Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jul 2004 Source: Nation, The (Thailand) Copyright: 2004 Nation Multimedia Group Contact: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1963 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) HUMAN RIGHTS TAKE THE BACK SEAT The Government Continues To Flout The Civil Rights Of The People The most unsettling thing about the controversial drug raid earlier this week, during which police officers fired some 200 bullets into a house of apparently defenceless people, is that it could have been one rare "lucky" incident in the Thaksin government's war on drugs. For all its horrific implications, at least nobody died, although the amount of firepower involved suggests it could have easily have been a major tragedy. Newspapers reported the raid as if it was the first incident of its kind, a result of low-ranking officers' jumpy imprudence, but we are left with a chilling question: Is it? The death toll in the government's war on drugs is around 3,000. We can either buy the authorities' claims that all of them were proven criminals, or we can wonder whether the Thai police, who would open fire on a large house without hesitation, have managed to treat suspected villagers running scared in isolated woods or huddled in their huts with any sort of respect for their rights. Should we assume that the officers who raided the house in Ayutthaya's Bang Sai district panicked when one or two shots were fired by those inside, in the middle of the night? Or should we suspect that the hail of bullets from the law-enforcement officers is something far beyond an error of judgement? Some may sit back and consider this a small blip in the government's "sincere" and "serious" efforts to combat narcotics. Others may see an unchanged mentality at the highest level that, despite warnings from local activists, the international community and His Majesty the King, still trivialises civil rights and liberty. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra's reaction was deplorable yet nonetheless expected. It was, again, about overzealous officers making an "honest mistake". The search was conducted with a search warrant, he said, adding that he had heard that there had been resistance to arrest. The state's excuse would surely grow louder if the suspects the police were after were later proved to be major drug dealers. The crime would be used to justify the raid and blur the human-rights issue it has stirred up. Police said they had fired because the occupants shot at them first following an announcement that a search of the property would be conducted. But the occupants insisted they had not heard an announcement and fired several rounds from a pistol thinking the people outside were burglars. After 20 minutes of gunfire, police raided the house but banned reporters from going inside. A bullet-ridden refrigerator was taken away by the officers. No drugs or narcotics-making equipment were found. Already statements from the authorities and Thaksin have suggested that the police were going after the right man. This, however, only serves to compound the government's confused idea of justice, particularly when our leader asks for receipts and sympathy whenever it comes to scandals involving his businesses or anyone close to him. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin