Concern is growing for a 31-year-old British man who is serving a 17-year jail sentence following a highly questionable trial in Myanmar.
However, unlike the recent Matthew Hedges’ case in the United Arab Emirates, there is little media interest and what appears to be even less concern from the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office despite striking parallels of injustice.
Both the Durham University academic, given a life sentence for spying, and Niranjan Rasalingam, an accountant from Croydon, have been extremely vocal about their innocence.
Both men were denied justice in the way of court translators, transparent judicial process and access to lawyers.
Both men have said they were submitted to torture and abuse by the regimes which held them.
Niranjan Rasalingam was held in prison in Myanmar for more than a year without charge before he was put through a trial and sentenced to 17 years in jail in a case that has attracted international criticism from human rights groups.
However, Matthew Hedges was given a pardon after robust intervention by the British Foreign Office yet after several attempts to ask the FCO for comment on Niranjan Rasalingam’s case there has been complete silence. Apart from two separate acknowledgements that WTX News has submitted questions about the Rasalingam case, the FCO appears unwilling to respond.
All I wanted to know is when did British consular officials last visit Rasalingham and what actions are being taken to help him.
I’m really concerned at what I can only describe as a lack of concern from the British Foreign Office in the accountant’s case and equally baffled why the two men’s cases are being treated quite differently by the government. Obviously, it will have nothing to do with the fact Niranjan Rasalingam is a man of colour, surely but it would be reassuring to see the sort of robust action being taken that we witnessed when the UAE sentenced Matthew Hedges to life in prison.
As more than 700,000 Rohingya can testify from the camps in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, justice is not a concept familiar in the brutal Myanmar regime.
Niranjan Rasalingam, an accountant from Croydon, was arrested in 2014 alongside three Indian nationals on suspicion of stealing 25.2m kyats (£13,744) using cloned ATM cards in Yangon. While the Indian Government has moved swiftly to get justice for their citizens the same can not be said of the British FCO.
A very confused and lengthy trial ended in a 17-year sentence for Rasalingam on June 16 last year. The court didn’t even wait for his lawyer to arrive and make a defence while his translator had already left the courtroom when sentencing was announced.
He was apparently told he could reduce his sentence to nine years if he paid a 400 lakh (£23,000) fine. Throughout the trial, he denied the allegations against him.
His British lawyer Michael Polak told me: “It is very worrying that Mr Rasalingam has been convicted after a trial process which can only be described as a gross miscarriage of justice and the lack of due process has continued into sentencing where he has been sentenced to 17 years using an aggregation of sentences which is unlawful under domestic Burmese law.
“All those with the power to raise this case must do so immediately as Mr Rasalingam is being subject to mistreated and should be returned to the United Kingdom.’On top of that he’s serving his sentence under inhumane conditions at the country’s infamous Insein prison, where he said last year he was assaulted by another prisoner.”
After his conviction, Rasalingam told The Guardian (the only mainstream media that I believe has taken an interest in his plight): “Life in Insein prison is hell on earth – the conditions, the corruption and the danger. I have paid to get a bed and bedding and friends from the UK have sent money to me to try to get a few comforts like additional food and toiletries.”
He said he was in Myanmar as a broker for a holiday reservation website and as for his three co-accused, he says he knew only one of the Indian nationals he was arrested with and that was via a family friend.
The Indian embassy has filed a complaint to the Myanmar foreign ministry about treatment and the trio’s legal team insist that the three were not even in Myanmar on November 16 2014, when the crime was allegedly committed. A complaint by Myanmar bank Kanbawza Bank Limited (KBZ) led to the four men’s arrest but KBZ has not responded to repeated requests by media for comment.
If something dodgy is happening in this case then it must be called out. I’ve never been able to remain silent in the face of injustice, something which does not appear to trouble the British government which seems selective on such issues.
Mercifully British-born academic Matthew Hedges was freed by a pardon from the UAE’s president after the Foreign Office demanded his release. There was certainly nothing quiet going on ‘behind the scenes’ when the FCO learned Mr Hedges had been convicted of spying, the case of injustice made headlines and rightly so.
Like Rasalingam, the academic spent months without access to a lawyer or translator while vehemently denying the charges laid against him, but unlike Hedges, it seems he has been abandoned by his country.
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The Home Secretary Sajid Javid has claimed that a high number of men found involved in child exposition in the United Kingdom are of Pakistani origin.
He was speaking on BBC Radio 4 Today show, and Sajid Javid, who has Pakistani heritage, said that ignoring the ethnicity of abusers gives “oxygen” to extremists.
“When it comes to gang-based child exploitation it is self-evident to anyone who cares to look that if you look at all the recent high-profile cases there is a high proportion of men that have Pakistani heritage,” the Conservative party representative said.
These sick Asian paedophiles are finally facing justice. I want to commend the bravery of the victims. For too long, they were ignored. Not on my watch. There will be no no-go areas https://t.co/cZGqDOxt4u
— Sajid Javid (@sajidjavid) October 19, 2018
“There could be – I’m not saying that there are – there could be some cultural reasons from the communities that these men came from that could lead to this kind of behaviour,” Javid added.
“For me to rule something out just because it would be considered sensitive would be wrong. If I had ignored it, or been seen to ignore it, that is exactly what I think extremists would like to see in this country. It would give them oxygen and I refuse to do that.”
When asked about the decision to strip some offenders with dual citizenship of their British nationality and deport them to Pakistan, Javid said there was a “very high bar” on such decisions, which were usually only taken in cases of terrorism.
“I’m the British home secretary and my job is to protect the British public, to do what I think is right to protect the British public. That’s my number one job,” he said.
The home secretary has ordered research into the “characteristics and contexts” of gangs abusing children, arguing that ignoring issues such as ethnicity is more likely to fuel the far-right.
He further delved into the issue and said: “When I’m asking my officials to go away and do research to look into the causes of gang-based child exploitation, then I want them to leave no stone unturned and to look at everything.
Grooming gangs have recently been convicted in Huddersfield, Oxford, and Rotherham.
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Indonesia on Thursday rerouted all flights around the erupting Anak Krakatau volcano between Java and Sumatra islands, as it spewed columns of ash into the air, days after it triggered a deadly tsunami.
A crater collapse on the volcanic island at high tide on Saturday sent waves up to 5 meters (16 feet) high smashing into the coast on the Sunda Strait, killing more than 400 people.
“All flights are rerouted due to Krakatau volcano ash on red alert,” the government air-traffic control agency AirNav said in a release.
Authorities raised the volcano’s alert level to the second-highest on Thursday, imposing a 5-km exclusion zone.
This latest development will hinder the aid agencies in getting emergency aid and necessary equipment into the region.
The death toll from the volcano-triggered tsunami has reached at least 281 people.
1,016 were injured, 57 are missing and 11,687 have been displaced.
Indonesian rescuers are scrambling with diggers and other heavy equipment and even their bare hands, trying to free survivors from the rubble.
More than 600 homes and more than 400 boats and ships were damaged.
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In Paris the “yellow vest” anti-government protests that have rocked President Macrons administration is set to be held on Saturday and New Year’s Eve, and continue into 2019.
The group called the “Yellow Vest” after the visor jacket have no plans of yielding to the terms of the government and will continue to protest into Next year. Laetitia Dewalle, one spokesperson of the protest movement, “The yellow vests are still mobilised.”
Several of the movement’s representatives said a seventh straight Saturday of protests will take place across the country this weekend.
The Champs-Elysees has since last month been the epicentre of repeated violent protests against Macron’s government, with the Arc de Triomphe ransacked on December 1. Violence is inevitable.
Yellow-vest representative Benjamin Cauchy said protesters would be out on New Year’s Eve as well, “to show that the mobilisation will not end in the new year”.
Cauchy also warned that if the concessions made so far by President Emmanuel Macron did not add up, “we will end up with a large-scale mobilisation in late January”.
Earlier on Thursday, Paris city officials said that New Year’s Eve celebrations on the Champs-Elysees will go ahead despite the protest plans on the famed avenue.
Tens of thousands of tourists and locals traditionally ring in the new year on the wide shopping boulevard, which ends with the Arc de Triomphe monument.
While the numbers turning out at protests across the country have fallen dramatically, several thousand people are listed on Facebook as planning to attend what it calls a “festive and non-violent event” on New Year’s Eve.
And officials from the organisation suggest that the New Year Eve’s protest will encourage many others to join the movement.
In the past month, France has seen cities in chaos, cars on fire, police using water cannons as violence and chaos have erupted out of control. French President Macron was left red-faced at the G20 summit where he was forced to yield to some of the demands of the protestors and reverse some policy changes.
The Champs-Elysees being prepped for the New Years Eve celebrations in Paris, the Yellow vests intend on persisting through the cold to make sure their voice is heard.
The avenue is a regular gathering point for national celebrations such as Bastille Day, the Tour de France and France’s victory this summer in the football World Cup.
But on recent Saturdays, it has been the scene of violent clashes between riot police and “yellow vest” protesters who accuse Macron of favouring the rich with his policies.
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Indonesia has been hit by another deadly Tsunami. The Tsnumai hit around 2.30 pm GMT and has hit popular touridt resorts.
So far 77 people have been killed and over 700 injured after a tsunami hit the coast on Indonesia’s Sunda Strait.
The country’s disaster management agency has briefed the media and said hundreds of buildings were damaged by Saturday’s violent tsunami.
The agency also added that the possible cause of the tsunami was undersea landslides after the Krakatoa volcano erupted.
The strait, between the islands of Java and Sumatra, connects the Java Sea to the Indian Ocean.
Deaths have been reported in the Pandeglang, South Lampung and Serang regions.
Among the areas hit was the popular Tanjung Lesung beach resort in west Java. There was no warning of the advancing wave.
Officials are investigating whether the tsunami was caused by Anak Krakatoa, a volcanic island in the Sunda Strait.
The eruption from the volcano can cause landslides under water which can trigger a Tsunami.
Indonesia is prone to Tsunamis because it lies on the ‘Ring of Fire. Many Tsunamis are triggered by earthquakes in this region and as recent as September over 2000 people were killed and over 100,000 displaced by a Tsunami and Earthquake that hit the Palu district.
More to follow as it breaks.
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