Pubdate: Tue, 08 Apr 2003
Source: International Herald-Tribune (France)
Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2003
Contact:  http://www.iht.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/212
Author: Seth Mydans, The New York Times

THAIS BLAME POLICE FOR DEADLY WAR ON DRUGS

BANGKOK An extraordinary campaign of government-approved killings is under 
way in Thailand - a crackdown on drug dealers that has taken as many as 
2,000 lives over the past two months, an average of 30 a day.

The death toll - equal to that of the carnage in East Timor in 1999 - has 
drawn outrage from local and foreign human rights groups. It seems 
particularly shocking in a country where democracy has replaced the coups 
and strongman rule of past decades.

 From the start, the police have disavowed most of the killings, saying 
they are the work of drug dealers trying to silence informers. Few people 
here accept that explanation. A variety of other government statements and 
independent monitoring make it clear that the police are carrying out 
widespread summary executions.

In rural areas and city slums, residents say they now stay indoors at night 
for fear of what have become known as "silent killings." The most dangerous 
thing, they say, is to answer a police summons to respond to an accusation 
of drug dealing. "Most of them got killed on the way back from the police 
office," said Sunai Phasuk, a member of an independent human rights group, 
ForumAsia. "People found their name on a blacklist, went to the police, 
then end up dead."

The Interior Ministry says its lists include 41,914 people around the 
country who are "targets for monitoring." According to the police, there 
are rarely any witnesses to the killings. Bodies are often removed without 
autopsies. Often, they are found with plastic bags of drugs placed neatly 
by their side. Few homicide arrests have been made.

The official death toll of 2,052, announced by a police spokesman last 
week, is believed to include a number of other killings carried out under 
cover of the narcotics crackdown.

When it began at the start of February, the crackdown, ordered by Prime 
Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, had broad public backing. Methampheta-mines, 
trafficked from Burma over the old opium routes through the Golden 
Triangle, are ravaging all sectors of society, from laborers to bankers, 
young and old.

But the campaign has become less popular as it has taken innocent lives, 
and the shooting death of a 9-year-old boy just over a month ago jolted the 
public into outrage.

The campaign has also drawn criticism from the United Nations as well as 
from human rights groups. Initially, the prime minister said he would rid 
Thailand of illicit drugs within three months. Now he says it will take 
until the end of year.

"The scale of these killings is absolutely appalling," said Mike 
Jendrzejczyk, the Washington director for Asia for Human Rights Watch. 
"Thailand's image as a place where the rule of law is respected is clearly 
under assault."

He added: "I think the United States should suspend all assistance to the 
Thai police until there can be a credible, independent investigation into 
the killings and the United States takes steps to ensure it is not directly 
or indirectly complicit in them."

Thaksin has brushed aside the criticism, saying, "The United Nations is not 
my father." He added sarcastically: "Opponents can gather signatures to 
back their call for the government to let the drug dealers live happily. 
Why care about our children?"

The government says 700 million methamphetamine pills are smuggled from 
Burma every year, most of them for use in Thailand. It says 3 million 
people use the drug - which is known here as yaa baa, or "crazy medicine" - 
including 300,000 people who are addicted, in a population of 63 million.

Officials say dozens of organized crime groups run the drug trade, 
protected by or run by powerful civilian and military figures. Critics note 
that the current campaign targeting low-level dealers and traffickers 
leaves these organizations intact.

Initial surveys by an independent polling company showed that 90 percent of 
the public supported the crackdown, even though 40 percent of those polled 
said they were afraid of being falsely accused, and 30 percent said they 
were afraid of being killed.

Then, just over a month ago, three undercover policemen firing at a getaway 
car killed the 9-year-old boy, Chakraphan Srisa-ard, with two bullets in 
the back. The police had just arrested his father for trying to sell them 
6,000 pills, and his mother was fleeing for her life with the boy in the 
back seat. The killing drew the biggest headlines since the start of the 
crackdown, and the boy's funeral was widely publicized.

"The war on drugs is getting more violent every day," one of his uncles, 
Chlaermpol Kerdrungruang, said. "The police kept shooting and shooting at 
the car. They wanted them to die."

As public opinion began to turn, officials stopped issuing regular reports 
of the death toll, and the government appointed a commission to investigate 
complaints of summary killings.

Last week, however, Deputy Attorney General Praphan Naiyakowit, who runs 
the investigation, said the police had failed to produce any of the reports 
he had requested.

The killings appear to have continued, though possibly at a somewhat lower 
rate. A police spokesman, Pongsapat Pongchaeroen, gave the latest death 
toll last week, adding that the police had made 46,776 drug arrests, had 
seized 12.51 million methamphetamine pills and had confiscated $14.94 
million in property belonging to suspected traffickers.

As with earlier reports, he insisted that most of the victims had been 
killed by fellow drug dealers. Just 46 had been killed by the police, he 
said, and all of those killings had been in self-defense. He said that six 
police officers had been killed and 15 wounded.
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