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Thailand denies using chemical weapons in clashes with Cambodia

Thailand denies using chemical weapons in clashes with Cambodia

CNA3 days ago
BANGKOK: Thailand on Monday (Jul 28) denied using chemical weapons in its border conflict with Cambodia, condemning the 'baseless accusation'.
In a statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the allegations are part of a 'campaign of disinformation aiming to discredit Thailand's reputation while the two countries are scheduled to meet'.
'This accusation once again is groundless and reflects a pattern of disinformation, aimed at distorting the facts on the ground and deliberately undermining Thailand's credibility and standing in the international community,' the ministry added.
Maly Socheata, a spokesperson for the Cambodian defence minister, had earlier accused Thai forces of using chemical weapons in their attack.
The Cambodian Human Rights Committee also condemned what it called 'Thailand's deliberate use of toxic military smokes and obscurants'.
On Facebook, the wife of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet shared a photo of a plane emitting smoke, captioned: "Thai aircraft released toxic smoke in the disputed areas on Jul 27, according to the Cambodia's Ministry of National Defense."
In Monday's statement, the Thai foreign ministry said its position on the use of chemical weapons has been consistent.
'We condemn the use of chemical weapons anywhere, by anyone, under any circumstances,' it said.
'Thailand is also fully committed to all international instruments on disarmament and the non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.'
The Royal Thai Armed Forces said it 'categorically rejects' the allegations by Cambodia.
'Thailand calls upon the international community to take serious note of such behaviour and to jointly condemn the use of disinformation aimed at distorting reality on the global stage,' it said in a statement.
The leaders of Thailand and Cambodia held ceasefire talks in Malaysia on Monday as the deadly skirmish dragged into a fifth day.
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Ex-engineer at Singapore's health tech agency jailed for accepting S$18,000 Paris trip as bribe
Ex-engineer at Singapore's health tech agency jailed for accepting S$18,000 Paris trip as bribe

CNA

timean hour ago

  • CNA

Ex-engineer at Singapore's health tech agency jailed for accepting S$18,000 Paris trip as bribe

SINGAPORE: A former engineer at Singapore's health tech agency Integrated Health Systems Information (IHiS) was jailed on Thursday (Jul 31) for taking bribes in the form of a trip to Paris worth more than S$18,000 (US$13,900). He took the bribes from two directors of IT firms who wanted to win a multi-million-dollar bid supplying equipment and maintenance services with IHiS. Ng Kah Siang, a 37-year-old Singaporean, was sentenced to jail for five months and two weeks, after pleading guilty to three charges of corruptly obtaining or attempting to obtain bribes under the Prevention of Corruption Act. Another two charges were taken into consideration. The court heard that Ng, also known as Ronnie, was an engineer working for IHiS, whose vendors provide IT products and services to all the public healthcare institutions in Singapore. IHiS, now known as Synapxe, was the national agency supporting the tech needs of the public healthcare sector and is a wholly owned subsidiary of MOH Holdings. IHiS' open tenders were generally of a substantially higher value compared with tenders in the private healthcare sector, given the relatively larger budgets IHiS had to invest with. Ng was part of IHiS' project team which facilitates procurement and was in charge of contracts with vendors. He was assigned around November 2021 to be the project manager in charge of a "term deal", where IHiS was going to renew its master contract for certain network equipment purchases and maintenance services via an open tender. The term deal would allow the public healthcare institutions the option to purchase IT equipment and solutions from the approved vendors, using public funds. The incumbent brand used by IHiS at the time was Cisco. The term deal was meant to consolidate the two existing term contracts covering Cisco equipment purchase and network equipment maintenance services for all Singapore public healthcare institutions. The average annual procurement from those two contracts were valued at about S$22 million a year for the years 2020 and 2021. As project manager in charge of the term deal, Ng was involved in drafting tender specifications. He was also responsible for putting up the pre-procurement approval paper to his superiors to seek approval for the conduct of an open request for a proposal to establish the deal. Ng was told by his superiors that they wanted more competition for the term deal and asked him to approach different brands to sound them out on the deal and find out who their preferred system integrators were. NG MEETS HIS CO-ACCUSED Around November 2021, Ng was introduced to Peng Ming, an account director of Huawei in charge of the Singapore healthcare sector. He told Peng that he was one of the IHiS staff in charge of drafting tender specifications for the term deal and asked what Peng could do for him if Ng helped Huawei to be included in the upcoming IHiS tender requirements. Peng, a 39-year-old Singaporean also known as Michael, asked Ng what figure he was looking at, and Ng replied S$20,000. Peng did not accept this request. Ng made it seem like he would ensure Huawei would be shortlisted if he was given gratification. Ng was part of the panel which evaluated the presentations given by the respective brands, which included Huawei and Cisco, to IHiS. Peng offered to organise a trip for Ng to visit Huawei's lab in Singapore to better understand Huawei's capabilities. Ng rejected this as he found Huawei's lab at Changi to be too far from his office in Serangoon North, and there was "nothing to entice him" to travel the distance. Peng later offered to sponsor a trip for Ng to a country where Huawei had a presence. Ng initially asked to go to Rome in Italy with his wife, but later settled on Paris, France, and Peng agreed. Peng introduced Ng to co-accused Chiang Chee Seng, a senior sales director of Nera Telecommunications. The company was one of Huawei's preferred systems integrators, Peng said. Chiang, 50, was Nera's agent overseeing the public sector account involving Singapore public healthcare institutions. Peng allegedly told Chiang that they needed Ng's help to ensure Huawei was shortlisted to be awarded the term deal. Chiang expressed his interest in accompanying the pair for the Europe trip, as he too wanted to increase the chances of his company, Nera, being the system integrator and tier-2 distributor of Huawei to win the term deal. Both Chiang and Peng viewed IHiS as an important client. They therefore conspired to corruptly give Ng and his wife an all-expenses-paid trip to Europe, including the expenses for flights, accommodation, food and tour attractions. They did this so Ng could help their companies win the term deal. Chiang created a WhatsApp chat group in February 2022 titled "Private Tour to Paris". The three men and their families then went on the trip in March 2022. In order to have their companies bear the costs of Ng and his wife's travel expenses, Peng and Chiang falsely declared in their respective business trip proposals that Ng's wife was an employee of IHiS, when she was not. The value of the Paris trip received by Ng and his wife was S$18,188.15. AFTER THE TRIP After returning from the trip, Ng asked Chiang for a gratification of 1 per cent of Nera's sales revenue if Nera was awarded the term deal. However, Chiang rejected him, saying Nera was a listed company. Meanwhile, Peng contacted Ng and asked for the tender form for the upcoming term deal, as he wanted to prepare it early and stand a better chance. On May 10, 2022, before the specifications were to be published later that week, Ng met Chiang at a coffee shop and passed him the specifications to share with Peng. The Corrupt Practices Investigations Bureau (CPIB) received information on the corruption and arrested the three men in May 2022. Ng surrendered S$10,000 to CPIB that same month. He later surrendered the rest of the sum he had received. The prosecution sought six months' jail for Ng, calling him the "primary mover" of the scheme who acted for financial gain. SENTENCING ARGUMENTS Deputy Public Prosecutors Eugene Phua and Andre Ong said Ng took advantage of his position to actively gain corrupt gratification over seven months. During this period, he attempted to obtain gratification from various IHiS vendors on five occasions, succeeding in only one of these attempts, which resulted in the trip. The biggest prize he sought was a cut of the revenue from the term deal, but he was stopped because the vendors did not agree to his proposals and CPIB arrested him, said the prosecutors. Defence lawyer Mato Kotwani sought 12 weeks' jail instead, saying this was something Ng regrets and is deeply remorseful about. Ng has surrendered the full sum of over S$18,000 and has a very young child at 17 months of age, said the lawyer. He referred to a CNA article where IHiS said in a statement that Ng's actions did not result in any financial loss or procurement irregularities, and that the integrity of its operations remained uncompromised. The lawyer said that it was very likely that IHiS would have accepted the tenders of Nera and Huawei for continuity reasons, adding that his client never disclosed a confidential list to the two men.

Cambodia asks Thailand to release detained soldiers as truce holds, Asia News
Cambodia asks Thailand to release detained soldiers as truce holds, Asia News

AsiaOne

time2 hours ago

  • AsiaOne

Cambodia asks Thailand to release detained soldiers as truce holds, Asia News

Cambodia accused Thailand on Thursday (July 31) of detaining 20 of its soldiers and killing another in post-ceasefire incidents, as a fragile peace held for a third day along their disputed border. Five days of intense clashes between the Southeast Asian neighbours that began last week killed at least 43 people, many of them civilians, and displaced more than 300,000, until a truce brokered in Malaysia on Monday halted the fighting. Thailand has since accused Cambodian troops of violating the ceasefire multiple times, a charge denied by authorities in Phnom Penh, who instead allege that the Thai military has wrongfully detained a number of its soldiers. "We appeal to the Thai side to promptly return all 20 of our forces, including other forces if any are under Thai control," Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet said on Thursday. In a statement, senior Cambodian defence official Lieutenant General Rath Dararoth said one Cambodian soldier had died in Thai custody since the ceasefire and his body had been returned. He did not provide further details. Thailand currently has custody of 20 Cambodian soldiers who had surrendered, including two who are under medical treatment, Thai Rear Admiral Surasant Kongsiri told reporters. "We are investigating them to verify the facts. After this is finished, they will be released," Thailand's Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai said, stressing the Thai military had not violated the ceasefire agreement. As per talks between military commanders held after Monday's truce announcement, Thailand and Cambodia agreed to facilitate the return of wounded soldiers and bodies of those deceased, besides refraining from reinforcing troops along the border. Cambodia took military attaches and diplomats to a border checkpoint on Wednesday to verify the ceasefire as both sides exchanged accusations of violating the truce. For decades, Thailand and Cambodia have wrangled over undemarcated points along their 817-km land border, with ownership of the ancient Hindu temples Ta Moan Thom and the 11th century Preah Vihear central to the disputes. The recent truce followed a push by Malaysia and calls by US President Donald Trump's phone calls to leaders of Thailand and Cambodia, warning them that trade deals would not be concluded if the fighting continued. Both countries face a tariff of 36 per cent on goods sent to the US, their biggest export market. US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, in an interview with Fox News' Sean Hannity, said early on Thursday that trade deals had been made with both countries ahead of the Aug 1 tariff deadline. [[nid:720781]]

Trump defers announcement of tariff rate on Malaysian goods to Aug 1, will attend Asean Summit in Oct: Anwar , Malaysia News
Trump defers announcement of tariff rate on Malaysian goods to Aug 1, will attend Asean Summit in Oct: Anwar , Malaysia News

AsiaOne

time2 hours ago

  • AsiaOne

Trump defers announcement of tariff rate on Malaysian goods to Aug 1, will attend Asean Summit in Oct: Anwar , Malaysia News

The United States' tariff rate on Malaysian goods will be announced on Friday (Aug 1), Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said on Thursday (Jul 30) after speaking to US President Donald Trump. "After the discussion and some clarifications that I made, he (Trump) decided to postpone the announcement of the tariff rate to tomorrow," said the Malaysian prime minister, adding that the call took place at 6.50am on Thursday morning. Anwar said that he had discussed the principles and spirit of free trade with Trump and that negotiations are ongoing between the Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry, and the US' trade representative and commerce secretary. These updates were shared by Anwar in Parliament on Thursday as he tabled the 13th Malaysia Plan, which outlines government spending on the country's development for the next five years until 2030. Malaysia is facing a 25 per cent tariff rate on its exports to the US, but The Straits Times reported official sources as saying that a deal to lower the tariff to a maximum of 20 per cent or as low as 15 per cent should be announced by Aug 1. On Jul 7, the White House announced that Trump had signed an executive order determining that certain tariff rates, which were initially set to expire on Jul 9, will expire on Aug 1 (Friday). Since then, the Trump administration has struck deals with several other Asean countries, including Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam. Anwar shared that Trump had praised Malaysia for its effective and positive role in brokering the Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire. He added that Trump confirmed his attendance for the upcoming Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Summit that will be held in Malaysia from Oct 26 to 28. [[nid:719999]] editor@

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