On Jun 17, 6:37 pm, KD yahoo.com.au> wrote:
> On Jun 16, 7:51 pm, thanouxay hotmail.com> wrote:
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>> Kay,
>> Laos was not your home but a place where you and your husband used to
>> plunder our national well and treasure. In top of it, Laos was a
>> country where you had and your criminal husband have been convicted
>> for economic crime. You yourself tried to escape and a large sum of
>> money in cash out from our country.
>> Stop divert the opinion from your crime.
>
>> On Jun 16, 6:02 am,KDyahoo.com.au> wrote:
>
>>> On May 23, 2:46 am, ທ້າວໃຂ່ມືດ hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>>>> On May 15, 3:41 pm, Vannassay gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>>>> It seems to me that this thread might be posted in the wrong forum, if
>>>>> not that would be deliberately looking for provocation with a
>>>>> premeditated mindset in favor of white race prisoners over the others.
>>>>> A comment like such doesn’t really evoke any real empathy from any
>>>>> conscious readers with such biased statement, because the argument
>>>>> seems to undermine the basic principle of equal rights so
>>>>> hypocritically preached in the West or Australia. To some extent, the
>>>>> poster tries even to suggest the argument toward a more favorable
>>>>> rights for the white prisoners than actually what they have violated
>>>>> in their host country, and to say that the violator can even evade the
>>>>> entire Lao justice altogether with graciously going back to their
>>>>> native country. How can this be interpreted, if not a showcase of
>>>>> despotism in the suggesting? I thought that we all learned from the
>>>>> history book about this kind of dominance by threat.
>
>>>>> I have a few practical simple advices in preventive medicine to all
>>>>> these white foreigners will-be violators of the law in Laos, in order
>>>>> to avoid these mediocre hardship altogether, thus they should have
>>>>> better known ahead either from their own chatterbox media or any other
>>>>> source that Lao prison is not a five stars Hilton hotel facility with
>>>>> even less to their standard in medical treatment or psychological
>>>>> counseling…If they violate the local law which is law almost the same
>>>>> everywhere, and that’s where they end up with the rest of the crowd…I
>>>>> can agree if the argument applies to all prisoners regardless of
>>>>> gender or race…The absurdity here is to save another white guy as this
>>>>> one is so unique at the expense of the entire useless human pool in
>>>>> incarceration, and this leads us directly to the same very questions
>>>>> about the kangaroo court of justice at Guatanamo, and the Australian
>>>>> Aborigines’ forced separation injustice in their own backyard over a
>>>>> century ago, yes, over a century?.
>
>>>>> Of course, everything has to be in humane as said including killing a
>>>>> lot of innocent civilians by bombs as long as the end justifies the
>>>>> mean. And where we go from here? How about the law enforcement and
>>>>> justice for the local innocent victim to whom the white culpable has
>>>>> done etc…Another suggestion may be fairer is to let Australia finance
>>>>> the entire Lao prison system by making into a luxurious Hilton hotel
>>>>> type of facility so the prisoners can play happily when that’s picture
>>>>> taken like tourists! So Michael Newman may have laid beautifully in
>>>>> luxury. In such prejudice world, sometimes that has to do with lack
>>>>> of financial support even in a prison than lack of will as we can
>>>>> imagine with an assured difference in picture between poor man’s
>>>>> prison and rich man’s one.
>
>>>>> Vannassay,
>
>>>> I think you hit the nail the head ai Vanh.
>
>>>> Hak Pang,
>>>> BHL- Hide quoted text -
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>>>> - Show quoted text -
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>>> Lao agreed to uphold the minimum standard of treatment for prisoners
>>> when it signed on to the UN Declaration of Human Rights. Yet there is
>>> still widespread torture and ill treatment in the prisons. This is the
>>> point that needs to be made and those in power need to consider the
>>> affects of their signing onto such agreements.
>
>>> I have never once said that prisoners who commit offences such as drug
>>> trafficking should be given a free ticket out of Laos... they should
>>> be held accountable. They should be taken to trial, they should be
>>> sentenced according to the Lao law. But they should also be treated in
>>> accordance with the minimum standards of treatment for prisoners NOT
>>> hotel guests!!!
>
>>> The three US-Hmong citizens that were detained at Phonthong Prison
>>> were not treated fairly according to many. they were denied access to
>>> their Embassy. They were denied even entering the country until proof
>>> was provided that they did enter. The authorities claim they exited to
>>> Thailand and yet there is no record. They are not white foreigner....
>>> they are human being... which makes them entitled to certain rights
>>> under international law. Their dissappearance needs to be explained
>>> because it has the potential to undermine future US investors to
>>> Laos.
>
>>> I have every right to raise my concerns because Laos was once my home
>>> too! It was not my fault that some stupid and corrupt police colonel
>>> foolishly exposed himself and his foreign minister to the plot of
>>> overthrowing President Siphandone. They got what they deserved and
>>> President Siphandone was all the wiser!
>
>>> There are prisoners in Laos detained for political reasons and not
>>> ever subjected to a trial. How can anyone here argue that it is
>>> correct to simply imprison someone and not ever take them to court?- Hide quoted text -
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>>> - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
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>> - Show quoted text -
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> My husband and I never got rich from laos. Shows how little you knew/
> know of that subject. Your foreign minister Somsavat was trying to
> overthrow President Khamtay Siphandone and perhaps Yong... you were
> part of that ... I don't know. But in any case, President Siphandone
> saw through the deception and worked a solution to allow my husband
> and I to return home to Australia. the money you speak of was returned
> to me at the court and according to Lao law, was not in any violation
> of carrying money because of the resolution made to assist foreign
> investors in transacting business. You need to become more familiar
> with your law I think.
>
> In any case, prisoner in Lao jail is similar to prisoner in Lao
> country. I am not advocating to set prisoners free... I am advocating
> human rights. There is a huge difference you know. As for some stupid
> comments about me making money from books... well that just further
> shows people's ignorance. Unless you are world famous best selling
> author then you dont' make much money at all from books. Go do the
> math. I don't care what you all call me... I don't see you doing
> anything constructive at all. You snipe away at me for wanting to call
> for prison reforms, human rights, to preserve legal integrity, fair
> trials and human treatment for all people.... I wonder why you object
> so much that I call for these things that you yourselves should
> certainly aspire to! Go think for a while and see if you don't look
> stupid and selfish as you claim I am.- Hide quoted text -
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> - Show quoted text -
Good thing your husband and you weren't locked up in the US. Huh?
http://www.wbaltv.com/news/16753796/detail.html
"UPPER MARLBORO, Md. -- The FBI and Maryland State Police on Tuesday
continued to investigate the strangulation of a 19-year-old man found
dead in his cell a day after he was jailed on charges of running over
and killing a police officer."
Your friend,
ແລຣີ້