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Army Compensates Family of Thai Soldier Killed By Drill Sergeants

Army soldiers stand guard in Bangkok on 23 May 2014.

BANGKOK — The Royal Thai Army agreed today to give 6.5 million baht to the family of a drafted recruit who was beaten to death by his drill instructors in 2011.

The compensation was a part of court settlement between the army and the family of the deceased soldier, Private Wichian Pueksom. Mr. Wichian's mother filed a lawsuit to the Civil Court in May 2012, suing the army, the Ministry of Defence, and the Office of Prime Minister for damages of 7 million baht for her loss. 

Mr. Wichianwas beaten to death when he was 25 years old by 11 drill sergeants during a training for newly drafted recruits in a military barrack in Narathiwat province. 

Apart from the civil case, Mr. Wichian's mother, Prathueng Pueksom, also filed a separate lawsuit against the three agencies with the Criminal Court. Since Thai citizens are not allowed to name the armed forces as a defendant in Criminal Court cases, the lawsuit was transferred to the Office of Public Sector Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC).

However, the PACC has not pursued the case.

The death of Private Wichian sparked a national debate about Thailand’s military draft, which requires all Thai men report for a two-year military service once they reach the age of 21, except those who have opted for military training in their high school years. Mr. Wichian delayed his drafting to pursue a Masters degree first.

The army also faced scrutiny over the alleged widespread of abuse and violence directed towards by low-ranking soldiers during their service. 
 

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Prayuth Tells Foreign Investors 'Not To Worry'

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha met with foreign investors in Bangkok on 15 August 2014.

BANGKOK — Prime Minister and junta leader Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha told a group of foreign investors in Bangkok today "not to worry" about Thailand’s political situation.

Gen. Prayuth was addressing delegates from the Thai-European Business Association at the Royal Thai Army headquarters in Bangkok today. 

"Thank you for giving honour to the NCPO," Gen. Prayuth told the businesspeople through an interpreter, using the formal name of the junta, the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO). "Now that everyone has given honour to the NCPO, the NCPO gives honour to everyone."

Gen. Prayuth promised to ensure that Thailand remains a central hub for foreign investors. 

"I am aware that businesspeople have many concerns about issues [in Thailand]," he said. "I'd like to ask you not to worry about anything at all. The NCPO is aware that investors focus on investment as their priority." 

Gen. Prayuth also said he would gladly consider any suggestions submitted by the delegates, who are the first foreign investors to officially meet with Gen. Prayuth after he appointed Prime Minister on 21 August. 

Six months of anti-government street protests prior to the 22 May coup devastated Thailand's tourism industry and unnerved many foreign investors. The NCPO says it was necessary to intervene to restore stability and pave the way for a series of national reforms.

 

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Hat Yai Officials Launch Crackdown On 'Elephant Beggars'

SONGKHLA – A combined task force of military and police officers in Songkhla province have vowed to take action against elephant handlers who bring elephants into urban areas to help beg for money from tourists.

The elephant handlers, known as mahouts, bring the animals into Hat Yai’s shopping districts to persuade tourists to buy sugar cane for the animals, said  Pol.Col. Passakorn Klanwan, commander of Hat Yai Police. He believes that four groups of mahouts in the Hat Yai area are involved in the business. 

According to Edwin Wiek, the founder of the Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand (WFFT), mahouts can earn several thousand baht a day from this practice.

Pol.Col. Passakorn said he has also received reports that some of the elephants are abused by their handlers, citing a video that recently surfaced online showing two men beating an elephant on the streets of Hat Yai.

This morning, police and military officers raided an elephant enclosure near Kaew Sawang village, where they found one elephant that was reportedly used by the mahouts to beg for money downtown.

A woman in the village identified herself as the owner of the elephant and provided ownership documents to the police. Pol.Col. Passakorn said the documents are genuine, but police are still investigating the case to determine whether any illegal actions have been committed.

Pol.Col. Passakorn explained that it is difficult to prosecute the mahouts because they appear to have genuine ownership of the animals. "We can only arrest and fine them for causing annoyance to tourists and obstructing traffic," the officer said.

He added, "We will cooperate with related agencies to investigate [the cases]. If we find any illegal action, we will take legal actions right away."

There are currently no laws protecting animal welfare in Thailand, although a proposed bill is receiving “fast-track” consideration from the National Legislative Assembly.  

Mr. Wiek, the founder of Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand (WFFT), said he is hopeful that the new bill will be passed.

“Now that the military has taken over we are seeing very positive signs that they – especially Gen. Prayuth – are really in favor of protecting elephants," Mr. Wiek said, referring to Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, the army chief who led a coup on 22 May and is now the country's new Prime Minister. 

Thailand is known as a hub for animal tourism, with abundant opportunities for tourists to pay to interact with animals like tigers, elephants, and gibbons. Yet, according to animal welfare groups like WFFT, many of these captive animals are physically mistreated and some of them have been taken by poachers from the wild.

Mr. Weik says there are currently between two and three thousand "working" elephants in Thailand.

“There are enough laws to stop this,” Mr. Weik said. "It’s the negligence of government officials that make people do this and get away with it.” 

 
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Hajj Pilgrimage Continues Despite Thai-Saudi Tension

NARATHIWAT — Over 200 Thai Muslims departed for a religious pilgrimage to the Saudi Arabian city of Mecca today, despite ongoing tension between the Thai and Saudi governments.

A total of 577 pilgrims from Thailand’s three Muslim-dominated southern border provinces – Narathiwat, Yala, and Pattani – are scheduled to participate in the holy pilgrimage this year, officials said. 

Islamic faith requires that all Muslims make a pilgrimage to Mecca, known as a "Hajj," at least once in their lifetime. 

Gen. Udomdej Sitabutr, sec-gen of the military junta's National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), presided over a ceremony that bade farewell to the pilgrims before they left Narathiwat Airport for Medina, Saudi Arabia this morning.

The trip is funded by the Southern Border Provinces Administrative Centre (SBPAC) as part of an effort to improve the relationship between Thai authorities and local Muslims in Thailand’s Deep South, which is home to a hotbed of Islamic insurgent violence that has killed more than 5,000 people in the past decade.

A number of Muslim leaders in Thailand previously expressed concern that Thai Muslims might be barred from taking up the Hajj due to a recent diplomatic row between Saudi Arabia and Thailand. 

Abdulelah Al-Sheaiby, the Saudi Arabian embassy’s Charge d’Affaires, was recalled from his post in July, four months after Thailand’s Criminal Court found five Thai police officers not guilty of abducting and murdering a Saudi businessman who went missing in Bangkok in 1990.

Mr. Al-Sheaiby's deputy, Abdulsalam Alenazi, told Khaosod English that the recall was ordered to express the Saudi government’s disapproval of the verdict and the court’s last-minute change of judges. He added that Saudi officials have not decided when, and if, Mr. Al-Sheaiby will return to Bangkok.

The Saudi government imposed restrictions on travel and business dealings between the two kingdoms in the 1990s to protest Thailand's stalling investigation into the abduction of the Saudi businessman, Mohammad Al-Ruwaili.

However, Mr. Alenazi, who is now serving as the head of Saudi Arabian Embassy in Bangkok, confirmed that the Saudi Arabian government will not alter the existing agreement between the two kingdoms that allows Thai Muslims to participate in the pilgrimage to Mecca. 

"Hajj is one thing that we don't touch," Mr. Alenazi told Khaosod English last week. 

 

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Hat Yai Officials Launch Crackdown On 'Elephant Beggars'

Police and military officers raided an elephant enclosure near Kaew Sawang village, where they found one elephant that was reportedly used by the mahouts to beg for money downtown, 27 Aug 2014.

SONGKHLA – A combined task force of military and police officers in Songkhla province have vowed to take action against elephant handlers who bring elephants into urban areas to help beg for money from tourists.

The elephant handlers, known as mahouts, bring the animals into Hat Yai’s shopping districts to persuade tourists to buy sugar cane for the animals, said  Pol.Col. Passakorn Klanwan, commander of Hat Yai Police. He believes that four groups of mahouts in the Hat Yai area are involved in the business. 

According to Edwin Wiek, the founder of the Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand (WFFT), mahouts can earn several thousand baht a day from this practice.

Pol.Col. Passakorn said he has also received reports that some of the elephants are abused by their handlers, citing a video that recently surfaced online showing two men beating an elephant on the streets of Hat Yai.

This morning, police and military officers raided an elephant enclosure near Kaew Sawang village, where they found one elephant that was reportedly used by the mahouts to beg for money downtown.

A woman in the village identified herself as the owner of the elephant and provided ownership documents to the police. Pol.Col. Passakorn said the documents are genuine, but police are still investigating the case to determine whether any illegal actions have been committed.

Pol.Col. Passakorn explained that it is difficult to prosecute the mahouts because they appear to have genuine ownership of the animals. "We can only arrest and fine them for causing annoyance to tourists and obstructing traffic," the officer said.

He added, "We will cooperate with related agencies to investigate [the cases]. If we find any illegal action, we will take legal actions right away."

There are currently no laws protecting animal welfare in Thailand, although a proposed bill is receiving “fast-track” consideration from the National Legislative Assembly.  

Mr. Wiek, the founder of Wildlife Friends Foundation Thailand (WFFT), said he is hopeful that the new bill will be passed.

“Now that the military has taken over we are seeing very positive signs that they – especially Gen. Prayuth – are really in favor of protecting elephants," Mr. Wiek said, referring to Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, the army chief who led a coup on 22 May and is now the country's new Prime Minister. 

Thailand is known as a hub for animal tourism, with abundant opportunities for tourists to pay to interact with animals like tigers, elephants, and gibbons. Yet, according to animal welfare groups like WFFT, many of these captive animals are physically mistreated and some of them have been taken by poachers from the wild.

Mr. Weik says there are currently between two and three thousand "working" elephants in Thailand.

“There are enough laws to stop this,” Mr. Weik said. "It’s the negligence of government officials that make people do this and get away with it.” 

 
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Nationalist 'Energy Reform' Activist Released Without Charges

Mr. Veera and the other demonstrators were detained by security forces near Victory Monument on 24 August for campaigning to overhaul Thailand’s energy sector.

BANGKOK — Conservative activist Veera Somkwamkid and seven others were released from military custody this morning, three days after they were arrested for violating the junta’s ban on public demonstrations.

Mr. Veera and the other demonstrators were detained by security forces near Victory Monument on 24 August for campaigning to overhaul Thailand’s energy sector. Thailand's military junta banned public protests shortly after declaring martial law three months ago. 

Mr. Veera is a well-known ultra-nationalist activist who recently returned to Thailand after spending nearly four years in a Cambodian prison for trespassing across the border during his campaign to "reclaim" the territory around Cambodia's Preah Vihear temple. 

Mr. Veera and the seven other "Partnership for Energy Reform" activists were released this morning without charges.

Although authorities insist that the ban on public protests applies to all political causes, all 48 individuals who face criminal charges for violating the ban were arrested for participating in anti-coup demonstrations, according to data gathered by iLaw

None of the activists participating in recent anti-Israelpro-death penalty, or anti-American demonstrations have faced legal prosecution. 

Shortly after he was released from custody this morning, Mr. Veera resumed his role at the helm of the energy reform movement by joining a public panel discussion at the Army Club about the group's demands for "taking back" the PTT, the state oil enterprise that is partially owned by the private sector. 

Although the "Partnership for Energy Reform" group has a variety of goals, such as opposition to coal power plants and demands for cheaper energy prices, the nationalisation of the PTT has been its primary agenda. 

Today's panel was also joined by Buddha Issara, the Buddhist monk and conservative activist who actively campaigned against the previous government. 

 

 

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Nationalist 'Energy Reform' Activist Released Without Charges

Conservative activist Veera Somkwamkid and seven others were released from military custody, three days after they were arrested for violating the junta’s ban on public demonstrations, 27 August 2014.

BANGKOK — Conservative activist Veera Somkwamkid and seven others were released from military custody this morning, three days after they were arrested for violating the junta’s ban on public demonstrations.

Mr. Veera and the other demonstrators were detained by security forces near Victory Monument on 24 August for campaigning to overhaul Thailand’s energy sector. Thailand's military junta banned public protests shortly after declaring martial law three months ago. 

Mr. Veera is a well-known ultra-nationalist activist who recently returned to Thailand after spending nearly four years in a Cambodian prison for trespassing across the border during his campaign to "reclaim" the territory around Cambodia's Preah Vihear temple. 

Mr. Veera and the seven other "Partnership for Energy Reform" activists were released this morning without charges.

Although authorities insist that the ban on public protests applies to all political causes, all 48 individuals who face criminal charges for violating the ban were arrested for participating in anti-coup demonstrations, according to data gathered by iLaw

None of the activists participating in recent anti-Israel, pro-death penalty, or anti-American demonstrations have faced legal prosecution. 

Shortly after he was released from custody this morning, Mr. Veera resumed his role at the helm of the energy reform movement by joining a public panel discussion at the Army Club about the group's demands for "taking back" the PTT, the state oil enterprise that is partially owned by the private sector. 

Although the "Partnership for Energy Reform" group has a variety of goals, such as opposition to coal power plants and demands for cheaper energy prices, the nationalisation of the PTT has been its primary agenda. 

Today's panel was also joined by Buddha Issara, the Buddhist monk and conservative activist who actively campaigned against the previous government. 

 

 

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UN rights expert seeks access to Israel, occupied Palestinian territories for assessment mission

On 12 August, 18-month-old Mohammed Ali Wahdan lies on a cot in the paediatric ward of Al-Shifa Hospital, in Gaza. He is recovering from burns and injuries he sustained during a blast that reportedly killed 12 members of his family, including his mother. Photo: UNICEF/NYHQ2014-1159/El Baba

(United Nations)

26 August 2014 – An independent United Nations expert has requested access to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory to gather first-hand information on the impact of current hostilities on the human rights situation.

“As a newly appointed Special Rapporteur, it is my priority to see with my own eyes the situation on the ground, to listen and to speak face-to-face with victims and witnesses, and to discuss issues of concern with officials on both sides,” Makarim Wibisono said in a news release.

Mr. Wibisono is tasked by the Geneva-UN Human Rights Council with monitoring and reporting on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967. The last visit of a Special Rapporteur with this mandate to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory was in 2007. Access was then granted by Israel, but no meetings with Israeli officials were held. Lifting the seven-year old blockade on Gaza is an essential step towards ending this perpetual crisis and allowing the people of Gaza to rebuild their lives

“The recent escalation of hostilities in the Gaza Strip and heightened tensions in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, have given me an even greater sense of urgency to see at first-hand the impact on the lives of civilians,” he stressed.

The Rapporteur voiced dismay at the renewed escalation of hostilities, and urged leaders to take “bold and courageous steps to immediately bring this senseless violence to a halt, particularly in light of the exceedingly high loss of life.”

Over the past six weeks of hostilities, the death toll has already exceeded 1,450 Palestinian civilians, including over 490 children, and four civilians in Israel. Hundreds of thousands of civilians remain in UN shelters or with host families across the Gaza Strip, the news release pointed out.

It is estimated that around 17,200 housing units have been totally destroyed or rendered uninhabitable across the Gaza Strip, with life-sustaining infrastructure for entire neighbourhoods in need of urgent repair.

Mr. Wibisono reiterated the joint appeal made with fellow UN experts before the Human Rights Council in July to both sides to abide by the fundamental principles of international humanitarian law and international human rights law, and for much more to be done to protect civilians.

“Lifting the seven-year old blockade on Gaza is an essential step towards ending this perpetual crisis and allowing the people of Gaza to rebuild their lives,” he added.

“I call on all parties to return to the negotiating table. Only by putting international human rights and humanitarian law at the heart of the talks will the cycle of violence and destruction be brought to an end.”

Mr. Wibisono, who works in an independent and unpaid capacity, plans to conduct his mission in September 2014, with a view to preparing his oral update to the sixty-ninth session of the General Assembly in October 2014 and his first substantive report to the twenty-eighth session of the Human Rights Council in March 2015.

 

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7-11 'Drive-Through' Motorcyclist Surrenders To Police

Methat Srisuchat, 30, met with Pol.Lt. Noppa Thongbo at Bangkok Yai Police Station to give his testimony, 26 August 2014.

BANGKOK — The 30-year-old man who was filmed driving his motorcycle into a 7-11 store surrendered himself to the police today after the video of his adventure went viral on the internet this week.

The video shows the man driving around aisles of a 7-11 store, much to the bewilderment of onlookers. Earlier this week, police made an announcement on Channel 3 describing the man's action as unlawful and urging him to report for criminal prosecution.

The motorcyclist, identified as Methat Srisuchat, 30, met with Pol.Lt. Noppa Thongbo at Bangkok Yai Police Station this afternoon to give his testimony.

Mr. Methat said the incident took place "in mid 2013" at a 7-11 store in Bangkok. According to Mr. Methat, he was dared by his friends to drive into the convenience store on his motorcycle.

"I was reckless," Mr. Methat told police.

The motorcyclist explained that the video was filmed by his friends for private viewing, but it appears that someone uploaded the clip on the internet few days ago. 

"I came to see the officers to offer my apology," Mr. Methat said, "I did not have any ill intention. I didn't do it because I wanted to damage the store. I was just reckless."

Police say Mr. Methat has been charged with disrupting public order and violating traffic laws.

 

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Student Activist Reveals Military Threats of Enforced Disappearance

One of the cloth banner read "The people own the power. No Coup."

(Prachatai English)

Contrary to what the junta has tried to claim, that all detainees have been very well treated while in custody, other than being deprived of their freedom, a second account of degrading treatment of an anti-coup protester has emerged. A student activist said he was threatened with enforced disappearance and being killed because he had protested against the coup just twice. The story also shows how the media saved him from detention.
 
Prachatai earlier reported the first account of degrading treatment of anti-coup protesters by the military. This involved threats of killing and deprivation of water.

Read more of the story here

 

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