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UN Security Council to hold emergency meeting on Ebola crisis on Thursday

A health care worker disinfecting a taxi in Liberia at an Ebola treatment centre. Photo: WHO/R. Sørensen

(UN News Center) –  The United Nations Security Council will hold an emergency meeting on Thursday 18 September 2014 to discuss the Ebola outbreak that has gripped West Africa, the president of the 15-member body announced today.

The outbreak, affecting Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone, is unprecedented in scope – with more than 4,000 cases having been reported across the region and over 2,200 deaths. It has also dealt a major blow to the already fragile health care systems in West Africa.

“The trend lines in this crisis are grave and without immediate international action we are facing the potential for a public health crisis that could claim lives on a scale far greater than current estimates and set the countries of West Africa back a generation,” Ambassador Samantha Power of the United States, which holds the Council’s presidency for September, told reporters at UN Headquarters.

The meeting – requested by the US owing to the “increasingly grim situation,” particularly in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea – is expected to hear from Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, as well as senior UN officials dealing with the Ebola crisis.

“At this moment, it is crucial that Council members discuss the status of the epidemic, confer on a coordinated international response and begin the process of marshalling our collective resources to stop the spread of the disease,” stated Ms. Power.

“This is a perilous crisis but one that we can contain if the international community comes together to meet it head on,” she added. “This outbreak is controllable; Ebola is treatable; and victims can survive. Anything short of our full collective commitment could have grave and destabilizing public health, humanitarian, economic, and security consequences which could reach far beyond the borders of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.”

Also today, the Council adopted a resolution extending until 31 December 2014 the mandate of the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). In doing so, the Council also urged the international community to respond swiftly to the shortage of qualified medical professionals and appropriate equipment and preventive measures necessary to address the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Briefing the Council last week, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative and head of UNMIL, Karin Landgren, told the Council of the “merciless” spread of Ebola, which has already claimed at least 1,200 deaths in Liberia.

“The speed and scale of the loss of lives, and the economic, social, political and security reverberations of the crisis, are affecting Liberia profoundly,” she stated.

Also last week, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Hervé Ladsous pledged during his visit to Liberia that the UN will continue to stand by the affected countries as they battle the Ebola outbreak.

“It is true that we, the international community, have invested a lot over the years to bring back peace and security to Liberia, and, more generally, to West Africa. And it is even more true that we do not want to [jeopardize] that patient work,” he told reporters in the capital, Monrovia.

Mr. Ladsous noted that while UNMIL is not a public health operator, the Mission and the wider UN system would be on hand to ensure Liberia moves beyond the current crisis.

We are not leaving Liberia. We are here to stay the course and to help the people of the country and their neighbours get through this terrible crisis,” he said, adding that all 8,000 personnel at UNMIL – military, police and civilian staff – would spare no effort towards that goal.

Meanwhile, football’s world governing body, the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), has teamed up with the UN in its efforts to help control the epidemic. Last Thursday, it was announced that the Antoinette Tubman Stadium in Monrovia will be used to set up two large Ebola treatment units.

After the UN World Health Organization (WHO) identified the field as the most suitable location for the treatment units, the use of the pitch for this purpose raised concerns in the local community, who feared the facility could be damaged. The stadium was only recently donated by FIFA to Liberia’s Football Association.

According to a news release issued by the UN Office on Sport for Development and Peace (UNOSDP), FIFA quickly pledged its support for the UN-coordinated Ebola response in the affected countries. FIFA will cover the costs of potential damages arising from the use of the field to house the units. It will also consider using resources from its solidarity fund to support the member associations of the particularly affected countries in the fight against Ebola.

“The Ebola outbreak also has a tremendous impact on the sport community, ranging from health threats to the athletes themselves and restrictions of travel affecting competitions and the development of sport,” said Wilfried Lemke, the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Sport for Development and Peace.

“National authorities, the UN and the world of sport need to work closely together in order to halt the spread of the disease. The commitment of sport organisations to support our efforts is very much welcomed and crucial,” he added.

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HM King Leaves Hospital For Summer Palace

Crowds of well-wishers lined the roads in Bangkok and shouted "Long live the King" as the royal motorcade passed by on 15 Sept 2014.

BANGKOK – The King of Thailand has left Bangkok for his summer palace in Prachuap Kiri Khan province after a five-week stay at Siriraj Hospital for medical treatment.

The 86-year-old monarch left the hospital in a royal motorcade this evening. Her Majesty the Queen joined the convoy in another vehicle. 

King Bhumibol was checked into Siriraj Hospital on 6 August, reportedly for an annual medical examination. The Bureau of Royal Household said the king was diagnosed with mild gastritis during his stay, but has since recovered.

Udom Kachinthorn, the director of Siriraj Hospital’s Faculty of Medicine, said yesterday that the medical team has determined His Majesty the King's health to be "normal."

"At the moment, the doctors think everything is well," said Mr. Udom, who was in charge of the medical staff that tended to the monarch. 

Crowds of well-wishers lined the roads in Bangkok and shouted "Long live the King" as the royal motorcade passed by this evening.

King Bhumibol previously spent several years at Siriraj Hospital to undergo surgery and other medical operations before he was discharged in August 2013. Prior to his most recent hospital stay, he was recovering at Klai Kang Won Palace, where he is returning to this evening. The palace is an approximately two-hour drive south of Bangkok. 

His Majesty the King's health is a cause of anxiety for many Thais. The monarch has been on the throne for more than 60 years and is widely credited with bringing stability to the kingdom. 

 

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HM King Leaves Hospital For Summer Palace

HM the King left Siriraj hospital for his summer palace in a royal motorcade on 15 Sept 2014.

BANGKOK – The King of Thailand has left Bangkok for his summer palace in Prachuap Kiri Khan province after a five-week stay at Siriraj Hospital for medical treatment.

The 86-year-old monarch left the hospital in a royal motorcade this evening. Her Majesty the Queen joined the convoy in another vehicle. 

King Bhumibol was checked into Siriraj Hospital on 6 August, reportedly for an annual medical examination. The Bureau of Royal Household said the king was diagnosed with mild gastritis during his stay, but has since recovered.

Udom Kachinthorn, the director of Siriraj Hospital’s Faculty of Medicine, said yesterday that the medical team has determined His Majesty the King's health to be "normal."

"At the moment, the doctors think everything is well," said Mr. Udom, who was in charge of the medical staff that tended to the monarch. 

Crowds of well-wishers lined the roads in Bangkok and shouted "Long live the King" as the royal motorcade passed by this evening.

King Bhumibol previously spent several years at Siriraj Hospital to undergo surgery and other medical operations before he was discharged in August 2013. Prior to his most recent hospital stay, he was recovering at Klai Kang Won Palace, where he is returning to this evening. The palace is an approximately two-hour drive south of Bangkok. 

His Majesty the King's health is a cause of anxiety for many Thais. The monarch has been on the throne for more than 60 years and is widely credited with bringing stability to the kingdom. 

 

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Police: Arrested 'Blackshirts' Not Responsible For Slain Colonel in 2010

The five suspected Blackshirts re-enact their alleged crime for police in downtown Bangkok on 12 Sept 2014.

BANGKOK — Thai police have retracted the accusation that five suspects recently arrested for their alleged connection to a Redshirt militant group were responsible for the murder of an army colonel during political unrest in 2010.

"This case is not related to the killing of Col. Romklao Thuvatham," said Pol.Col. Prasopchoke Prommool, deputy commander of the Crime Suppression Division.

Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang, chief of Thai police, previously claimed that four men and one woman arrested last week were the "Blackshirt" militants responsible for attacking security officers during the military crackdown on Redshirt protesters on 10 April 2010. Pol.Gen. Somyot also accused the suspects of killing Col. Romklao, the commander of the crackdown.

Yet Pol.Col. Prasopchoke explained today that the five suspects have only been charged with possessing military-grade weapons and "using these weapons to shoot at soldiers and civilians" near Kok Wua Intersection on Ratchadamnoen Avenue, where another clash took place on the night that Col. Romklao was killed.

According to a DSI official, the five suspects are not currently being treated as suspects in the murder of Col. Romklao. 

"More evidence is needed before it can be established that they were involved with the killing of Col. Romklao," the official, who requested anonymity, told Khaosod English today.

All of the suspects are currently being held in prison, and police are still searching for two more suspects, Pol.Col. Prasopchoke said. 

Twenty civilians and five soldiers were killed in the clashes on 10 April 2010, nearly a month after the Redshirts descended into the capital city to demand a fresh election from then-Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. The protests were eventually crushed by another military crackdown on 19 May 2010. 

According to Pol.Gen. Somyot, all of the suspects were supporters of the Redshirt movement, confirming the Abhisit administration’s allegation that the Blackshirts were allied to the Redshirt protesters.  

Mystery

The retraction of the link between the Blackshirt suspects and the murder of Col. Romklao is only the latest inconsistency to puzzle observers and raise questions about the accuracy of the police investigation.

Pol.Gen. Somyot, who has refused to say how and when the suspects were arrested, also recently scaled back his claim that Kritsuda Kunasen, a 26-year-old Redshirt activist living in exile, supplied weapons and transferred payments to the militants.

Pol.Gen. Somyot later clarified the statement, saying police have yet to draw a clear link between the Ms. Kritsuda and the militants.

Some Redshirts have accused the Thai police chief of attempting to discredit Ms. Kritsuda after she accused soldiers of torturing her during her 27-day detainment in a  military camp this June. 

It's also unclear why one of the suspects, Kittisak Soomsri, was reportedly detained incommunicado in a military camp for a week prior to the press conference announcing the five suspects' arrests. Mr. Kittisak confessed to the charges during the press conference, though Thai police have a history of parading suspects in front of the media and extracting confessions from them that are later retracted. 

Finally, many have questioned the likelihood that members of the Blackshirt cell are still in Thailand today; sources report that those connected to the violence in 2010 fled the country several years ago.

Weng Tojirakarn, a core activist of the Redshirts' umbrella organisation, the United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), said he doubts the suspects were genuine members of the Blackshirt group.

"I wonder if they are in fact scapegoats who were coerced and tortured into confession," Mr. Weng said last week.  

 

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Police: Arrested 'Blackshirts' Not Responsible For Slain Colonel in 2010

The five suspected Blackshirts were dressed in black clothing with red arm bands for the police press conference announcing their arrests on 11 Sept 2014.

BANGKOK — Thai police have retracted the accusation that five suspects recently arrested for their alleged connection to a Redshirt militant group were responsible for the murder of an army colonel during political unrest in 2010.

"This case is not related to the killing of Col. Romklao Thuvatham," said Pol.Col. Prasopchoke Prommool, deputy commander of the Crime Suppression Division.

Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang, chief of Thai police, previously claimed that four men and one woman arrested last week were the "Blackshirt" militants responsible for attacking security officers during the military crackdown on Redshirt protesters on 10 April 2010. Pol.Gen. Somyot also accused the suspects of killing Col. Romklao, the commander of the crackdown.

Yet Pol.Col. Prasopchoke explained today that the five suspects have only been charged with possessing military-grade weapons and "using these weapons to shoot at soldiers and civilians" near Kok Wua Intersection on Ratchadamnoen Avenue, where another clash took place on the night that Col. Romklao was killed.

According to a DSI official, the five suspects are not currently being treated as suspects in the murder of Col. Romklao. 

"More evidence is needed before it can be established that they were involved with the killing of Col. Romklao," the official, who requested anonymity, told Khaosod English today.

All of the suspects are currently being held in prison, and police are still searching for two more suspects, Pol.Col. Prasopchoke said. 

Twenty civilians and five soldiers were killed in the clashes on 10 April 2010, nearly a month after the Redshirts descended into the capital city to demand a fresh election from then-Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. The protests were eventually crushed by another military crackdown on 19 May 2010. 

According to Pol.Gen. Somyot, all of the suspects were supporters of the Redshirt movement, confirming the Abhisit administration’s allegation that the Blackshirts were allied to the Redshirt protesters.  

Mystery

The retraction of the link between the Blackshirt suspects and the murder of Col. Romklao is only the latest inconsistency to puzzle observers and raise questions about the accuracy of the police investigation.

Pol.Gen. Somyot, who has refused to say how and when the suspects were arrested, also recently scaled back his claim that Kritsuda Kunasen, a 26-year-old Redshirt activist living in exile, supplied weapons and transferred payments to the militants.

Pol.Gen. Somyot later clarified the statement, saying police have yet to draw a clear link between the Ms. Kritsuda and the militants.

Some Redshirts have accused the Thai police chief of attempting to discredit Ms. Kritsuda after she accused soldiers of torturing her during her 27-day detainment in a  military camp this June. 

It's also unclear why one of the suspects, Kittisak Soomsri, was reportedly detained incommunicado in a military camp for a week prior to the press conference announcing the five suspects' arrests. Mr. Kittisak confessed to the charges during the press conference, though Thai police have a history of parading suspects in front of the media and extracting confessions from them that are later retracted. 

Finally, many have questioned the likelihood that members of the Blackshirt cell are still in Thailand today; sources report that those connected to the violence in 2010 fled the country several years ago.

Weng Tojirakarn, a core activist of the Redshirts' umbrella organisation, the United Front of Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), said he doubts the suspects were genuine members of the Blackshirt group.

"I wonder if they are in fact scapegoats who were coerced and tortured into confession," Mr. Weng said last week.  

 

For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

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Chinese Tour Co Agrees to Pay Out B12 Million Outstanding Phuket Invoices

[Photo from The Phuket News]

(The Phuket News)

PHUKET – A major Chinese group tour company, Thai Xin Ya Zhou Tour Co Ltd, has agreed to clear up the B10 to 12 million in outstanding invoices with tour companies in Phuket.

The solution, which came in the second round of negotiations with representatives from the company yesterday, follows a period of uncertainty for the seven affected tour companies, including the two ladyboy caberet shows – Simon Cabaret and Aphrodite Cabaret – as well as Sea Star Tour company.

Related parties refused to reach a conclusion in the first round of negotiations earlier this week, with one media outlet reporting that the the Chinese company owed B40 million to 10 companies, but refused to pay. Read the rest of the story here

Note: Khaosod English is not responsible for content on other websites.

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“EUROPEAN HERITAGE DAYS” EVENT IN THAILAND

Note: This is a press release. Its contents are not produced by Khaosod English.

“EUROPEAN HERITAGE DAYS” EVENT IN THAILAND 
BANGKOK – 21 SEPTEMBER 2014

________________________________________

As part of the « European Heritage Days » annually held in France and overseas, the French Ambassador to Thailand will open, as in previous years, the reception areas of his residence to the public.

This “open house” event will take place on Sunday 21st September 2014 from 10 am to 4 pm at number 35, rue de Brest, Charoenkrung Road, Soi 36, in the Bang Rak district of Bangkok.

The « Heritage Days » have been annually organized since 1984 on the third week-end of September by the French authorities in France and overseas, in order to promote the richness and diversity of public buildings. They were, later on, adopted by other European countries and since then named « European Heritage Days ».

During the tour, visitors will discover the main lounge and the large dining room with a fully set table, both on the first floor of the Residence, as well as the reception areas located on the ground floor of the mansion where a photographic exhibition on the topic of the « Biodiversity : Thirty-four wonders of the world » will be on display. Also, of special interest, visitors will also have the opportunity to enjoy an outside view of the brand-new building of the Embassy’s chancery.

The French Embassy staff will be available to guide the visitors and answer their questions during the visit.  

Press Contact : Napadol Wirakan – [email protected] – 02 657-5131

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 สถานเอกอัครราชทูตฝรั่งเศสประจำประเทศไทยจะเปิดทำเนียบเอกอัครราชทูต (ที่พำนักท่านทูต) โดยเฉพาะส่วนที่ใช้ในการต้อนรับบุคคลภายนอกให้ผู้สนใจได้เข้าชมเนื่องใน ”วันมรดกยุโรป” งานดังกล่าวจัดขึ้นทุกปีทั้งในฝรั่งเศสและในต่างประเทศ

 ทำเนียบเอกอัครราชทูตจะเปิดให้เข้าชมวันอาทิตย์ที่ 21 กันยายน พ.ศ.2557 เวลา 10.00 น. ถึง 17.00 น. สถานที่ดังกล่าวตั้งอยู่ที่เลขที่ 35 เจริญกรุงซอย 36 (ถนนแบรสต์) เขตบางรัก กรุงเทพฯ (ข้างโรงแรมโอเรียนเต็ล)

 ในวันดังกล่าวผู้ที่เข้าชมจะได้เยี่ยมชมห้องนั่งเล่นใหญ่ ห้องรับประทานอาหารที่ตกแต่งประดับประดาพร้อมรับแขกที่มาเยือนบนชั้น 2 ของทำเนียบเอกอัครราชทูต รวมถึงพื้นที่ที่ใช้ในการต้อนรับแขกสำคัญๆ ที่ชั้นล่างของอาคารเดียวกัน พร้อมด้วยนิทรรศการภาพถ่าย “Biodiversity : Thirty Four Wonders of the World” นอกจากนี้ ยังจะได้ชมสถานที่ทำการใหม่ของสถานทูตฯ ซึ่งเพิ่งเปิดใช้จากภายนอกอาคารอีกด้วย

 เจ้าหน้าที่ของสถานทูตฯ จะเป็นผู้นำชมและตอบข้อสงสัยแก่ผู้ที่เข้าเยี่ยมชมตลอดวัน รายละเอียดเพิ่มเติมติดต่อ นภดล วีระกันต์ – อีเมล [email protected] – โทรศัพท์ 02 6575131

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Island On Lockdown After Gruesome Murder of British Tourists

Hat Sai Ri Beach on Koh Tao, where two tourists were found brutally murdered on 15 Sept 2014.

SURAT THANI — Police have closed down all piers on the island of Koh Tao as they search for the suspect behind the brutal murder of two British tourists on the island.

The 24-year-old man and the 23-year-old woman were found dead near Hat Sai Ri Beach early this morning. The female tourist was partially naked and "slashed" to death, police say, while the naked male tourist had a serious wound on the back of his neck.

Police believe the suspect may have attempted to sexually assault the female victim before she was killed.

The two bodies were found 20 metres apart from each other, and approximately 30 metres away from a resort on the beach. A bloody hoe was also found in the area, leading police to suspect that it was the weapon used in the gruesome murders.

Police say that they have closed down all piers on the island to prevent the suspect from fleeing the area.

 "I believe the perpetrator is still on the island," said Pol.Maj.Gen. Kiattipong Khaosam-ang, a commander of Surat Thani police.

Witnesses said they saw the pair drinking and dancing with other party-goers on the beach in front of their resort on the previous night. The pair then left the party, presumably to take a stroll, witnesses said.

According to Pol.Maj.Gen. Kiattipong, the man arrived in Thailand with "2-3" male friends while the woman came with four female friends. They met at Ocean View Bungalow, where they were both staying, the officer said. 

The bodies were found at around 6.20 am by a group of Burmese workers who were cleaning the beach, Pol.Maj.Gen. Kiattipong said.

A friend of the male victim, who also had wounds on his body, was initially being considered as a suspect in the case, but police say he is no longer being treated as a suspect because it has been established that his injuries date back to a recent Full Moon Party.

Khaosod English is witholding the identities of the victims until it's confirmed that their families have been notified. 

CORRECTION: The female victim's age is 23, not 24 as was originally reported.

 

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Island On Lockdown After Gruesome Murder of British Tourists

Hat Sai Ri Beach on Koh Tao, where two tourists were found brutally murdered on 15 Sept 2014.

SURAT THANI — Police say they have closed down all piers on the island of Koh Tao as they search for a suspect behind the brutal murder of two British tourists on the island.

The 24-year-old man and the 23-year-old woman were found dead on Sairee Beach early this morning. The female tourist was partially naked and "slashed" to death, police said, while the naked male tourist had a serious wound on the back of his neck.

Police believe the suspect may have attempted to sexually assault the female victim before she was killed.

Khaosod English is witholding the identities of the victims until it's confirmed that their families have been notified. 

The two bodies were found 20 metres apart from each other, and approximately 30 metres away from a beachside resort. A bloody hoe was also found in the area, leading police to suspect that it was the weapon used in the gruesome murders.

Police say that they have closed down all piers on the island to prevent the suspect from fleeing the area.

"I believe the perpetrator is still on the island," said Pol.Maj.Gen. Kiattipong Khaosam-ang, a commander of Surat Thani police.

Witnesses said they saw the British tourists drinking and dancing with other party-goers on the beach in front of their resort on the previous night. The pair then left the party, presumably to take a stroll, witnesses said.

According to Pol.Maj.Gen. Kiattipong, the man arrived in Thailand with "2-3" male friends while the woman came with four female friends. They met at Ocean View Bungalow, where they were both staying, the officer said. 

The bodies were found at around 6:20 am by a group of Burmese workers who were cleaning the beach, Pol.Maj.Gen. Kiattipong said.

A friend of the male victim, who also had wounds on his body, was initially being considered as a suspect in the case, but police say he has been cleared after it was established that his injuries date back to a recent Full Moon Party.

CORRECTION: The female victim's age is 23, not 24 as was originally reported.

 

For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

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Kritsuda's Link to "Blackshirt" Militants Unclear, Police Say

Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang (holding the microphone) with the five suspected Blackshirt militants arrested on 11 Sept 2012.

BANGKOK — Thailand’s chief of police has scaled back his claim that a 26-year-old Redshirt activist provided weapons to militants who fought with security officers during the 2010 unrest.

Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang previously suggested that Kritsuda Kunasen, who is currently living in exile, supplied military-grade weapons to the suspected "Blackshirt" militants who were arrested last week. He claimed police found pay slips and money transfer records in Ms. Kritsuda's home. 

But Pol.Gen. Somyot said yesterday that police have not established a clear link between the 26-year-old activist and the armed militants. 

"Ms. Kritsuda may be involved with the case, but we cannot yet determine clearly what the money [Ms. Kritsuda] transferred to those accounts was for," Pol.Gen. Somyot said. "We do not know the purpose of the money."

In May, the military detained Ms. Kritsuda without charges for 27 days, exceeding the seven-day limit on arbitrary detention that authorities respected for the majority of other detainees. After being released, Ms. Kritsuda fled to Europe and accused soldiers of torturing her during the detention – an allegation the military has vehemently denied.

Shortly after Ms. Kritsuda spoke out about her experience in military custody, Pol.Gen. Somyot accused her of engineering gunfire and grenade attacks on anti-government protesters who took to the streets in December 2013 – May 2014. 

Last week, Pol.Gen. Somyot also accused Mr. Kritsuda of supplying weapons to Redshirt-allied militants in 2010, following the arrest of five suspected “Blackshirts” on Thursday. The “Blackshirts” is a name given to the masked gunmen who were seen exchanging fire with security forces during the military crackdown on Redshirt protesters around Ratchadamnoen Avenue on 10 April 2010.

Twenty civilians and five soldiers, including the commander of the operation, were killed in the clashes.

Yesterday, Pol.Gen. Somyot insisted that police’s ongoing effort to extradite Ms. Kritsuda is needed to question her about the Blackshirts.

"The police have to arrest Ms. Kritsuda first, so that we can know what the money was for," Pol.Gen. Somyot said, adding that the police still do not know in which country the activist is currently residing.

It’s unclear why the military let Mr. Kritsuda walk free after her detainment. Some Redshirt supporters suspect authorities fabricated the charges against Ms. Kritsuda – which came after her allegations of torture – in an attempt to discredit the activist.

On Saturday, Ms. Kritsuda uploaded a video from Geneva, refuting "Uncle Somyot's" allegations and insisting that she was too young to be involved in politics in 2010. 

"I feel ashamed on behalf of the low-ranking and high-ranking police officers who are not happy about this case," Ms. Kritsuda said in the video, adding that she is currently meeting with rights groups in Geneva to talk about her torture experience. 

Related articles:
Missing Redshirt Ends Up As Militant Suspect
Police Charge 'Tortured' Activist With Gunrunning 

 

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