Pubdate: Tue, 8 Jun 2004 Source: Nation, The (Thailand) Copyright: 2004 Nation Multimedia Group Contact: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1963 Author: Pravit Rojanaphruk RIGHTS VIOLATIONS 'CANNOT BE DENIED' Human-rights violations, especially torture and abductions, have become so frequent in Thailand that the government and society can no longer deny their existence, a speaker from a regional rights organisation said at the weekend. Nick Cheesman of the Hong Kong-based Asian Legal Resource Centre said the public has for too long failed to acknowledge violations such as the abduction of people in the deep South and the torture of prisoners in police custody. Thailand's human-rights re-cord, he said, has never been as sound as some local activists would like. "There has been a general denial of serious rights violations, even by people who work in the civil service, [but now] there's no way that these violations can be denied," said Cheesman. He was referring to alleged police torture of people accused of being involved with violence in the South, the disappearance of Muslim rights lawyer Somchai Neehlapaichit, the storming of the Krue Se Mosque and the government's war on drugs. Cheesman said the general public's feeling that people connected to the drug trade deserved to be shot dead in the street will have a detrimental effect on the judicial process and society as a whole. He said he was most concerned about the attitude that only the innocent deserve justice. Cheesman told The Nation that such attitudes and the culture of "official impunity" led to heavy-handedness in dealing with problems in the South. Although the arrest of five police officers in connection with Somchai's disappearance was an indication that Thailand is more progressive than some of its neighbours, "It was a great setback that, subsequent to the arrest, the charges don't fully account for what happened to Khun Somchai," he said. "It's clear that there were [higher ranking] people who were behind it and no progress has been made. This is very disappointing." Cheesman said hundreds of villagers have disappeared in the deep South in recent years, each deserving as much attention as Somchai. He said he didn't want to simply blame Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, because "the conditions must exist to allow a government to behave in a certain way". He added, however, that Thaksin is trying to give orders as if he were an executive president, while at the same time there is no mechanism in place to counterbalance his strength. "So it points to a systematic problem," Cheesman said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake