Much of the news you read in The ReconsiDer Tidbits concerns
the movement of nations around the world toward a more rational drug policy.
There are a few countries, however, that follow the U.S. lead in fighting a
war on drugs.Sweeden, forinstance, permits the arrest of a citizen if a police
officer simply suspects he may be intoxicated. The most egregious example of
drug prohibition at work these days must surely be Thailand where some 1500
alleged drug dealers have been sumarily executed in the last two
months, without trial, apparently by police officers thinly disguised as other
dealers. The reaction of the Interior Minister? "Who cares? They are
destroying our country." I think it's a safe bet to say that the real
damage is being done to the country of Thailand's reputation as a
civilized state and that their measures will not eliminate their drug
problem.
LIVES, BLOOD THE MEASURING STICK OF
THAILAND'S DRUG WAR
BANGKOK - Thanom Monta and his wife, Kwanla Puangchompu,
learned they were on a government blacklist of suspected drug dealers when they
received a
letter ordering them to report to police.
On Feb. 26, they
rode their motorbike to a police station in the central city of Phetchabun. They
were allowed to leave at 3 p.m., but before they had driven two miles, a car
pulled alongside them and men inside opened fire. Both Thanom, 53, and Kwanla,
40, were killed.
With their deaths, the couple became part of Thailand's
grisly success in its new war against drugs.
Officials report that at
least 1,498 people have died since Feb. 1, when Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra declared an all-out campaign against drug
trafficking. Authorities
say there are only three ways to get off the lists of drug dealers: get
arrested, turn informant, or die.
Police acknowledge killing 31 suspected
traffickers in self-defense but say the others were slain by drug lords seeking
to silence potential informers.
"In this war, drug dealers must die," the
prime minister said. "But we don't kill them. It's a matter of the bad guys
killing the bad guys."
Interior Minister Wan Mohammed Noor Matha warned
that drug dealers would "be put behind bars or even vanish without a trace," and
added: "Who cares?
They are destroying our country."
The slaying of
suspected traffickers has broad public support in a nation fed up with an
epidemic of drug abuse. But the killing spree has alarmed human rights
advocates, who fear that the biggest casualty will be Thailand's rule of
law.
Some rights activists say that police have organized death squads to
kill traffickers and are covering up evidence of official involvement. They also
charge that corrupt officers involved in the narcotics trade are colluding with
drug lords to slay those who might betray them. There have been several cases,
like the deaths in Phetchabun, in which suspects have been killed in broad
daylight minutes after leaving a police station, activists say.
"In many
provinces, there are death squads roaming around killing drug dealers," said
Somchai Homlaor, secretary general of the human rights group Forum Asia. "The
rule of law and democracy could disappear overnight."
One victim of the
war was 9-year-old Chakraphan Srisa-ard. He was riding with his parents in a car
in Bangkok on Feb. 23 when his father, Sataporn Srisa-ard, allegedly stopped to
make a drug deal. Police say Sataporn tried to sell amphetamines to an
undercover officer and was taken into custody.
When the boy's mother,
Pornwipa Kerdrungruang, realized what was happening, she slipped behind the
wheel and drove off. Police fired at the Honda, and the boy was hit twice. His
mother ran from the car and escaped.
Police initially admitted shooting
at the vehicle. Later, they blamed Chakraphan's death on his father's "guards,"
who police claim showed up moments after the arrest and shot at the car. Three
police officers turned in guns for ballistics testing by their department's
laboratory. No match to the bullets was found.
Many victims' families
have been reluctant to complain publicly about the deaths of their loved ones,
but Chakraphan's killing triggered widespread criticism of the drug
war.
Jaran Pakdithanakul, secretary to the president of Thailand's
supreme court, warned that summary executions by police were destroying the
judicial system. He called the official account of the boy's killing
"unbelievable" and said the nation must stop its "bloodthirsty police
officers."
Some human rights activists fear a return to the ways of the
military dictatorship that ruled Thailand from 1957 to 1973 and employed death
squads to eliminate opponents.
Thaksin, a former police officer who
became one of the country's wealthiest businessmen before being elected prime
minister in 2001, prefers to cast himself as the nation's chief executive,
bringing corporate standards to the running of government. At a recent Cabinet
meeting, he recommended two books for his ministers to read on methods of
business organization.
For the war on drugs, he has set quotas and
deadlines for provincial governors and police chiefs to clear names from the
blacklists. He has threatened to fire those who don't meet the quota, a move
that critics say has prompted some officials to resort to illegal means to save
their jobs.
"The government's strategy is to smoke out pushers, who will
be eliminated by their own kind," Thaksin said. "I don't understand why some
people are so concerned about them while neglecting to care for the future of 1
million children who are being lured into becoming drug
users."
Authorities say the country is suffering from an epidemic of
methamphetamines known by the name "yaa baa," or crazy pills. Thaksin said that
3 million people - 5 percent of the country's population - use the drug, making
Thailand the world's largest per-capita consumer of methamphetamines.
The
little orange pills bearing the letters WY initially provide a sense of energy
and well-being, but after prolonged use become debilitating. About
80 percent
of the yaa baa sold in Thailand is made in neigboring Burma, whose rulers know
it as Myanmar, one of the major drug-producing nations.
The rest is made in
Thailand. The WY pills are exported around the world and have turned up in the
United States, Europe, Japan, and Australia.
Thailand's narcotics agency
has long kept a secret blacklist with the names of 25,000 suspected drug
dealers. Two weeks before the drug war began,
police officials and village
chiefs hurriedly put together a second list with the names of 45,000 suspected
traffickers, including some on the earlier roll. Together the two cover 55,000
people.
Authorities have no obligation to notify suspects that their
names are on the lists, and there is no appeals process for suspects to contest
their inclusion.
Since the campaign began, authorities say they have
arrested about 30,000 drug suspects, but few of them are major drug lords or
accused of involvement in the nearly 1,500 deaths.
Dr. Pornthip
Rojanasunand, acting director of the government's Forensic Science Institute,
said she presented evidence to the prime minister's office early this month
showing that police were behind some of the killings. His office declined to
investigate, she said.
The flamboyant coroner, who is known for her spiky
red hair and independence, earlier accused police of torturing and killing
suspects. She is regarded as the country's top forensic pathologist. However,
since Feb. 1 police have stopped calling her to murder scenes, she said, instead
summoning doctors with no forensic experience.
"The police don't want me
to find their lies," she said.
The killing of Thanom and Kwanla in
Phetchabun might have received little notice except that their son, Suwit
Baison, works as a cameraman at a Bangkok television station. The day after
their deaths, he stopped Thaksin at a media event, knelt in front of him, and
presented a petition seeking an investigation.
"I am afraid the culprit
won't ever be caught, so I ask for justice from your excellency," Suwit told
Thaksin.
The prime minister ordered police to investigate. So far, they
say there are no leads in the killings.
Local authorities say Thanom and
Kwanla had been arrested in the past for drug use, although it is unclear
whether either was suspected of selling drugs.
"My mother just wanted to
prove my father's innocence, and they ended up dead," Suwit said in an
interview. "It's very
cruel."
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