คนร้ายใช้อาวุธปืนยิงต่อสู้ ตร.ปส.วิสามัญ 1 ศพ
ยึดยาบ้า A1 94,000 เม็ด @ อ.ฝาง จ.เชียงใหม่!!
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(24 ตค.) เมื่อเวลา 14.20 น. – พ.ต.อ.อิทธิพล จันทร์ศรีบุตร ผกก.2 บก.ปส.3 พร้อมกำลัง ทำการสืบสวนติดตามเป้าหมาย นายบุญเป็ง หม่อง กลุ่มค้ายาเสพติดชาวไทใหญ่ในพื้นที่ อ.ไชยปราการ จ.เชียงใหม่ ซึ่งเฝ้าติดตามพฤติกรรมมากว่า 1 เดือน พบกำลังขับรถยนต์ออกไปตลาดแม่ข่า อ.ฝาง จ.เชียงใหม่ เพื่อส่งมอบยาบ้าให้กับสายลับ จนท. จึงแสดงตัวเพื่อจับกุม ที่ท้ายตลาดหน้าบ้านเลขที่ 240/3 ม.5 ต.แม่ข่า อ.ฝาง จ.เชียงใหม่
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แต่คนร้ายได้ใช้อาวุธปืนยิงต่อสู้ และถูก จนท.ตร.ยิงตอบโต้ คมกระสุนเจาะร่าง นายบุญเป็ง เสียชีวิตคาที่ ตรวจสอบพบปืนออโตเมติคยี่ห้อ cz rami ขนาด 9 มม.ตกอยู่ใกล้ศพผู้ตาย พบยาบ้า 94,000 เม็ด ประทับตราหีบห่อ สัญลักษณ์ A1ซุกซ่อนไว้ด้านหลังรถยนต์ ยี่ห้อมิตชูบิชิ รุ่นสตราด้า ทะเบียน ผผ-8962 เชียงใหม่
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พีระเดช วิเศษศรี…..รายงาน
ขอบคุณภาพจาก สมาชิกข่าว แม่สายเพรส
& แอดมิน ตร.สัมพันธ์ CR. CATHAY MEE
Tag: Fang
Blood Foundation: Rebuilding a school to help rebuild young lives.
The Daylight School opened just a few months back at the beginning of February. It was set up to provide full time non-formal education for the children of Shan migrants living and working on the commercial orange farms located in the mountains along the Burma border in Fang District. These people have come to Thailand illegally, seeking refuge from persecution and oppression living under the Burmese Junta who currently rule their homeland, Shan State, with an iron and bloodied first.
Having no papers and not speaking the local language makes for a highly uncertain life in Thailand. These families must avoid the authorities while trying to eke out an existence doing jobs no one would take for wages and conditions no one else would accept.
For their children, education is essential for any hope of a positive future. Being able to speak, read and write Thai are necessary skills if they are ever to further their education in Thailand and enter a government school. Aside from Thai they also study their native Shan language and culture, this helps to preserve identity and keeps them connected to their heritage.
Since the school began there have regularly been some 25-30 students in attendance. Some of them are as young as four and others as old as twelve. It has been necessary to split the groups up, which given the one small classroom we have has only been achieved by holding the older, more advanced class in the outdoors. This has worked well for several months but now with the monsoon rains coming we need to find a different solution. It’s now summer school holidays here in Thailand so this is the time to make changes.
Fortunately there is an old abandoned building located on the orange farm where the school is held. It used to be a non-formal school run by another organisation some years ago. They stopped this smaller school when they opened a much bigger school some 20 km away. The building has fallen into disrepair, but the basic structure – the walls and the roof, are in good working condition. There are several small rooms and a flat courtyard area out the front which can be used for morning and afternoon assembly as well as a play area for the children. It’s a great spot but the building needs a lot of work. Continue reading “Blood Foundation: Rebuilding a school to help rebuild young lives.”
The army has stepped up patrols along the Burmese border after a clash with Wa insurgents suspected of trying to smuggle 650,000 speed pills into Chiang Mai.
Third Army commander Thanongsak Apirakyothin ordered troops to keep an extra close watch on border areas amid reports of more attempts by the Burmese minority group to smuggle illicit drugs into Thailand.
Lt Gen Thanongsak’s order followed an exchange of gunfire between members of the Pha Muang Task Force and 20 suspected members of the United Wa State Army about 3km inside Fang district on Sunday night.
One of the Wa was killed in the 20-minute shootout, after which soldiers cleared the area and found two bags packed with 650,000 methamphetamine pills, two AK-47 rifles and a 9mm pistol.
The area where the shots were exchanged is part of the main smuggling route and kept under watch by soldiers.
Drugs and security agencies have cracked down on the influx of illegal drugs into Thailand from Burma, especially speed pills, as minority groups in Burma need cash from selling drugs to dealers in Thailand to arm themselves against Burmese government forces.
Thai security agencies and non-governmental agencies expect further crackdowns on armed insurgents by Burmese government forces this year ahead of a planned general election.
Meanwhile, customs officers at Suvarnabhumi airport on Sunday searched a 29-year-old Pakistani man whose appearance matched an intelligence report and found he was carrying 330g of heroin in 21 packs concealed in his stomach.The department said the drugs had a street value of about one million baht.
The man, identified as Muhammad Riaz Khan, was charged with smuggling illicit drugs into the country.
http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/33737/army-intensifies-war-on-drugs
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