Tag: bomb

  • Explosion At Bangkok’s King Mongkut Hospital Caused By Bomb: Police

    Explosion At Bangkok’s King Mongkut Hospital Caused By Bomb: Police

    Police in Thailand have said that an explosion at the King Mongkut Hospital in Central Bangkok on Monday (May 22) was caused by a bomb.

    Twenty-four people were “slightly injured” following the explosion.

    Of the 24 injured, three are still receiving treatment – mostly for injuries from broken glass, reports said.

    Deputy Police Chief Sriwara Rangsiramanakul told reporters that the hospital is being searched.

    “We found wiring and what seems to be the remains of battery parts that could have been part of the bomb. The intention of the attack is still unclear but this attack is unacceptable and I condemn this,” the deputy police chief said.

    “We found the pieces that were used to make the bomb,” said Kamthorn Aucharoen, commander of the police’s explosive ordnance team.

    “Right now, authorities are checking out closed circuit cameras,” he told Reuters.

    Local broadcaster Thai PBS said the incident took place in a guest room for retired military officials. All of them were taken to the emergency room for treatment, it added.

     

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/

  • Singapore Man Sentenced In US For Plot To Export Bomb Parts To Iran

    Singapore Man Sentenced In US For Plot To Export Bomb Parts To Iran

    A Singaporean man was sentenced to 40 months in prison Thursday for helping ship US-made radio frequency modules to Iran that were eventually found in IED bombs in Iraq.

    Lim Yong Nam, 43, also known as Steven Lim, pleaded guilty last December in Washington to fraud charges related to US sanctions violations by helping route 6,000 of the modules through Singapore to Iran.

    Lim and others he worked with had declared Singapore as the final destination for the electronics, but instead they were forwarded from the south-east Asian city-state in five lots to Iran, the US Justice Department said.

    “Lim and his co-conspirators were directly aware of the restrictions on sending US-origin goods to Iran,” the department said.

    The modules can be used in networking home and office computer equipment. But in 2008-2009, coalition forces in Iraq discovered modules from the same shipments being used in the detonation systems of unexploded IEDs, or improvised explosive devices.

     

    Rilek1Corner

    Source: http://www.businesstimes.com.sg

  • Bangkok Blast: TNT, Ball Bearings Used In Bomb

    Bangkok Blast: TNT, Ball Bearings Used In Bomb

    BANGKOK: Authorities are still waiting for lab-test results before confirming the type of bomb that was used to stage the bloody attack in Bangkok on Monday.

    Tests can identify the type of gunpowder from soot found on victims’ clothes and tissue,” an informed source said.  “From there, we will be able to trace precursor materials of the bomb”.

    The government has now described Monday’s bomb blast as the worst ever attack on Thai soil.

    Hitting the world-famous Erawan Shrine at the Ratchaprasong Intersection, the explosion killed at least 20 victims and injured more than 100 others.

    After the explosion, authorities closed traffic around the intersection until Tuesday afternoon as officials scoured for evidence. Found at the scene were some 0.6-mm ball bearings.

    The same source said there was a high possibility that the bomb in the Monday’s attack was TNT.

    “It’s inflammable, highly destructive and yellow,” it added.

    National Police Commissioner Pol General Somyot Poompanmuang said the bomb had complete combustion, and left hardly any trace at the crime scene.

    “That’s why it took time for the explosives ordnance disposal team to collect evidence,” Somyot said.

    Pol General Jarumporn Suramanee, an adviser to the national police chief, inspected the blast scene himself.

    Also at the shrine was Supanee Wattanawijarn, treasurer of the Than Tao Mahaprom Foundation Erawan Hotel. Her foundation takes care of the Erawan Shrine, where Than Tao Mahaprom (the sacred Brahma statue) is enshrined.

    Deputy National Police Commissioner Pol General Ruangsak Jritake accompanied Supanee as they examined the sacred statue together.

    “The blast has caused some damage to the statue’s chin and right arm,” he said.

    Supanee said the repairs would be done by the Office of Traditional Arts, using plaster and gold ornaments.

    “During the repair, people are still welcome to the shrine,” she said, adding that security measures around the shrine would be increased.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my

  • Singaporean Tourists Injured in Kuala Lumpur Explosion

    Singaporean Tourists Injured in Kuala Lumpur Explosion

    KUALA LUMPUR: At least 14 people were injured, one seriously, after an explosion in front of a pub at Sun Complex in Jalan Bukit Bintang at about 4.20am on Thursday (Oct 9), Bernama reported. The explosion is believed to have resulted from a homemade bomb, the news agency reported on its Twitter account.

    Berita Harian Malaysia reported that police confirmed among those injured are Singaporean, Thai and Chinese tourists. The newspaper said initial police investigations indicated that the explosion was targeted towards the seriously injured victim.

    The Star reported that the injured were aged between 22 and 40 and included two women. They have been sent to Hospital Kuala Lumpur and the nearby Tung Shin Hospital.

    At least four cars were hit by the explosion, according to The Star. The report said that the explosion came from two devices placed underneath two cars parked in the area – one of which was believed to be an unexploded grenade. The Star reported that the two explosive objects were thrown at the scene from the second floor of a building.

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/several-injured-in-kuala/1405298.html

  • When terrorists in one country are national heroes in another

    KRIUSMANHARUN359

    Tensions are running high between Indonesia and Singapore over the former’s decision to name a naval vessel after two convicted members of the Indonesian Marine Corps, who carried out the bombing of the MacDonald House office building in Singapore on March 10, 1965.

    The bone of contention lies in how Harun Said and Usman Ali, the two Indonesian commandos, are seen by both countries.

    In Singapore, they are the perpetrators of the bombing of a civilian target, while the Indonesian government sees them as national heroes who carried out their duty during Konfrontasi (1963-66) with Malaysia.

    The disparate labels for the two men are understandable considering Singapore, still part of Malaysia at the time, and Indonesia were locked in a dispute that stemmed from the latter’s objection towards the formation of the federal state of Malaysia, encompassing large swathes of territory on the island of Borneo that Indonesia had laid claim to.

    However, objectively speaking, were Usman and Harun terrorists or were they war heroes?

    Merriam-Webster’s dictionary defines terrorism as the use of violent acts to frighten the people in an area as a way of trying to achieve a political goal. By this definition alone, what the two men did qualifies as an act of terrorism.

    Singaporean police records state that when they were arrested floating at sea, the two men said they were a fisherman and a farmer, before later confessing to the bombing.

    However, it was not until later, during their trial for murder, that the two revealed they were members of the Indonesian Marine Corps with express orders to cause trouble in Singapore as part of confrontation with Malaysia. Apparently, the two men chose to reveal their status in the hope of being treated as prisoners of war under the Geneva Conventions.

    21-02-Foto-Jejak-Langkah-2-Perdana-Menteri-Singapura-Lee-Kuan-Yew-menaburkan-bunga-pada-makam-Usman-dan-Harun-di-Jakarta-pada-tanggal-28-Mei-1973

    When the presiding judge denied them POW status – on the grounds that members of enemy armed forces who are combatants and who come here with the assumption of the semblance of peaceful pursuits and divest themselves of the character or appearance of soldiers, but are captured, are not entitled to the privileges of prisoners of war – Usman and Harun retracted their statements that they were members of the Indonesian military.

    Despite lobbying by the Jakarta government for their release, Usman and Harun were found guilty of murder and sentenced to death. However, when their bodies were brought back to Jakarta after their execution in 1968, the two were interred in the National Heroes Cemetery with full military honours.

    It could well be argued that the granting of national hero status to the two men was Indonesia’s way of saving face after a failed diplomatic attempt to have the two released.

    It was also a delicate time for Indonesia as the new government under then President Sukarno was trying to extricate itself from the confrontation.

    The hero status for both men was also anomalous even by Indonesian standards, as people given this recognition are usually those who perished in combat against enemy forces. Usman and Harun never actually met these criteria – as never during Konfrontasi did the Indonesian government nor its Malaysian counterpart officially declare war on each other.

    So, essentially, both were perpetrators of a state-sponsored act of terrorism. Hence, the adamant position by the Singaporean government that Usman and Harun were terrorists.

    By the same token, Indonesians should look at the incident as a lesson in how not to conduct bilateral relations. Sukarno’s accusation that Malaysia was a puppet state of the United Kingdom has never been proven.

    To date, it remains obscure why Sukarno instigated the unofficial war against Malaysia in 1963. Some historians have argued that his earlier success in wresting Papua from the Dutch emboldened him to try a similar tactic with the former British Malaya, though Sukarno always publicly denied any territorial ambitions. Nevertheless, Sukarno’s coveting Malaysia as part of a Greater Indonesia may not have been just a flight of fancy.

    In many ways, his model for the state of Indonesia was the ancient Majapahit Empire, which encompassed Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and parts of Thailand and Indochina.

    ST_20140208_STINDONSHIP1_4025141e

    Whatever his motives, the border skirmishes and acts of sabotage against Malaysia during Konfrontasi appeared to be designed to provoke the British, who had granted independence to Malaysia in 1957, into declaring war against Indonesia. Had they done so, Sukarno would certainly have obtained his evidence that Malaysia was simply an extension of British imperial powers.

    Johannes Nugroho*

    ###

    *Johannes Nugroho is a writer and businessman from Surabaya. This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insider.

    Source: The Jakarta Globe