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protests

Briton arrested in Thailand over protests

by THMNews on September 8, 2010

A second British man has been arrested in Thailand for alleged involvement in violent anti-government “Red Shirt” protests earlier this year, police said Thursday. Keith Wayne Bush, 49, from Manchester was arrested on arson charges at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport on Wednesday after arriving on a flight from the United Arab Emirates, according to immigration police. His Thai wife, Alisa Bush, 33, was also arrested after she went to the airport to meet him. (Khao Sod Newspaper)

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By Saksith Saiyasombut,

The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) held a press conference on Monday to inform about the progress of the inquiry of the 91 deaths during the anti-government protests. What they have announced though leaves much to be desired.

The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) says it cannot at this stage reach a finding in its investigation into the deaths of 91 people killed in the violence between April 10 and May 21 during the street protests by the red-shirt United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD).

This was announced at a press conference on Monday by Col Fuangwich Anirutthewa, secretary to the justice minister, and Pol Col Narat Savetnant, deputy director-general of the DSI.

Pol Col Narat said the DSI has so far received 266 cases from police involving the violence between April 10 and May 21.

From its preliminary investigation into the 91 people who died it could be concluded at this stage only that the deaths were unnatural and caused by other persons under Article 148 of the Criminal Procedures Code.

The DSI knew only what caused their death and types of weapons used, but could not yet say who killed them.

Little progress in red probe“, Bangkok Post, August 23, 2010

First of there’s the question on how they come up with the figure of 91 deaths during the protests. Looking at the official figures form the Bangkok Emergency Medical Service indicate that according to this list (PDF) published on May 23, 86 people were killed. But this document show 87 names with the last victim dated on May 14, five days before the last day of the protests and of the street battles. It appears that it does not include the six people killed inside Wat Pathum, a designated safe zone many protesters fled to after the red shirts dispersed on May 19, but were still shot inside the temple. So how do these numbers all add up to 91?

And then there was this very interesting detail made during the announcement:

Autopsies on 89 Thais, including 11 policemen and soldiers, confirmed that all had died from bullet wounds.

Investigators fail to identify killers of foreign journalists“, Deutsche Presse Agentur via The Nation, August 23

Again a considerably spectacular claim by the authorities, if you think that various sources claim different causes in various cases such as the death of Col. Romklao Thuwatham during the clashes on April 10, as he was reportedly killed by a bomb. On the other hand though other news sources have reported that the DSI “had received only 42 autopsy results from officials in each jurisdiction,” (Source) so it is highly possible that all the 42 autopsies report that they all have died from bullet wounds and the rest might have been from other causes as well.

Another focus of the announcement were the deaths of the two foreign reporters, Japanese Reuters cameraman Hiro Muramoto and Italian photographer Fabio Polenghi. 

In the deaths of two foreign journalists, Reuters Japanese cameraman Hiro Muramoto, 43, and independent Italian press photographer Fabio Polenghi, 45, Pol Col Narat said investigators could only conclude they were killed by high-velocity bullets. They have not been able to identify their killers.

However, it could not yet conclude who fired the weapons due to lack of witnesses at the scene, and some of their belongings such as mobile phones and digital cameras had disappeared. [...]

He said the DSI had paid special attention to the two cases since they were delicate and could affect Thailand’s relations with Japan and Italy.

Little progress in red probe“, Bangkok Post, August 23, 2010

It is delicate indeed, as on the same day the Japanese foreign minister was on a visit to Thailand and also visited the site Muramoto died.

He was shot in the chest during the clashes on April 10, at Khok Wua intersection, not far from the Democracy Monument as the last pictures on his camera filmed the carnage between soldiers and red shirts. 

Fabio Polenghi was killed during the final push of the military onto the red shirts protest site at Rajaprasong on May 19. German journalist Thilo Thielke has published his and his colleagues’ investigation into the death of the Italian at New Mandala. Key excerpts of this very detailed account include…

On 21 May, two days after the Fabio’s death, the Police Forensic Institute did a forensic examination. The day after, Fabio Polenghi’s body was cremated in a simple and emotional ceremony attended by his younger sister Isabella, his friends, and his colleagues. Three months later, the Department of Special Investigations (DSI) – the “Thai FBI” – which is in charge of the investigation of Fabio’s killing, still refuses to publish the forensic report. “The investigation is not finished yet”, says Colonel Naras Savestanan, the deputy-director general of DSI. He says he cannot answer basic and crucial questions such as those about the kind of bullet which killed Fabio, the angle and distance of shooting and the location of the killer. Other important questions deal with the location of military sharpshooters who killed many demonstrators on that day as well as the location of the mysterious Black shirts – the armed wing of the Red movement. But also here, the questions find no answers. Or only very vague ones. (…)

“It is more likely that the Italian journalist has been hit by fire from advancing soldiers at the ground level, on Rajdamri road. I cannot see clearly why sharp shooters would particularly target him”, says a journalist who was on the military side on Rajdamri on 19 May. The type of bullet which killed Fabio, if it is revealed publicly someday, is not the most crucial element as Black shirts and military personnel have used some similar weapons. The most important elements are the entry point of the bullet, the description of the wound and the shooting angle, which could cast some light about the location of the shooter. Without these data, there will be no certainty on the identity of who killed the Italian journalist.

Who killed Italian photographer Fabio Polenghi?“, by Thilo Thielke, New Mandala, August 17, 2010

There’s still much yet to be investigated and there’s still much unknown about the circumstances of the victims. But initially the DSI announcement revealed basically nothing new. We already knew that the two foreign journalists were shot, we already knew that nearly all of the victims died unnaturally and we also already knew that the authorities’ inquiry into the deaths will be sluggish at best and will have to do much more in order to convince us that, as they said it, “truth will be established” – but will the public also fully know about it once the investigations have concluded?

Saksith Saiyasombut


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No mass protests but student activism still alive

by THMNews on September 6, 2010

The “golden age” of massive student activists taking to the streets to fight for democracy is long gone and will not likely return at any foreseeable future, said student leader Anuthee Dejthevaporn, who has just finished as secretary-general of the Students Federation of Thailand (SFT).
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Sombat Boonngam-anong, head of the Red Sunday Group, has been leading dozens of followers in symbolic protests against the government’s deadly crackdowns in April and May every Sunday, making headlines in defiance of the emergency decree for two months now. He speaks to The Nation’s Pravit Rojanaphruk about his motives and the future acts of protest. Here are some excerpts:
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Briton freed over Thai protests

by THMNews on July 8, 2010

A Briton involved in violent anti-government protests has been freed by a Thai court after pleading guilty to all charges and will be deported in the next few days.

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Oscar-winning dolphin hunting documentary “The Cove” was screened at a cinema guarded by police in Japan on Saturday despite outrage among protesters who have complained the film is anti-Japanese.
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PHUKET: Jenarong Tapklaeng, a 16-year-old leukemia patient from Phuket, spent almost a month in Bangkok for medical consultations that should have taken just a few days after his hospital was shut down because of the red-shirt protests.

Doctors at King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital were set to examine the possibility of performing a bone marrow transplant on Jenarong, who is currently undergoing a course of chemotherapy.

But after more than 200 red-shirts stormed the hospital on April 30, causing an evacuation of around 600 patients, his consultation was delayed.
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Back in February:

Acting government spokesman Panithan Wattanayakorn said on Tuesday that money had been transferred from overseas into the bank accounts of key members of the red-shirt people group over the past two and three months. An old soldier had also carried money into the country via Suvarnabhumi airport, he claimed.


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Supporters hold up a cutout of Maj. Gen. Khattiya Sawasdiphol during his cremation ceremony at a Buddhist temple in Bangkok, Thailand Tuesday, June 22, 2010.

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Authorities in Indian Kashmir Monday deployed thousands of police and paramilitary forces to stem demonstrations in the main city of Srinagar over the recent killings of three protesters.
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