Pubdate: Thu, 06 Dec 2007 Source: Nation, The (Thailand) Copyright: 2007 Nation Multimedia Group Contact: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1963 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) PUT POLICE REFORM TOP OF THE AGENDA A Shake-Up Plan For Thailand's Law-Enforcement Body May Be This Govt's Only Chance To Leave A Lasting Legacy The interim Surayud government made known its intention to reform the Royal Thai Police shortly after it came to power last year. Making police reform a priority issue is consistent with the government's promise to clean up politics, strengthen the rule of law and reduce corruption. A national committee, comprising former police chiefs, criminal justice experts, academics and civil rights advocates, was set up in November last year to find ways to revamp the 200,000-strong national police force. Since its formation, the committee has produced a blueprint for police reform complete with plans to restructure the present cumbersome organisational set-up and to make the Royal Thai Police more accountable to the public. The committee's reform proposal has been widely debated at various public forums organised by members of civil society groups, who rightly consider themselves key stakeholders in this long-overdue reform effort. The proposal seeks to achieve ambitious goals - among them to decentralise the police command structure, create an effective mechanism to monitor and evaluate police performance, raise professional standards, upgrade working conditions and increase the current low level of remuneration to officers. The main idea behind the reforms is to de-politicise the police force and to eliminate the corruption that has long been widespread among the police rank and file. There is a consensus among the general public that our police force is in need of a thorough shake-up. The public perception of the police is far from flattering. In fact, the force is seen as one of the most corrupt among all government agencies. The police force has also been subject to manipulation by politicians. During his almost six years in power, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra used the police force to intimidate political opponents and critics. The ex-premier also used the entire force to commit wholesale human rights violations in connection with his notorious "war against drugs" in 2002. During that now infamous campaign, more than 2,500 suspected drug traffickers were killed under dubious circumstances. The police claimed that many of those who died either resisted arrest and were killed extrajudicially by law enforcement officials, or they were liquidated by fellow drug traffickers - the latter claim being the most widely used to expla! in the large number of deaths. Little has been done by the Surayud government to shed light on this dark episode of police brutality. Few, if any, of the police officers and other law enforcement officials suspected of abusing their authority have been investigated. The way things stand, how the Surayud government proposes to implement reform is as important as setting lofty goals, if not more so. After all, the police force continues to be plagued by ingrained corruption. Without a serious attempt to weed out and punish corrupt officers, any move to reform the police force will not go far - and is probably doomed to complete failure. The government, which came to power after the military toppled the corruption-prone Thaksin government in September last year, has a unique opportunity to rid corrupt elements from the police force. But apparently this opportunity has already been missed. With less than one month to go before it hands over power to the democratically elected government that will emerge from the December 23 election, the least this government can do is to put in place a master plan for drastic reform of the police. Concrete measures must be implemented under a specific time frame so that the next government can take over and implemented these without too much fuss. Police reform is one of the things that should not be left unfinished by the interim government. If previous attempts at police reform over the decades are any guide, civilian governments cannot be trusted to implement change in a straightforward manner. This is partly due to the lack of public pressure that would otherwise stiffen a civilian government's resolve to vigorously push for much-needed change in the way the police force does its job. The government and the National Legislative Assembly owe it to the Thai public to bring about meaningful police reform before they leave office. If there are to be any positive, lasting legacies that this administration can justly claim credit for in the future, police reform might be one of them. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom