Rights Groups Urge Probe of Thai Carnage
Muslim
detainees were treated inhumanely
BANGKOK, October
27 International rights groups, world capitals and politicians demanded
October 27, that an inquiry into the deaths of 84 Muslim protestors
in police custody be rigorous and independent.
Rights groups also
decried the unapologetically aggressive and belligerent approach taken
by Thai security forces in dealing with Muslims of southern Thailand,
amid mounting criticism of Thailand's human rights record.
The carnage, meanwhile,
threatened a Muslim revolt against Bangkok, in light of repeated blood-letting
of Muslim blood in the south.
London-based Amnesty
International, for its part, called for an independent inquiry saying
there was a disturbing pattern of Thai security forces using excessive
force against Muslims in the south.
The human watch
group said allegations that authorities may have used excessive force
in suppressing the demonstration must be immediately investigated.
In a statement faxed
to Malaysian news agency Bernama, Amnesty International Deputy Asia
Director Natalie Hill said all deaths related to the incident, including
that of at least 78 persons who suffocated after being transported in
inhumane conditions after the arrest, must be promptly, effectively
and independently investigated.
Those suspected
of responsibility should be suspended from duty pending the result of
legal proceedings and brought to justice, she said.
Some 1,300 detainees
were left piled on top of each other in trucks for at least six hours
after the demonstration was broken up, leaving 78 dead, mainly from
suffocation but also several with broken necks.
Inquiry
Thai forces are accused of using inhumane force against Muslims in the
south. Stopping short of apologising for the carnage, Thai Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra announced an inquiry into the deaths, but it was
not clear who would sit on the panel or how it would be run.
It's most important
there are very thorough, independent judicial and legislative inquiries,
said Nick Cheesman, project officer of the Hong Kong-based Asian Human
Rights Commission (AHRC), according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Rights activists
have accused Thaksin's government of abuses over the last two years
including a war on drugs that left more than 2,500 people dead, a raid
on a mosque in April that killed 32 lightly armed rebels and other hard-line
tactics in the south.
The AHRC called
Monday's deaths at Tak Bai in Thailand's Muslim-majority Narathiwat
province most disturbing and utterly inexcusable .
Their deaths speak
to the total absence of professional behavior and rudimentary respect
for human lives on the part of those leading and carrying out this operation,
it said.
Not only the south,
but the whole country must now face the bloody consequences of an unapologetically
aggressive and belligerent approach to legitimate human rights concerns
held by growing numbers of people there.
Explanation
Thai senator Kaewsan Atipho demanded a thorough explanation from the
government as to why dozens of Thai men died in transport from Tak Bai.
If the fact was
that people had their hands tied behind their backs and were piled into
trucks it was the fault of the government, and the government has to
give their families justice, he said.
He also called on
authorities to immediately release the remaining 1,200 detainees or
give them lawyers and allow them to meet relatives if charges would
be pressed against them. They can be held for up to seven days under
martial law.
Premier
Under Fire
A defiant Thaksin stopped short of offering Muslims an apology
Thailand's human
rights commission was to send its own four-person fact-finding mission
to Narathiwat this week and submit a letter of complaint Wednesday to
Thaksin.
In its letter, the
commission rapped Thaksin, saying the use of force was excessive, and
someone should be held responsible, commissioner Saneh Jamarik told
reporters.
In a blunt assessment,
he laid the blame for the southern unrest, which has now left at least
414 people dead this year, squarely on Thaksin's government.
We have analyzed
and found that the key problem is government policy. We have proposed
advice in previous letters but the government was not interested in
our opinions, Saneh said.
He ranked the incident
on a par with the brutal April 28 raid on the Krue Se mosque in Pattani
province when security forces shot dead 32 lightly armed suspected Muslim
militants. A fact-finding commission concluded that troops were too
heavy-handed when they stormed the mosque on a day when 108 militants
and five security forces were killed in the south. The army commander
who ordered the mosque assault, General Pallop Pinmanee, resigned over
the controversial raid, but Thaksin stopped short of acknowledging any
wrongdoing by Pallop.
Muslims
Fury
Meanwhile, the main Islamic political party in neighboring Malaysia
called the deaths a real massacre , warning it could lead to an Islamic
uprising in southern Thailand.
This is tragic and
a real massacre of a group of people who are just peacefully demonstrating
and this will have a great effect on the feelings of southern Thai people,
Muhammad Hatta, chairman of the external affairs committee of the Parti
Islam se-Malaysia (PAS), was quoted by Al-Jazeera.net Web Site as saying.
This latest issue
will create more instability and dissatisfaction and we are very worried
that people will rise against the government.
Furthermore, a Thai
Muslim group threatened of taking the fight to Bangkok to avenge the
Monday deaths.
Their capital will
be burned down in the same way the Pattani capital has been burned,
the Pattani United Liberation Organisation (PULO) said in a statement
posted on its Web site.
Source:
IslamOnline.net & News Agencies.