Pubdate: Fri, 07 Nov 2003 Source: Vanguard (Nigeria) Copyright: 2003 Vanguard. Contact: http://www.vanguardngr.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2890 AMNESTY SLAMS THAILAND FOR DRUG WAR KILLINGS BANGKOK -- THE Thai government appears to have condoned the killings of more than 2,000 suspected drug dealers as a way to win its war on drugs, Amnesty International said on Wednesday. It said Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's government had failed to bring anyone to justice for the killings, despite its promises to investigate the deaths of 2,245 people, most of them killed by "unknown assailants" during a bloody 90-day campaign. Thaksin has consistently denied police were guilty of extrajudicial killings. His government says 2,194 of the deaths were the result of drug traffickers killing one another. The rest were killed in shootouts with police. "The government has failed to initiate independent, impartial, effective and prompt investigations into these killings," the group said in a 30-page report on alleged rights abuses in the Southeast Asian country. "The Thai government appeared to condone killing of drug suspects by unknown assailants as one method of fighting the drugs war," it said. "The lack of political will has been exacerbated by the weak criminal justice system in Thailand, which is open to corruption, undermined by undue delays and a lack of investigative skills on the part of law enforcement officials," the report said. Tapping into voter discontent over the country's worsening drug problem, Thaksin swept to power in 2001 elections promising to crackdown on drug peddlers. Thaksin, a former policeman, wants the country drug free by December 5 as a birthday gift to King Bhumibol Adulyadej. Rights groups say most of the deaths were extrajudicial killings by police and security forces, in some cases under pressure to clear so-called blacklists of suspected drug dealers and users in their areas. Police used the lists, usually drawn up by local officials, to summon people for questioning. In some cases cited by Amnesty, suspects were killed soon after returing home from a police station. Amnesty said that on February 20, Somjit Kuanyuyen learned she was on a blacklist and reported to her local police station in Ban Lam District. After signing a paper and being told by police she was safe, Somjit returned home. "Four unidentified men in a one-tonne pickup truck with darkened windows drove up to her house and shot her seven times in front of her seven-year-old granddaughter and her seven-months pregnant daughter," Amnesty said. Police questioned a relative of Somjit, but Amnesty said a thorough investigation was still pending. Somchai Homlaor, a member of the Law Society of Thailand which has investigated 18 unsolved killings so far, said most witnesses or relatives were too frightened to file a complaint. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin