A Thai national was arrested in Cambodia over the killing of former lawmaker Lim Kimya. Read more at straitstimes.com.
He had just arrived in Bangkok with his wife on a bus from Cambodia. A police officer attempted to resuscitate him, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. "He was courageous, with an independent mind,
The Cambodian government has extradited to Thailand the Thai ex-marine suspected of murdering former Cambodian opposition MP Lim Kimya, a dual Cambodian-French citizen, who was shot dead on Tuesday in a tourist area of Bangkok.
Lim Kimya was gunned down by a motorcyclist as he arrived in Bangkok by bus from Cambodia with his French wife.
The killing of a former Cambodian politician stoked safety fears that Thailand is no refuge for those fleeing autocracy.
Lim Kimya, an ex-lawmaker from the dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party, was shot dead in Bangkok on Tuesday evening. In a statement, Cambodia’s National Police said the suspected gunman fled to Cambodia shortly after he shot the victim. BANGKOK (AP ...
Thai national Ekkalak Paenoi faces charges including premeditated murder in the Tuesday shooting death of Lim Kimya, 74, in the Thai capital.
Cambodian police on Wednesday said they had apprehended a Thai man suspected of gunning down a former opposition politician from Cambodia.
A Thai court has issued an arrest warrant for the suspected hit man who murdered former Cambodian opposition lawmaker Lim Kimya in Bangkok. The 74-year-old politician, a member of the dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party,
Cambodian police said Saturday they had handed over to Thai authorities a man suspected of assasinating a former opposition politician in a brazen attack in downtown Bangkok. Lim Kimya, an ex-lawmaker for the dissolved Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP ...
A gunman shot dead Lim Kimya, 74, a former member of the banned opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) at around 4 p.m. on Tuesday on a busy street near Wat Bowonniwet Vihara temple in Bangkok’s old quarter. He died at the scene.
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet denied on Monday his government and father, former leader Hun Sen, were involved in the killing of an opposition politician in downtown Bangkok this month.