Chinese prostitute battered to death by Bangladeshi driver

Dubai: A driver has denied intentionally killing a prostitute, claiming he defended himself when she tried to strangle him after they quarrelled over her fees.

“I did not kill her premeditatedly…she offered to have sex for Dh25 but we fought over her fees. She pushed me and tried to strangle me. I almost suffocated…I grabbed the first thing I found and battered her head to force her to let go of me because I needed to breathe,” said the 24-year-old Bangladeshi driver when he defended himself before the Dubai Court of First Instance.

Prosecutors charged the suspect, M.R., with the premeditated murder of Chinese sex worker L.M. and stealing her mobile phone.

The suspect pleaded not guilty and argued before Presiding Judge Fahmi Mounir: “She tried to kill me and I acted in self defence…”

Advocate Eisa Bin Haidar volunteered to defend M.R., when Presiding Judge Mounir asked if any lawyers present in the courtroom were ready to represent the suspect.

An Emirati police captain testified that the woman’s body was found in a building in Naif.

Covered in blood

“We reached the flat and discovered that the Chinese woman, in her thirties, had been battered to death … blood covered the floor and surrounding walls. Preliminary investigations unveiled that she succumbed two days before. A special investigation team was formed and combed the area until a suspect was arrested for possessing the woman’s stolen mobile phone. He claimed that L.M. gave him the phone,” the captain testified.

Records said the alleged murder was unveiled after neighbours complained to the building’s watchman that a bad smell was coming from the victim’s flat.

The trial continues.

bron: gulfnews.com

A nation’s history of discrimination

The now infamous May 1998 riots in which Indonesian Chinese were the target of attacks and killings and their shops and houses looted, while their wives and daughters were subjected to gangrape, were not an isolated incident of ethnic conflict in Indonesian history.

The stories of a small Chinese community in West Kalimantan (also known as West Borneo) show that violence and discrimination against ethnic Chinese Indonesians have evolved throughout the history of modern Indonesia.

This historical evolution is the focus of a book titled Penambang Emas, Petani dan Pedagang di Distrik Tionghoa Kalimantan Barat (Gold Miners, Farmers and Traders in the “Chinese Districts” of West Kalimantan) by Mary Somers Heidhues, a lecturer in the Southeast Asia Department of Cornell University in the United States.

The book records the history of the Chinese community in West Kalimantan since the Dutch colonial era, through the Japanese occupation, into post-Independence Indonesia, the New Order and finally the present day Reform era.

The first Chinese settlers came to West Kalimantan at the request of Panembahan Mempawah and the Sultan of Sambas in early 1740. Malayan nobles invited the Chinese because they had more advanced mining technology than local people. At that time, the local people, the Dayaks and Malayan tribes, were mostly farmers.

In West Kalimantan, the Chinese people organized their workers in groups called kongsi. The members of each kongsi elected their own head and shared the profits from mining activities. Some kongsi united into federations.

There were three principal kongsi: Fosjoen/Thaikong in Monterado (1776-1854), Lanfang in Mandor (1777-1884) and Samtiaokioe, which separated from Fosjoen in either 1819 or 1822 and then fled in 1850 into Sarawak territory with disastrous results for the Brooke regime seven years later.

The office of kongsi had several roles, including as a center of public administration, residence of the chairmen, public hall and religious shrine.

Eventually, the existence of the independent and democratic kongsi became a threat to the local kingdoms and their ally, the Dutch colonial power. In September 1850, the Dutch colonial government began a military campaign to dismiss the kongsi.

This resulted in three kongsi wars (1822-1824, 1850-1854, 1884-1885), with a spillover in the 1857 Chinese uprising in Sarawak (in Malaysian Borneo). The first conflict was an attempt by the new Dutch regime to control the kongsi. The last kongsi, Lanfang, vanished in 1884-1885.

The kongsi wars were not simply an outcome of the Chinese resistance against the Dutch. There were complex ethnic and political alliances. After the demise of the kongsi, depopulation and impoverishment followed.

It was only at the end of the 19th century that Chinese people started to return to West Kalimantan in significant numbers. This time, it was not gold but agriculture that drove them to come. They dominated the trade of forest products (gutta-percha, rattan and lumber).

In the political field, the Dutch colonial government appointed Chinese officers to control the work and become the intermediaries between them and the Chinese settlers. Their tasks were to collect taxes, to organize forced labor and to collect the opium levy.

Burdened by the heavy taxes in 1912 and 1914 the Chinese, along with the Dayaks and Malayans, rebelled against the Dutch .The colonial government blamed the Chinese secret societies and nationalist movement – inspired by the 1911 Chinese revolution – for being behind the rebellion. But a small number of Dutch troops suppressed the rebellion.

During World War II, the Dutch colonial regime fell under Japanese occupation, including West Kalimantan. In early 1943, the Japanese military orchestrated a massacre of the locals. They accused the former West Kalimantan governor of collaborating with a multi-ethnic rebellion to fight against the Japanese colonial power.

Thousands of people, including the local sultan, nobles, ex-Dutch officers, journalists, doctors and Chinese businessmen, were killed. This incident was remembered as the Pontianak Affair; to commemorate it, the Indonesian government built a memorial monument at the scene in 1970.

After Indonesia gained independence, the Chinese community came under further pressure. Beginning in the 1950s, a set of regulations destabilized the local economy and cultural institutions of the Chinese in West Kalimantan as Jakarta extended its authority throughout the region.

The government of Indonesia issued a regulation in 1959 that limited various economic activities by non-citizens. As a consequence, thousands of Chinese people fled back to their motherland and overseas. Chinese schools were also closed.

Most devastating and traumatic was the event known as the “Dayak raids” in 1967, which took place after the failed coup by the Indonesian Communist Party in 1965.

In the name of the Dayak people, the Indonesian military ran a campaign against what they called the “communist element” in Indonesian society. All Chinese communities at the time were considered supporters of communist China.

Thousands of people were killed and others fled to refugee camps. The result of the raid was the expulsion of Chinese from rural areas.

The authoritarian New Order government banned every cultural expression of China including its languages (Mandarin, Hakka and Teochiu), the barongsai lion dance and the celebration of the Chinese Lunar New Year.

In the Reform era, all these bans were lifted by then president Abdurrahman Wahid.

This book, which is a complete study of the Chinese minority in West Kalimantan in the context of social, economic and political struggle, makes a huge contribution to local history in Indonesia.

Gold Miners, Farmers and Traders in the *Chinese Districts’ of West Borneo

bron: www.thejakartapost.com [meer informatie is toegevoegd aan dit artikel]

Chinese murdered and robbery on the Tourtonnelaan, Surinam

Friday night, nearing Saturday morning, a robbery took place on the Tourtonnelaan, near Suristore in Paramaribo, which ended up in the victim being killed. The Chinese man was shot a couple of times just before he about to enter his vehicle. The culprits, three men of supposedly Boslandcreoolish background, had an escape car ready and fled with a bag filled with baby necessities. The robbers supposedly thought that there was money in the bag. On the way to the hospital the man died.

Thursday night there was an attempted robbery on a Chinese shopkeeper on the corner of PT. Paltan Tewarieweg and Botromankiweg, near the Eddy Blackmanstation. Two young men stepped in the shop during the evening hours. They bought a pack of cigarettes and walked outside. They immediately returned with a hammer. They attacked the shopkeeper with it. After striking him a few times they tried to open the cash till. This was harder than they thought, and when people outside the shop noticed what was going on, the robbers quickly fled. Security camera filmed this entire ordeal.

Bron: www.dbsuriname.com [30-11-2009]

Man kills mum when she finds him masturbating

A 22-year-old murdered his mum when she caught him in masturbating.

Dino Babic (22), smashed his mum Silvana over the head with a small statue and then suffocated her at their family home in young man in Split, Croatia, daily newspaper Vecernji List reported today (Mon).

He called cops after the killing and confessed, telling them he had snapped when he saw her shock at finding him masturbating while pulling on a scarf tied tight around his neck.

bron: www.croatiantimes.com [16-11-2009]

Anal Penetrating Chair Kills Teen

A fourteen-year old boy in China was killed when a chair he was sitting in exploded. Chunks of metal pierced the boy’s rectum resulting in extensive and fatal bleeding.

This is not the first time such a thing has happened, but it is the first fatality.

anal chair death 300x200 Anal Penetrating Chair Kills Teen picture

The boy was alone when the accident occurred, sitting on his computer chair. Bravely, he managed to make one last phone call to his father despite being in horrific pain. An ambulance was immediately summoned, but it took an hour to get him to the hospital and he died enroute.

The “killer chair” was a common gas-cylinder-based chair the height of which can be altered via a cylinder located at the base of the chair, which contains highly pressurized gas.

Allegedly, energy created by the seat cushion caused the explosion.

The fact that three similar incidents were reported at a hospital in the last month alone, suggests an influx of malfunctioning chairs. Back in 2007, such a chair propelled a metal part into the rear of a 68-year-old man, who suffered a severe wound but survived.

In all of the incidents three factors were implicated:

• Non-nitrogenous gases contaminated the cylinder of the chair.

• Deficient materials in the cylinder reduced the durability of the part.

• The cylinder was not completely airtight.

Although oil-based hydraulic devices are said to be safer, most such chairs on the market today use gas cylinders and the majority of them come from China.

bron: www.weirdasianews.com [14-7-2009]

Widow of Chinese detainee wants feds kept in suit

In America: The widow of a Chinese immigrant wants the federal government to remain a defendant in her lawsuit over the death her husband, who was detained at a Rhode Island jail.

Hiu Lui Ng, who had lived in Queens, N.Y., America, died of liver cancer in August 2008 while he was being held for overstaying a visa. Investigators say he was abused and denied medical care at the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility in Central Falls.

The private jail contracted with the federal government to house immigration detainees. The government has asked to be dismissed from the case, saying Wyatt staff were private contactors and not government employees.

But lawyers for Ng’s widow say federal immigration authorities failed to act even after it became clear that Ng was being seriously mistreated.

bron: www2.turnto10.com

Dispute Leads to Fatal Shooting of Unemployed Chinese Immigrant

In Monterey Park, Califonia, America, a confrontation between two Chinese immigrants a job center, resulted in a fatal shooting, according to the World Journal. The newspaper reports that both the suspect and the victim are immigrants from Tianjin Province, north coastal China, and were visiting the center on Nov. 6 for job search.

The owner of the job center, Yang, who witnessed the killing, told the paper that the confrontation was not about money or love affairs, but simply because “Chinese new immigrants experienced lots of pressure in the United States.” However, he refused to reveal more other than the suspect shot the victim once. The 40-year-old suspect is still at large.

bron: news.ncmonline.com [10-11-2009]

Mushroom collector in Japan finds woman’s head

A JAPANESE man collecting mushrooms in a mountain area today found the severed head of a young woman, believed to be a college student missing since last month, news reports said.

The man made the grisly find near the 1223-metre peak of Mount Garyu in the north of Hiroshima prefecture, where he was gathering wild mushrooms, Jiji Press reported, quoting police sources.

Police suspect the head may be that of a local 19-year-old college student who has been missing since October 26, Jiji said.

bron: www.news.com.au

In Hong Kong: Woman dies after being hit by taxi

A woman has died after being knocked down by a taxi in Tuen Mun (simp屯门trad屯門). Police say the 46-year-old was crossing Heung Sze Wui Road shortly before nine this morning when the accident happened.

She suffered head injuries and was certified dead in hospital around half an hour later.

bron: www.rthk.org.hk [31-10-2009]

Corpse mistaken for Halloween display

The dead body of a 75-year-old man was left on a Los Angeles balcony for several days because neighbours thought it was a Halloween display.

Halloween /PA pics

The body of Mostafa Mahmoud Zayed was found slumped over a chair on the balcony of his third-floor apartment with a single gunshot wound to the eye.

Neighbours had seen the body nearly a week before but hadn’t called police because they thought the corpse “looked like a Halloween dummy”.

Cameraman Austin Raishbrook was at the apartment in the Marina del Rey district when the authorities were finally alerted to the body, reports the Daily Telegraph.

“The body was in plain view of the entire apartment complex and they all didn’t do anything. It’s very strange. It did look unreal, to be honest,” he said.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department are treating the death as an apparent suicide.

bron: www.ananova.com