Pubdate: Sun, 14 Sep 2008
Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand)
Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2008
Contact:  http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39
Author: Thongbai Thongpao

IS THAILAND'S HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD ANYTHING TO  CELEBRATE?

On Dec 10 this year, the Office of the United Nations  High
Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCR) will  celebrate the 60th
anniversary of the Universal  Declaration of Human rights.

On that day in 1948, all member countries convened in  Paris to
endorse the fundamental rights of all human  beings regardless of
gender, race, colour or religion.

Thailand ratified the declaration right from the start.  We are now
party to five major international  human-rights instruments: the
International Covenant on  Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the
International  Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the
International Convention on the Elimination of All  Forms of Racial
Discrimination, the Convention on the  Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against  Women and the Convention on the Rights of the
Child.

Bound by the commitments under these treaties, we have  continually
amended laws that violate them.

They are taken into consideration when a new  constitution is
drafted.

All organic laws are also amended to comply with these
conventions.

Punishments under the civil and penal codes have also  been reviewed
regularly to ensure full compliance.

 From the legal perspective, it can be said that  Thailand has
seriously promoted and upheld human  rights.

The 1997 constitution also created a National Human  Rights Commission
(NHRC).

The body has since played a key role in promoting and  protecting
human rights, investigating alleged  violations, setting up and
endorsing related  organisations and networks, and recognising the
promoters of human rights.

To celebrate the diamond anniversary, the local  representatives of
the UNHCR, in collaboration with the  NHRC and local academics and
human rights advocates,  will present a publication on the human
rights  situation in Thailand. Since it is intended to  celebrate an
auspicious occasion, it is speculated that  the book will focus on
progress rather than violations.

I have had a chance to read many of the investigation  reports on
human rights cases in Thailand, and I wonder  whether any of them will
ever make it to the  publication.

Over the years, thousands of victims have sought help  from the NHRC,
which investigated into their cases and,  as a rule, came up with a
toned-down conclusion.

A blunter verdict would be that in many of these cases,  the police
are the major offenders.

This is especially true of Thailand's so-called war on  drugs, which
began in 2003. At that time the police  were told to fill their
"arrest quotas" or faced  transfers. Three months into the
operation, at least  2,000 people were killed at the hands of police,
prompting the UNHCR to send a representative to  Thailand on an urgent
mission.

For its part, the NHRC has proposed that the  government, police force
and individual police officers  should compensate relatives of the
victims, a call that  has to date fallen on deaf ears.

In one case, a young couple in Nakhon Ratchasima won  the top prize in
the government lottery, worth millions  of baht. They bought a new
house that doubled as a  small grocery shop in their village, along
with a  pickup truck to deliver goods. They would be leading a  happy
life running their small business today had  police from Khon Buri
district not suspected them of  being "unusually rich".

The police sought search warrants, but could not find  anything amiss
in the couple's house. But before they  could produce any evidence of
how they came upon their  money, the couple were shot dead. The cash
they carried  to buy goods on that day was seized and 17 amphetamine
pills were found on the seat of their pickup.

The official police investigation failed to name the  killers, but
said the couple were suspected of  involvement with drugs - a standard
conclusion drawn on  all "unsolved" cases in those days.

Although common sense tells us a drug trafficker should  not be so
stupid as to leave drugs on the seat of his  vehicle, the police
seized all the couple's assets.

After probing into the case, the NHRC proposed that the  police pay
compensation to the relatives, but this has  been ignored.

In another case in Phetchabun, a former army sergeant's  purchase of a
big house with a swimming pool drew the  attention of police, who
suspected him of trafficking  drugs.

They had no evidence against him apart from the fact he  shared the
same family name as one of their drug  suspects. The sergeant was
later killed mysteriously on  his way home from jogging and the case
was closed. Such  cases are unlikely to be included in the 60th
anniversary book to celebrate Thailand's  accomplishments in the field
of human rights.
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