Pubdate: Tue, 05 Oct 2004 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2004 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 Author: Yuwadee Tunyasiri Bhanravee Tansubhapol Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) KLONG TOEY TARGET OF NEW WAR ON DRUGS 'Brutal Measures' Vow Raises Rights Concerns The second war on drugs will focus on Klong Toey slum communities, which must be made free of drugs, Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said yesterday. Mr Thaksin opened the second six-month phase of Palang Phandin Ruam Kwadlang Yaseptid (the war on addictive drugs) yesterday at the Police Society in Bang Khen. He instructed the police to be serious in combating the drug trade, especially the transportation of cocaine by motorcycles. The new metropolitan police commissioner and anti-drug chief should launch at least one more crackdown on drugs in the Klong Toey area where there were always drugs and anti-drug volunteers must remain on guard. The prime minister wanted the Education Ministry and the city to sort out school students addicted to drugs or solvents and send them for rehabilitation so they would not grow up as drug dealers. "Now, I know drugs have gradually made a comeback though at a much different degree than before. Ketamine has been brought in via Cambodia where it is not considered a drug. "Ecstasy has been smuggled from Malaysia while cocaine has been flown in by Africans. But for heroin, Burma is very strict. Marijuana is now popular among Bangkok teenagers. It is not as dangerous as other kinds of drugs but it can directly lead to harmful ones," he said. Mr Thaksin also ordered agencies to protect school drop-outs and the unemployed from drugs by locating drug sources in all communities and villages and sending addicts for rehabilitation. "For drug rehabilitation and special training there will be no budget limits," he said. At the end of the meeting he signed the second war on drugs declaration and wrote down: "I will never let drugs destroy the future of our children." Opposition politicians, senators and human rights activists warned that the prime minister's promise of "brutal measures" against drug dealers would result in more people being killed. Mr Thaksin said on Sunday that all drug traffickers and dealers would be sent to "meet the guardian of hell". Thavorn Senniam, deputy secretary-general of the Democrat party and chairman of the House committee on justice and human rights, said people should prepare to once again hear Mr Thaksin's claims that dealers were being silenced by drug gangsters, not by government agencies _ as he had claimed so many times when the first drug war was launched in April last year. "The eye-for-an-eye policy, without compassion or humanitarian principle, means more people will be killed, just as those 2,500 people were killed in the first anti-drug war," Mr Thavorn said. The first war had succeeded in a certain level, but the drug situation later returned to normal. The war would not solve the drug problem permanently, even though thousands of drugs traffickers and dealers would be killed in the future. The people's willing participation was essential if the drug problem was to be eradicated. Senator Thongbai Thongpao said the prime minister's new anti-drugs war showed the government had failed to overcome the drugs problem. "The prime minister should not have said he will send drug traffickers and dealers to meet the guardian of hell," he said. "It seems that he is sending a clear message to encourage anyone to freely silence those suspected of being involved in drugs. Jaran Dittha-aphichai, a human rights commissioner, said the anti-drugs war was just another populist policy. The government was campaigning for votes in the February general election. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D