    I guess so. They do advertise ’water touch’ as opposed to ‘kamikaze’.

    Apparently not. “Some guys went right under”. 

     ‘Meat and two veg and all’, as they say in the sarf London resort of Patt-ay-ya, all hitting the water with a giant thwack!

    I've got them all tucked up nicely this time

    I've got them all tucked up nicely this time

    British honeymoon couple survive Thai train horror

    From Andrew Drummond, Hua Hin
    Monday October 5th 2009

    Link to Daily Telegraph Link to Metro

    Link to Daily Mail   Link to Daily Express

     

    Pictures: Andrew Chant
    A British honeymoon couple today spoke of their miraculous escape from death when a train on the Orient Express line in Thailand crashed killing ten people and injuring over 50.
    Richard Stroud, 43, and his bride Dawn, 34, were thrown from their beds as the Bangkok bound train left the rails and crashed into another train. Their carriage came to an abrupt halt and then rolled twice sending the couple spinning.
    “It was like we were in space when the carriage rolled. One minute I saw Richard on the other side of the carriage, then he was gone, then he was there again. We were literally flying,” said Dawn, a retail manager at Home Bargains in Stroud.
    “I ended up on top of Richard then our beds ended up on top of us.”

    Honeymooners Dawn and Richard Stroud in Hua Hin Hospital

    Honeymooners Dawn and Richard Stroud in Hua Hin Hospital

    Richard and Dawn were heading back to Bangkok for a flight home last night after a two week holiday in Thailand, which began with two days in Bangkok, a week the northern capital Chiang Mai taking in some jungle trekking.
    For the last week they had gone south of the island of Koh Meuk in Thailand’s Trang Province. “It was idyllic. Because of the down turn in tourism we had a beach and a resort, which can accommodate 300 people, virtually all to ourselves”,  said Richard, Materials Manager for G.E. Aviation in Cheltenham, previously married with two sons.
    “We decided to take a first class cabin back to Bangkok taking the same route the Orient Express takes.  It may have saved our lives.  We were asleep when we were awoken by the whole train shuddering.
    “I shouted down to Dawn in the bottom bunk ‘What the hell is that!’.  Then suddenly we were both thrown out of our bunks.  I hit some metal, and then came down on the sink.  Then the train started rolling.
    “When we recovered it was pitch black but we found some lights we put on our heads for caving and switched them on. All around us we could hears moans and crying.
    “After a while rescuers came and they were very good.  They put a neck brace on me and pulled me up and out through a window as the train was on its side.
    “As we walked away we had to pick our way through mangled metal and wreckage and the bodies of those from a 2nd Class carriage, who were not so lucky.”
    Richard and Dawn Stroud will have to wait two weeks before they are allowed to fly back to the hometown which bears their name – Stroud.  Doctors have told Richard he is not fit to fly in the meantime.
    He has two fractured ribs and bad body bruising.
    Thai State Railways Governor  Yuthanna  Thapcharoen said: “Among the 10 people dead is a 2-yr-old girl.  We have already begun an enquiry into why the train left its tracks and I cannot comment further.”
    The Thai News  Agency said a switching error may have been the cause of the crash near Hua Hin, a Thai beach resort 150 miles south of Bangkok early this morning.  The train was due in Bangkok at 08.25am.
    But it is also being  reported that the train’s driver had gone through a red signal and that the train was travelling too fast to successfully traverse a junction.
    NB: Foreign/Home News Desks: final death toll and injuries likely to change:
    Ends.-

    Camera director of ‘Big Trouble in Thailand’ makes ‘tactical withdrawal’

     

    From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok,
    September 20 2009

    Pictures Gavin Hill/Vera
    A British producer cameraman has had to flee Thailand after filming a sequence in which British Royal Marines were held at gunpoint by Thai mafia after hiring a Jet Ski on a paradise beach.
    The cameraman Gavin Hill, 40, from Manchester, a former bureau chief for Associated Press Television, was today back in London, after fleeing Bangkok, as his Thai crew faced up to a year in jail.
    They stand accused of assisting in the filming of a sequence which could ‘damage the country’s image’.  A battle with the Thai authorities has raged for two weeks.
     Hill, who also produced ‘Crime Squad’ for the BBC with Sue Lawley, and a series for Real TV said today (Sunday) :  “I’ve made a tactitcal withdrawal  and am in London to discuss how we can help our Thai colleagues.  But yes, I did not wish to argue my case from prison.

    Marine Tebbott, JJ, and producer cameraman Gavin Hill

    Marine Tebbott, JJ, and producer cameraman Gavin Hill

    “We filmed the mafia but suddenly we are the criminals apparently. The atmosphere is a little bit hysterical. The Marines are behind me thank god. ”
    The gun incident happened on Phuket when a young marine Jack Tebbott  from Leicester was kidnapped by tattooed mafia figures, who control what’s for sale on Phuket’s  Patong Beach.
    Twenty-one-year old Tebbott  was seized after his colleagues from Delta Company 40 Commando told a scammer to ‘get lost’ after they were presented with a bill for 60,000 Thai baht (£1094) for damaging  a jet ski which they had hired.
    The marines, from  40 Commando based in Taunton,  have lost three men fighting the Taliban in Helmand province of Afghanistan. Delta section’s most famous Marine is Joe Townsend who lost his legs in a mine explosion. 
    They had been warned about the scam and told not to hire jet skis  before after arriving on HMS Bulwark in June, but did not anticipate coming up against a gunman in a Thai holiday resort.
    Gavin Hill had received permission from the Thai authorities to film a series called ‘Thai Cops’ , a reality show which followed British volunteers in the Thai Tourist Police dealing with the hundreds of thousands of  British tourists  who travel to Thailand every year.  However ,as a result of this incident and others, the title of the series had to be changed to ‘Big Trouble in Thailand’.
    The Marines incident happened after producers received complaints from tourists and went to a Jet Ski operator called Winai Naiman, nicknamed JJ, to get his side of the story.
    On camera he admitted beating up tourists if they did not pay.

    The foreign and Thai production crew for 'Big Trouble in Thailand'

    The foreign and Thai production crew for 'Big Trouble in Thailand'

    Then he called the production crew to film after catching Marine Tebbot and taking to him his yard three miles from the beach.  Unknown to him Hill was also filming with the Marines.  Naiman brought out a gun with a telescopic sight after a section of Delta Company react to a distress call.
    The affair was settled after the arrival of  Marine Police Sergeant  and Detatchment Commander Tim Wright, from London, who told Naiman his was ‘corrupt and a crook’ after examining the jet ski and finding the damaged area had already turned brown proving it was old.  But Sergeant Wright finally agreed to pay 35,000 baht, over £600.
    Royal Marine Police Sergeant Tim Wright said at the 40 Commando base in Somerset: “I got my men out of that situation without claret being spilt and that was the important thing.
    “The Thais are trying to say my men were not threatened or held at gunpoint.  But by doing this they are questioning my integrity. I do not like my integrity being questioned especially by a two bit crook.
    “We will make representations to the Foreign Office. The warning to tourists is not sufficient.
    “ If Thailand wants to make a fuss about this I am happy to support the producer and raise the level to that of diplomatic incident.  The case of Marine Tebbott was not the only case of extortion I had to deal with, not by far.”
    The Foreign Office advisory warns traveller to ensure that the people whom they hire jet skis from are reputable. But they do not warn specifically about the extortions involved and that violence has been used.
    Tourists have been milked for as much as 200,000 bat during these incidents in Thailand according to a group of foreign consuls, who estimated on the Thai island of Koh Samui  jet ski operators, working with local police, had  scammed nearly £100,000 out of tourists between December and April of this year.
    “In almost all cases the police are called they make the tourists pay out and then they get the commission from the jet ski operators.  In most cases it is old damage. In a case of new damage the cost of repair would not normally be more than £50, ” a local consul said on condition of anonymity.

    Filming with Thai Tourist Police in Phuket

    Filming with Thai Tourist Police in Phuket

    A spokesman for the Thai film board said the crew had violated Article 34 of the motion picture law by not having the contents examined by a Tourism and Sports Ministry film committee before they were broadcast abroad.
    And Seksan Nakawong, director-general of the Office of Tourism Development, said the film-makers also violated Article 23 of the same law for making a film tarnishing the reputation of Thailand.  The penalties are a £18,000 fine and a year in jail or both.
    Meanwhile Police  Lt. Gen Santhan Chayanont, chief of Provincial Police Region 8, whose officers are accused of being involved in the scams,  says he has ordered his men to bring in all the Thai ‘collaborators’ .
    40 Royal Marine Commando lost one  officer  Lt. John Thornton and two men, Marine David Marsh and Marine and Corporal Damian Mulvihill  during a seven month tour of duty fighting the Taliban in Helmand Province in 2008.

    Royal Marine Joe Townsend

    Royal Marine Joe Townsend

    The actions  and conduct of Delta Company’s Marine Joe Townsend, who lost both his legs in a mine explosion in Afghanistan, have been held up in the UK as a shining example of courage of the British forces.

    Marine Townsend recently accompanied Britain’s Prince Harry to New York to meet US serviceman who had lost limbs in Afghanistan and Iraq.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Karen Elephant Patrol -Andrew Drummond. See comments below

    Karen Elephant Patrol -Andrew Drummond. See comments below

    The Great Thai jet ski tourist scam - a producer bares all

    The series ‘Big Trouble in Thailand’ has provoked quite a controversy across the internet blogs in this part of the world and is now begining to hit the mainstream Thai media.

    Royal Marine Police Sergeant Wright confronts JJ

    Royal Marine Police Sergeant Wright confronts JJ

    Accusations have been made. Was the confrontation with the Marines set up? What sort of guy is JJ – the Thai mafia figure featured in this seemingly shaming episode for the Thai tourist industry.
    Anyway Gavin Hill the producer/director is throwing the issue wide open.  He says he has not formed a judgment, but of course the film had to be cut and edited, and it is apparent that although his comments were ‘taken on board’, perhaps not all were acted upon.
    You can form your own opinion of JJ by clicking on the following links.
     We all get edited. Make your own mind up. 

    Of course JJ may seem worse!  Personally I may have cut the film in pretty much the same way, I think the producer is entitled to make a judgment.   We start today with JJ on the beach whinging about bad tourists.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzeui3rC5yo

    and continue with him whinging on the beach. I rather picked up on the piece where JJ said : ” We call the police”

    http://www.youtube.com/user/BigTroubleInThailand#play/all/uploads-all/1/yFJsyJccTWE

    He believes a lot of foreigners have money to spare. He just needs to feed his family.

    They come off the beach tomorrow, Saturday, not before time, when I am sure we will hear about JJ’s police contacts!

     Meanwhile JJ has not sold himself to me, although to be sure there are some idiots hiring jet skis from time to time.

    Arrest follows ‘extortion’ of Royal Marines in Thailand

    Arrest follows British television documentary

    From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, September 9th 2009
    Pictures: Andrew Chant/Gavin Hill/

     

    Face off Royal Marine Police Sergeant Wright and JJ

    Face off Royal Marine Police Sergeant Wright and JJ

    Thai authorities have arrested the leader of a Thai mafia gang and charged with him with extortion based solely on the evidence of a British television documentary.
    Police today were holding a Thai known locally a JJ Naiman, aged 27, after he was seen on a British television programme trying to extort over £1000 from a British Royal Marine who had rented a jet-ski on the holiday island of Phuket.
    The province’s governor Wichai Praisa-nob also stepped into the row today and called a meeting of police, jet-ski operators, Marine Police, and local government officials to discuss what action would be taken. They are also to be shown the film. He said he was considering banning jet skis from the island.
    The British documentary ‘Big Trouble in Thailand’, which went to air on  Monday on the Bravo Channel, showed Royal Marines, who arrived in Phuket on HMS Bulwark, after a tour of Helmand Province, Afghanistan, being held at gun point in a local boat yard run by local mafia.
    Royal Marine Face-offThe row was only resolved after the arrival of Marine Police Sergeant Tim Wright who defused the situation but not before exposing the Thai gangleader  as a ‘corrupt crook’.  The Marine Jack Tebbott, 21, from Leicester (right) eventually paid just over £600.
    Tim Wright said: “These men openly threatened serving military personnel whilst on R&R in Thailand. The important thing is that I got them out of there with no one being hurt, other than pride and in the wallet. I don’t remember swearing but apologise if I did! The other important thing to remember is don’t hire jet skis in Thailand.”
    The jet-ski con is widespread. Tourists are forced to pay for damage which they clearly have not created, but the mafia gangs have had assistance from corrupt police officers, who, according to one source, claim 20 per cent. 

    Copies of the programme are now widely available on the internet.   Further programmes could also embarrass Thailand.  A well known police rip-off on the island of Koh Phangan where police collect £10,000 every month from touriRoyal Marine Face-offsts on minor drugs charges on the threat of having to go to jail pending trial, is already getting exposure.  
    The boyfriend of one girl arrested says he received a demand to find £1,400 for possessing a small amount of cannabis, others had to pay more. For normal Thais the fine can be as little as £50.
    And a similar jet ski scam will also be exposed on the Thai island of Koh Samui.
    British Producer Gavin Hill said: “This was not designed to be an investigative programme. We just filmed what was going on in front of us.”
    He said however the next programme in the series probably reflected more on bad British behavior than that of Thais.

    “I am a little surprised at the big reaction now. This seems to have been going on for a long time.”

    JJ Naiman has been refused bail. Allegations that he had been paid to help set up the scene were described by Gavin Hill as ‘hardly credible’. “We had to cut a lot of the footage. I am satisfied that what was presented was the absolutely correct portrayal of the situation.  I have not taken any side.”

    Picture Special: Royal Marines in stand-off with Thai mafia

     
    Picture special:
     by Andrew Drummond, Bangkok

    Pictures: Andy Chant/Gavin Hill/Vera Productions

    Royal Marine Face-off

    (pops rewrite)
    Royal Marines fresh from a tour of duty fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan have been involved in armed stand-off with the mafia thugs on the Thai holiday island of Phuket.
    The marine ‘section’,  on exercise in South East Asia on ‘Operation Taurus’, faced down a mafia gun-man as they fought the same cause of hundreds of tourists who have been swindled at the top British holiday destination.

    I gotta get me a gun

    I gotta get me a gun

    The only reason blood was not spilled was because a Marine Police Sergeant stepped in to avoid a major international incident as the marines faced off with armed and tattooed Mafiosi who had been beating up tourists and ripping them off for thousands of pounds.
    Trouble began after HMS Bulwark made a port call in Phuket two months ago with the Marines who had just completed a tour of duty in Helmand Province.
    Within hours Shore Patrol policeman Matt Turner from Sheffield was reporting. “It’s mayhem.  Our lads, and hundreds of westerners are being fleeced and we believe it’s all by organised gangs.  Jet skis, taxis, everything.
    He added: “We have to help. We will do it whether its Marines or tourists being ripped off. We do not differentiate.”
    The boisterous Marines were officially warned by their officers not to hire jet skis on the beaches of the holiday island as this was the most expensive rip-off of all. Thailand has been hard hit by a tourist recession.
    But confident they could handle the situation, many ignored the ruling.

    Marine Jack Tebbott

    Marine Jack Tebbott

    Not long afterwards Marine 21-yr-old Jack Tebbott from Leicester found himself staring down the barrel of a gun after being taken to a  builders and boating yard in the back of beyond,  after allegedly damaging a jet-ski he had hired. The mafia were demanding 60,000 Thai baht £1,400 in damages and loss of earnings.
    Several tourists have already been beaten up for refusing to surrender to the mafia demands.
    Surrounded by the stripped to the waist thugs and held at the point of a rifle Tebbot had managed to get an sms message to his mates who arrived at the yard near Patong Beach on Phuket in ‘section force’.
    Bloodshed was only avoided when Marine Police Sergeant and Detatchment Commander Tim Wright arrived on the scene and told Tebbot: “Ok lad we told you not to hire jet skis. We know it’s a con but I’m afraid you’re now going to have to pay some money to get out of this.”

    No nonsense Marine Sgt Tim Wright

    No nonsense Marine Sgt Tim Wright

    Then  after examining the jetski the no nonsense Sergeant, who had already had to deal with other cases, turned on the mafia chief called JJ and said: “You’re a crook!  You’re corrupt.  The damage is old. The fibre glass has already turned brown.  How come all your jet-skis have a problem?”
    Then he turned to Marine Tebbot and said: “Ok boy. You go now!”
    JJ then ordered his thugs to block Tebbot’s exit but JJ perhaps sensing he had a fight on his hands continued negotiating.    The price eventually dropped by almost a half to 35,000 baht to (£627) but not before some other heated exchanges.
    “I’m just a f…cking businessmen. F..ck. You.  How are we to feed our families,” said JJ pointing to his fellow thugs lounging around and waiting for their next sucker.
    : ‘F..k you. You are not my father. You are not my pa.
    Sgt:“Don’t shout at me. You’re  crook. You’re a worm. You’re doing this day after day.

    Marine policeman Mat Turner

    Marine policeman Mat Turner

     

    JJ:F.. ck you!
    Sgt: F.ck you!’.
    The standoff ended when Marine Tebbot agreed to foot the bill. “Ok,” said Sergeant Wright,” you better toddle of to the ATM then.
    The Marines conceded afterwards that it was £627 too much but worth it to avoid an international incident.
    Said Sergeant Wright:  “They are trained to be cool. But had it come to the crunch we could have easily fought them and got all our lads out of there.  But there would have been some claret spilt on both sides.”

     

     

    Face off Royal Marine Police Sergeant Wright and JJ

    Face off Royal Marine Police Sergeant Wright and JJ

     The stand-off did however have a happy ending. After complaints from the British and other Embassies in Phuket the island’s police chief has ordered a crackdown on the thugs,  on the orders of Thailand’s Deputy Prime Minister, admitting that some policemen had also been pocketing cash with the local mafia.
    Police Commander Pigad Thantiphong , who admitted that the Royal Navy had also made a complaint  through the Embassy said: “Anyone who threatens tourists from now on will be prosecuted.  Any policeman who assists the mafia will be punished, and independent experts will be brought in to adjudicate in any case.”

    But how do we feed our families?

    But how do we feed our families?

    Amazingly the Marines standoff was captured on film by producer/director Gavin Hill which can be seen tonight(Monday) 10 pm in ‘Big Trouble in Thailand’ made by comedian Rory Bremner’s Vera Productions for Bravo Channel  and filmed with the Thai Tourist Police.

    It was like this - you want to teach ME the art of public debating

    It was like this - you want to teach ME the art of public debating

     

    And despite the incident many marines still thought Phuket was the best place they had taken shore leave in.

    Big Trouble in Tourist Thailand

    The last time Royal Marines had a fight in Phuket

    Sailing friends to hold service for Brit murdered by escapees from Thai ’slave ship’

    From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok
    March 31 2000

    Link to Daily Telegraph

    Picture: Andrew Chant/Linda Robertson

    Malcolm Robertson on board Mr. Bean

    Malcolm Robertson on board Mr. Bean

    Sailing friends and the family of yachtsman Malcolm Robertson will on Thursday hold a memorial service on the Malaysian island of Langkawi  after his body was found off Thailand late on Monday.
    Mrs.  Linda Robertson, 57, said she hoped that the Thai authorities would press a murder charge.
     Speaking in Satun, South Thailand , where three Burmese migrant labourers are being held in custody, she added: “I believe only one of them is guilty of murder, but I do not want him to be sentenced to death.  Apart from that I am in a foreign country and will leave it up to the Thai justice system.”
    The body of Mr. Robertson, 64, from St. Leonards, East Sussex, was formally identified at sea aboard a Thai fishing boat, by his son Dean,  as the family were concerned that Thai newspapers would publish  ‘inappropriate’ photographs.
    The body had been found off Lipe Island, in Tarutao Marine Park, off South Thailand.  The Robertson’s had moored off Butang Island nearby when they were boarded by the three Burmese who had jumped a Thai ‘slave ship’.
    Arrangements have already been made to fly Mr. Robertson’s boy home to Britain.
    The Robertson’s have berthed their yacht Mr. Bean on Langkawi for the last three years, returning to sail during the British winter.
    It is expected that Eksian Warapong, 19, will be charged with murder and the two other Burmese, Aow, 18, and Koo, 16, will continue to faces charges of kidnap, assault and theft.
    Last week Warapon confessed to the murder saying he bludgeoned Mr. Robertson to death with a hammer after he put up a fight.
    The three Burmese said that they had been sold to an agent by Thai police from a Thai immigration detention centre for just £100 each and put to work on the Thai fishing trawler Chai 6 based out of Phuket.
    The youngest Koo had been on the ship for eight months without pay and without being allowed ashore.
    They jumped ship onto an uninhabited desert island in the Butang Island group. They had not eaten for three days when the Robertson’s arrived yacht arrived and moored offshore.
    They said they just planned to take the yacht’s tender and some food.

    The Bangkok British Embassy staff were bloody brilliant!

    Of an Embassy and Brits in the sh*t  (Part 11)     This is a blog only

    Link to ‘Of an Embassy and Brits in the sh*t’ Part 1

    “The British Embassy staff were bloody brilliant’

    embassydesktsunamiNot my words but those of my colleague Andrew Chant.  For the last week we have been working on the story of Malcolm Robertson, who was murdered on his yacht ‘Mr.Bean’  off southern Thailand.

    Having done myself  the initial interview with his wife Linda, who thankfully survived,  Andy was left heavily involved, hands on, with Embassy officials, and Linda Robertson and the family  members who flew out to be with her.

    Andy reports:“The assistance given by the British Embassy to the family of Malcolm Robertson was bloody brilliant. In fact it’s fair to say they could not have done more.

    “A three person team buzzed around the family, at pains not to be intrusive,  but at other times giving support when needed. Deputy Head of Mission Daniel Pruce liaised with the Thai authorities, the Thai media and the FCO, organizing a quite extraordinary search. 3 helicopters, 2 spotter planes, three marine police / naval vessels, a number of small naval vessels and over a hundred fishing boats were and are still looking for Malcolm’s body.

    “Vice Consul Caroline Vaudrey assisted Daniel and spent time giving support to Malcolm’s wife Lindie and their children. The Thai member of staff did a superb job as translator during the day long testimony given by Lindie to Satun Court. He had to take the place of the court appointed translator because he was far, far better.

    “I felt proud to be British.”

    Well you cannot get a better testimonial than that from a hard-bitten newsman like Andy Chant, but he did panic and say ’Don’t make me look sychophantic!’, when I told him we had better give the Embassy due credit.

    I hope this provides some balance to the reports we do, which do not always show the British Embassy in a good light. So I really have to say ‘Thank you chaps’.

    But,  before  I get too sychophantic,  this today from Judith Sinnott who is sure her brother was murdered in Pattaya in 2002. Judith had been reading our reports on the Malcolm Robertson murder. *

    “Dear Andrew

    It is good to see that you are still fighting the cause of a number of British Tourists murdered in Thailand of which the UK Government continues to whitewash, my brother being one of the many statistics ! The British Embassy BKK are hopeless and if anything the FCO are very obstructive during and investigation. I am so glad that there are journalists out there not afraid to cover these horrendous stories

    “My brother was murdered in Pattaya in 2002 and to cut along story short, justice has never been done due to Thai police incompetence and meddling by the FCO.

    “Having been “missing” for 4 months, I personally found him in the Forensics Institute as an unidentified Farang, despite the Embassy having checked !!…. and despite numerous inconsistencies in statements from the people he was with, this was never properly investigated in Thailand and the death was put down as drowning despite all this !

    “ I still continue to investigate in the UK though. However for the families involved, it never really goes away. There are a lot of us out there who never get any form of justice in Thailand and I fear that this will happen again to the latest family. Maybe there needs to be some form of collective article in relation to this ?

    “I have indeed read your website and it is very good, in fact some of it really tickled me.

    “I do seem to remember that the Embassy were less than impressed with some of what had been written about them, hence they were desperate to keep you away from us, but, hey ho , the truth hurts sometimes !! They really leave themselves wide open to criticism in my opinion”.
    Best wishes
    Judith

    *edited from two emails and a reply to my blog

    Picture: British Embassy Tsunami desk, Phuket Provincial Hall, December 28 2004

    “I killed the farang with a hammer. Please tell the lady I’m sorry”

    ‘I killed the farang with a hammer. Please tell the lady I’m so sorry’: Burmese pirate confesses to murder of Briton on sailing trip

    By Andrew Drummond and Andrew Chant   (link to Mail on Sunday) : 

    Pictures: Andrew Chant/Linda Robertson
    29th March 2009
    A teenager arrested after the murder of British yachtsman Malcolm Robertson has confessed to the killing from his cell – but may never be charged with the crime.
    robertsonlaowekFisherman Eksian Warapon, 19, (centre right)admitted: ‘I did it. And I did it alone. First I knocked the  farang [the foreigner] down with a hammer. Then when I was told that he was still alive I went back and hit him several times until I heard his skull crack.
    ‘If I ever get out of jail I’ll lead a good, proper life. Please tell the lady [Mr Robertson’s wife Linda] I’m so sorry. I know I do not deserve to live.’
    However, Thai authorities say they cannot prosecute for murder because they do not have a body. Eksian says he threw Mr Robertson’s body overboard.
     Eksian Warapon, right, has confessed from jail to killing Malcolm Robertson with a hammer after boarding his boat with shipmate Aow, left
    Eksian, known as Ek, said he was puzzled why he had not been charged with killing 64-year-old Mr Robertson. Ek and his ‘amateur pirate’ shipmates Aow, 18, and Ko, 17, have been charged only with kidnap, assault and theft.
    Mr Robertson and his 57-year-old wife, from St Leonard’s in East Sussex, had been sailing their yacht Mr Bean from Phuket in Thailand to the Malaysian island of Langkawi.
    lindarobertsonmalcolmboatThey were set upon after they moored off Butang Island in Tarutao National Marine Park on Tuesday.
    Their assailants swam out to the mooring and attacked Mr Robertson (right) as he tried to throw them off the boat.
    Ek, who was born in Phuket to Burmese parents who were killed in a car crash when he was 14, said that he, Aow and Ko had been working aboard a Thai fishing vessel.
    But he claimed that conditions were bad – with little or no pay and work that was too heavy for the teenagers to carry out – so they decided to jump ship.
    Ek said: ‘Last week our fishing boat moored for the night between two islands off Satun. On one of the islands we could see a park ranger’s office and some sign of life, so we decided to swim there.
    ‘It was on the side of the boat that the crew couldn’t see. But after we jumped off the tide changed the boat’s position. It swung around 180 degrees so we had to swim around the boat and off with the current in the opposite direction to the other island, Butang.
    ‘But there was no food there. We didn’t eat for two days. We were marooned and we thought we would die there. On the third day we saw a yacht moored off the island and decided that at nightfall we would go there, try to get the yacht’s dinghy and take it to the other island and get some food.’

    The yacht was the Robertsons’ 44ft ketch, which had taken the couple two thirds of the way around the world in their retirement from running their bakery business.
     The pirates boarded the Robertson’s 44ft ketch Mr Bean. They had moored off uninhabited Butang Island and had spent the day swimming and sunbathing.
    Ek added: ‘At midnight we swam to the yacht and climbed on board. At first we all looked for food on the top of the boat but there was none.
    ‘Then I found a hammer and decided to go downstairs for food. I got down and turned right and found a torch. I opened a door and saw a woman sleeping there.
    ‘I quietly shut it before she woke up. Looking around again I found a knife and thought I could use that to cut away the dinghy from the yacht.
    ‘Then I heard a cough from in front and figured that the wife must have been sleeping in one room and the man in the other. First of all the man just turned over and didn’t wake up. I crouched down and then started looking for food again.
    linda-robertson-beach-froli1
    ‘Then he turned over again and quickly sat upright. Our eyes met. He came towards me shouting and I struck him twice with the hammer, knocking him semiconscious.’
     Brutal: Ek repeatedly hit Mr Robertson with this hammer until he heard his skull crack
    ‘He fell down and I went straight for the ladder. The lady must have heard because as I was going up she came out and screamed. I showed her the knife and shouted “Stop” in English. She stopped and I put her back into her room and tied her up.
    ‘I shouted for Ko to check to see if the man was dead. He said he was not dead. I told the boy to watch the lady and went to see the man.
    ‘As I went in he stumbled into me,’ said Ek, miming a head butt. ‘I was shocked and scared and hit him again with the hammer three or four times. On the final blow I heard a loud crack and he collapsed to the floor. I just used the hammer. I did not slit his throat as police have claimed.
    ‘After that we got the lady to start the boat. Then we sent her back to the room. We drove the boat for what seemed like only a couple of minutes before we put the engine on idle.
    ‘I went down with Aow and we pulled the body up to the top, put the legs over the side rails, lifted the body up and threw it off. I was worried people would see the blood on the boat. Now I don’t know why or how I could have done it. But none of us wanted the body on the boat.
    ‘From then on we ate everything we could find and decided to motor far away. When we got near to a port, which we found out was Satun, we decided to leave the ship. We locked Mrs Linda in the cabin, but we had loosened her ropes a little because she was complaining of the pain. Then we got into the dinghy. But it broke down a few yards away.
    ‘We tried to get back to the boat but she sailed away in front of us. After a while we got the outboard going and headed for shore. But we were picked up by the police very quickly.’
     Malcolm and Linda were sailing the globe on their yacht Mr Bean
    Last night Mrs Robertson said that Ek’s claims ‘leave me cold’. She added: ‘It’s easy to confess to a crime when you have been caught red-handed.
    Malcolm and Linda Robertson‘I am in disbelief that these men have only been charged with assault, theft and kidnap and not murder, not even manslaughter. However, if he gets 15 years or life it makes no difference to me.
    ‘The youngest of the three was the only person who showed any remorse. He brought me food and drink and stroked my feet which were in agony because they were tightly bound.
    ‘These people had a picnic on board the yacht and I could hear them laughing and joking as if they did not have a care in the world.’
    She added: ‘I would rather think of the happy memories I had with my husband. Malcolm was a great kidder. He had everyone convinced that Rowan Atkinson sent him a sizeable cheque every year for using the name Mr Bean. Of course it was tosh, but he earned a few drinks out of that one.
    ‘I’m trying to close my mind to the bad memories and relive the fond ones.’

    Saved by the hand of an angel - Bangkok nightclub fire

    Other adapted versions of this story from this author on the links below

    British man tells of blaze horror - SKY News

    Saved by the hand of an angel - Daily Mail (online)

    British survivor tells of miracle escape - Daily Mirror

    British survivors tell of chaos escaping blaze in death trap club - The Guardian

    British man saved by angel who dragged him out - Daily Telegraph

    Brits in deadly new year blaze - SKY NEWS

    Fireworks blamed for Thai club inferno - The Independent

    Brits in fire hell - The SUN

    Britons reveal horror of nightclub blaze -Daily Mail (Newspaper)

    Saved by the hand of an angel - Daily Express

     Hand of an angel saved me from death in Bangkok club blaze, says Briton - Daily Record

     

     

    From Andrew Drummond,
    Bangkok
    (Pictures Andrew Chant)
    A British survivor of the New Year fire horror in a Bangkok club told tonight how he was saved from death by the hand of an angel.
    Alex Wargacki, 29, told how he collapsed and fell unconscious, as fire raged threw the Santika nightclub in Bangkok, taking the lives of 60 people, and injuring over 200 including four Britons.
    “I woke up and heard this voice saying. ‘Come on. Come on this way’ . Then I felt myself being dragged towards an exit. A crowd of people parted in front of me and then I was out in the open air.
    “Had it not been for this voice with the hand of an angel I would not be alive today.  The voice sounded as if he was Thai.  Maybe he was one of the people at the New Year’s party.
    “Maybe he was a fireman. But when I get out of hospital I want to thank him for sure.”
    Mr. Wargacki, a Forex trader, from Finchley, North London, told how he saw the fire being started in the club at about 12.30 am on New Year’s morning.
    Together with seven friends he had been revelling to rap and hip hop music in the club.
    “Suddenly to the right of the stage I saw a firework being let off amongst a crowd of partygoers. I shot right across the room. I don’t know exactly how long, but it seemed no time at all when the whole place, walls and ceilings were ablaze.
    “Then everyone started running for the door. But the door seemed tiny and people were jammed up against it.  If there was another way out, none of us knew about it, and all the windows were barred.
    “There were flames from the floor to the ceiling. I could hear windows cracking and breaking in the heat.
    “I felt myself going unconscious. I knew something was happening to my lungs. I could not breathe. I blacked out and fell to the floor.  That’s when I heard the voice
    “I had been to the club many times and went to the New Year’s Party because the club was closing and it was their ‘Goodbye Santika’ party.
    “I guess I always knew the place was a bit of a death trap. But that’s like so many places here. That’s Thailand. You come to expect it. I have worked here for four years and got used to it. Even some shopping malls are accidents waiting to happen.
    Speaking at Samitivej Hospital off Bangkok’s Sukhumvit Road, Mr. Wargacki added “A British Embassy official came to see me today. Maybe they can help.  My hospital bill is already £1500. I am hoping the club owners will pay it.”
    Alex Wargacki  was one of four Britons injured in the blaze. He was brought to the Samitivej Hospital will fellow Briton Oliver Smart, 35, who last night was still unable to speak.
    A hospital spokesman said: “One of his lungs totally collapsed. He has been only able to tell us his name, and that he was with his Thai girlfriend.   She is being treated at another hospital.”
    The other two Britons were named as Steven Hall, from South Wales, and Adam Butler. 
    Steven Hall who was treated at the city’s Bamrungrad Hospital for third degree burns to his back and hand told CNN: “About 12.30 or 12.45, I saw flames billowing out across the ceiling.
    “At first I thought it was part of the show, along with everybody else I think, but I noticed the look of terror on the people’s faces on the actual stage and I instantly realised it wasn’t.”
     ”I could feel the heat almost straight away, but people weren’t reacting,” he said.
    “There was a girl behind the bar who was more concerned with getting the cash register out.”
    “It was pitch black, it was burning my back, I put my hand behind me on my head, and on the way to the hospital, the skin was dropping off my hand.”
    There was only one way down from the balcony that ringed the top level, and one way up from the toilets in the sub-ground floor, he said. All the windows were barred.
    “The flames spread very very fast. It went straight along the ceiling.”
    Thailand’s Eton educated Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva yesterday visited the scene of the tragedy and victims in the nearby Camillian Hospital.
    “Why was someone allowed to let off a firework in the club?” he asked.
    Serious questions were also raised about the fire precautions in the club. Thailand has a history of tragic fires.  Some 380 workers died in a toy factory on the outskirts of Bangkok unable to get out of fire escapes which were padlocked.  A club fire Route 66 club in the resort of Pattaya also took a heavy death toll.
    Revelers complained that there was no sprinkler system in the Santika.  And that although there were other exits, there were no signs pointing out where they were, so everyone fled to the front door.
    Exits can be locked in Thai club for fear of people leaving without paying their bills
    The Foreign Office say that they have not been notified about any British fatality though it was reported by one newspaper that a 34-yr-old female British teacher had died. The bodies of some 32 people, who have been burned beyond, have still to be identified.
    The club in Bangkok’s  Thong Lor district, an area known for up-market night clubs frequented by both Thais and foreigners,  operates on three levels, basement, ground floor and second floor.
    Many of the dead were trapped in the basement unable to get up the one stairwell. Others were knocked down in the stampede to the clubs one main entrance and exit.
    Members of the band which was playing were reported to have been able to get out a rear exit that few people knew about.
    Briton Andrew Long, who managed to escape, said: “There were a number of people trapped in the toilets which were in the basement. Some people were able to escape through windows, but some were barred. “

     

     

    Weary stranded Brits join BA’s first flight home. Ladyboys beg tourists to return - Evening Standard

    From  Andrew Drummond
    Bangkok
    December 4 2008

    Link to Stranded tourists face weeks of delay - Irish Independent

    Link to - Gruelling trip for stranded Britons - Evening Standard

    Some 200 weary Britons set off from Bangkok today to board the first British Airways rescue flight from Thailand
    .
    Ahead of them they face a gruelling 33 hours journey back to London after being stranded in Thailand during the siege of the airports by anti-government demonstrators.

     

     

    And as the the Britons and others left the country’s emptying hotels, Thais, fearful of the blow to their tourist industry, laid on bands and transvestites shows imploring ‘Please come back again’

    The Britons, some frustrated, some angry, and others  ‘just going with the flow’  having enjoyed some extra days holiday, set off from Bangkok today to board BA1010, a Boeing 777 which has been flown out to the southern island of Phuket.

    The passengers checked in for flight at special desks set up at the Bangkok Shangri-La hotel and then boarded buses for the ten hour journey south to Phuket.

    From there they will join 72 and depart at 4am Friday, and  fly  first to Chennai (Madras) and on to London arriving shortly after 2.10 pm.

    A retired army colonel, from Stratford-on-Avon,who asked not to be named as he was doing security work for the U.N. in Laos, smiled chuckled to himself before boarding one of the buses said: “A good quartermaster sergeant major could have sorted this out in no time.  He would have got the transport by hook or by crook.
     
    “I would have got to Singapore on the roof of a train if they had let me, but its been impossible to get out of Bangkok”

    Paul Wicks, 24, travelling with his girlfriend Rebecca Cavaliero,23,  both from Guildford, Surrey said: “The waiting has not been bad. We have been in a good hotel and our room and food has been paid for.

     

    “But by the time we had left there were not many people left in the hotel –and it was only Brits. All the Germans and Scandinavians had gone. It was getting like a ghost hotel.”

    Barry Parkinson, 55, from Barnard Castle, Durham, agreed. “Our hotel was getting quieter by the hour too.  We are retired and not so much in a hurry, we have just been going with the flow, but Brits certainly seem to be the last out of this mess.

    “We could not understand the explanations BA gave as to why they could not fly here when others could.”

    Geoffrey Hyde, 54, from Eastbourne, a carpenter , was worried about the dog he had left his kennels and his job.

    “I have taken unpaid lead and was due back at work this week. There has been a lot of confusion. The BA office was shut at the weekend.  I hit the roof and my wife was crying earlier when the airline later told us we could not go home until December 10th. Luckily the situation changed”.

    Adam Brooks, 18, and Jessica Bilton, also 18, both from Nottingham, were not so lucky. Although they joined the busses to Phuket they were told they would have to fly to Singapore and wait another day for a flight from there.

    “We did not know about the offers to provide hotel and food accommodation. We had to borrow money to get by, even to call home. We called the Embassy and they said they would see what they could do. But we never heard from them again.”

    Both British Airways and the Foreign Office have been criticised for not coming to the aid of the Britons. Both have vehemently denied the allegations.

    Other airlines including Holland’s KLM, Italy’s Alitalia, France’s Air France, four airlines from China, and military aircraft from Spain had got their country nationals out of Thailand.  But British Airways refused to fly in.  The Chinese are reported to have evacuated all their stranded citizens by December 1st.

     British Airways QUANTAS Kevin McQuillan  Thailand Country Manager apologised to the passengers saying: “We appreciate how frustrating it has been for all.”

    He said afterwards: “ We have got  900 of our passengers out of Thailand already. We have charted Jet Star airways to fly to Singapore and also charted Malaysian Airlines for a relief aircraft to join our flights in Singapore.  Our foremost consideration was for the safety and security of our passengers.

    “Our office was open during the weekend, but unfortunately the answer phone message said we were closed.
     
    “If callers had hung on they would have heard an addition to the message especially for stranded passengers.” He said British Airways hoped to be flying to Bangkok again within days.

    Meanwhile stranded tourists flying out from U-Tapao airport in eastern Thailand, a former US airbase for B52s during the Indo-China war, were being entertained by live bands and a transvestite show, as the Thais, fearful for their tourism industry encourages them  to come back again.

    They are also being given free food, drink and orchids.
    All parties in Thailand have agreed to end demonstrations until after the birthday of King Adulyadej on December 5th

    Gary Glitter - where they went wrong

    (originally published September 2008)

    When the disgraced former glam-rock star was released from jail in Vietnam, Bangkok based journalists Andrew Drummond and Andrew Chant made sure the convicted paedophile went back to the U.K., despite a Hong Kong diversion which was billed in the UK as Glitter’s Asian Tour 2008.

    It was fitting as both Drummond and Chant were the journalists who had originally tracked him down to Vietnam and exposed his activities in Vung Tau after first finding his home in Cambodia.

    But as Andrew Drummond reports he could easily have slipped away.   He also illustrates the role journalists are playing in this controversial issue of child sex abusers and the problems they encounter and the criticisms, some justified, they face.

     

    “Look here. This is their card. On it, it says ‘Protecting Children Everywhere’  - but they are clearly not.  Had we left it up to Scotland Yard’s CEOP (Scotland Yard’s Exploitation and Online Protection unit) Gary Glitter would now be roaming free in Thailand.

    “Once in Bangkok he could have got a false passport, changed his appearance, and quite literally disappeared.”

    I’m talking to Sudarat Sereewat, a member of Thailand’s National Committee on Child Protection, and as Secretary General of FACE  (Fight Against Child Exploitation) the foreign paedophile’s worst enemy in Thailand.

    Gary Glitter, real name Paul Francis Gadd, had finally been put on Flight TG901 to London after 48 hours of screaming, feigning illness, and balling out British Embassy officials and police.

    But, as Sudarat intimated, he was within a hair’s breadth of freedom in Thailand. He just needed to escape a posse of reporters.

    She adds: “It appears Scotland Yard was busily telling the world they were waiting to meet this man in London but they failed to tell Thailand’s Immigration department he was coming here.

    In the ‘No Man’s land’ of Suvarnabhumi airport earlier this year I watched  as Scotland Yard’s  CEOP tried to get their man.

    Because indirectly I, who was the person, who told Thai police what they were about to face, and initiated his Asian tour.

    There has been considerable debate about the ‘Glitter’ story.  On the one hand its quite clear that there something quite appalling in the massive coverage Glitter’s latest tour and his subsequent hounding merely because Glitter is a ‘celebrity paedophile’.

    The News of the World and SUN were leading the ‘Hang em high’ brigade, but there was, nevertheless, a pretty clear consensus that having served 2 years nine months in a Vietnamese jail for offences against Vietnamese children – his lawyers paid compensation to two families to avoid rape charges – he should be returned to regulators in Britain in all possible haste.

    That’s what the British Government had planned,  but on August 19th at Tan Son Nhat international airport in Ho Chi Minh City as I waited to join Glitter, on his 8.50 p.m. flight,  there were already signs that something would go wrong with this particular deportation.

    In London, Scotland Yard had leaked information to journalists that the convicted paedophile would be met by police on his arrival in Britain, specifically at Gatwick airport. He could not travel anywhere.

    Scotland Yard even leaked to favoured and trusted journalists that he was flying to London via Doha by Qatar Airways. One TV crew actually went leaving my colleague Andy Chant holding the ITN card, myself running for Sky TV, and Jonathan Head and Andrew Harding alternating for the BBC.

    Meanwhile Britain’s Home Secretary Jacqui Smith selected August 19th as the day she would announce new legislation which would stop convicted paedophiles  - ‘people like Gary Glitter’ - from travelling abroad.  This would be announced shortly before Glitter was led ignominiously off from Heathrow airport.

    In Ho Chi Minh City Glitter’s lawyer , Le Kinh Tanh was also publicly saying his client was being deported to London, which was odd, as he had told my colleague Andrew Chant the week before; that Glitter was free a free man as soon as he left Vietnam.

    I already had the print-out for Glitter’s reservation in ‘tourist class’ in seat 63K on the Thai Airways flight to Bangkok so I booked the seat beside him.

    The Vietnamese authorities had announced that Glitter would have to travel tourist class.

    So when a local Vietnamese took the seat next to me and Glitter took his seat in Business Class I knew that a local Asian deal had been done and pretty sure Le Than Kinh had done his client a last favour.

    I immediately called Sudarat Sereewat in Bangkok.  We had discussed Glitter previously. We both knew that,  as he had no convictions in Thailand, no alert would go up if he tried to go through immigration unless someone took action.  She assumed the British Government had everything under control.  Scotland Yard had paid enough visits to Vietnam.

    She quickly established however that Thai Immigration had no inkling of his arrival or for that matter who on earth he was, and had less than two hours to go to work on the case.

    A fax was immediately sent to Police General  Chatchawal  Suksomjit,  Head of Thailand’s Immigration Police together with a copy of  Glitter’s full indictment in Vietnam,  which I had passed on earlier.  In it also were the details I had sent including Glitter’s passport number, and date of birth.

    Sudarat made it to Bangkok’s just ten minutes before the plane arrived on the night of Tuesday the 19th.  Police there, led by Colonel ‘Pop’ Putiporn,  had been ordered to work closely with her.

     Thai Immigration Police were waiting at the aircraft door together with hospitality staff of Thai Airways. Glitter had told the cabin crew he was a star who wished to avoid the press.  

    For the next 24 hours there ensued what Fleet Street concluded was an ‘oriental farce’ which began almost immediately as Glitter, first feigning illness, locked himself in a room airside at Louis Tavern, as a CEOP officer Martin Joss tried to coax him to go home. 

    Flight TG901 was getting close to boarding.  Joss was failing, what’s more the Scotland Yard officer was in an unenviable position as he was there ‘unofficially’ and not accompanied, as is normal, by a Thai Police officer. 

    Nor at first did he get a warm welcome from Sudarat.  His boss, Jim Warnock, Director of Operations at CEOP, had been particularly difficult, she felt, in helping secure the arrest of another British paedophile in Bangkok earlier in the year.

    But if Martin Joss could quickly persuade Glitter that Britain was his only option then perhaps the problem would go away.

    There was little Thai authorities could do, as the Vietnamese police had not given Thai Airways any documentation that Glitter was being deported.

    But when Joss was asked whether he had any paper work showing Glitter’s convictions in the U.K.,” he said: “No,”  adding, a little timidly, that as this was not his jurisdiction he wished to keep a low profile.

    He was however given time with Glitter, with Thai Police and Sudarat witnessing the interview.

    Glitter remained rigid: “I am a British citizen. I am entitled to full rights. I have served my time and now I am a first class passenger.”

    He now wanted to see a British Embassy official.

     Stephen Buckley, an Attaché representing Britain’s Department of Trade & Industry, whose duty that night was to answer calls from Brits in life or death situations,  arrived at 12.40 – just a few minutes before Glitter’s onward flight was due for boarding.

    Glitter again demanded his rights.

    “I’ll need to speak to the Ambassador,” said Buckley, diplomatically.

    But flight TG901 pulled out before Ambassador Quinton Quayle could be contacted, or at least before he could give a reply.

    The next morning Glitter spent some frustrating hours waiting for a ‘promised ticket to Singapore’ to arrive from Thai Airlines and the CEOP officer snuck up to Glitter’s room for some last minute persuasion.

     Perhaps as Jacqui Smith had already made her ‘Glitter is going nowhere’ proclamation broadcast , which could be picked up in Thailand this was again fruitless. He left telling Glitter ‘I am not missing tonights flight to London. If you are not on it I cannot help you anymore.”

    And Thai Police were still in a pickle.  Although they now had a fax from Jim Warnock CEOP’s Head of Operations, saying that Glitter should sent back to London, there were still no details of his British conviction.

    All they could do however, was, having warned Glitter not to attempt to go through Immigration, arrest him for being in breach of a police order if he did, and throw him into Bangkok’s Immigration Jail.  When that happened, they felt, it would not be long before he demanded deportation.

    Not surprisingly, as he had a police escort, he did not attempt to get through immigration.

    They chose the much simpler course.  They allowed him to fly on to Hong Kong, while telling the Hong Kong authorities to expect him and send him back with deportation papers.

    I joined him on the flight in the seat behind. We spoke briefly.

    He simply replied that he was going to Hong Kong from medical treatment. He was either feigning or had a lot of trouble hearing my questions.  Lots of shrugging and pointing to his ears. Then he spent time on his phone calling his lawyers in London and trying to fix his Hong Kong accommodation whom he seemed to hear perfectly.

    Glitter was of course detained by the authorities in Hong Kong then sent back to Bangkok.  Glitter would now be on Thursday’s TG109 by hook or by crook. By now he was too tired to fight.

    By the time he got to London however the British Government, and CEOP, and The Home Office had received a minor roasting by the press and by the public on internet forums.

    The exception may have been the The Sun, who were happy with their report by Virginia Wheeler under the headline ‘Glitter stroke my arm and called me sweetie!” from the Vietnam –Bangkok leg.

    CEOP will say of course that they notified the Thai authorities. They no doubt did. But their warning must have still been sitting in an in-tray in Police HQ.

    Christine Beddoe of the charity ECPAT(End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and the Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) said that the British authorities tended to “turn a blind eye” to British nationals indulging in child sex tourism.

    Sexual offences prevention orders were already in place, she said, which would compel registered paedophiles to tell the police when they intended to travel abroad, and allow the police to share that information with their colleagues at the destination country, if it is decided that the journey should even be allowed.

    “But only five such orders were issued between 2004 and 2007 even though during that time some 15 British nationals have been charged in Thailand alone for sexual offence involving children”.

    In the Independent newspaper, under the headline ‘The Real Scandal of Gary Glitter’,   Deborah Orr wrote: “Tabloid pursuit of Glitter may well be uncivilised and distasteful. …. But at least his lamentable tale has the potential to draw attention to a much more widespread horror. If the tabloids don’t track British paedophiles abroad, then no one tends to at all.”

    And there Deborah Orr has it.  A British child sexual abuser in Thailand is much more likely to be identified by a member of the British public. And the public are much more inclined to call a British tabloid newspaper than Thai police, or even CEOP.

    For two years now there has not been a Police Liaison officer at the British Embassy.  There is a member of the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) but calls about sex offenders in my experience will all be referred to London. It’s not serious enough under SOCA’s rules of engagement.

    When people tip off civil servants things can go badly wrong.

    Earlier this year a member of the British public living up in north east Thailand sent an email to the British Embassy notifying them that his neighbour a registered paedophile from Accrington, Northern England, had not only been cheating the British Social Security system, by illegally claiming British government benefits while in Thailand, but had also had secured a job teaching at a school in Bangkok.

    The reply he got from the British Embassy was classic.

    In the case of the benefits fraud the informant was told to contact the Department of Work and Pensions.  In the case of the Brit being a registered paedophile who was teaching Thai children in Bangkok,  the Embassy told the man to contact his local police station in Isaan!

    No wonder he called the London SUN who subsequently called me.

    On this occasion I also contacted Sudarat, who notified Bangkok Metropolitan Police’s Women and Children’s Investigation Branch.   I also notified a very senior policeman in the UK and through him CEOP.

    The CEOP call turned out to be a totally pointless exercise. All  calls were immediately diverted to the press office. Calls to the Embassy were also re-routed to the Press Office.  I did not want any press information.

    Besides waiting for an answer from the Embassy’s press department can often take days and the answer is not usually worth waiting for, in the sort of enquiries I tend to make.

    Andy Chant and I investigated the Accrington man, Alan Smith, (right)and we came to the conclusion that in any of these cases it really was not worth telling the proper authorities first.

     We found the paedophile,  verified the case,  and the man was removed from the school and deported without CEOP’s help.

    Sudarat told us she had much more problems with CEOP than even we had.

    Earlier this year the CEOP’ chose as their Liaison Officer on one of their publicised training courses  a political secretary at the Embassy, famous for describing a journalist from a respected Sunday newspaper, as being ‘scum of the earth’ during the 2004 Tsunami.

    A short while later this young man was back in London.  He had taken to writing a blog in ‘The Nation’ newspaper which had to be stopped after two days, after it was described as ,well at best ‘patronising’, and bloggers reported him (no doubt falsely) as having been seen in Soi Cowboy, a red light area,  with a $5 whore!”

    There are hundreds of ‘angry Brits’ in Thailand, out of sorts possibly because they have failed to get a Thai girlfriend back to the UK, so its open season when a British diplomat puts himself on the net, especially if he likes telling people how he sings karaoke with Thai generals.

    Many people are grateful for the British Embassy’s help and I know of many such cases.

    But the culture of ‘If you say nothing or do nothing you can’t get into trouble’  (a British official’s off the record comment to me, referring to calls from the Press) can sometimes seem all pervasive.  

    The Foreign  & Commonwealth Office, however  can and does look after itself and itself.

    After the 2004 Tsunami an independent report carried out by the National Audit Office in the United Kingdom was scathing in its criticism of The British Embassy anf FCO effort.

    The British Embassy were duly congratulated by a Junior Foreign Office Minister for doing a good job and published a complete but unconvincing rebuttal,  which you can still find on the internet.

    (Picture left: British Embassy Tsunami Desk Phuket!)

    This year the British Foreign Office are again being condemned for obstruction and deceipt in the case of a Briton Julie Ward, 28, who was murdered in the Masai Game Reserve in Kenya 20 years ago.

    The independent report compiled by Jon Stoddart, now the Chief Constable of Durham in Northern England, accused the British authorities of ‘inconsistency, falsehoods and downright lies’.  The Foreign office has already issued a denial.

    The above reports are not criticisms by newspapers. They are from British Government departments written by government officers.

    The FCO I am glad to say did not however go to the aid of a retired diplomat who was caught in Pattaya by a British Sunday newspaper and exposed under the headline ’Her Majesty’s Vice-Consul and child pervert ring’ for dealing in naked pictures of under-aged boys.

    He ran a coffee shop as part of the ‘Boyz Boyz Boyz’ complex in Pattaya - see Fighting for Justice

    But the whole point here is that If CEOP want to operate in Thailand to protect children from Britain’s child sex predators they should be talking to people here who actually know the business, who the predators are, and how they evade the law.  In short they need to get down and dirty.

    The British government, and others, have spent hundreds of thousands of pounds, on courses to train people, especially police, how to deal with child sex offenders.

    Cash would be better spent on individual cases to ensure justice. Because the cash paedophiles have enables them to elude justice. This is the reality.

    I have been in Thailand for 20 years and have seen scores of paedophiles walk. British, Germans, Dutch, French, Swiss,  American, the lot.

    A whole series of foreigners, among them three Britons, were arrested in Pattaya earlier this year, for offences against children.  Not many of them are still in the system.  One Briton in particular, known to the kids as ‘The Ghost’ has been bailed again, even though his latest offence was committed, while on bail appealing a 14 year jail sentence for the rape of two under-aged girls.

    Only high profile paedophiles, such as ‘Mr.Swirly’ or Gary Glitter , appear to be unable to beat  the system, and usually only after an international furore. This is a basic fact of life here.

    British law enforcement officers such as those from CEOP, have to go through the Royal Thai Police Foreign Affairs Division.  All well and good. But there they have to join the queue along with the world’s other police forces and the RTP often have bigger and more lucrative fish to fry.

    It is at this point that a lot of back scratching, the ritual exchange of police divisional and departmental shields and plaques ,  the dinners, the Embassy socials, all come in to play.

    Their job would be best served in the middle of the action rather than just familiarity tours of Pattaya’s Sunee Plaza.

    Until then their motto, ‘Protecting Children Everywhere’, may just be a slogan and we’ll just have to leave it to those who are actually reeling in paedophiles abroad.  The international and tabloid press.

    Tracking down Gary Glitter

     

     

     

     

    Thaksin Shinawatra branded a criminal. Thais seek extradition

     

    From Andrew Drummond,
    Bangkok Supreme Court, October 21 08
    Former Thai Premier and owner of Manchester City Football Club was branded a criminal today and jailed for two years while ‘in absentia’ in England.
    After finding him guilty of corruption in a land deal  the Supreme Court submitted the verdict to Thailand’s Attorney General to pass to Britain for extradition proceedings.

    PAD protesters at Government House - Picture Andrew Chant
    Thousands of Thais, members of the opposition People’s Alliance for Democracy were last night on the streets of Bangkok also calling on Britain to return Mr.Shinawatra  which they said would to put an end to the Bangkok stand-off -  which started when they seized control of Government  House here three months ago.
    Sporting banners reading ‘Send Thaksin back now’ and ‘UK Government Stop Harbouring Criminals’ members of the PAD cheered and sent thousands of plastic hand-clappers off as the sentence against Thaksin Shinawatra, known as ‘Frank’ to Man City fans was announced.
    But as a sign of how split the country is the judges only voted 5 against 4 for the conviction and they acquitted Thaksin’s wife of corruption as she was ‘not a member of government’.
    Behind the calls for the return of Thaksin is the belief, held widely on both sides, that Thaksin Shinawatra, has been affectively controlling the leaders of two proxy governments since the military junta ousted him in a coup.   The PAD say only if Thaksin is in jail will he stop attempting to meddle in Thailand’s affairs.
    Kanchana Malaithong ,45, from Lampang sporting a ‘Stop Harbouring Criminals’ placard outside PAD headquarters at Government House said: “The only safe thing for Thailand is if Thaksin is actually put in jail.
    “He claims he is not involved in politics, but that is a lie, even his puppet Prime Ministers admit to consulting him. The people are sick of corrupt and greedy politicians.”
    The Thai National Human Rights Commission has blamed both the current Thai government, run by Thaksin’s brother-in-law Somchai Wongsawat, and police, for violence two weeks ago when 400 protesters were injured and two were killed, after police attacked with Chinese made tear gas bombs, which contained explosives and blew off limbs.
    Shinawatra was found guilty of corruption by signing off on a deal which allowed his wife Pojoman, 51, to buy a massive city centre area of Bangkok from a government department at one third of its market price while her husband was Prime Minister.
    Pojaman is currently appealing a three year jail sentence imposed in July for tax fraud involving the same 13 acre piece of land. But she and her husband fled Thailand to Britain, via the Beijing Olympics, after her last conviction.
    Pojaman, born into one of Thailand’s richest Chinese Thai families, had bought a sixteen acre site of prime real estate in Ratchadphisek in the centre of Bangkok from a government financial department.
    Today’s result was not unexpected even by Thaksin himself who said: “I had long anticipated that it would turn out this way”.
    In the earlier case in his judgment the principal judge was quoted as saying that the defendants had ‘lied, cheated, and conspired to evade taxes, which is regarded as a serious crime.”
    The last Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, who admitted in his campaign that he was Thaksin’s nominee, was forced to resign his Premiership when it clashed with a politically oriented cookery show he hosted on television.
    The current Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, Thaksin’s brother-in-law has been found guilty by the National Counter Corruption of dereliction of duty in a remarkably similar case in which he allowed subordinates in his department at the Justice Ministry to sell government land without taking the appropriate fee.
    And to cap it all the office of the Attorney General’s Office last week petitioned the Constitutional Court to disband the ruling PPP government  and  two of its coalition partners  for electoral fraud.
    So far the Thai Government of his brother-in-law Somchai has not even revoked Shinawatra’s diplomatic passport. 
    In Britain Thaksin Shinawatra had been told he could not remain owner of Manchester City F.C. once he had a conviction, and last week  the passenger window of his Rolls Royce was reported to have been smashed.
    On another occasion while dining at a Chinese restaurant in Notting Hill Gate other customers are reported to have banged their glasses on their tables in protest at his presence.
    ends

     

     

    Andrew Drummond the only reporter with Gary Glitter -Daily Mail August 21 08

     

     

    REJECTED BY VIETNAM, THAILAND, HONG KONG, NOW POP PERVERT GLITTER AGREES TO RETURN TO BRITAIN

    By Andrew Drummond and Sam Greenhill

     

    Paedophile Gary Glitter has agreed to fly back to Britain after two days in international limbo as he was refused entry to Hong Kong and Thailand, according to Thai police.

    Officers said the disgraced former pop star has finally agreed to board a flight back to London despite his attempts to avoid returning to his home country.

    The paedophile and former pop star has agreed to return to Britain after being caught in a sting that resulted in him being served deportation papers in Hong Kong.

    Thai police want him on the first available direct flight back to London. A space is being held for him on flight TG 901, which departs at 1.10am local time and lands at Heathrow Terminal 3 at 6am tomorrow.

    Reluctant: Gary Glitter flying back to Thailand today. Police there say the convicted paedophile has now agreed to take a flight back to Britain

    Reluctant: Gary Glitter flying back to Thailand today. Police there say the convicted paedophile has now agreed to take a flight back to Britain

    The deal came after it emerged that Glitter had appealed to the Foreign Office to help him out of his travel deadlock.

    But an airport source said he had fallen into a trap by boarding the plane to Hong Kong:

    “Gary Glitter was allowed to fly to Hong Kong. It was a trap and he fell for it. He was given the deportation papers as soon as he touched down.

    ‘They can now legally make him get on that plane back to the UK, or put him in a detention centre.

    ‘Thai immigration police colluded with Hong Kong to make this happen as neither country wants him. Consular officials are speaking to him.”

    A spokesman said: ‘It’s our understanding that he’s arrived in Bangkok. He will either try to go somewhere else or come back to the UK.’

    Some 19 countries had refused the convicted paedophile entry and Thai officials had threatened to put him in a detention centre if he refused to leave for Britain.

    The 64-year-old, travelling under his real name Paul Gadd, was said to be trying to book flights to Sri Lanka and Singapore this morning before accepting his fate.

    With an estimated £5 million fortune, there were fears that he could bribe his way into a country and resume his pursuit of children.

    The former singer appeared totally determined to avoid returning to the one country he will certainly be allowed into - Britain.

    He was released from prison in Vietnam on Tuesday after serving a three-year jail term for abusing girls aged 11 and 12.

    From there he was deported to Thailand, supposedly to board a flight from Bangkok back to Britain but on arrival, he refused to budge.

    Last night it was suggested that an announcement by Home Secretary Jacqui Smith on restricting travel by paedophiles was behind this decision.

    glitter

    The sleeping creep: Glitter snoozes on a Thai Ariways flight to Hong Kong yesterday

    After a farcical 20-hour standoff with immigration officials, he eventually took a Thai Airlines flight to Hong Kong.

    Glitter had rebuffed all attempts to coax him aboard two London flights from Bangkok, and the Thais had made it clear he was not welcome to stay in their country, declaring him a ‘threat to domestic morality’.

    During the confrontation, he was overheard saying: ‘I’ve been in jail three years. Now I want to do some shopping in Hong Kong.’

    Once aboard Thai Airlines Flight TG602 to Hong Kong and settled into his business class seat, Glitter began issuing instructions to cabin staff, telling them: ‘I am quite famous and hard of hearing. Please can you arrange for an escort for me at the other end?’

    He used an on-board phone to call a friend in Hong Kong, asking him to book accommodation in Wanchai - the city’s lively night club area. ‘Just leave any message with Thai airways ground staff. They will know how to contact me,’ he said.

    The only reporter on the plane, Andrew Drummond, who was in the seat behind him, asked Glitter his plans and was told: ‘I am travelling to Hong Kong for medical treatment.’

    gary

    Stop right there: Gary Glitter arrives at Hong Kong airport where he is greeted by immigration officials

    Drummond said: ‘On landing, Glitter left the plane after being met by Cathay Pacific staff and an immigration official.

    ‘He smiled as he was fast-tracked through the Diplomats and Airline Staff immigration point, but once out of sight the smile must have been wiped off his face.’

    At least 19 countries have said they will refuse him entry.

    Meanwhile, the Home Office denied reports it had blundered by issuing him a new passport last year, allowing him to roam the world.

    A spokesman insisted his passport - number 761028553 - was in fact issued in 2002, four years before he was jailed in Vietnam.

    The spokesman said: ‘There was no blunder. We do not enforce the return of sex offenders, and he was entitled to a passport.’

    While Glitter, 64, was doing his utmost to avoid the UK, Home Secretary Miss Smith seemed determined to bring him home and keep him here.

    She was accused at Westminster of trying to manage the news by waiting for a ‘celebrity pervert’ to promote her tough measures to curtail paedophiles’ rights to travel.

    In fact, there were suspicions Miss Smith had actually triggered the Glitter farce by panicking him into refusing to board the flight to Britain.

     

    Glitter

    Please let me in: Glitter tries to persuade Chinese officials to let him into Hong Kong

    While at Bangkok, he watched the BBC which was broadcasting that paedophiles would never be allowed to travel again.

    Shadow Home Secretary Dominic Grieve, said: ‘Government policy timetable should not be dictated by the movements of a serial sex offender with a media profile.

    ‘This would be the crudest form of news management in an extremely sensitive area.’ 

    jacqui smith

    Embarrassment: Home Secretary Jacqui Smith

    Miss Smith admitted that she had found it ‘ embarrassing’ that Glitter had not come home but said: ‘No paedophile is a celebrity, every paedophile needs to be controlled.’

    The former star, who in his 1970s heyday sold 18million records and has a personal fortune of £5million, told reporters he was planning to write a book to ‘prove’ his innocence.

    He said: ‘I should never have been in there. I was set up”.

    Pictures Andrew Chant

    Link to Daily Mail

    Gary Glitter tricked onto flight - The Times August 21 08

    From Times Online August 21, 2008

    Gary Glitter tricked on to flight back home

    Andrew Drummond in Bangkok

    The disgraced glam-rocker Gary Glitter has finally agreed to return home to Britain after falling for a trick by Thai police, with a little help from their colleagues in Hong Kong.

    The 64-year-old convicted paedophile sat alone tonight on a bench seat in Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi airport, cordoned off from the press in a transit area and waiting to be deported for the third time in three days.

    Glitter, whose real name is Paul Francis Gadd, was thrown out of Vietnam on Tuesday after serving two years and three months for abusing two girls aged 10 and 11.

    But his arrival in Bangkok from Ho Chi Minh City left Thai Immigration Police in a quandary.
     
    They did not know the strong feelings his name conjured in Britain and, although they had been tipped off about his arrival, nobody had given them any official documents which they could use to further his deportation to London.

    Officers knew he had been convicted in Vietnam, but the government there did not give Thai Airways any deportation documents – even though it insisted that Glitter travel coach class. He got himself upgraded as soon as he entered the plane and arrived in Bangkok as a person with status.

    “I am a free man. I have served my time,” Glitter insisted, producing a document from his Vietnamese lawyer stating that he was a full member of society, purged of any crimes and free to travel where he wished.

    He then demanded to change his London ticket for a ticket to Singapore. When he was told there were no flights at that time of night, he demanded overnight accommodation and installed himself in a transit area at the airport where weary passengers can book rooms by the hour.

    As the minutes ticked away for TG901, his connecting flight to London, in stepped an officer of CEOP – Scotland Yard’s Child Exploitation and Online Protection unit – who said that Glitter should be returned to London forthwith. He then withdrew and booked him a room nearby, admitting that he was “out of his jurisdiction”. He had no papers to present which could validate a deportation.

    Thai police duly turned up shortly after midnight to take him to the plane, but Glitter would not budge. He demanded attention from the British Embassy duty officer, who duly arrived in the form of Stephen Buckley, a member of the commercial section whose duty that night was to out-of-hour calls from Britons in life-or-death situations.

    Glitter ranted about his rights. “I will need to call the Ambassador,” Mr Buckley said diplomatically.

    The following morning, with the plane already gone, the British Embassy told Thai officials that they did not want to get involved, which left the Thais back at square one. Glitter slept through as the morning flights left to Hong Kong and Singapore, his destinations of choice. He did not surface until 11am and refused to leave his room until he was brought a ticket.

    The Thai Airways midday flight left for London without him on board. Thai Immigration told Thai Airways to solve the problem because they had brought in a deported person without the right documentation.

    Glitter was eventually invited to a 3pm meeting in the office of the head of the airport police. A solution could be reached, he was told, that could be agreed by all parties.

    Singapore was ruled out, said police, “because they won’t even let you in there”.
     
    When Glitter suggested Hong Kong there were quizzical looks and an officer was sent out to enquire.

    “I’ve been in jail for nine years. Why can’t I go and do some shopping in Hong Kong,” said Glitter smiling. Everybody smiled back. Some laughed.

    Within the hour Glitter was promised a ‘Press Free’ permit to Hong Kong, although he was advised to buy a return ticket anyway.

    By 7pm Glitter was in seat 11B, a glass of champagne beside him and happily unaware that he had fallen into a trap. He planned to stay in a luxury hotel in Wanchai and used the phone on his arm rest to summon a friend to collect him at the airport.

    But Thai Police informed Hong Kong Immigration that he was coming and they agreed on a plan. He was arrested on arrival.

    By 1pm today Gary Glitter was back in Bangkok and, this time, Thai Airways brought the deportation papers they needed - issued by the Hong Kong police.

    His fate was sealed and his farcical Asian odyssey had come to an end.

    Tonight, Major General Phongdej Chaiprawat, of the Thai police, confirmed that Glitter had agreed to return home. Honouring his part of the deal, however, he refused to tell the press which flight the star would be on.

     Link to Times story

    Pictures: Top: Glitter, aka, Paul Gadd tries to negotiate himself out of Hong Kong

    Centre: Reading on the aircraft

    Bottom: Cheerfully arriving in Hong Kong

    All pictures by Andrew Chant

     

    British jailed for adultery to fly home - Mail on Sunday Aug 17 08

    Link to Mail on Sunday article

    From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok 
    16th August 2008

    Pictures by Andrew Chant

    A British man who faced a seven-year prison sentence in the Philippines for adultery is being allowed to return to the UK with his girlfriend and baby this week.

    David Scott, 37, has had his application for partner Cynthia Delfino to accompany him granted by the Home Office on humanitarian grounds.


    The couple’s daughter Janina has been given British citizenship following her parents’ ordeal, which began when they were arrested and flung into a squalid cell in Manila when Cynthia was eight months pregnant.

    They were charged with adultery, which is illegal in the strictly Catholic Philippines, despite Cynthia having separated from her husband.

    After four days the couple were bailed and they fled to live in a jungle and derelict houses before Janina, now seven months old, was born in a tiny clinic.

    David, from Swindon, Wiltshire - who met Cynthia on the internet in 2006 - paid £12,000 in legal fees and bribes to get them to Thailand.

    After the long and emotional journey, they picked up Cynthia’s visa from the British embassy in Bangkok last week.

    David said: ‘It’s been a long fight having to pay bribes everywhere I go. But every time I look at my daughter I just know it was worth everything.’

    Cynthia said: ‘I am so relieved. I am a little scared about going to Britain, but everybody is so kind.’

     

    Coming home at lastFrom Andrew Drummond,
    Koh Samet, Thailand
    Saturday August 16 08
    In the sea  off the Thai island of Koh Samet David Scott takes his first ever dip with is new born baby and Filipina wife.
    He has been in the tropics for nine months but has not even seen so much as a swimming pool in an ordeal which began with his arrest and jailing in the Philippines for adultery and a threatened  sentence of seven years.
    But yesterday David Scott, 37, his girlfriend Cynthia, 28, and baby Janina, seven months finally found time to celebrate after learning that the Home Office had granted them permission on humanitarian grounds for the whole family to return to Britain.
    David and Cynthia are on the run after escaping from Philippines Police. A court official in Coolocan, Manila, confirmed last week that a warrant had been issued for their arrest or adultery.
     This week they will be flying back to Swindon, Wilts, where Scott will introduce his new born baby to his grandmother.
    Said David: “If it had not been for you guys (the Mail on Sunday) and my local M.P. Anne Snelgrove, I have no idea where I would be now, but probably in jail or worse. I cannot thank you enough.”
    David Scott, 37, from Swindon, Wilts., spent last New Year in jail in Manila, after he was arrested with 8 month pregnant Cynthia Delfino,  during a night-time swoop by Philippines police and officers of the National Bureau of Investigation.
    Accompanying the police was Cynthia’s Filipino husband Noriel Delfino, who was demanding the couple be jailed for the maximum seven years in the Philippines for adultery unless they paid him the equivalent of £7,000.
    There is no divorce in the Philippines, a strictly Catholic country, but rich families can seek costly annulments on the grounds of the mental incapacity of one of the partners.
    The couple  were thrown into a  police cell and that’s when how they spent last New Year. They even had to bribe police to be allowed to share a cell.
    The couple fled while on bail and were forced to live in the jungle, derelict houses, and finally a room provided by friends, before their baby girl Janina was born in secret in a tiny clinic south of Manila.
    All in all David Scott had to legal fees and bribes over £12,000 using his savings and finally cash sent by his mum and friends in Britain, to pay for documentation for Janina and his wife and get smuggle them out of the country.
    Although the warrant was out for their arrest, they were able to board a flight to Bangkok, Thailand.
    “The Immigration policeman took  my last £25,” said David.
    Back in Thailand journalists chipped in and provide food and accommodation for the family for four months while David attempted the hardest - part to get them all home to Britain.
    With the help of local M.P. Anne Snelgrove, Mr. Scott was able to get British citizenship for baby Janina in Bangkok a month ago, and this week an official from the British Embassy in Bangkok  informed David the Cynthia’s application to travel with her baby to England was granted on humanitarian grounds.
    On the holiday island of Koh Samet,  150 miles south east of Bangkok David Scott said:  “When I flew to the Philippines to visit Cynthia for the birth of our baby her husband had already agreed to go through an annulment.  But I walked into a trap.  It’s been a long fight having to pay bribes every where I go.  But every time I look at my daughter I just know it was worth everything.
    “I have learned a lot from this trip. The biggest lesson of all is that one is not automatically going to get help or even just advice from a British Embassy if one gets into trouble. You are very much on your own.
    “The first advice I got from an Embassy official in Manila was that legally Janina was not my baby and I should leave the country without her. 
    (Technically as there is no divorce in the Philippines the government would recognise Janina as being the daughter of Noriel Delfino).
    “That’s not the sort of advice one forgets.  Then when I got to Bangkok they would not even let me and Janina into the Embassy – until my M.P. called them – all because we had ticked the wrong box on a visa form.
    (Cynthia has been given a visa even though technically she is still married to Noriel Delfino and has known David under the statutory two years. Thus they were not even allowed to join the visa queue).
    Said Cynthia:  “I am so relieved. I am a little scared about going to Britain but  everybody has been so kind so far.”

     

     

     

    Jungle Brit gets Home Office permission to bring family home -Aug 14 08

    Jungle Brit gets permission to fly home with Filipina and baby

    From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, Wednesday August 14

    Pictures: Andrew Chant

     

    A Briton who fled to the jungle in the Philippines after being told he faced seven years in jail there for adultery has been given leave to return to England with his girlfriend and seven month old baby.


    David Scott, 37, from Swindon, Wilts., spent last New Year in jail in Manila, after he was arrested with his 8 month pregnant Filipina girlfriend Cynthia Delfino, 28, during a night-time swoop by Philippines police and officers of the National Bureau of Investigation.
    Accompanying the police was Cynthia’s Filipino husband Noriel Delfino, who said David, was demanding the couple be jailed for the maximum seven years in the Philippines for adultery unless they paid him the equivalent of £7,000.
    There is no divorce in the Philippines, a strictly Catholic country, but rich families can seek costly annulments on the grounds of the mental incapacity of one of the partners.
    The couple fled while on bail and were forced to live in the jungle, derelict houses, and finally a room provided by friends, before their baby girl Janina was born in a tiny clinic south of Manila.
    A warrant was issued for their arrest but by paying bribes they were able to board a flight to Bangkok, Thailand.
    With the help of local M.P. Anne Snelgrove, Mr. Scott was able to get British citizenship for baby Janina in Bangkok a month ago, and early today an official from the British Embassy in Bangkok  informed David the Cynthia’s application to travel with her baby to England was granted on humanitarian grounds.
    In Bangkok David Scott said today: “Obviously we are both delighted.  It’s been a nine month ordeal. We would like to thank our M.P. and journalists and everybody who helped us fight to get our baby home to Britain.


    “When I flew to the Philippines to visit Cynthia for the birth of our baby her husband had already agreed to go through an annulment.  But I walked into a trap.  It’s been a long fight having to pay bribes every where I go.  But every time I look at my daughter I just know it was worth everything.”
    Said Cynthia:  “I am so relieved. When the Embassy called this morning I just knew it was going to be good news. I am a little scared about going to Britain but  everybody has been so kind so far.”

    Footnote: The following email was sent later by David Scott

    Andrew Drummond and Andrew Chant saved us when Embassy could not help

    ‘I decided to pluck all my resources to live- The Sun June 09 08

    British divers swept out to sea tell of their terrifying ordeal

    From Andrew Drummond, Pulau Bidadari, Indonesia

    For SUN story and slide show click here
    UNEDITED VERSION HERE

    From Andrew Drummond, Pulau Bidadari, Indonesia

    This is the moment 25-yr-old Charlotte Allin thought she was about to die.

     

    Charlotte hanging on to ‘Wilson’. Copyright James Manning

    Strapped to a long with four other castaways and having been swept 40 miles by an ocean current her eyes can reveal her anguish. Right now she knows she may never see land again.

    The log, on which their lives depend, has been named ‘Wilson’, after the football Tom Hanks dressed up as an imaginary companion in the Hollywood film ‘Castaway’

    Public school educated Charlotte knows her only choice is to paddle furiously with her colleagues for land but they are making no headway.  It looks like they will be washed away far into the Indian Ocean never to be seen again.

    But after weather conditions miraculously changed the party struggled ashore led by the heroics of her former Royal Marine Commando boyfriend only to be attacked by a lethal Komodo Dragon.

    Now for the first time Charlotte and her boyfriend Jim Manning, 30, told of their two day two night ordeal, which began on what was their last planned dive off Komodo Islands in Indonesia.

    Here on Pulai Bidadari, off the coast of Indonesia near the town of Labuan Bajo, recovering from exhaustion, dehydration, and cuts and bruises, they told of their fateful last dive with colleague Swede Helena Naradainen, Frenchman Lauren Pinel, and dive leader Kathleen Mitchinson, 50, from Carlisle.

    “We had just done one dive site called the Hanging Gardens and went for our last dive 65 minutes at a place called Manta Corner.

    “The dive went fine with our supervisor Kath. We went down 17 metres at 15.03, according to Jim’s watch, and saw Frog Fish and Scorpion Fish, Moray eels and sharks and surfaced at 16.08.

    “We saw our dive boat and signalled. But the boat had its back to us. So we blew n our whistles and put out a bright orange Surface Marker Boy SMB).   Still they did not see us so we put up another surface marker boy.

    Added Jim: “I had waited for over an hour before to be picked up by a dive boat so I was not worried. But the current was taking us away quite quickly. So we put out a second and third markers boys.

    “We drifted past a rock then between two islands. Each time we tried to swim towards the island across the current we failed.”

    Said Charlotte: “Jim and I got separated from the rest who had ended up in some sort of whirlpool.  We eventually kicked ourselves back to the group blowing whistles.

    “By 6pm it was getting very dark. We needed to get to land. We saw lights on an island and tried to paddle towards it. But each time he headed towards an island he current took us past and around it.

    “I was talking to the group trying to keep them interested, trying to keep their spirits, but maybe my spirits up.  We were getting very thirsty and it was getting cold.

    “We drifted past yet another island.  The next hour must have been the worst. We knew from our dive leader Kath that the Indonesians could not search at night because of the reefs.

    “I thought this is it.  We are going to drift off into the Indian Ocean never to be found. I thought we would die of hypothermia. We were not worried about the reef sharks.

    “Then we saw something black in the water in front. My first thought that it was a shark, then, more optimistically,  a dolphin.  But when we swam towards it we saw it was a log. A massive great tree stump about 18 inches in diameter.  It was big enough to support us all.

    “We clipped ourselves onto to the log and Jim clipped himself to me and I clipped myself on to Helena the Swede.

    “Then the weather turned bad. The wind got up and do did the waves with them. We were all attached to the log and we were swirling around in the stormy water.

    “We were swallowing water. We tried to use our masks to protect our faces. In the skies we saw shooting stars.  Each time we saw one e veryone in the group made a wish. Some wished for dry land. Some wished for safety.  I just wished for my life.

    “Beside me Helena had taken ill. Basically she was seasick, but in an extreme way.
    I tried to talk to everybody. I did not want to die. I made a decision looking up at the stars that I would live or die. I decided I had to pluck up all my resources to live.

    “I had to be positive. We all had to stick together. We were kicking continuously even though the wind wand currents were swirling us around all the time. We were kicking to stay warm.  Although Helena did not seem to be responding.

    “My fingers were red and bruised from digging my nails into the log. My other arm was tucked under Jim’s life jacket.  We had long since got rid of our diving weight belts.

    “We chatted to each other. I asked Lauren about his travels. I asked Kath about her other diving experiences.   Jim joked that he hoped Kath was not going to charge us for a night dive as well.  We were just talking and joking to keep our spirits up, but we all knew what was happening was deadly serious.

    “We knew we had to find land. Then at about 10.45 at night on Thursday the sea flattened out. Then we started kicked like mental for our lives.”

    Said Jim from Barnstaple:  “We knew then we had to kick ourselves to some sort of island if we were going to get through this.  Everybody was aching. We all had cramps.

    “At some point I saw a white patch ahead in the darkness. I thought it might be a beach.  I said to the group that I would leave ‘Wilson’ and swim to the white patch. If it was a beach I would return and tell them.

    “But some people were not in agreement. Certainly Charlotte was not. It was eventually agreed that both Kath and I go.

    “There was a chance that once we let go of ‘Wilson’ we would let go of our lives. But this white patch was the only recognisable solid thing we could see.

    “Kath and I swam off together and found we could make good progress without the log.  It was ashore. But Kath could not get ashore. She was being flung against the rocks.

    “We decided to switch places. I tried to get ashore and succeeded. It was a beach of sorts but there were massive white pebbles in the way.  I found a way through and came back to signal to the rest of the group. 

    “First came Lauren the Frenchman then Helena, then Charlotte and finally Kath.”

    Charlotte, Lauren, Helena on the rocks after striking land. Copyright James Manning
    “Yes. We were delirious with joy, “ added Charlotte, “but we could not stand up. We had to lie down and look up at the sky. We were cold and shivering with unbearable pain in our legs and stomachs and unable to sleep – but we were alive!”

    “Kath had decided that the island we were on was called Pulau Pandar. If that was true, she said,  in the next cove would be a sandy beach where fisherman and live aboard dive boats spent a lot of time.

    “Kath and Jim would go in the morning to raise the alarm.”

    In fact the group had landed on Rinca Island, an island dominated by lethal Komodo Dragons, whose bite is fatal to both man and beast.

    But when Kath and Jim went to search the following day they did not know this.

    Jim, a former Corporal of  59 Independent Commando Squadron, Royal Engineers, who has done tours of duty both in Afghanistan and in Iraq and had been offered a place on an SAS course, takes up the story.

    “When we woke up we found a hill behind us 200 metres high and very steep. This was not a walk it was a climb. Initially it was ok to go on hands and knees, we had to go through and under brambles and thorns.

    “But it got to the stage that it was so steep that it one of us fell we were going to be in a very bad situation. I told Kath I would go on my own. And she made her way back to the beach.

    “I had to be careful where I was putting my hands. I did not know what was in the crevices. When I got to the top I did see another bay. And started to go down the other side. I was stopped in my tracks.  Actually I landed back on my arse rather than stumble right into a beehive, then backtracked.

    “I went along the coast along the top of a cliff and saw another bay.  I was parched. I could not breathe. The sun had come up and was beating down full and I had not had a drop of want since 2.30 pm the previous day.

    “I managed to get down to a beach and dived into a rock pool to cool off.

    “By this time I knew it was useless to go back and tell the group that this was the wrong island. I had to go on. I could not go up.  The sun was too hot.

    “But the cliffs were high and the only way to get round the island was by both swimming and climbing.

    “But the swell was getting up too.  I still had diving boots, but apart from that I was just about naked.  The waves would bounce me against the rocks. I was able to use my boots to fend myself off most of the time, but I took a bit of a beating as well from the sharp rocks and crustaceans.

    “When the current caught me it the waves would roll me over, take me out,  turn me upside down. I did not know where I was. Each time I recovered I would swim madly for the shore.

    “At one point I had to climb again and made my way up the cliff forcing my hands and fists into every available crevice.  But this was not like army training, where we used ropes and you could even let yourself fall onto the rope to take a breather.

    “Eventually I found a cove with a sandy beach. I thought I saw some people there and started shouting and swearing at them when they did not reply.  When I got up closer I realised the people were just rocks, but they looked like people sitting and holding their knees.

    “I saw monkeys and a herd of deer but they were too far in the distance.  Eventually I found a section of rocks facing the sea, which had three flat shelf-like surfaces on which I could lie, although they were at an angle and I had to use me feet to stop slipping off.

    “I could rest there and watch out for boats.  I went back to the beach and gathered some leaves. I covered myself in leaves for warmth.  All I had was shorts, a Rash Vest.

    “I kept staring out to see and saw a boat and again I started shouting, then swearing. But it was not a boat it was a rock.

    “At midnight I moved down to the bottom shelf because I could not stay awake to stop myself slipping off the higher shelf.

    “Then in the morning after stripping off washing myself in the sea and began my lookout duties again.

    “I was struggling to stay awake. Then I saw this speedboat approaching. I jumped and waved and ran down and jumped into the sea.  It was 12.30 pm.

    “My colleagues were all there. Everybody was smiling, even the Indonesians.

    “I did not know I had spent all this time in Komodo Dragon land.”

    While Jim was out looking for help Charlotte remained with the rest of the group on the beach where they had landed.

    “The first morning our spirits were good. We saw three boats. One looked like it had spotted us and started coming towards us, then it turned away. We were waving our safety sausages (SMBs). We thought it had turned away to summon help.

    “I had mixed emotions about Jim. I knew he was capable of doing the climbs and that he was physically and mentally strong. But I knew he could fall and if that happened nobody could help him.

    “Kath and I started to get a fire going after collecting dry grass and by using a magnifying glass which she had. But it got really hot and we had to hide in the shade of the rocks, which were like giant white pebbles.

    “We also put together an SOS sign made out of these giant white pebbles, but I could only carry one at a time and we were all absolutely parched. We were so, so, so thirsty.

    “Every time the thirst played on me I just imagined I had drunk a large glass of Sprite (lemonade) with ice through a straw.

    “I felt like I had had a drink. We found a coconut and Kath broke it open. But inside it was rotten. We kept it anyway just in case. 

    “We kept ourselves occupied by playing hangman or noughts and crosses in the sand.
    Lauren the Frenchman spent the morning and afternoon on a lookout rock, coming back at midday for two hours because Kath said the fishermen would not be out during those hours.

    “At midday the heat was unbearable there was no shade at all.

    “We saw ships in the distance but nobody saw us and by about 4.30 pm I was beginning to despair. We found an overhang in the rocks by the shore and saw water dripping down. Kath and I tried to drink it. When we did we realised it was just sea water from the splashing waves.

    “Then suddenly we heard a scream. We saw Helena and right next to her was a Komodo Dragon. It was just inches away.  These Komodos can kill buffalo and deer with just one bite.
    “The Dragon made a lunch at her and I saw his tongue darting out. Then he grabbed the hood of her suit which was beside her.  We rushed and Kath picked up a couple of sticks and beat it, but it did not go away.

    “Then the Komodo grabbed Jim’s wet suit which he had left behind. Kath hit the Dragon again and he left go

    “We rushed to the sea to fill out bottles with sea water, because we were told the Komodos did not like water.  But it did not seem concerned when we threw water over it.

    “The Komodo Dragon kept coming back. It was big but not an adult, We knew it must have a mummy and a daddy about somewhere. People and other animals die from the bites from the bacteria.

    “I collected all the wetsuits because we needed them to keep warm during the night. We let the Komodo have any masks or flippers or BCDs (buoyancy control devices) he wanted.

    “We were confused what were Komodos doing on this island. We huddled together for the night.

    “Lauren seemed to have the most energy and we asked him why. He said he had been eating sea snails.   That cheered us up.  The next morning we knew it was safe to eat them.  So having slept all night on some big boulders we went down for breakfast,

    “At first we just broke off the shells, smashed them with a stone and swallowed them.
    But Lauren was chewing. So we gave them a try. They were black and slimey but actually not bad and we got some juice from them.

    “But our spirits were still down.  I did not think we would be able to survive one more night. By this time I thought Jim was dead.  I thought even if we were rescued I would not leave without him.

    “Then about midday we saw a boat out to see turn around and head in our direction.
    Could that boat have at last spotted us?  We did not want to let our hopes up. But it came on and came on towards us. Oh my God. It IS coming!

    “Kath and I dropped on our knees and burst into tears. 

    “When we got on the boat and had some water we insisted that Jim was still out there. The boat took us around the island and then a crewman shouted from the front. He’s here.  My darling was jumping up on a rock and waving his hands.  Our lives had been spared.

    “We do not blame anyone for what happened.  It could have happened to anyone.
    We are just so glad all of us to be alive.”

    Charlotte and Jim’s trip was organised by Ernest Lewandowski from Locherbie, Scotland and Kathleen Mitchinson, from Carlyle who run Reefseekers Dive Centre out of Labuan Bajo.

    Said Ernest afterwards: “We are so happy that everyone is safe. I had already got by group back into the boat. We raised the alarm when we could not find Kath’s group.

    “I went to see a local soothsayer in Labuan and she predicted exactly where the group would be found. I am very proud of the way Kath led her group.”

    Copyright: © Andrew Drummond June 8 2008

     

     

     

     

    Charlotte, Jim, and Kathleen: Picture: Andrew Chant

    ‘I have no cash, no job’ says Mr. Swirly dealing with compensation claim June 2 08

    “I have, no cash, no job, and can’t work” replies Mr. Swirly after being asked to discuss compensation to child’s father

     

    From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok

    Monday June 2nd 2008

     

    Canadian paedophile suspect Christopher Neil, now better known as ‘Mr. Swirly’, came face to face with the father of one of his victims in court in Bangkok yesterday.

     

    But when asked by the judge if he would like to discuss compensation Neil replied: “I could talk to him all day but I cannot do anything about it. I have no money. I have no job and I can’t work!”

     

    Neil, 33, , who sparked off an international manhunt after German Federal Police cleared up swirly pictures which allegedly showed him having sex with minors, appeared at Bangkok Criminal Court accused of four counts of child abuse with young boys aged 9 and 14.

     

    When the charges were put to him and he was asked how he pleaded, Neil from Maple Ridge, British Columbia replied: “I deny all charges.”

     

    Just minutes earlier his state appointed interpreter lawyer Kittiporng Kiattanapoom had given on camera interviews claiming the Canadian, who had secured teaching jobs in Thailand and Korea, had confessed to indulging in oral sex with the children.

     

    Neil said he was penniless as he faced the father of the nine year old boy, named in the charges, whom the judge told him was seeking compensation of 300,000 Thai baht (Can$9,166. or  £4,693) .                    

     

    Neil was remanded back in custody to Bangkok’s Klong Prem prison where he has been since last October when he was arrested in Nakorn Ratchassima, North Eastern Thailand following a global manhunt initiated by an Interpol alert.

     

    The case was adjourned until October 7.

     

     The children whose pictures were found on the internet are believed to be from Cambodia or Vietnam, but after his arrest the two Thai boys aged 9 and 14 claimed he had also molested them.

    Pictures: Andrew Chant:  andrew@andrewchant.com