31.6 C
Bangkok
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Home Blog Page 3408

Chiang Mai Police To Crack Down On Ethnic Vigilante Violence

5 Tai ethnic individuals accused of stabbing and robbing 2 Thai teenagers in Chiang Mai on 16 June 2013

(28 June)
Chief of police in Chiang Mai province said he will work to prevent further clashes between gangs
of Tai immigrants and Thai individuals who are enraged by reports of robbery and assaults allegedly
committed by Tai immigrants.

Reports have been streaming from Chiang Mai that certain number
of Tai ethnics, who reside as immigrant workers in the province, has banded into gangs loitering in
the town center and causing disturbance to locals. Some of these gangs were also reportedly mugging
and beating up victims at odd hours.

One such incident was said to take place at 03.00 on 16
June. Police say 2 teenagers were assaulted by knife-wielding suspects who rode on 3 motorcycles and
spotted the victims as they were hanging around a bridge in Muang District.

The victims
reportedly fled on their motorcycle but the assailants caught up with them in front of a restaurant.
There, they were slashed with knifes on the heads, legs, and arms. The suspects also stole mobile
phone from the victims. Later, police arrested 5 Tai ethnics accused of committing the crime. The 5
Tai men reportedly confessed.

The worries over the so-called Tai gangs have led to
retaliation from Thai teenagers who formed vigilante groups and attacked Tai immigrants in the
province. Our correspondent said the situation forced many residents in town center to stay indoor
during night time, fearful of various gangs and vigilante groups who raced their motorcycles noisily
along the city roads looking for their rivals.

Recently, a Facebook page titled Campaign of
Taming Tai Gangs has been launched, gaining many ?Likes?. Many Facebook users wrote their
complaints about the alleged Tai gangs behavior, while some openly encourage vigilante actions
against the gangs.

Today, Pol.Lt.Gen. Chamnarn
Ruadrew, vice commander of Chiang Mai regional police, said he has instructed the police force step
up vigilance against both factions. He said that police will immediately step in and arrest the
individuals who gathered at any spot with intention to commit crimes.

 Pol.Lt.Gen.
Chamnarn added that the police have also launched an operation to crack down on the Tai immigrant
gangs and have already detained many suspects.

Advertisement

Doubt Cast On Reports Of 'Stringent' FDA Thai Rice Inspection

(28 June) Trade office of the Thai government based in Los Angeles has released statement dismissing reports circulated by a number of Thai media agencies that the US food agency is preventing Thai rice exports from passing through American ports due to possible chemical contamination.

Previously, Thai Rath, the best-selling newspaper in Thailand, has devoted its front page to reports that the  Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has ordered "every port" in the US to urgently quarantine rice grains exported from Thailand.

On the 6th page of the newspaper, Thai Rath quoted an unidentified ′′foreign news agency" saying that the FDA specifically ordered "every container" carrying Thai rice inspected out of fear that the grains processed under Thai government′s rice mortgage scheme contained dangerous level of insecticide chemicals.

The newspapers also included quote from an unnamed "rice exporter" who claimed that the US alert is one of the biggest issues for rice trading in the past 20-30 years as it could affect Thai rice export growth and confidence among consumers.

"The US has never inspected Thai rice in every container. Its measure has affected confidence in Thai rice quality. The Thai government needs to clarify these doubts clearly to the public," the unnamed individual reportedly told Thai Rath.

However, a report on the website of The Nation, the well-known English newspaper based in Bangkok, appears to carry the very same quotes that appeared on Thai Rath. The Nation′s report included bothreports from unidentified "foreign news agency" and the unnamed source.

"The US FDA has ordered every port such as in New York and Chicago to confine Thai rice for random inspection. … The source said that such stringent inspection has created concern among American importers as well as Thai rice exporters. Importers could easily turn to order rice from other rice export countries such as Vietnam and Cambodia," The Nation website reported. The exact same quotes can be found in Thai Rath story on the matter.

It is not clear who copied whom. The search for news about FDA and Thai rice on the Internet by our correspondent has turned up only a report which appears in the website of Thai Financial Post. 

However, the story is remarkably different to the one reported by both Thai Rath and The Nation. According to Thai Financial Post, it was the Thai Ministry of Public Heath that instructed the FDA to inspect the rice in the American market for possible chemical contaminations "in its bid to raise the nation′s rice standard to match the Good Manufacturing Practices, or GMP".

The story on the said website did not mention any plan by the FDA to quarantine Thai rice nor the "stringent" inspection reported by Thai Rath and The Nation.

The claim about FDA′s quarantine of Thai rice also appeared on Manager Online, the media agency operated by key members of the Yellowshirt movements – the fierce critics of the government under PM Yingluck Shinawatra.

Manager Online and other Yellowshirts-allied media outlets have been sharply criticizing the Yingluck administration′s rice subsidy program – or any other policy undertaken by the Prime Minister, for that matter. The Yellowshirts are self-declared enemies of Ms. Yingluck′s brother, Former PM Thaksin Shinawatra, whom they viewed as a corrupt, anti-monarchy tyrant.

The report on Manager Online bears many similar wordings to that of The Nation and Thai Rath. Manager Online claimed a "source inside rice export industry" as provider of their story.

Meanwhile, the Thai Trade Center in Los Angeles, which operates under Thai Ministry of Commerce, released statement denying the report carried by Thai Rath, The Nation, and Manager Online. 

In the statement signed by Ms. Pilai Siripanich, Executive Director of the LA-based Trade Center, it says that  ports management and rice buyer companies in California contacted by the Center about the matter denied that there is any known quarantine order to Thai rice exports.

Advertisement

Transport Minister Gets Taste Of Bangkok Public Bus

Mr. Chirapong Prasertpollakrang's photo on Twitter

(27 June) A top official
in Thai government reportedly ditched his usual motorcade for a bus today because he wanted to find
out about quality of Thai public transport – and tasted the life of common Bangkokian by having to
wait for more than 30 minutes before getting on the bus.

Mr. Chirapong Prasertpollakrang, a
journalist who works for The Nation newspaper, tweeted photo of Mr. Chatchart Sittipat, Minister of
Transport, at the bus stop in Ratchadumnern Avenue, just across the Government House.

The
journalist wrote in his Twitter post that Mr. Chatchart said he was waiting for Bus 509, alone, to
catch his flight at Don Muang Airport. He reportedly told Mr. Chirapong that he would switch to Bus
29 at Victory Monument.

If true, the Minister of Transport would have traveled the route into
central Bangkok notoriously known for its traffic jam.

It appears to be what he wants,
though. Previously, on 25 June, Mr. Chatchart has stated to the meeting at the Ministry that he
expected high-ranking officials to travel by the buses operated by Bangkok Mass Transit Authority
and its private contractors at least once a week between July-August this year so they can inspect
the problems faced by many Bangkokians.

Many of these buses are in poor condition while
regular passengers complain about the rude service and reckless driving behavior by the
drivers.

Mr. Chirapong said he chatted with Mr. Chatchart for a while before excused himself
and left the Transport Minister at the bus stop on his own. According to Mr. Chirapong, he told Mr.
Chatchart his Ministry should also look into the endemic problems of tuk-tuk and taxi drivers
refusing to take passengers, especially in financial districts of Bangkok.

In another Tweet,
Mr. Chirapong said Mr. Chatchart sent a text message to him that he finally got on the bus after
waiting for more than 30 minutes.

The journalist dismissed accusations from anti-government
critics that he and Mr. Chatchart staged the encounter to enhance the Minister′s image.

I
was on the bus to work at the Government House when I saw the Minister waiting at the bus stop, so I
got off in the next bus stop and ran to talk with him, The Nation reporter
insisted.

Advertisement

Chonburi Man Goes Fishing, Finds Dead Body

(27
June) A dead body has been found at a pond in Chonburi province by a man who was fishing
there.

The pond located behind a shrine dedicated to spirit of Lady Takien at Prince Chumpon
Park. The dead body identified as male, 25-30 year old. No wound or trace of fight has been detected
on his body, and no ID of any kind was found on him.

Nevertheless, police found a bag of glue
attached to his pants.

Mr. Pairote Saipetch, the person who reported the body discovery to
the police, told our correspondent that he and his friends were sneaking into the park to fish at
the pond. As they were chattering, he said, the dead body surfaced.

Police say the individual
might have been a glue addict who inhaled the substance to the point of delirium and fell into the
water.

Advertisement

Govt Pays 19 Mil. Baht Compensation For 77 Redshirts

(27 June) Ministry of Justice
hands out 19 million baht worth of compensation to 77 individuals who were jailed for their alleged
roles during the Redshirts protests in 2010.

The
protests came to the violent end on 19 May 2010 when the military launched the final assault on
their encampments in financial district of Bangkok and rounded up scores of protesters, jailing them
under emergency laws.

Many of the arrestees were eventually acquitted of their charges on
terrorism and arson attacks, which were pressed against them by the government at the time, while
some spent months in jail without being properly charged of any crime.

The current
government under PM Yingluck Shinawatra has previously agreed to pay compensation money for their
time in detention. The agreement, billed as a move toward reconciliation, extends to other unlawful
detentions, injuries, and deaths caused by political incidents from 2005 to 2010 regardless of
factions.

Today, Pol.Gen. Pracha Promnork, Minister of Justice, presided over the ceremony to
hand out the money to the Redshirts who were imprisoned in 2010. 18 of them are from Ubon Ratchatani
province, 20 from Bangkok, 28 from Udon Thani, 6 from Kon Kaen, 4 from Chiang Mai, and 1 from
Mukdaharn.

Ms. Thida Tojirakarn, chairwoman of the National United Front of Democracy Against
Dictatorship (UDD), said the compensation to sufferers of unfair political charges would help heal
the country back toward peace. Nonetheless, she said she would campaign for modification of the
compensation regulation, calling the existing one unfair.

According to the regulation,
individuals who were jailed less than 90 days would receive 411 baht per day of imprisonment, while
those jailed for more than 90 days but less than 180 days would receive 750,000 baht lump sum and
those jailed more than 180 days would receive 1,500,000 baht.

Ms. Thida, who was also at the
payout ceremony, said the regulation leaves wide gap between those jailed for 91 and 89 days.
Pol.Gen. Pracha told our correspondent he has received complaint from the Redshirts about the
matter, but said that any change to the current guideline would have to be modified by the Cabinet
committee.

The 19 million baht payout today is the 4th batch of money paid out so far. The
compensation money now stands at approximately 50 million baht, paid to more than 100
individuals.

Advertisement

'114 Year Old' Grandpa Reveals Tips For Long Life

(27 June) A man in Nakorn
Ratchasrima province reported to be 114 year old offered recipe for the elixir of long life: oat
rice, homegrown vegetables, and warm water.

When our correspondent
visited Mr. Kong Chai-ngarm, or ?Grandpa Kong? as his neighbors fondly called him, at his house in
Muang Thong village, Muang District, he was just arriving at the residence with his wife Ms. Pikul
Inhiran, believed to be in her late 90s.

He said he and his wife were traveling by bus from
Rorn Pibul District – a testament to his good health despite his reported old age.

Mr. Kong
cheerfully told our correspondent that he was born on a Tuesday in First Month of the Buddhist Era
2443 according to the old Siamese calendar, which correspond to December, 1899 in Western reckoning.
He could not remember his exact birthday, and the official record did not specify it.

His age
could not be independently verified, however, due to the murky record. The only evidence he provided
to our correspondent is a document signed by local officials which announced that he was born in
B.E. 2443. If he is ever confirmed to be 114, he would have ranked among 10 oldest individuals
alive. According to Guinness World Records, the oldest person living is currently residing in Japan,
at the age of 115.

Mr. Kong said in the interview that his 4 siblings are all dead. As for
himself, he said he had 4 children with his ex-wife, but had not been in contact with any of them
for very long time now.

They must have thought I am dead already, Mr. Kong
laughed.

Asked about his tips for extraordinarily long life, Grandpa Kong said his favorite
dish has been oat rice and the vegetable he grows by himself, coupled with some dessert during the
day. He told our correspondent he avoids drinking cold and hot water, preferring to stick to warm
beverage. He also said he took shower 3 times a day, and spent much of the day
exercising.

Mr. Kong is now currently living with children of his current wife, Ms. Pikul.
However, he said he never needs their help when he and Ms. Pikul traveled around.

The buses
do not charge me for the fare because I?m so old, he said, adding that before the interview with
our correspondent he and his wife were visiting their relatives in Rorn Pibol District for 3-4
days.

Grandpa Kong said he is a follower of Por Thaan (Holy
Father) Klai Vajasit, a local monk famous for his amulet blessing. According to Mr. Kong, Father
Klai told him he would live to 121 years.

Advertisement

‘Reformist’ Student Wins School Election, Vows To Push Agenda

Typical hairstyle that students in Thai public schools are required to wear.

While Redshirts and so-called White Masks are feuding in the national politics scene of Thailand, another battle between progressive force and the Ancien Regime is taking place on much smaller scale at a public school in Bangkok after a student who advocated for an end to oppressive culture led his student party to landslide victory in the school election.

Netiwit “Frank” Chotpatpaisan,  an 11th grade student at Nawaminthrachinuthit School (part of Triam Udomsuksa school network), has previously launched a Facebook page called Federation of Thai Students for Education Revolution. It currently has more than 11,000 “likes”.

The Facebook group criticized practices like hazing of junior students by the senior, unquestioned obedience to the teachers, and the strict hairstyle enforced by many school administrations.

In fact, it is the hairstyle code, of all the issues, that Mr. Netiwit and his group most vigorously challenged. Public schools in Thailand, with very few exception, required male students to maintain the very short haircut that closely resembles that of the military. As for female students, they have to follow mind-boggling regulations which inspect even the length of their ponytails.

Mr. Netiwit has said this kind of unnecessary rules prevented Thai students from creative thinking and individual expression. His arguments gained nationwide attention after he appeared on a popular Channel 3 talk show, in which he dismissed claims from other students that, somehow, the strict hairstyle should be cherished as national culture of Thailand.

His cause reaches the international audience, too, after New York Times published story about his group and the seemingly David-vs-Goliath battle which pitched a call for change against deeply rooted bureaucracy of Thai schools that appear intent on preserving the old ways.

Now, Mr. Netiwit might have secured the chance to wage his culture war with more vigor. On Monday, his student party, named Tertkasat (Honor the King), reaped around 50% of the votes in school election (1,371 votes out of 2,603 voters), propelling him to the position of student
presidency and head of student council.

Speaking to Khaosod English, Mr. Netiwit said he already presented the school administration with 3 policies he wants to see implemented: the reduction of school class hours (they currently study 9 hours a day); the abolition of rules on which bags the students they can and cannot carry to school; and, of course, abolition of the mandatory hairstyle.

He said the teachers flatly refused all 3 proposals, but he vowed that he would continue to campaign for them, reasoning that he was given legitimacy by the majority of students to do so.

Nevertheless, Mr. Netiwit expected it to be a rough fight. Although he finds support among his many students, as reflected on the election result, the majority of teachers hated him, Mr. Netiwit said in the phone interview.

According to Mr. Netiwit, the teachers accuse him of tarnishing the school′s reputation.

Most of the time they criticize me in front of the students in other classrooms, but sometimes they confront me face-to-face, too, the newly elected student president said.

In one episode, he told our correspondent, one of the teachers told him to take off Phra Kiew (the tiny pin in shape of a crown resting on a cushion – the symbol of Triam Udomsuksa school network) from his shirt and hand it back to the school since he acts like a traitor.

I didn’t do that because I refused to wear it in the first place anyway, Mr. Netiwit said.

Apart from the crusade against restrictive hairstyle, Mr. Netiwit said he also planned to challenge other oppressive practices in the school, too, such as the requirement for students to prostrate on the ground to show respect for the teachers in some ceremonies.

Mr. Netiwit claimed that many teachers get jumpy when they heard simple words like human rights and freedom. When they hear that word, they think it means people doing whatever they are pleased, he said, before adding that it is because the teachers prefer to see the students obediently conform to their rule.

It wasn’t the first week of his job yet, but he said that all this hostility made him despair of the
year ahead already. He said sometimes he wondered if he made wrong decision by signing up for the
election, and he was on the verge of quitting many times, but in the end I thought of the hope many
students place in me that I can speak on their behalf as the Student President.

He clarified
that he didn?t choose the name of his party. The school reportedly provided the names for the
candidate parties and they are all randomly selected. Among other names are Pattana Thai (Develop
Thailand) and Fai Khunnadharma (Morally-minded).

It should be noted that, officially, the
Ministry of Education already instructed all public schools to abandon the strict haircut
regulations. But many school administrations, including where Mr. Netiwit is studying, simply
decided to disobey the government orders and continued to enforce what they insist is their
radition.

These schools rely on a section of the Ministry of Education′s regulations which
permit school administrations to preserve the identity of the establishment.

However, Mr. Netiwit told our correspondent that he expected that his school, and others, would eventually relent. The pressure on the school administration to abandon the archaic culture is growing, he said, and the world is changing.

I will keep irritating them like a fishbone stuck in their throat, Mr. Netiwit concluded.

Advertisement

Surin Locals Recover 'Magical' Tree Trunks From Stream Bed

(26 June) A man in Surin province claimed he was guided by a ghost in
his dream to rescue ironwood tree trunks from the stream bed.

Mr. Preecha Nanual, 36, a
local of Arlong village in Sri Narong district, told our correspondent that Lady Takien Thong, the spirit believed to reside in Takien Thong tree (ironwood
tree) according Thai rural folklore, has visited him in his dream.

According to Mr. Preecha,
Lady Takien Thong told him that she had been drowned and suffering for many decades in a stream that
runs close to his village. She reportedly begged him to rescue her from the water, so when Mr.
Preecha woke up he told his relatives and neighbors about his dream.

The villagers hired a
medium to ?channel? with the spirit of Lady Takien Thong, and set out to investigate the Lam Huay
Sen stream which lay around 700 meter from the village. There, they said, they discovered a long,
large trunk of ironwood tree and two smaller pieces. The villagers made brief ritual asking for
permission from the spirit before hauling the trunks up from stream bed.

The trunks are now
placed at the village′s shrine to local spirits. The largest piece is measured at 9.14 meter long,
and the villagers say its bottom part looks like head of the Naga, the mythical dragon in Buddhist
cosmology. They named the trunk ?Mae (Mother) Rasmi? and prayed to it for good
luck.

Mr. Kien Boontua, chief of the village, said a necromancer has been hired for a
ceremony to hallow the magical tree trunk next week.

Apart from Lady Takien Thong, many Thais are also familiar with Lady
Tanee, believed to reside in banana trees, while boatmen and fishermen pray regularly to Lady
Yanang, the spirit tasked with protecting all ships and crafts. Tourists in Bangkok can easily spot
flowers placed at the helm of boats in Chao Praya River which are dedicated to Lady
Yanang.

Advertisement

Academics Agree With Call For Troop Withdrawal From Restive South

Mr. Hassan Toyib

(26 June) The Southern
insurgents? demand that the Thai authorities withdraw most of their troops from the Deep South as
pre-condition for peace dialogue has been met with mixed reactions. 

 
The demand was greeted with scorns from top
politicians and military commanders, but a number of academics and activists has concurred that
troop withdrawal would help pave way for mutual trust between the Thai authorities and the
insurgents. 

Previously, Mr. Hassan Toyib,
representative of the BRN Coordinate, believed to be the umbrella organization of various separatist
militants in the Deep South, has released his 4th statement concerning the peace dialogue in a video
on Youtube website. The translation of his speech was provided to Khaosod by Mr. Hara Shintaro, a
lecturer at Songkhla Nakarin University.


Among other demands, Mr. Toyib
called for soldiers from First, Second, and Third Area Army to be withdrawn from 3 Southern bordern
provinces and 5 districts in Songkhla province – the region Mr. Toyib termed collectively as Pattani.
 Mr. Toyib said the Fourth Area Army could remain in Pattani, but they were to be kept in their
barracks, away from local villages. 

The BRN representative also
demanded the police and the heavily armed Border Patrol Police to stay away from Pattani villages.
Mr. Toyib said the partial troop withdrawal is prerequisite for the dialogue between Siamese
Colonial Hunters and his organization.

Top officials almost immediately lashed at the
statement. Vice PM Chalerm Yoobamrung said that withdrawing soldiers from the Deep South is
unthinkable.

Why would we decrease the troops number? Even with so many soldiers in the
area, there are still many attacks. What part of the brain the BRN was using when they made the
demand? Mr. Chalerm was quoted as saying.

ACM Sukumpol Suwannatat, Minister of Defense, similarly
refused to consider the demands. He said the BRN was not being sincere in their call for troops
withdrawal, and expressed his disappointment that the BRN posted their demands on Youtube instead of
passing them to Thai officials via Malaysian government, the mediator in the peace dialogue.

They [the BRN] should be aware of who they are talking to. We are the Thai state. We operate
under Thai constitution. We already honor them a lot by loweing ourselves to engage in dialogues
with them in the first place, ACM Sukumpol said.

However, in interviews with Khaosod, many academics and activists based in the Deep South
expressed their agreement to the BRN′s offer.

One such figure is Mr. Srisompop
Chitpiromsri, director of the Deep South Watch Center at Pattani campus of Prince Songkla
University, said that the BRN′s demand is not too unreasonable as it does not call for total troop
withdrawal.

Mr. Srisompop argued that the issue of
troop pull-out has long been favored by local residents in Pattani province, and the BRN was simply
tapping into that desire. He believed that Fouth Area Army is capable maintaining security in the
Deep South on its own. Nonetheless, he acknowledged that troops withdrawal would be a long and
complicated process.


Ms. Subaidah
Dalah, director of Burapa Islamic School in Narathiwat province, said that local people, not only
the BRN, want to see the decrease of soldiers in the area. At least, she said, the troops should not
be deployed in so many places as is the case in current situation.

Even though the
soldiers might perform their duty well, the local populace would still feel intimidated by the
[overwhelming] presence of troops, she said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Sakee Pitakkumpol, a
fellow at Peace Studies Center in Had Yai campus of
Prince Songkla University, said in
an interview that he′s worried about extreme positions taken by both sides in the Deep South. He
urged Thai authorities and BRN to be open-minded and give opportunity to the middle ground. He
warned that total refusal to BRN′s demands might put an end to the peace dialogue.

Mr. Abdullahman Abdulsamad, chairman of Islamic
Committee of Five Border Provinces, said the BRN′s demands should be considered carefully by the
Thai authorities before they accept or reject them. He said the Thai government can take the
initiative to win trust by canceling the Emergency Decree imposed in the Deep South.

As
for the question of troop withdrawal, Mr. Abdullahman said the BRN should also give promise to the
Thai authorities that no violent incident would be committed by their militants once the Thai army
withdrew their troops.

I believe this insurgency will come to and end, but it will
take a long time because the problems have been here for a long time. It′s hard to image they will
be resolved within 1-2 years, he said. 

Advertisement

Abhisit Says He's Not Worried By 2010 Crackdown Criminal Charges

Mr. Abhisit Vejjajeeva and Mr. Suthep Thaugsuban at the Attorney General office.

BANGKOK — Former PM Abhisit Vejjajeeva visited the Attorney General office to acknowledge the criminal charges brought against him for authorizing the 2010 military operation on Redshirt protesters that caused more more than 90 fatalities.

The Division of Special Investigation (DSI) charged Mr. Abhisit and his deputy at the time, Mr. Suthep Thaugsuban, on the ground of conspiring to cause other individuals to commit murders.

Mr. Abhisit and Mr. Suthep chaired the Center for Resolution of Emergency Situation (CRES) in April-May 2010 which oversaw the crackdown of the Redshirts protesters who occupied parts of Bangkok to call for fresh election. CRES authorized use of live ammunition in many of these operations, which concluded on 19 May 2010.

The duo were also charged specifically on the cases of 2 individuals – one of them is a 13 year old boy – whom the court said were shot to death by the soldiers at Ratchapralop Road in May 2010. The DSI argued Mr. Abhisit and Mr. Suthep should be held responsible for their deaths as the soldiers were operating under orders of CRES.

Speaking to reporters at the Attorney General office, which situated in the compound of Ratchapisek Criminal Court compound, Mr. Suthep said he and Mr. Abhisit are ready to fight the legal procedure. He claimed that DSI has no legitimacy to pursue their charges, and added that he already filed challenge legal against the DSI.

Mr. Suthep complained that the charges are unfair, voicing his fear that any death or injury in the April-May 2010 violence would be attributed to the doing of him and Mr. Abhisit. Nonetheless, he said he has faith in Thai justice system and he is willing to face the legal procedure in order to prove his innocence.

"We won?t flee the country and instigate any chaotic protest to help us," Mr. Suthep said. He defended his role in CRES, insisting that he was merely following the laws to save the people from "terrorism" and arson attacks on the capital city – the terms he and his Democrat Party often adopt to describe the 2010 Redshirts protests.

Mr. Abhisit said he is not worried by the charges against him as he is confident in "truth" and the laws. He disputed both the accusation that he deliberately caused the deaths in the crackdown and the DSI′s evidences.

He repeated Mr. Suthep′s assertion that the DSI has no business in the cases against him, stating that the investigation should instead be conducted by the Office of National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC). 

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
overcast clouds
31.6 ° C
31.6 °
31.1 °
68 %
3.5kmh
93 %
Sat
35 °
Sun
36 °
Mon
33 °
Tue
35 °
Wed
32 °