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PILLAGING PIRATES
Chinese 'thief' swallowed diamond, tried to flee Thailand
by Staff Writers
Bangkok (AFP) Sept 14, 2015


Chinese tourist guide robbed of 25,000 euros in France
Versailles, France (AFP) Sept 13, 2015 - A Chinese tourist guide was robbed of 25,000 euros ($28,300) in cash and his new Rolex watch after he had prevented two of his group from being robbed themselves outside a hotel near Paris, police said Sunday.

The Chinese tourists were getting off a coach when three men tried to grab designer handbags from two women in the group.

When the 32-year-old guide intervened, the men turned their attention to him and grabbed his bag containing 20,000 euros and nearly 5,000 Swiss francs (4,500 euros) and also the watch, which he had just bought for around 5,000 euros.

The robbers then left the scene in Carrieres-sur-Seine, 20 kilometres (12 miles) west of Paris, by car.

"The guide had wanted to help two Chinese tourists targeted by three thieves who tried to take their Longchamp handbags," a police source said.

"The guide intervened and in the end it was him who was stripped of his possessions."

Police are investigating whether there is any link between the robbery and similar incidents in the area, including several near the Versailles palace, a popular destination for Chinese visitors to France.

France is seeing an increase in the number of Chinese tourist visitors, but their reputation for carrying large amounts of cash has made them a target of thieves.

French authorities tightened security around Chinese tourist groups in 2013 after Beijing expressed concern about the increasing number of incidents.

A Chinese woman who allegedly tried to smuggle a stolen diamond out of Thailand by swallowing it was released from hospital Monday after doctors removed the expensive gem from her gut.

Police say the 39-year-old unnamed woman, who will appear in court later Monday, switched the 10 million baht ($278,000) gem with a fake one at a jewellery fair on the northern outskirts of Bangkok on Thursday.

She then tried to flee Thailand undetected by ingesting the gem.

Investigators caught up to her as she tried to fly out of Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi airport and an X-ray showed the diamond lodged in her gut. A 33-year-old Chinese man who she was travelling with was also arrested.

Police say neither time nor laxatives dislodged the gem and on Sunday doctors were called in to remove the stone.

"She is leaving the hospital -- she is fine now," Police Colonel Mana Tienmuangpak, lead investigator on the case, told AFP Monday.

He added that the woman would be taken to Nonthaburi Provincial Court which would then decide whether she will be remanded in custody as police continue to investigate.

Police Lieutenant Colonel Anchulee Theerawongpaisal, spokeswoman of the Police General Hospital where the woman was treated, said doctors used a colonoscope and instruments to remove the gem from her lower intestine.

"It took 12 minutes to extract it" Anchulee said.

"It's a normal surgical procedure except this time there was a 10-million-baht diamond involved," she added.

While rare, it is not unheard of for gem thieves to swallow stones as they try to evade capture.

In September 2011, a thief who stole a diamond from a British woman in Spain was caught when police stopped him at a checkpoint and forced him to undergo an X-ray.

In February 2014 a British man was arrested in Australia trying to board a flight after he made off with a $180,000 pink diamond.

At the time investigators were convinced he had swallowed the diamond but the stone was never recovered.

Despite being convicted and sentenced to prison he has yet to reveal what happened to the gem.


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