The Sun (Malaysia)

Thai court sentences Myanmar duo to death

> Brutal murders of British tourists dented kingdom’s image as holiday paradise

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KOH SAMUI: A Thai court sentenced two Myanmar migrant workers to death yesterday after convicting them of the murders of two young British tourists on a holiday island in a case mired in controvers­y and a dispute over DNA testing.

The battered bodies of backpacker­s Hannah Witheridge and David Miller were found on a beach in Koh Tao in September last year.

Police said Witheridge, 23, had been raped and bludgeoned to death.

Miller, 24, also suffered blows to his head.

Following weeks of pressure to solve the case, police arrested Myanmar migrant workers Zaw Lin and Win Zaw Tun and later said the two had confessed to the crimes.

The brutality of the murders dented Thailand’s image as a happy-go-lucky holiday paradise and raised serious questions about its treatment of migrant workers.

The verdict and sentence follow an investigat­ion and trial that triggered allegation­s of police incompeten­ce, mishandlin­g of evidence and DNA tests and torture of the suspects.

Both later retracted their confession­s saying they had been made under duress.

The verdicts came after 21 days of witness hearings in a trial that began in July and ended in October.

As is customary in Thailand, where trials have no jury, a judge delivered the verdict and sentence and said the DNA tests by investigat­ors were carried out to acceptable standards and the DNA found on Witheridge matched that of the defendants.

The debate over DNA samples that police say linked the two suspects to Witheridge were at the heart of the trial.

Defence lawyers had asked to retest DNA samples but authoritie­s issued conflictin­g statements on DNA evidence and, at one point, said that it had been used up.

No independen­t re-testing of DNA evidence has been done.

The judge said there was no weight to the two men’s claims that they had been tortured.

Miller’s family flew to Thailand for the verdict.

His brother, Michael, delivered a statement to reporters outside the court and said justice had been delivered, adding that the two men had shown no remorse for what they had done.

“We believe what happened today represents justice for Hannah and David,” he said.

“The Royal Thai Police conducted a thorough and methodical investigat­ion ... evidence against the two was overwhelmi­ng.”

Witheridge’s family said the trial had been distressin­g.

“We found listening to proceeding­s very challengin­g and we have had to endure a lot of painful and confusing informatio­n.

“We need time to digest the outcome of the trial and figure out the most appropriat­e way to tell our story,” they said in a statement. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Zaw Lin (left) and Win Zaw Tun arrive at the Koh Samui provincial court yesterday.
Zaw Lin (left) and Win Zaw Tun arrive at the Koh Samui provincial court yesterday.

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