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#1
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11-20-2018, 11:15 AM
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Thai Death Mix
1. On 12th November 2018 in Khao Yai, a charred body was found. 2. On 12th November in Udon Sawang, 17 year old A.S. died in a road accident. 3. On 15th November 2018 in the Ban Phut district, a 40 year old man was stabbed to death. 4. At around 8pm on 14th November 2018 in Chumphon. 5. In the early hours of 17th November 2018 in Mueang District, the body of 25 year old T.C. was found. She had been stabbed + strangled. Her body had been there for no more than 2-3 hours.
__________________ "I'd give the world for the chance just to see your face again. Still I pretend that you're still standing by." |
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#4
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11-20-2018, 11:21 AM
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Re: Thai Death Mix
I think it's an East Asian thing, they do it in Cambodia too. I also find it strange, it's not like you can miss a dead body up close!
__________________ "I'd give the world for the chance just to see your face again. Still I pretend that you're still standing by." |
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#9
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11-24-2018, 08:19 AM
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Re: Thai Death Mix
Why do ambulance workers pose with dead bodies? The majority of ambulance workers in Thailand are not paid – they are volunteers, required only to undertake a two-day first responder training course. When they arrive at the scene of a death they are responsible for taking care of the body until a paid official arrives to move them to the morgue. While undertaking the task they will often take photos to post on Facebook or other social media. “The posing with a dead body is a pride thing, to show that one has helped take care of that body...Mr “It’s a pride in doing a job that society generally shuns,” said Cunningham, the author of the book 'Sleeping with the Dead'. * In some of the photographs the ambulance workers can be seen pointing at the corpse. “Pointing at a dead body is just something that has come from pointing to small things in pictures to highlight them,” Mr Cunningham said. “It’s a little strange that the Thais still point at the obvious but [it’s] just something that they have actually picked up from Western media, although interpreted in a sometimes bizarre way.” * |