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Junta To Consider Bureaucrats' Salaries Boost

NCPO chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha attends the ceremony marking the 127th anniversary of Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy, 5 August 2014

BANGKOK – The Ministry of Finance has submitted a proposal to the military junta requesting an eight percent increase in bureaucrats' salaries.

If approved, the salary increase will cost the state at least 20 billion baht, said Rangsan Sriworasart, permanent secretary of the Ministry of Finance. 

"I believe we will use around 20 billion – 30 billion baht to readjust the salary base of the bureaucrats," Mr. Rangsan said. 

The salary boost is a part of the Ministry's plan to improve the welfare of bureaucrats nationwide, Mr. Rangsan explained. Other measures include an increase in retirement money and daily allowances, he said. 

The permanent secretary argued that the measure are is necessary because many state officials are suffering from the economic slowdown and a spike in the cost of living.

"When the salary can be adjusted depends on the decision of the NCPO," Mr. Rangsan said, using the acronym of the military junta's National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO).

Since staging the coup against the elected government on 22 May, the NCPO has delegated many powers to bureaucrats. State officials dominate the junta-appointed National Legislative Assembly (NLA). Local elections in many regions have also been indefinitely suspended by the NCPO, which said it will appoint high-ranking bureaucrats to take the vacant seats.

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NCPO: Yingluck May Extend Her Stay Abroad

Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra at the press conference in Bangkok on 18 July 2014.

BANGKOK — Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra may ask the military junta for permission to extend her stay abroad, a top military officer said.

Ms. Yingluck left the country for Europe late last month, ostensibly to visit her brother former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in France. Although she promised to return to Thailand to fight corruption charges, there is widespread speculation that she will go into exile.

Lt.Gen. Kampanart Ruddit, deputy chief-of-staff of the Royal Thai Army, said today that the junta has not been informed that Ms. Yingluck will postpone her return to Thailand, scheduled to be 10 August, but she can file a request to the junta if she would like to extend her stay.

"If Ms. Yingluck indeed does not come back, she will have to explain what kept her from returning to Thailand. The leader of the NCPO will judge whether she can remain abroad," Lt.Gen. Kampanart said, referring to the National Council for Peace and Order. 

Although the NCPO previously issued arrest warrants on politicians and activists who either left the country without permission or failed to report to the junta in time, Lt.Gen. Kampanart said the military rulers consider many factors before they prosecute those who violate the NCPO's travel restrictions. 

"In the past two months, the NCPO has been very negotiable. We do not just issue arrest warrants right away. If anyone has a task [that kept them away], they can inform us," Lt.Gen. Kampanart said. "The NCPO will give them time, but when time is up we will have to issue arrest warrants."

He also dismissed criticism that the NCPO was naive to let the former leader leave the country, saying that Ms. Yingluck is free to travel as she wishes because she remains innocent until proven guilty in court. 

"I ask you, what rights does the NCPO leader have to forbid Ms. Yingluck from going abroad? If he had done so, it would affect the principle of human rights, and he would be criticised," Lt. Gen. Kampanart said. "There's only one standard. No one has the privilege. I insist that the NCPO leader has no intention to help Ms. Yingluck escape her charges."

Vacation or exile?

Last month, the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) found Ms. Yingluck guilty of negligence that allegedly led to massive corruption in the rice-mortgage scheme – a key policy of her administration. 

Her case has been forwarded to the Criminal Court for further prosecution. If found guilty, Ms. Yingluck could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of 20,000 baht.

Shortly before she left the country, the former leader insisted on her innocence and questioned the legality of NACC's investigation against her. She also vowed to return to Thailand to contest the charges. 

"There has been allegation that I am going abroad to escape from the cases," Ms. Yingluck said on 18 July. "Let me insist that my trip is a personal one, and there is clear schedule of return date. I prepared this trip long before the NACC found me guilty in a hasty manner."

Ms. Yingluck's aides also told the media that she was merely traveling to attend a birthday party for her brother, Mr. Thaksin, in Paris on 26 July, and to enjoy a private vacation in Europe with her son. 

However, for many Thais, Ms. Yingluck’s situation is reminiscent of that which Mr. Thaksin once faced. Mr. Thaksin was also deposed in a military coup and was later charged with corruption. He fled the country shortly before a court found him guilty in 2008 and has been living in self-imposed exile ever since.

A survey claimed that a majority of Thais expect Ms. Yingluck to follow her brother's footsteps and chose a life of exile. 

 

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NCPO: Yingluck May Extend Her Stay Abroad

Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra at the press conference in Bangkok on 18 July 2014.

BANGKOK — Former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra may ask the military junta for permission to extend her stay abroad, a top military officer said.

Ms. Yingluck left the country for Europe late last month, ostensibly to visit her brother former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra in France. Although she promised to return to Thailand to fight corruption charges, there is widespread speculation that she will go into exile.

Lt.Gen. Kampanart Ruddit, deputy chief-of-staff of the Royal Thai Army, said today that the junta has not been informed that Ms. Yingluck will postpone her return to Thailand, scheduled to be 10 August, but she can file a request to the junta if she would like to extend her stay.

"If Ms. Yingluck indeed does not come back, she will have to explain what kept her from returning to Thailand. The leader of the NCPO will judge whether she can remain abroad," Lt.Gen. Kampanart said, referring to the National Council for Peace and Order. 

Although the NCPO previously issued arrest warrants on politicians and activists who either left the country without permission or failed to report to the junta in time, Lt.Gen. Kampanart said the military rulers consider many factors before they prosecute those who violate the NCPO's travel restrictions. 

"In the past two months, the NCPO has been very negotiable. We do not just issue arrest warrants right away. If anyone has a task [that kept them away], they can inform us," Lt.Gen. Kampanart said. "The NCPO will give them time, but when time is up we will have to issue arrest warrants."

He also dismissed criticism that the NCPO was naive to let the former leader leave the country, saying that Ms. Yingluck is free to travel as she wishes because she remains innocent until proven guilty in court. 

"I ask you, what rights does the NCPO leader have to forbid Ms. Yingluck from going abroad? If he had done so, it would affect the principle of human rights, and he would be criticised," Lt. Gen. Kampanart said. "There's only one standard. No one has the privilege. I insist that the NCPO leader has no intention to help Ms. Yingluck escape her charges."

Vacation or exile?

Last month, the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) found Ms. Yingluck guilty of negligence that allegedly led to massive corruption in the rice-mortgage scheme – a key policy of her administration. 

Her case has been forwarded to the Criminal Court for further prosecution. If found guilty, Ms. Yingluck could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of 20,000 baht.

Shortly before she left the country, the former leader insisted on her innocence and questioned the legality of NACC's investigation against her. She also vowed to return to Thailand to contest the charges. 

"There has been allegation that I am going abroad to escape from the cases," Ms. Yingluck said on 18 July. "Let me insist that my trip is a personal one, and there is clear schedule of return date. I prepared this trip long before the NACC found me guilty in a hasty manner."

Ms. Yingluck's aides also told the media that she was merely traveling to attend a birthday party for her brother, Mr. Thaksin, in Paris on 26 July, and to enjoy a private vacation in Europe with her son. 

However, for many Thais, Ms. Yingluck’s situation is reminiscent of that which Mr. Thaksin once faced. Mr. Thaksin was also deposed in a military coup and was later charged with corruption. He fled the country shortly before a court found him guilty in 2008 and has been living in self-imposed exile ever since.

A survey claimed that a majority of Thais expect Ms. Yingluck to follow her brother's footsteps and chose a life of exile. 

 

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Junta To Consider Bureaucrats' Salaries Boost

NCPO chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha (right) attends the ceremony marking the 127th anniversary of Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy, 5 August 2014

BANGKOK – The Ministry of Finance has submitted a proposal to the military junta requesting an eight percent increase in bureaucrats' salaries.

If approved, the salary increase will cost the state at least 20 billion baht, said Rangsan Sriworasart, permanent secretary of the Ministry of Finance. 

"I believe we will use around 20 billion – 30 billion baht to readjust the salary base of the bureaucrats," Mr. Rangsan said. 

The salary boost is a part of the Ministry's plan to improve the welfare of bureaucrats nationwide, Mr. Rangsan explained. Other measures include an increase in retirement money and daily allowances, he said. 

The permanent secretary argued that the measure are is necessary because many state officials are suffering from the economic slowdown and a spike in the cost of living.

"When the salary can be adjusted depends on the decision of the NCPO," Mr. Rangsan said, using the acronym of the military junta's National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO).

Since staging the coup against the elected government on 22 May, the NCPO has delegated many powers to bureaucrats. State officials dominate the junta-appointed National Legislative Assembly (NLA). Local elections in many regions have also been indefinitely suspended by the NCPO, which said it will appoint high-ranking bureaucrats to take the vacant seats.

 

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Ebola Outbreak in Thailand 'Very Unlikely'

Microscopic image of Ebola virus (Wikipedia file photo)

BANGKOK — A public health official has assured the Thai public that an outbreak of Ebola virus in Thailand is extremely unlikely.

"We have estimated that the risk of an outbreak in Thailand is very minimal," said Sophon Mekthon, director of the Department of Disease Control (DDC). "However, we are not letting our guard down. We have implimented many measures to control and prevent the disease."

More than 800 people have died in the latest Ebola epidemic in four African nations, while 1,600 more are reportedly infected.

The outbreak led to concerns that Ebola-inflicted individuals may arrive in Thailand and spread the disease beyond the African continent, but Mr. Sophon said today that authorities are closely monitoring all arrivals from Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria  to look for potential patients. 

"We check their body temperatures and when they left the affected areas. If they left more than 21 days ago, they are considered safe," Mr. Sophon said. Those who left the area less than 21 days before they arrived in Thailand will undergo elaborate medical checkups, he said. 

According to Mr. Sophon, 341 people have arrived in Thailand since the observation was put in place on 8 June, and not a single potential Ebola carrier has been found. He also insisted that the Thai public health officials have equipment and technology up to international standards to detect and quarantine any Ebola cases. 

Although the ongoing Ebola outbreak has been confined to the four African nations, some Thais have already started profiting from the Ebola scare in the Kingdom. A number of online shops are selling aloe medicine that is claimed to make human bodies immune to Ebola. 

 

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HM King To Visit Hospital For 'Annual Health Checkup'

His Majesty the King and Her Majesty the Queen wave to crowd of well-wishers as they left Siriraj Hospital on 1 August 2013. The king is due to return to the hospital today for annual health checkup, the royal household says.

BANGKOK — His Majesty the King will return to Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok today for an annual health checkup, the Bureau of Royal Household said in a statement.

The 86-year-old monarch is due to undergo his yearly health checkup, which requires specific equipment at the hospital in Bangkok, the statement says. 

It does not say what time King Bhumipol will arrive in Bangkok and whether His Majesty's stay at the hospital will be a long one. 

Hundreds of Thai well-wishers are expected to await His Majesty's arrival in Bangkok along the roads near Siriraj Hospital. 

His Majesty the King spent several years at Siriraj Hospital to undergo surgeries and other medical operations. He was released from hospital on 1 August 2013 and has since been recovering at his summer retreat, Klai Kang Won Palace, an approximately two-hour drive south of Bangkok.

The king has rarely appeared in public during his stay at Klai Kang Won Palace, but made a brief appearance on 22 July when he endorsed the 2014 interim charter. 

King Bhumipol's frail health is a cause of great anxiety for many Thais, though the issue is mostly discussed in private because of Thailand's strict lese majeste law, which criminalises any remark considered negative toward the monarchy.

In November 2009, two businessmen were arrested and prosecuted under the Computer Crimes Act for spreading false rumours about the health of His Majesty the King, which negatively affected the Thai stock market. 

 

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Aggressive Car Windshield Cleaners Gang Arrested

The suspects point to equipment they allegedly used.

BANGKOK – Police have arrested a group of car windshield cleaners in Bangkok who reportedly dirtied their potential patrons' cars before they offered to clean them.

Pol.Lt.Col. Siam Intarasuwanno, deputy superintendent at Thoong Maha Mek Police Station, said police have received many complaints from motorists about the group, who had been operating at an intersection on Narathiwat Ratchanakarin Road.

According to the complaints, the suspects – identified as Boonchoo Sookthong, Mana Saeling, Sirikul Boonyanan, and Somsak Thimwat – splashed dirty water at random cars as they waited for the green light at the intersection, then approached the motorists to offer their windshield cleaning service.

When the motorists refused, the suspects "aggressively" and rudely berated them, Pol.Lt.Col. Siam said.

"So I ordered the investigative officers to inspect the area, and they found the suspects committing the crime," Pol.Lt.Col. Siam told reporters. He said all suspects confessed that they have been performing this scam "for many times" because they need the money.

Pol.Lt.Col. Siam said the four individuals have been charged with causing nuisance to the public, which carries a penalty of 1,000 baht fine. 

 

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German Reporter Decries Silence Over Assault Charges

German photojournalist Nick Nostitz filing a complaint with the police after he was attacked by PCAD demonstrators in November 2013.

BANGKOK — A German photojournalist who was assaulted by anti-government protesters last year has urged police to step up the investigation against his attackers.

Freelance photojournalsit Nick Nostitz told Khaosod that he filed charges against the anti-government protest leader and former Democrat Party MP Chumpol Jumsai on 26 November 2013, a day after Mr. Chumpol told a crowd of protesters to attack him, yet police have not made any progress in their investigation over the last eight months.

The journalist was covering an anti-government demonstration on Ratchadamnoen Avenue on 25 November when Mr. Chumpol spotted him among the crowd and urged the protesters to "expel" him from the protest site because he was "Redshirt reporter." Mr. Nostitz was promptly beaten by a group of protesters, forcing nearby police officers to intervene and rescue him. 

"I gave them all kinds of evidence, such as photos and videos at the moment of assault that other photographers recorded," Mr. Nostitz said, "When I asked Dusit Police Station [where he filed the charge], they told me the case is being handled by the Division of Special Investigation. But no one can give me answers about the current stage of the criminal investigation, even though it's been eight months."

The journalist said he has also complained about the incident to the National Human Rights Commission, yet the agency has not taken any helpful action.

Mr. Nostitz compared the silence over his case to the arrests of anti-government protesters who allegedly shot at and assaulted Royal Thai Army officer Col. Witthawat Wattanakul and pilot Surasak Sowattanakul during their campaign against the former government.

"The police have already arrested the suspects in those two cases, so I ask the police to speed up the investigation in my case, too," Mr. Nostitz said, adding that he still feels unsafe even after the anti-government protests ceased following the 22 May military coup. 

"I don't feel safe because I am constantly intimidated by supporters of the PCAD who phoned me to berate me and my family," Mr. Nostitz said, using the acronym of the anti-government People's Committee for Absolute Democracy With the King As Head of State. "Whenever I go out I have to be careful. I can't do my job as a reporter as normal. I can barely make a living these days."

He also demanded PCAD leaders like Mr. Chumpol apologise to him for accusing him of being a "Redshirt reporter."

"What do they want from me? I am not a Redshirt or a Yellowshirt or any-shirt. I am a journalist. How can I accept reconciliation when I still have not received any justice?" 

A veteran journalist who has been covering Thailand for more than a decade, Mr. Nostitz has reported extensively on the Red-Yellow political crisis that has sharply polarized Thai politics since the 2006 military coup. 

Although Mr. Nostitz spent considerable time covering demonstrations and protests of both Redshirt and Yellowshirt factions, he eventually became a target of intimidation from many Yellowshirt supporters who viewed him as aligned with the Redshirt movement. 

In May 2014 Mr. Nostitz was nearly abducted by several PCAD guards while he was covering news at the Constitutional Court in Bangkok. The guards reportedly attempted to take him to the PCAD leader Buddha Issara, a monk who has a record of capturing and torturing undercover police officers.

 

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US-Based Rights Group: Thai Junta Must Investigate Alleged Torture of Activist

Soldiers stand guard outside Army Club in Bangkok on 23 May 2014.

(By Human Rights Watch)

NEW YORK – Thai authorities should immediately and impartially investigate the alleged torture of an opposition activist in military custody, Human Rights Watch said today. “Red Shirt” activist Kritsuda Khunasen, 27, was secretly detained without charge at an unidentified military camp from May 27 to June 24, 2014.

Kritsuda, in a video interview released on August 2, alleged that soldiers beat her during interrogation and suffocated her with a plastic bag over her head until she lost consciousness. On August 3 the junta blocked access to the interview on YouTube and to an English language article about her case.

“The Thai junta’s alleged torture of a detained activist is further cause for alarm that rights protections are not on the military’s agenda,” said Brad Adams, Asia director. “Only by promptly investigating Kritsuda’s allegations and prosecuting those responsible can the junta undo its knee-jerk denial of her serious charges.”

The Thai junta’s response to Kritsuda’s allegations has been dismissive, raising broader concerns for the authorities’ treatment of all detainees. On August 3, Col. Winthai Suvaree, spokesman for the ruling National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), said that “Kritsuda was not mistreated while in military custody,” and that her allegations were “groundless without any supporting evidence.” The deputy National Police chief, Somyot Phumpanmuang, said police would investigate to see whether the circulation of Kritsuda’s video interview broke any Thai laws.

On the evening of May 27, soldiers from the 14th Military Circle arrested Kritsuda during a raid of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), known as the Red Shirts, in Muang district in Chonburi province.

In the interview, remotely conducted via Skype, Kritsuda said she was blindfolded and put in a car heading to an unknown military camp in Bangkok:

They used my scarf to blindfold me. I recognized that I was taken to Bangkok when I heard the driver pay the expressway toll. Then I heard the driver stopping at a checkpoint. It was a military camp. The driver told soldiers at the checkpoint that he was dropping off a “parcel.” He referred to me as a “parcel.”

Kritsuda said that she was put in a room to rest overnight: “The room was guarded by soldiers. I could hear the sound of their boots. I could also hear the sound of soldiers doing exercise the next morning.” She described her interrogation:

Soldiers first told me that they just wanted to have a talk with me and would then let me go…. But what happened was not a talk. I was interrogated.… When the scarf they used to blindfold me came loose, a female soldier was told to tighten it and wrap duct tape around my head on top of the scarf. That completely blinded my sight. I could not tell if it was night or day anymore. I was kept like that while being interrogated. My hands were also tied. One of the soldiers told me, “Sister. You would not get out of this place alive if you see our faces.”

Kritsuda said she was slapped, punched, and suffocated during the interrogation:

The first morning when they started to question me, I was slapped in the face. That was how it began.… After that, when I could not give them information they wanted, they slapped me and punched me. But that did not compare to the most brutal thing those soldiers did to me. They put a plastic bag over my head and wrapped a piece of cloth around it to suffocate me. I felt as if I was dead before they let me breathe again. They did that to me again and again until I passed out.

Kritsuda said that a female soldier had to take off her pants when she went to the toilet because her hands remained tied during the detention:

I was allowed to have shower a couple times. While a female soldier stripped me naked and gave me a shower, I heard male voices near me. I felt I was sexually harassed. I told those soldiers I could take care of myself. But they said they had not received an order to untie me.

After seven days, the limit of an administrative detention under martial law, Kritsuda said the authorities ordered her to write a letter saying that she volunteered to stay in military custody. Then on June 23, she said, several senior military officers came to meet her at the military camp. She said Maj. Gen. Sansern Kaewkamnerd, leader of the NCPO spokesperson team, told her she would be interviewed by army-owned TV Channel 5 and to “say the right thing to make the military look good.” The footage, which was broadcast nationwide on the evening of June 23, shows Kritsuda saying that she volunteered to be in military custody and was “happier than any words can say.” In his August 3 response to Kritsuda’s allegations, the NCPO spokesman Winthai claimed that Kritsuda “was genuinely happy” during the interview.

Kritsuda was freed without charge on June 24 after a considerable domestic and international outcry for her release. She has since stated that she had been living in fear and could not give her account until she could leave Thailand. She is now in Europe seeking asylum.

Human Rights Watch has repeatedly raised serious concerns regarding the Thai junta’s use of arbitrary arrest and secret military detention. Since the May 22 coup, the NCPO has detained more than 300 ruling party and opposition politicians, activists, journalists, and people accused of supporting the deposed government, disrespecting or offending the monarchy, or being involved in anti-coup protests and activities. The NCPO has placed those people in incommunicado lockup in unofficial detention sites, such as military camps. The risk of enforced disappearances, torture, and other ill-treatment significantly increases when detainees are held incommunicado in unofficial military detention.

On June 24 the NCPO announced that everyone being held without charge in military custody had been released, but it has never provided information about those supposedly released. Instead, the military authorities have continued to arbitrarily arrest and detain people despite publicly asserting that the practice has stopped. The authorities have continued to summon a wide range of people for questioning, at times leading to arbitrary arrest.

The military has also arrested people in their homes without warrants in Bangkok and other provinces. For instance, on July 30, soldiers took Dachai Uchukosolkarn, leader of Phalang Prathet Thai Party, from his home in Lampang province. He remains unaccounted for.

The authorities typically compel those released from military detention to sign an agreement that they will not make political comments, become involved in political activities, or travel overseas without NCPO permission. Failure to comply is punishable by a new round of detention, a sentence of up to two years in prison, and a fine of 40,000 baht (US$1,250).

The junta leader, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, has given repeated public assurances that detainees would be safe in military custody. On July 25, he said in a televised speech: “The NCPO would like to ask the international community to understand that we have never committed serious human rights violations. We have no policy to assault, kill, torture, rape, or harm anyone.”

Sihasak Phuangketkeow, the permanent secretary of the Thai Foreign Ministry told the United Nations Human Rights Council on June 12 that most of the people summoned by the military authorities had already been released, and that no one had been held for more than a week. The NCPO has contended that incommunicado detention is necessary to allow detainees to “cool off and adjust their attitude” without disruption from outsiders.

The alleged torture of Kritsuda highlights the concerns raised by the junta’s enactment on July 22 of an interim constitution that exempts the NCPO and anyone acting on its behalf from all liabilities for abuses. Under international law and United Nations principles on the right to a remedy for human rights violations, governments have the duty to investigate allegations of serious human rights violations and prosecute those responsible.

“Kritsuda’s alleged torture is a test case for the Thai junta’s commitment to respect human rights and ensure justice for victims of abuse,” Adams said. “Will the junta respond with a serious investigation or will there be more cover-ups and stonewalling?”

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Mass Theft On Train With 'Ladies-Only' Sleeping Car

A ladies-only sleeping car as it parked at Hua Lumphong Central Train Station in Bangkok , 1 August 2014.

SONGKHLA – Passengers on a southbound train were reportedly robbed in their sleep just metres away from the lady-only car installed in the wake of a deadly rape on the same rail route last month.

The incident took place at around 3 am on Thaksin (southbound) Express Train no. 37, which was traveling from Bangkok to Narathiwat province this morning, police said.

According to Pol.Col. Witset Ketpan, deputy commander of Thai Railway Police, nine passengers said they lost their phones and cash in the theft. 30 passengers were in the car at the time, Pol.Col. Wiset said, adding that the perpetrator managed to remove sim cards from all the victims' phoens and left them behind, in order to avoid tracking from the police. 

"I believe the thief was on the same car," Pol.Col. Wiset said.

Pathom Pinakan, a volunteer ranger who was traveling with three squad mates, said he and his companions were deep in their sleep when the theft happened, and only discovered that their belongings were missing when they woke up at 6 am. He also suspected that he and other victims may have been drugged by the perpetrator. 

"Many other passengers were also robbed," Mr. Pathom said, "Everyone said the same thing: they were sleeping very deeply. Some also had dazing conditions when they woke up. It's possible all of us in the car were drugged."

However, Pol.Col. Wiset  said it is "very unlikely" that the victims were drugged because some of passengers were still conscious when the theft occurred, though he said the police will investigate the claim very seriously. 

Cpt. Panomnoi Thiplai, a police officer at Hat Yai Train Station, said the perpetrator may have departed the train with some other passengers at Thoong Song Train Station in Surat Thani province. He told Khaosod that the police have combed every passenger on the train and none of them is a suspect at the moment. 

Theft, rape, and murder

The incident is bound to stir a new round of criticism and scrutiny toward the State Railway of Thailand (SRT) regarding its security measures, especially because the theft happened just next to the special "lady-only" sleeping car, which officials promise would be a safe environment for women and children passengers.

The lady-only car was installed after the horrific rape and murder of a 13-year-old girl on the same train route in July. 

Wanchai Saengkhao, a 22-year-old cleaning staff on the train, confessed to sexually assaulting the girl in her sleeping cabin and throwing her body overboard afterwards. The suspect also claimed he committed the crime because he was drunk and high on amphetamines at the time. He is currently awaiting trials for charges of premeditated murder, sexual assault, theft, and drug abuse in a prison.

The rape and murder sparked a wave of outrage among the Thai public, even leading some citizens to defy the martial law's ban on public protest to stage demonstration calling for death penalty for convicted rapists. Meanwhile, a number of women also avoided using the SRT night trains, preferring rides on public buses.  

Pol.Maj.Gen. Thanang Buranon, commander of Thai Railway Police, said today that the police have been doing their best to provide security to the passengers on the trains.

He claimed that no harm ever came close to those in the lady-only sleeping car when this morning's theft took place because there were volunteer rangers and police officers guarding the car at the time. 

"However, we will urgently come up with new measures to prevent further incidents, "said Pol.Maj.Gen. Thanang. 

 

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