Jump to content

Huat Zai

Mugentech Minecrafter
  • Posts

    14848
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    210

Everything posted by Huat Zai

  1. MALAYSIA– Chinese coast guard vessels are believed to still be hovering around the waters of Malaysia’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) near Beting Patinggi Ali (or known as Luconia Shoals), which is rich in oil and gas resources. The ships include the CCG 5901, also known as ‘The Monster’, which weighs 12,000 tonnes and is currently sailing just 55 nautical miles(nm) from the coast of Sarawak, Malaysia. Reports of the voyage were made known by Raymond M. Powell, the Director of Project Myoushu at Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation, Stanford University, through his Twitter account @GordianKnotRay. Powell, a former colonel in the US Air Force, stated that another Chinese coast guard vessel, the CCG 5302, was also detected in the waters of Malaysia’s EEZ. Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) 1982, a country’s sovereign waters extend up to 12 nautical miles from its coastline, while its EEZ extends up to 200 nautical miles from the coast. Beting Patinggi Ali, located 84 nautical miles or 155 kilometers from the coast of Miri (specifically at Tanjung Baram), Sarawak, is clearly within Malaysia’s EEZ. #China continues to operate two coast guard ships deep in #Malaysia’s exclusive economic zone near Luconia Shoals (Beting Patinggi Ali), including the world’s largest—CCG 5901—which weighs in at 12,000 tons and has approached within 50nm of Malaysia’s coastline.#southchinasea pic.twitter.com/mBlGQm14WD — Ray Powell (@GordianKnotRay) February 25, 2023 In an earlier Twitter post on 20 February, Ray Powell had alerted that ‘The Monster’, the world’s largest coast guard vessel of the Zhaotou class have returned to the waters of Beting Patinggi Ali on February 18 to replace its companion, the Chinese coast guard vessel CCG 5303. “Royal Malaysian Navy ship KD Keris has deployed to monitor it,” he wrote. #China’s 12K-ton Zhaotou-class cutter 5901—the world’s largest coast guard ship, called “the Monster”—returned to #Malaysia’s exclusive economic zone 18 Feb, replacing CCG 5303 at Luconia Shoals (Beting Patinggi Ali). Royal Malaysian Navy ship KD Keris has deployed to monitor it. pic.twitter.com/AB4YryxPYr — Ray Powell (@GordianKnotRay) February 19, 2023 According to Defence Security Asia (DSA) , a news portal that covers military and security issues in Malaysia and the Asia-Pacific region, ‘The Monster’ was built in 2016 by Jiangnan Shipyard (江南造船(集团)) in Shanghai. DSA stated that with a top speed of 25 knots, the giant vessel has been used by Beijing since 2017 to patrol the South China Sea to defend China’s maritime rights. “Despite its enormous size, ‘The Monster’s’ main armament system is only a 76mm gun, two possible 30mm side guns, and a helicopter,” DSA reported. According to the portal, ‘The Monster’ is also believed to carry several unmanned aerial vehicles and an Underwater Surveillance Vehicle (USV). “The size of the CCG 5901 is so large that its presence in any location in the South China Sea is given serious attention by littoral countries in the region, as it symbolically represents the size of China itself, as well as the pressure and ‘power’ of a larger country over its much smaller neighbor,” DSA warned. According to The Maritime Executive, the presence of CCG 5901 near Indonesia’s North Natuna Sea last month also created a tension in the region. The government of Indonesia has dispatched a naval vessel to monitor the China’s mega-cutter, which has been operating in Indonesia’s North Natuna Sea within Indonesia’s EEZ. The area is rich in energy resources, and China claims ownership of large parts of it under its ‘nine-dash-line’ policy, which has been deemed illegal by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. https://www.theonlinecitizen.com/2023/02/28/china-coast-guards-12000-tonne-monster-spotted-sailing-near-coast-of-sarawak/
  2. Police in Peru made a surprise discovery when they searched a delivery man who came to their attention for acting drunk at an archaeological site in Puno. Inside his cooler bag was an ancient mummy. The man said that he had been sharing his room with the bandaged mummy and considered it "a kind of spiritual girlfriend". He had put the remains in the bag to show them off to his friends, he said. He explained that he kept "Juanita", as he had nicknamed the mummy, in a box in his room, next to the TV. He added that it was owned by his father, without specifying how it had come into his father's possession. Experts said the body was between 600 and 800 years old and that it was that of an adult male rather than a woman, as the man who was discovered with it had assumed. The mummified male is estimated to have been more than 45 years old at the time of his death and 1.51m tall (4ft 11in). The mummy was wrapped in bandages in the foetal position which is typical of many of the pre-Hispanic burials in the area. Mummification was practiced by a variety of cultures in what is now Peru before the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors. Some mummies were buried while others were brought out and paraded during key festivals. Police have seized the mummy carried in the cooler bag and handed it to Peru's ministry of culture, which looks after the country's heritage. The man who was transporting it and and his two friends, who are between 23 and 26 years old, were detained and are being investigated for possible crimes against Peru's cultural heritage. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-64797080
  3. Warning: This article contains descriptions of a murder. Audience discretion is advised. Police in Japan have arrested a 31-year-old man after the body of a 33-year-old single mother was found dismembered. The incident occurred in the Shizuoka Prefecture in southern Japan. The deceased Ayumi Ito, was found dismembered on the balcony in the home of Yuki Tsuchiya, a married man. Ito and Tsuchiya allegedly had an affair. Some of the victim's body parts were reportedly also found in her own car. via via Japanese media Fuji News Network reported on Feb. 24 that police arrested the suspect, Tsuchiya, on Feb. 23 on suspicion of abandoning a body. The crime is believed to have been committed on Feb. 21, Fuji News Network reported. Tsuchiya's house, where Ito's body was found in, housed the man's wife, his two young children, and his elderly father. The Straits Times reported that Tsuchiya had confessed to the killing. How murder allegedly committed He admitted that he had hit Ito on her head with a blunt object in the car and strangled her to death with a cord. According to unnamed sources, Fuji News Network reported that Ito found a new partner in 2022, which served as the motive for the killing. Two neighbours claimed that on Feb. 20 or Feb. 21, "suspicious" and "strange" noises, such as "rattling" and "banging", were heard coming from Tsuchiya's home and in a nearby parking lot. The victim lived in Iwata City, a two-hour drive from Numazu City, where Tsuchiya lived. Fuji News Network reported that Ito's car was found 280m away from Tsuchiya's home. Lianhe Zaobao reported that Ito had met Tsuchiya in 2022, when the two were both members of a committee focused on the development of Shizuoka Prefecture. Japanese police said that investigations are ongoing. Hong Kong case This incident in Japan came days after another high-profile dismemberment case in Hong Kong. The victim, socialite Abby Choi, 28, was allegedly brutally murdered and dismembered by her ex-husband's family. The case sent shockwaves across Hong Kong and the world. Parts of Choi's remains were found in a soup pot, with other remains kept in a refrigerator. Other body parts are still missing. https://mothership.sg/2023/03/woman-dismembered-japan/
  4. Rule one when you hack, don't fuck with a government.
  5. Winne the Pooh wants to use the war as a means to distract everyone from the problems in tiongland, Pudding don't give face https://res.cngoldres.com/upload/2019/0319/38d520eeebbf7d229f91309f796bcb5b.jpg
  6. It looks like controlled, directional charges. There's at less one explosive expert in the team, not simple.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Mugentech.net uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By using this site you agree to Privacy Policy