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Huat Zai

Mugentech Minecrafter
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Everything posted by Huat Zai

  1. Actually, this is a pretty smart move, now he'll be hauled as a hero in youtube.
  2. Ken Rhee, the ex-Navy Seal and YouTuber from South Korea, will be investigated by law enforcement in his home country for volunteering to join Ukraine in its fight against the Russian invasion. Return to recover and for treatment According to Reuters, the 37-year-old Rhee, who is also known as Rhee Keun, returned to Korea on the morning of May 27. His arrival at Incheon International Airport in Seoul was broadcast live on television. Speaking to the media present, Rhee said: "I haven't left the battlefield completely but came to recover from injuries." He had sustained cruciate ligament injuries in his knees during an infiltration operation. While in Ukraine, Rhee posted regular updates on his social media — even while he was in combat — and in a video posted to YouTube, described his injuries as non-serious, according to Yonhap News. When he arrived back in Korea, Rhee was seen walking with a slight limp and had to be helped at times. He told the media that he would have to undergo an operation and months of rehabilitation. Facing investigations Besides the members of the media, Rhee was also greeted on his arrival by 10 policemen, reported Reuters. He said the police officers were waiting for him when he stepped off the plane, and he was told that he will be summoned for questioning after his one-week quarantine. "I will cooperate in the investigation and receive punishment," he said. Violated government ban and travelled to Ukraine Rhee is believed to have gone to Ukraine without government authorisation. He arrived in Ukraine sometime towards the start of March 2022, after the South Korean government's Feb. 13 decision to bar its citizens from travelling to the eastern European country. In an Instagram post on Mar. 7, Rhee said he and a few others had initially considered leaving for Ukraine "through official procedures", but decided against it. Rhee added that he expected to be "treated as a criminal" for ignoring the government's travel ban. "If I return alive, then I will take responsibility for everything and receive the punishment I'm given," he wrote. The post was edited and removed two days ago. South Korea's foreign ministry subsequently filed a police complaint against him in mid-March for violating the Passport Act. Could be jailed and fined Those from Korea who go to Ukraine without authorisation could be jailed for up to one year and fined up to 10 million won (S$11,000). Convicted offenders are also required to turn in their passports, where they could face challenges applying for a replacement. According to Reuters, Rhee declined Ukraine's offer of citizenship and land ownership. "I don't think it's right to take citizenship to avoid a fine or trial," he said. No-fly list Rhee's rehabilitation in Korea is expected to take three months, after which he said he wishes to return to Ukraine: "I want to go back... because the war has not ended, there's still a lot to do." However, the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency has applied for an overseas travel ban for Rhee and placed him on a no-fly list, according to Naver. YouTube personality Rhee gained popularity in 2020 after a YouTube military series titled "Fake Men". As a former Navy Seal, Rhee starred as a trainer who coached celebrity contestants to complete training designed for the navy's elite forces.
  3. At less don't need to literary go to North Korea to eat at their NK branch,
  4. Shigenobu was one of the world's most notorious women during the 1970s and 1980s. (Photo: AFP/Charly Triballeau) TOKYO: Fusako Shigenobu, the 76-year-old female founder of the once-feared Japanese Red Army, walked free from prison on Saturday (May 28) after completing a 20-year sentence for a 1974 embassy siege. Shigenobu was one of the world's most notorious women during the 1970s and 1980s, when her radical leftist group carried out armed attacks worldwide in support of the Palestinian cause. Shigenobu left the prison in Tokyo in a black car with her daughter as several supporters held a banner saying "We love Fusako". "I apologise for the inconvenience my arrest has caused to so many people," Shigenobu told reporters after the release. "It's half a century ago ... but we caused damage to innocent people who were strangers to us by prioritising our battle, such as by hostage-taking," she said. She is believed to have masterminded the 1972 machine gun and grenade attack on Tel Aviv's Lod Airport, which left 26 people dead and injured about 80. The former soy-sauce company worker turned militant was arrested in Japan in 2000 and sentenced to two decades behind bars six years later for her part in a siege of the French embassy in the Netherlands. She had lived as a fugitive in the Middle East for around 30 years before resurfacing in Japan. Shigenobu's daughter May, born in 1973 to a father from the militant Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), hailed her mother's release on social media. Shigenobu maintained her innocence over the siege, in which three Red Army militants stormed into the French embassy, taking the ambassador and 10 other staff hostage for 100 hours. Two police officers were shot and seriously wounded. France ended the standoff by freeing a jailed Red Army guerilla, who flew off with the hostage-takers in a plane to Syria. Shigenobu did not take part in the attack personally but the court said she coordinated the operation with the PFLP. Born into poverty in post-war Tokyo, Shigenobu was the daughter of a World War II major who became a grocer after Japan's defeat. Her odyssey into Middle Eastern extremism began by accident when she passed a sit-in protest at a Tokyo university when she was 20. Japan was in the midst of campus tumult in the 1960s and 70s to protest the Vietnam War and the Japanese government's plans to let the US military remain stationed in the country. Shigenobu quickly became involved in the leftist movement and decided to leave Japan aged 25. She announced the Red Army's disbanding from prison in April 2001, and in 2008 was diagnosed with colon and intestinal cancer, undergoing several operations. Shigenobu said on Saturday she will first focus on her treatment and explained she will not be able to "contribute to the society" given her frail condition. But she told reporters: "I want to continue to reflect (on my past) and live more and more with curiosity." In a letter to a Japan Times reporter in 2017 she admitted the group had failed in its aims. "Our hopes were not fulfilled and it came to an ugly end," she wrote. https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/japanese-red-army-founder-shigenobu-freed-jail-2713106
  5. FYI, Singapore did not sign the contract to ban mines and we still actively use it in the Army
  6. Hong gao gan is suppose to be an expression, not a JAV. Plus bestiality is illegal in most parts of the world.
  7. "Industry investigations show that the underwater welding death rate has a high fatality rate estimated to be around 15%, making it 1,000 times more dangerous than working as a police officer. " https://mahonefirm.com/underwater-welding-death-rate/
  8. Why didn't they just build the stations closer in the first place?
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