Daily Dispatch

Court to decide in tourist murder trial

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A THAI court will deliver a long-awaited verdict this week in the high-profile case of two Myanmar migrant workers accused of the brutal murder of two British backpacker­s on the holiday island of Koh Tao.

The battered bodies of Hannah Witheridge, 23, and David Miller, 24, were found in September last year on a beach on the idyllic island in the Gulf of Thailand that is popular with divers.

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. A court on Samui island is due to give its verdict tomorrow.

Zaw Lin and Win Zaw Htun, migrant workers from neighbouri­ng Myanmar who were working on the island, were arrested after weeks of pressure on authoritie­s to solve the crime.

Police said they had confessed to the killings but both men later retracted their statements, which they said had been made under duress. They face the death penalty if found guilty.

Migrant workers often face discrimina­tion in Thailand and have been used as scapegoats for crimes in the past.

Police have denied using force during their interrogat­ion of the pair.

Allegation­s by defence lawyers of police incompeten­ce and evidence mishandlin­g have dominated the trial, which began in July this year and ended in October after 21 days of witness hearings.

Thai police were accused of failing to close off the island quickly and allowing potential suspects to escape.

Police said Witheridge was bludgeoned to death and had been raped. Miller also suffered blows to his head.

A debate over DNA samples that police say link the two suspects to Witheridge’s body has been at the heart of the trial.

Defence lawyers had asked to retest crucial DNA samples taken from the victims’ bodies 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 in the case. — Reuters

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