Archive for the 'The Times' Category

Memorial for DJ who ‘needlessly’ drowned in Thailand

Memorial for drowned DJ  June 16 2009
From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok,

Link to Surrey Advertiser
Friends and relatives are to host a memorial party to a 21-yr-old DJ from Surrey,  who,  they say,  needlessly drowned in Thailand after authorities in the holiday island of Phuket cut down on beach safety procedures.
James Patton (Facebook)Last week James Patton, 21, from Beacon Hill, Hindhead, was the third tourist to drown in two days on Karon Beach on the Thai holiday island.  It was the last day of his holiday.
Like the other tourists he was dragged out to sea by the undertow.  Several hundred tourists watched the spectacle. His girlfriend Bethan Jones, also 21, was saved by British tourists.
One of the witnesses, Briton Sian Mulley said: “The police did nothing, and the life guards wouldn’t even go in, they tossed a board at my brother to use instead.  My brother is in bits that he couldn’t do more and he is so angry that the lifeguards and authorities were useless.”
Patton’s family have set up a Facebook site to warn tourists of the dangers of swimming in Phuket during the rainy season.
Last week local authorities admitted that they had not as usual employed teams to warn tourists not to enter the water due to shortage of funds and volunteers.
Although the sun may shine and the sea look calm rip tides in Phuket during the rainy season are notoriously ferocious.
The memorial party will be held at the Woodcock Pub, Churt Road, Beacon Hill on July 3rd.

Link http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=205123015113&ref=share

Sex game riddle of ‘Kill Bill’ star found dead in hotel cupboard- Bangkok

Sex game riddle over ‘Kill Bill’ star found dead in Bangkok cupboard.
From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok. June 4 2009

Link to Daily Express

Link to the SUN

Hollywood Actor David Carradine  was found dead in a Bangkok hotel today  amid suggestions that he killed himself accidently during an attempt at auto-eroticism.
The 72-yr-old actor and lead in ‘Kill Bill’ was found dead in a hotel in Bangkok famous for its shrine dedicated to phallic power.  The body of Carradine who rose to fame as ‘Grasshopper’ in the series ‘Kung Fu ‘ was found by a chambermaid.
Police in Lumpini Bangkok said Carradine’s naked body was found hanging  in a closet in room  352 of the Nai Lert Park Hotel, Bangkok.  ‘A rope was attached to his neck and also to his genitals,” said an officer in the case.
The rope used was the rope to draw the rooms curtains.
Police initially said they they believed Carradine had committed suicide. There was no suicide note. But later they amended their reaction to saying: “It looks like suicide.”
Police estimated his time of death at between 11 pm on Wednesday and 1 am Thursday morning.  When police were contacted again a police spokesman said could neither confirm or deny the suggestion that the Hollywood star may have been involved in an act of auto-eroticism.
“We have nothing to add at this stage that apart from the fact that we do not believe anybody else was involved in his death. There is no investigation although a post mortem will be carried out.”
The BBC also reported Thai police as saying: that the 72-year-old was found by a hotel maid sitting in a wardrobe “with a cord around his neck and other parts of his body”.
His manager Chuck Bender described the news as shocking: “He was always full of life, always wanting to work- a great person.”
Carradine in Thailand to film a movie called ‘Stretch’ had failed to attend a dinner the night before with members of the production crew.
The Nail Lert Park hotel, next to the British Embassy in Bangkok is famous for its penis shrine, a tribute to penis power.  The shrine is associated with fertility and visitors make offerings to the female Spirit of Tubtim who hovers around a nearby canal. 
The offerings come in the form of phalluses in all shapes and sizes.
In November 1997 INXS star Michael Hutchence was found dead in a hotel in Sydney. The coroner returned a verdict of suicide, but because of the lack of suicide note or history of depression  he was widely believed, even by members of his own family,  to have died attempting an act of autoerotic asphyxiation.

Reason for edit: Punctuation error noted by Bob Smith

British prisoner in the frame for Orobator jail pregnancy

Pregnant prisoner: quiz to find father
Andrew Drummond

Link to Evening Standard

Link to Daily Mail

Link to The SUN

Samantha Orobator

Samantha Orobator

Prisoners in a notorious jail in Laos are to be quizzed over their relationship with a pregnant British woman accused of drug smuggling as it emerged that a fellow British prisoner could be the father.

The trial of Samantha Orobator, from south London, will be delayed until the father is identified, it emerged today.

Orobator denied this week, via her mother Jane Orobator, that she was raped or had sex with a prison guard. But Lao authorities said they would investigate her pregnancy, claiming she had lied to them about it.

And they will be quizzing other prisoners, including one Briton serving a life sentence for drugs trafficking.

Lao officials claim there is no association between male and female prisoners at Phongthong Prison in Laos. But a flimsy mesh is all that separates the woman from the men in the “medieval” jail, where stocks are still used as a punishment.

Police Lt.Col. Khamphonh Sihaphancha, drug control department director of the Ministry of Public Security, said: “Everything will be postponed until everything is made clear. We will solve this case as soon as possible.”

He claimed that 20-year-old Orobator had lied to the authorities by saying she was sick and pregnant by a boyfriend in England last September.

When authorities took for her checks in March she was found to be pregnant; on April 4th was found to be 17 weeks pregnant.

Ms Orobator, 20, from Camberwell, was arrested at Wattay International Airport in Vientiane on August 5, 2008, on her way to Sydney , Australia, allegedly with 680 grammes of heroin, contained in 68 capsules, hidden in different parts of her body.

The “prime suspect” in the hunt for the child’s father is a Briton, John Albert Watson, 47, from Halifax, West Yorkshire, serving a life sentence for trafficking in methamphetamines.

John Watson on the Foreign Prisoners Support Service website

John Watson on the Foreign Prisoners Support Service website

John Watson is reported by other inmates as being the prisoner closest to Samantha after she was admitted to the prison last August.

Our challenge is to continue our search into the matter,” Lt. Col. Khamphonh said.

The Evening Standard has spoken exclusively to John Watson in Phonthong Prison. He has categorically denied the charge. “It’s impossible. How could I get to her. It must be an immaculate conception,” he said.

Mesh fence separating male and female prisoners in Phonthong

Mesh fence separating male and female prisoners in Phonthong

He said he could not understand an alleged statement by his mother back home that she was looking forward to being a grand-mother again. Pat Watson reportedly said John was ecstatic over the news.  The couple had been freely allowed to associate during the day in Phonthong Prison.

John Watson, has two children by a previous girlfriend. But they have been estranged since his arrest nearly four years ago, also at Wattay airport.

Laos authorities appear to have not totally ruled out the fact that she could have impregnated herself with another man’s sperm. She had had a syringe amongst her personal possessions.

When Laos authorities carry out investigations in Phonthong Prison, they usually get results. But in any event if they do not get a confession they will probably hold her in Laos until they get an answer, even though the authorities have agreed to send he back to Britain to serve her sentence if convicted, which appears to be a foregone conclusion.

Once the baby is born they can just conduct tests. For the father they believe is captive.

Thaksin’s ‘red army’ capitulates in Thailand

 Link to Evening Standard    Link to Evening Times

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok

A leader of the red-shirted army of embittered Thai ex-Premier Thaksin Shinawatra today announced an end to the protest which brought holiday chaos to the Thai capital.

With the red-shirted army in complete disarray in Bangkok today and cornered around government house, Veera Musikapong, one of its five leaders announced: “The protest is over”.

He added: “But that does not mean we have surrendered.  We do not want any more of our supporters injured.”

Buses were laid on by the government to take the protesters home. Musikapong urged supporters to head for the northern bus terminal and be careful.  

Then together with other protest leaders he surrendered himself to Police Commissioner-General Pol Gen Phatcharawat Wongsuwan, Thailand’s police chief.

With the exception of Thaksin Shinawatra all the leaders were all in the bag.

The announcement came after the number of supporters of the so-called ‘Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorshop’ which last week topped 100,000 had dwindled to just two or three thousand.

Overnight they had disappeared in droves. Many looked anxious as they left the barricades, abandoning their red shirts, hats and scarves.

As thousands began their return  to the North Eastern provinces, the current Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, a school chum of Boris Johnson, can claim a major political victory.

Almost miraculously there have been only two deaths in two days of fighting in the streets of Bangkok, and neither of them was inflicted by government forces.

The two fatalities came when red-shirts clashed with market traders at the city’s Nang Lerng market.  And one of them a 53-yr-old man was shot dead by a Thaksin supporter.

Overnight two soldiers were also injured in drive-by gun attacks.

Today is a black day for Thaksin Shinawatra , who commanded tremendous support from the poor people of north east Thailand , whose voting power alone can pull down a government.

For over a week he had urged his ‘red-shirts’ to converge on Bangkok and bring the government of Eton and Oxford educated Prime Minister to its knees.  For a day it looked like they were winning as they stormed a conference of ASEAN ministers in the resort of Pattaya, causing them to flee back to their home countries.

Egged on by their success, the red-shirts then marched again on Bangkok gathering over 100,000. As tourists were urged to leave, and the British Government advised travellers not to come to Bangkok, the situation looked grim.

But 43-yr-old Prime Minister  Abhisit Vejjajiva , who himself was hit with by a flying brick, hastily called police and army chiefs together. Yesterday the army moved in destroying barricades and sending protesters fleeing  by firing volleys of predominantly blank shots.

Today, despite complaints by Thaksin, best known in Britain as the one time owner of Manchester City Football Club and known to fans as ‘Frankie, that the Army had fired real bullets and that the army had ‘hidden’ the bodies, there appeared little evidence to back his claims.

He had described the crackdown as brutal. But many found irony in the remarks made by a former Prime Minister who has been widely condemned by Human Rights organisations, not only over the disappearance of human rights activists but for the injudicial killing of over 2,500 in his self initiated ‘War on Drugs.”

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, said: “Thaskin Shinawatra does not believe in democracy and never did. It is not in his nature.”

As for the remaining protesters he said: “They can continue to protest if they wish, but they must do it peacefully.”

Surrounded and without food and water supplies in the hottest week of the year they are not expected to stay long.

Mr. Vejjajiva said he would continue to try and unite the country and would listen to complaints from poor farmers from North Eastern Thailand.

army-joins-inA  black pall of smoke from burning tyres rose over Bangkok. But there was little else to show the weeks days of chaos.  Revellers celebrating Songkran, the Thai New Year, carried on with the tradition of dousing themselves with water, a custom which has turned riotous, but all in good nature.  And the army and police joined in.

 

 

 

Sailing friends to hold service for Brit murdered by escapees from Thai ’slave ship’

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok
March 31 2000

Link to Daily Telegraph

Picture: Andrew Chant/Linda Robertson

Malcolm Robertson on board Mr. Bean

Malcolm Robertson on board Mr. Bean

Sailing friends and the family of yachtsman Malcolm Robertson will on Thursday hold a memorial service on the Malaysian island of Langkawi  after his body was found off Thailand late on Monday.
Mrs.  Linda Robertson, 57, said she hoped that the Thai authorities would press a murder charge.
 Speaking in Satun, South Thailand , where three Burmese migrant labourers are being held in custody, she added: “I believe only one of them is guilty of murder, but I do not want him to be sentenced to death.  Apart from that I am in a foreign country and will leave it up to the Thai justice system.”
The body of Mr. Robertson, 64, from St. Leonards, East Sussex, was formally identified at sea aboard a Thai fishing boat, by his son Dean,  as the family were concerned that Thai newspapers would publish  ‘inappropriate’ photographs.
The body had been found off Lipe Island, in Tarutao Marine Park, off South Thailand.  The Robertson’s had moored off Butang Island nearby when they were boarded by the three Burmese who had jumped a Thai ‘slave ship’.
Arrangements have already been made to fly Mr. Robertson’s boy home to Britain.
The Robertson’s have berthed their yacht Mr. Bean on Langkawi for the last three years, returning to sail during the British winter.
It is expected that Eksian Warapong, 19, will be charged with murder and the two other Burmese, Aow, 18, and Koo, 16, will continue to faces charges of kidnap, assault and theft.
Last week Warapon confessed to the murder saying he bludgeoned Mr. Robertson to death with a hammer after he put up a fight.
The three Burmese said that they had been sold to an agent by Thai police from a Thai immigration detention centre for just £100 each and put to work on the Thai fishing trawler Chai 6 based out of Phuket.
The youngest Koo had been on the ship for eight months without pay and without being allowed ashore.
They jumped ship onto an uninhabited desert island in the Butang Island group. They had not eaten for three days when the Robertson’s arrived yacht arrived and moored offshore.
They said they just planned to take the yacht’s tender and some food.

Bangkok Horror: Decapitated supposed’heartbroken tourist’ dangled from showpiece bridge

Link to The SUN - Head dangles from bridge

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok,
February 23 2008

NB Corrections update and comments at end of this story

 

Police in Thailand are trying to identify a western man made out to look like ‘a heart broken tourist’ whose decapitated head was placed in a plastic bag and left dangling 25 ft below a railing from the city’s showpiece bridge.
Detectives were forced to admit that the death was not self inflicted, despite a clumsy attempt to etch  a suicide note on the walkway railing of the gold painted 1.5 mile long Rama VIII suspension bridge in Bangkok at the spot from which the head was suspended.
The note read: ‘Cath, I want but I can not. I came to Bangkok to be you’, and suggested the author may have been a foreign tourist who was jilted in love.  But police do not believe the message on the railing.
The jilted English suggests it was written by someone who did not have English as a first language, and was most likely Thai because of the grammatical construction. Police say it could not have been written willingly by the victim.
In Thai a person would literally say ‘I want but can not’. The word ‘have’ is assumed.
Police Colonel  Atcharat Heamathanon said: “The case has interested the most senior police here.
“This looks much more like a mafia, or drug related killing. It’s not a suicide. The victim just has been made out to look like a heart-broken tourist”
In a desperate attempt to identify the man Thai police asked newspapers to publish a photograph of the man’s face. Early today millions of Thais woke up to find the decapitated head on the front pages of their newspapers.
The man is Caucasian in his 40’s with close cropped greyish hair. Police are also contacting all western Embassies. The man’s corpse was was found in the river later.
Most foreigners murdered in Thailand are killed because of business dealings which have turned bad.  Attacks on tourists are usually opportunistic or prompted by ‘loss of face’.
Last week a 34-yr-old Canadian male model turned property developer was assassinated by two gunmen on the holiday island of Phuket, who pumped seven bullets into him.  Francis (Frank) DeGionanni, from Quebec, was suing his property business partner  for £400,000 through the Thai courts.
The most famous bridge hanging was that of Roberto Calvi, ‘God’s banker’ whose body was suspended from Blackfriars Bridge in 1982.  But five people were acquitted in Rome of his murder.
Link: http://www.matichon.co.th/khaosod/

Corrections/Updates

Once the forensic investigators had examined the body and head of the victim, their evidence contradicted statements from several Thai police officers, including the one in this story.  Suicide, they said, was after all the most likely cause. Further they also identified the man as Maurizio Tosadori from Italy who was down on his luck in Thailand and staying in a guest house in Bangkok’s Samsen Road.

 

 

Canadian property developer gunned down in Thailand

Link to CBC Report by Andrew Drummond

Link to Globe & Mail report by same author

Link to Globe update with more infro from Oliver Moore

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok
February 20 09
Police in Thailand are investigating the murder of a wealthy Canadian property developer who was gunned down on his birthday outside his luxury condominium.
Francis Alex Degioanni, 34, originally from Quebec was shot seven times by gunmen who waited for him to drive out of his Panorama condo on Patong Beach, on the island of Phuket -one of Thailand’s top tourist destinations.
Minutes earlier Degioanni, had received a telephone call and had told his 22-yr-old Thai wife that he had to do some urgent business, but would be back to celebrate his birthday.
As he drove out of his condo in his Toyota Regal witnesses said he was approached by the gunmen, one wearing a long sleeved red shirt and trousers, the other wearing jeans, jacket and peaked cap.  Both had short military style hair-cuts.
The shooting began as he stopped. Degioanni was shot by the men firing .38 calibre pistols and had wounds in his head, neck, chest and one arm. Both men then fled on a motorycle in the direction of Jungceylon department store.
His Thai wife Tawadee Pencharoenwattana said: “My husband left in a hurry saying he had some business to attend to, after taking the telephone call.  When I heard the shots I rushed down.
“He was still alive and I dragged him across to the passenger seat and drove him to the hospital but he died before I reached it.  We have only been living here six months.”
Police who at the crime scene at 8.30 pm Thursday say they believe the shooting was business related.
Police Superintendent Krissak Songmoonmak said: “ The Canadian was very wealthy and had been involved in property development in Phuket for over five years.
“We know he was in dispute with his Thai business partner and had claimed he had been cheated out of 20 million baht ( Can $704,584).  That matter is already in the courts.”
Police did not say where in Canada Mr. Degioanni was from.
Last year Canadian Leo Del Pinto, aged 24, from Calgary was gunned down by a Thai policeman in the northern Thai village of Pai. 
The trial of the policeman was late last year abandoned and the Department of Special Investigations has been asked to prepare a new case.
Also murdered in Thailand last year was Dale Henry, originally from BC, but who spent much of his life as a paramedic and firefighter in Calgary.
Police have arrested his Thai wife, her lover, and a hit man in connection with the shooting at his home in Thailand’s Ranong Province, in a case which is still going through Thailand’s slow justice system.

N.B.Corrections/Updates: Father of Degioanni says his son was educated in the U.S. and has been in Thailand nine years. Later reports from Canada show that DeGioanni (this is now the accepted form) had earlier told his family that he thought he had been poisoned by his business partner, a woman, and might need police protection. He declined to return to Canada because he has a major project to finish. He was previously married in Thailand and has a three year old daughter.  The woman who shared his condo was his current Thai girlfriend.  DeGioanni was a former male model based out of Bangkok.

 

Nightclub inferno - club owners had licence to sell noodles

From Andrew Drummond,
Bangkok,  January 2nd

Bangkok blaze club was illegal - SKY News

Club blaze Briton tells of death trap - Evening Standard

Death trap Bangkok club only licensed to sell noodles - Daily Mail

The owners of an upmarket nightclub in Bangkok where scores of people died in a horrific New Year party blaze did not have the correct permits to operate but were allowed to open for business anyway by Thai police, it was claimed today.
Deputy Police Commissioner General Jongrak Juthanon of the Royal Thai Police claimed the police had refused to allow the Santika club to open in 2004, but it opened anyway while appealing to the Bangkok Administrative court.
The case has been in the courts for four years.
“We found it did not confirm to standards,” he said.
The Bangkok Post newspaper, claiming a source in the Bangkok metropolitan police, said the Santika was registered only as a night-time food shop and the licence required it to close at midnight.
It was actually in an area which in 2003 was declared a ‘non entertainment zone’ under Bangkok city zoning laws.
The contradictions accent Thailand’s laissez-faire attitude to public safety. 
The owners of the Santika bar, named as Suwit and Wisook Sejsawat, have not been seen since the fire which is now known to have killed 59 people and injured over 200, including four Britons, two of whom are in a hospital’s ICU.
Police say at the moment all they can charge the owners with is allowing an under-aged person into the club. One of the fatalities was a 17-yr-old Thai youth.
No entertainment establishments can operate in Bangkok without permission of police and almost all have to pay monthly under-the-counter stipends to police, for a hassle free existence.
The particular police station in control of Ekamai Road the location of the Santika Night club is Thong Lor police station. The same station also controls Soi Cowboy a street of a-go-go and sex bars, where early today there was another fire in a bar called ‘Rawhide’ – like its neighbour ‘Long Gun’ known for the sound of whips cracked by bar-girls dressed in black PVC. Fortunately there were no casualties.Neither the Rawhide nor any bar in Soi Cowboy has a back way out, although two have two front doors. Despite Bangkok’s risqué international reputation, prostitution and soliciting for prostitutes is against the law.

Legally the sex bars do not exist or the shows with whips, lighted candles etc.
Londoner Alex Wargacki, 29, from Finchley, said in the ICU unit at Bangkok’s Samitivej Hospital: “The Santika was a death trap. But so are many, if not most night time venues in Bangkok.
“They keep the exits to a minimum because they owners do not want anyone to run away without paying a bill.
“Foreigners living here come to accept that. But the club still has to accept responsibility for the deaths and injuries. I am going to insist the club pays my hospital bill, which after one day is already over £1500.”
Earlier he had told how he was saved from the fire by a man with ‘the hand of an angel’.
 “I woke up and heard this voice saying. ‘Come on. Come on this way’ . Then I felt myself being dragged towards an exit. A crowd of people parted in front of me and then I was out in the open air.
“Had it not been for this voice with the hand of an angel I would not be alive today.  The voice sounded as if he was Thai.  Maybe he was one of the people at the New Year’s party.
“Maybe he was a fireman. But when I get out of hospital I want to thank him for sure.”
Mr. Wargacki, a Forex trader,  had been partying with seven friends to rap and hip hop music in the club.
“Suddenly to the right of the stage I saw a firework being let off amongst a crowd of partygoers. I shot right across the room. I don’t know exactly how long, but it seemed no time at all when the whole place, walls and ceilings were ablaze.
“Then everyone started running for the door. But the door seemed tiny and people were jammed up against it.  If there was another way out, none of us knew about it, and all the windows were barred.
“There were flames from the floor to the ceiling. I could hear windows cracking and breaking in the heat.
“I felt myself going unconscious. I knew something was happening to my lungs. I could not breathe. I blacked out and fell to the floor.  That’s when I heard the voice.”

 

 

 

Saved by the hand of an angel - Bangkok nightclub fire

Other adapted versions of this story from this author on the links below

British man tells of blaze horror - SKY News

Saved by the hand of an angel - Daily Mail (online)

British survivor tells of miracle escape - Daily Mirror

British survivors tell of chaos escaping blaze in death trap club - The Guardian

British man saved by angel who dragged him out - Daily Telegraph

Brits in deadly new year blaze - SKY NEWS

Fireworks blamed for Thai club inferno - The Independent

Brits in fire hell - The SUN

Britons reveal horror of nightclub blaze -Daily Mail (Newspaper)

Saved by the hand of an angel - Daily Express

 Hand of an angel saved me from death in Bangkok club blaze, says Briton - Daily Record

 

 

From Andrew Drummond,
Bangkok
(Pictures Andrew Chant)
A British survivor of the New Year fire horror in a Bangkok club told tonight how he was saved from death by the hand of an angel.
Alex Wargacki, 29, told how he collapsed and fell unconscious, as fire raged threw the Santika nightclub in Bangkok, taking the lives of 60 people, and injuring over 200 including four Britons.
“I woke up and heard this voice saying. ‘Come on. Come on this way’ . Then I felt myself being dragged towards an exit. A crowd of people parted in front of me and then I was out in the open air.
“Had it not been for this voice with the hand of an angel I would not be alive today.  The voice sounded as if he was Thai.  Maybe he was one of the people at the New Year’s party.
“Maybe he was a fireman. But when I get out of hospital I want to thank him for sure.”
Mr. Wargacki, a Forex trader, from Finchley, North London, told how he saw the fire being started in the club at about 12.30 am on New Year’s morning.
Together with seven friends he had been revelling to rap and hip hop music in the club.
“Suddenly to the right of the stage I saw a firework being let off amongst a crowd of partygoers. I shot right across the room. I don’t know exactly how long, but it seemed no time at all when the whole place, walls and ceilings were ablaze.
“Then everyone started running for the door. But the door seemed tiny and people were jammed up against it.  If there was another way out, none of us knew about it, and all the windows were barred.
“There were flames from the floor to the ceiling. I could hear windows cracking and breaking in the heat.
“I felt myself going unconscious. I knew something was happening to my lungs. I could not breathe. I blacked out and fell to the floor.  That’s when I heard the voice
“I had been to the club many times and went to the New Year’s Party because the club was closing and it was their ‘Goodbye Santika’ party.
“I guess I always knew the place was a bit of a death trap. But that’s like so many places here. That’s Thailand. You come to expect it. I have worked here for four years and got used to it. Even some shopping malls are accidents waiting to happen.
Speaking at Samitivej Hospital off Bangkok’s Sukhumvit Road, Mr. Wargacki added “A British Embassy official came to see me today. Maybe they can help.  My hospital bill is already £1500. I am hoping the club owners will pay it.”
Alex Wargacki  was one of four Britons injured in the blaze. He was brought to the Samitivej Hospital will fellow Briton Oliver Smart, 35, who last night was still unable to speak.
A hospital spokesman said: “One of his lungs totally collapsed. He has been only able to tell us his name, and that he was with his Thai girlfriend.   She is being treated at another hospital.”
The other two Britons were named as Steven Hall, from South Wales, and Adam Butler. 
Steven Hall who was treated at the city’s Bamrungrad Hospital for third degree burns to his back and hand told CNN: “About 12.30 or 12.45, I saw flames billowing out across the ceiling.
“At first I thought it was part of the show, along with everybody else I think, but I noticed the look of terror on the people’s faces on the actual stage and I instantly realised it wasn’t.”
 ”I could feel the heat almost straight away, but people weren’t reacting,” he said.
“There was a girl behind the bar who was more concerned with getting the cash register out.”
“It was pitch black, it was burning my back, I put my hand behind me on my head, and on the way to the hospital, the skin was dropping off my hand.”
There was only one way down from the balcony that ringed the top level, and one way up from the toilets in the sub-ground floor, he said. All the windows were barred.
“The flames spread very very fast. It went straight along the ceiling.”
Thailand’s Eton educated Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva yesterday visited the scene of the tragedy and victims in the nearby Camillian Hospital.
“Why was someone allowed to let off a firework in the club?” he asked.
Serious questions were also raised about the fire precautions in the club. Thailand has a history of tragic fires.  Some 380 workers died in a toy factory on the outskirts of Bangkok unable to get out of fire escapes which were padlocked.  A club fire Route 66 club in the resort of Pattaya also took a heavy death toll.
Revelers complained that there was no sprinkler system in the Santika.  And that although there were other exits, there were no signs pointing out where they were, so everyone fled to the front door.
Exits can be locked in Thai club for fear of people leaving without paying their bills
The Foreign Office say that they have not been notified about any British fatality though it was reported by one newspaper that a 34-yr-old female British teacher had died. The bodies of some 32 people, who have been burned beyond, have still to be identified.
The club in Bangkok’s  Thong Lor district, an area known for up-market night clubs frequented by both Thais and foreigners,  operates on three levels, basement, ground floor and second floor.
Many of the dead were trapped in the basement unable to get up the one stairwell. Others were knocked down in the stampede to the clubs one main entrance and exit.
Members of the band which was playing were reported to have been able to get out a rear exit that few people knew about.
Briton Andrew Long, who managed to escape, said: “There were a number of people trapped in the toilets which were in the basement. Some people were able to escape through windows, but some were barred. “

 

 

Jingle bells unheard in Thailand until Santa shops child abuser

Andrew Drummond - Bangkok December 19 2008 - blog

Thailand’s education authorities have been duped once again, this time by a man with a record dating back 45 years for sexually abusing children, who ran a child-sex tourism operation for profit under their noses.

The widespread abuses committed by Canadian John Wrenshall are so mind boggling it comes as no surprise this time that the U.S. authorities chose to arrest him somewhere from which he could easily be deported for trial.

He was shopped by a part-time Santa Claus, but nobody in Thailand noticed the warning bells ringing about Wrenshaw, arrested at Heathrow airport London this week, who was hiring out and also abusing young children in Bangkok.

The arrest comes after voices at Thailand’s Ministry of Education insisted it would be checking the credentials and background of foreign teachers, as they did too at private schools and universities.

Wrenshall was one of the bosses at A.U.A in Bangkok, which has the country’s leading Thai and English language programmes. The U.S. authorities want to put him on trial in New Jersey, the home of one of his client child abusers, Wayne Corliss, 59, a part-time actor and occasional Santa Claus who spilled all.

Canadian Christopher Neil, 32, a teacher at the Ramkhamheang Adventist school, and also in Korea, who was on Interpol’s most wanted list, is currently serving some eight years in prison in Thailand, leaving little hope for a ‘show trial’ in Canada, where authorities wanted to demonstrate their ability to show their sex-tourism laws are working. They won’t get Wrenshall either.

The US authorities did not, I suspect, want him bogged down in Thailand, where inevitably victims, as in the case of Neil, will be found in retrospect.

Wrenshall, according to his CV, was a consultant to ‘Travel Alberta’ and gave up a promising career and his own computer software company in Canada to teach in Thailand at a fraction of his previous salary.

Wrenshall, was Supervisor of Assessment and Supervisor of the Academic English Language Program.  He had been there just short of ten years - straight from a prison sentence.

He also taught at Mahidol University out on their Salaya Campus.

Had either of these bastions of education bothered to check they may have discovered that in fact, he had left Canada in something of a hurry and rather cash strapped.

He had lost his company and had to sell his house and his car to settle civil suits by five Albertans who said he had molested them when they were minors.

At least 20 boys as young as nine were indecently assaulted by Mr. Wrenshall, from 1961 to the mid 1980s, according to court evidence in Calgary, Canada’s Globe and Mail reported.

“A former scoutmaster and Anglican choir member at Calgary’s Cathedral Church of the Redeemer, Mr. Wrenshall has a master’s degree in sociology. He lured his victims on the pretence that he was conducting a study on preteen boys’ sexuality , the court was told.

“After receiving a suspended sentence in 1970, he undertook two years of counselling. After he reoffended, a judge sentenced him in 1997 to one year in jail and two years probation, saying that would be a “satisfactory deterrent.”
“Two years later, he was pimping young Thai boys, charging up to $400 a boy and recruiting his johns in an Internet chat room called Boy Love and Chat”

Wrenshall was arrested at Heathrow on Tuesday on a warrant issued after he was indicted by a grand jury in New Jersey, USA.

———————————————————————————

Footnote: On December 22 2008 after CEOP officers had returned to the UK the Bangkok Post published a report by Wassayos Ngamkham. Thai police were quoted that the major player a Brit had escaped arrested during the operation.

”It’s an organisation deeply involved in the sex trade with a British man as the mastermind,” Pol Lt-Col Panya said. ”He contacts customers through a website and has a Thai transvestite procure children for customers, most of whom are Europeans who have businesses in Thailand or retirees who have settled here.”

According to the inspector, the British man is a big procurer in Pattaya. However, on the morning of Dec 11 when police arrested four foreign paedophiles there, they did not find any evidence linking them to the mastermind”.

The newspaper was supplied with photographs by the Royal Thai Police.

I ,of course hope Thai police have not given the game away and that ‘Mr.Big’ has not skipped off, but if he was not around for the December 11th raids, the chances are he had already.

Old Etonian takes Thailand on a ticket of ethics and principals

Old Etonian takes Thailand on a ticket of ethics and principals

Link to Evening Standard

Link to Daily Mail  Oxford Grad and former classmate of Boris Johnson is new Thai PM

From Andrew Drummond,
Bangkok, December 15 2008

A former Eton scholar and Oxford University graduate was today elected Prime Minister of Thailand by a slim majority of 37 votes.

MPs elected Abhisit Vejjajiva, leader of the country’s Democratic Party, putting an end to rule, by telephone, of ousted Premier Thaksin Shinawatra, and the successive governments he attempted to control in his exile.

His opponent was a former Thai police chief Pracha Promnok of the Puea Pandin Party, a small party which at the last minute offered to accept the nomination for P.M.

Promnok accepted the nomination on behalf of supporters of Thaksin Shinawatra, after the ruling Peoples Power Party was dissolved for vote-buying.

A special session of the Thai Parliament was held for the vote. But the country will in any case soon have to go to the polls and put the issue to the people.

Vejjajiva became Thailand’s 27th Prime Minister with 238 votes, over Pracha’s 198.

But to achieve victory, the soft spoken, good-looking, classmate of Boris Johnson,  had to do a deal ‘with the devil’ and form a coalition with factions run by old ‘Godfathers’ in Thai politics.

It was hoped that the election would bring an end to Thailand’s woes, which has seen the country split in two, by yellow-shirted followers of the People’s Alliance for Democracy, who recently occupied Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi airport, and the red-shirted followers of Thaksin Shinawatra.

But immediately after the result was announced angry red-shirted protesters picked up railings outside Parliament House and began throwing them. They also threw stones at cars leaving Parliament House.

Members of the Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorship believe Vejjajiva is a supporter of the PAD because of his anti-Thaksin stance.  They also believe that as Abhisit Vejjajiva is a member of Thailand’s old influential families, he will side with the country’s elite.

In fact he was against the military coup which ousted Thaksin and kept clear of politicking about the recent demonstrations. Traditionally he has always leaned to the left.

However the PAD put their support behind Vejjajiva, a class mate of Lord Mayor Boris Johnson both at  Eton and Oxford and a year above David Cameron,  because they regarded him as ‘clean’.

Born in Newcastle, Vejjajiva, 45, married with two children, entered Thai politics in the nineties, and became better known for his good looks rather than his policies, and became something of a pin-up in Thai women’s magazines.

His strong British connections, rather than help, may have actually hindered his path to power, in a political system which has been so riddled with corruption that it has ended in the recent demonstrations.

He has campaigned on a ticket of ethics rather than authoritarianism, better education, an increased minimum wage,  and will now almost certainly have to adopt and progress some of Thaksin Shinawatra’s policies to support the poor people in north eastern Thailand, who brought Thaksin Shinawatra to power.

Meanwhile Thaksin Shinawatra has clearly not given up his ambition to return to the political throne.
Convicted of corruption, and banned from Britain, Thaksin has been broadcasting to the nation from abroad  effectively running the People’s Power Party by phone.  He has told his supporters to be patient and wait adding that Britain ‘would feel sorrow’ from banning him from the U.K.

Meanwhile, while Abhisit , known at school as ‘Mark Vejj ‘  has not been brought up in the political mould of his friend Boris.

During his formative years in the Britain, where he mastered in political science and economics he has admitted: “I took part in many demonstrations against Margaret Thatcher.”

Boris Johnson has been quoted as saying of him: He was an exact contemporary of mine at school and is a seriously clever fellow. I’m probably the only person in Parliament at the moment who can spell Vejjajiva, but that won’t last as I’m sure he’s going to do great things in Thailand. I spent a blissful time with him and his family in Bangkok one summer in the mid-Eighties.”

 Pictures: Andrew Chant

Right: Abhisit the Newcastle United supporter

 

 

ends

 

Weary stranded Brits join BA’s first flight home. Ladyboys beg tourists to return - Evening Standard

From  Andrew Drummond
Bangkok
December 4 2008

Link to Stranded tourists face weeks of delay - Irish Independent

Link to - Gruelling trip for stranded Britons - Evening Standard

Some 200 weary Britons set off from Bangkok today to board the first British Airways rescue flight from Thailand
.
Ahead of them they face a gruelling 33 hours journey back to London after being stranded in Thailand during the siege of the airports by anti-government demonstrators.

 

 

And as the the Britons and others left the country’s emptying hotels, Thais, fearful of the blow to their tourist industry, laid on bands and transvestites shows imploring ‘Please come back again’

The Britons, some frustrated, some angry, and others  ‘just going with the flow’  having enjoyed some extra days holiday, set off from Bangkok today to board BA1010, a Boeing 777 which has been flown out to the southern island of Phuket.

The passengers checked in for flight at special desks set up at the Bangkok Shangri-La hotel and then boarded buses for the ten hour journey south to Phuket.

From there they will join 72 and depart at 4am Friday, and  fly  first to Chennai (Madras) and on to London arriving shortly after 2.10 pm.

A retired army colonel, from Stratford-on-Avon,who asked not to be named as he was doing security work for the U.N. in Laos, smiled chuckled to himself before boarding one of the buses said: “A good quartermaster sergeant major could have sorted this out in no time.  He would have got the transport by hook or by crook.
 
“I would have got to Singapore on the roof of a train if they had let me, but its been impossible to get out of Bangkok”

Paul Wicks, 24, travelling with his girlfriend Rebecca Cavaliero,23,  both from Guildford, Surrey said: “The waiting has not been bad. We have been in a good hotel and our room and food has been paid for.

 

“But by the time we had left there were not many people left in the hotel –and it was only Brits. All the Germans and Scandinavians had gone. It was getting like a ghost hotel.”

Barry Parkinson, 55, from Barnard Castle, Durham, agreed. “Our hotel was getting quieter by the hour too.  We are retired and not so much in a hurry, we have just been going with the flow, but Brits certainly seem to be the last out of this mess.

“We could not understand the explanations BA gave as to why they could not fly here when others could.”

Geoffrey Hyde, 54, from Eastbourne, a carpenter , was worried about the dog he had left his kennels and his job.

“I have taken unpaid lead and was due back at work this week. There has been a lot of confusion. The BA office was shut at the weekend.  I hit the roof and my wife was crying earlier when the airline later told us we could not go home until December 10th. Luckily the situation changed”.

Adam Brooks, 18, and Jessica Bilton, also 18, both from Nottingham, were not so lucky. Although they joined the busses to Phuket they were told they would have to fly to Singapore and wait another day for a flight from there.

“We did not know about the offers to provide hotel and food accommodation. We had to borrow money to get by, even to call home. We called the Embassy and they said they would see what they could do. But we never heard from them again.”

Both British Airways and the Foreign Office have been criticised for not coming to the aid of the Britons. Both have vehemently denied the allegations.

Other airlines including Holland’s KLM, Italy’s Alitalia, France’s Air France, four airlines from China, and military aircraft from Spain had got their country nationals out of Thailand.  But British Airways refused to fly in.  The Chinese are reported to have evacuated all their stranded citizens by December 1st.

 British Airways QUANTAS Kevin McQuillan  Thailand Country Manager apologised to the passengers saying: “We appreciate how frustrating it has been for all.”

He said afterwards: “ We have got  900 of our passengers out of Thailand already. We have charted Jet Star airways to fly to Singapore and also charted Malaysian Airlines for a relief aircraft to join our flights in Singapore.  Our foremost consideration was for the safety and security of our passengers.

“Our office was open during the weekend, but unfortunately the answer phone message said we were closed.
 
“If callers had hung on they would have heard an addition to the message especially for stranded passengers.” He said British Airways hoped to be flying to Bangkok again within days.

Meanwhile stranded tourists flying out from U-Tapao airport in eastern Thailand, a former US airbase for B52s during the Indo-China war, were being entertained by live bands and a transvestite show, as the Thais, fearful for their tourism industry encourages them  to come back again.

They are also being given free food, drink and orchids.
All parties in Thailand have agreed to end demonstrations until after the birthday of King Adulyadej on December 5th

Thai rescue for stranded tourists - except for furious Brits

 

 

Link to Daily Express article

 Thai crisis leaves thousands of tourists trapped at Bangkok airport

Link to Daily Telegraph article

Britons face long wait to get home

Link to Sky News story

Britons miss out on flights

Link to Daily Mail story

Thai protesters agree to lift blockade of airports after court sacks government

Link to The Standard

Britains may face more Thai chaos

Link to Daily Mirror story

Bomb blast kills one at airport

Evening Standard - Court sacks Thai government

thai-government-sacked-pm-to-step-down-after-being-found-guilty-of-corruptionj

Daily Mail - first flights out of Suvarnabhumi

 

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, December 1st 2008

The airlift of passengers trapped in the Far East took off  in earnest last night as airlines came to the rescue of most nationalities - except for thousands of desperate Britons.

 SAS had three flights for Scandinavians from Phuket, KLM came to the rescue of the Dutch. Air France provided a flight for the French. Jet Airways flew to the aid of the Indians. The Spanish provided military aircraft for their own nationals, Philippines Airlines went to the aid of Filipinas and the Italian government asked Alitalia to help their nationals.

Even Communist China has already got its citizens home on four rescue flights with just one more flight by China Southern Airlines to compete the job.

To add to that Thai Airways operated additional flights to Germany, China, Australia, Russia, Korea, Malaysia and Hong Kong ….but none to Britain.

But Britain had nothing on offer. Some  of the luckier Britons were bussed 12 hours to Phuket to get a flight by Eva Air, the Taiwanese airline, who were offering one direct flight to the U.K.

So last night hapless Britons, many of whom had been trapped in Thailand since last Tuesday when anti-government forces took over Bangkok’s two airports, joined the long queues at U-Tapao airbase, 130 miles east of Bangkok, in the hope of getting home via another country.

The only other alternative was to get down to the island of Phuket and hitch a ride on one of three Quantas airbuses to Singapore where the Britons, were told they could wait for a flight to London. Quantas runs code share flights with British Airways.

Last night at U-Tapau airport Briton Neil Lindsay, 53, queuing miserably to get a flight to Frankfurt said: “ I now know that to be British it to be a world second class citizen. “I’m in the check in queue with a Welshman. I have been here forty minutes and have not got inside the terminal yet. “There are hundreds of Indian and other nationalities and all queues seem to funnel into one small door.”

Mr. Lindsay, from Wade Bridge in Cornwall, who has been stuck in the Ambassador Conference hotel in the Thai resort of Pattaya since last Wednesday added: “We are stuck here without a hope, but all the Germans sent to our hotel have gone home already. The last went on Saturday. We Brits just keep getting bumped.”

Lindsay is among 121 Britons of 1,200 Thai airlines passengers who were bussed by airline to Pattaya, 90 miles east of Bangkok from the besieged Suvarnabhumi international airport last Wednesday. At least 7000 Britons are now thought to be stranded in Thailand out of a total of 240,000 tourists.

“It’s quite clear that Brits are well down the pecking order when it comes to getting home. I have not seen any British Consular officials, but the Aussies have been here in force and I know they have flown to Phuket too, and have been using their influence to get their citizens home,” said Mr. Lindsay .

“I’ve seen them so often I know the Australian Consular people by name. “The British group keep putting their names on the list and they keep getting bumped off. Thai Airways have told us we can take their flights to Frankfurt, and then we are on our own. But we still get bumped.

“To my knowledge no Briton has managed to get on any of the flights to Frankfurt which have left over the last few days from U-Tapao. “I have seen people going out everyday and coming back dejected in the evening.

“I have rung up the Embassy twice, but they just say sit tight. I’m not surprised the Foreign Office will not supply charter flights to get us out, there are too many of us!

“I had been holidaying in Thailand in Northern Thailand and was due to fly back last Wednesday morning. My flight was one of the first to be cancelled.

“But that does not account for anything when it comes to getting a seat out of here. There has been queue jumping for any number of reasons.”

The Foreign Office has refused to charter aircraft on the grounds that that the skies over the provincial airport were too busy.

“The key issue is the fact the two airports in Bangkok are closed and therefore you’ve effectively got planes stacking up and not being able to get slots. The situation is tense and we are monitoring events hour by hour,” said Foreign Office Minister Bill Rammell.

But the fact that many other airlines are flying seems to contradict that view.

There is hope today the People’s Alliance for Democracy who want the government to step down, will decide to end their occupation of Suvarnabhumi and Don Muang airports in Bangkok.

The Constitution Court in Bangkok is expected to rule that the government People’s Power Party, run by Premier Somchai Wongswawt, should be disbanded for vote buying.

Most of the hate of the protesters is directed at Somchai Wongsawat, who has retreated with his cabinet to the northern Thai capital of Chiang Mai, and his protégé, Thaksin Shinawatra, his brother-in-law, who was ousted from Thailand in a military coup, convicted of corruption and recently banned from Bntain.

Thaksin Shinawatra, a brief owner of Manchester City Football Club, is believed to be directing the government from abroad and says he wants to come back and save his country.

Brits miss out on Thai flights - Sky News

 

Thai Premier will not resign - Scene set for Bangkok showdown

 

Coverage by this author on the Bangkok airport protests

Link Thai protesters block second airport Daily Telegraph

Protester is shot dead as chaos engulfs Thailand - Evening Standard

1500 British tourists stranded in Bangkok - Daily Mail

Britons tell of being trapped by Thailand’s politicial crisis - Daily Telegraph

Crisis leaves thousands trapped in Thailand - Daily Express

Thugs crack down on Thai protesters - Daily Express

Police brace for raids on Bangkok airports - Daily Telegraph

Thai PM declares airport emergency - The SUN

Thai airport to remain shut - SKY NEWS

Britain will not charter planes to rescue tourists - Daily Telegraph

5000 Britons stranded in Thailand as Foreign Office refuses to charter planes - Daily Telegraph

 Empty planes leave Bangkok as Britons remain stranded - Daily Telegraph

Thai Premier will not resign. Scene set for confrontation in Bangkok
From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok
November 26
Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat tonight refused to step down saying ‘I have done nothing wrong’  and left it to police to deal with the yellow shirted protesters who have seized the  country’s international airport.
Shortly after his return to Thailand from Peru to be greeted by red-shirted pro-government supporters in the northern capital of Chiang Mai, he immediately declined an invitation to resign made earlier in the day by Thai army chief General Anupong Paochinda.
His dry-mouthed 20 minute speech, which included a list of good things his government had done for the country, did little to allay fears that the long running dispute, involving thousands of tourists,  would deteriorate rapidly.
And it immediately spelt bad news for thousands of tourists, soon to become tens of thousands, trapped in the country, on the closure of the world’s 18th busiest airport and at the beginning of the country’s tourism peak.
Among those trapped are hundreds of Britons, who are now being housed in hotels in Bangkok and on Thailand’s eastern seaboard.  This number could rocket by a 1000 a day.
And last night there were real fears that a violent clash was imminent.
Earlier in the day General  Anuporn Paochinda announced at a press conference that that best course of action to solve the dispute would be for the government to dissolve parliament and call new elections.  Demonstrators of the PAD (People’s Alliance for Democracy)  should also relinquish their control of Bangkok International Airport , he said.
“I do not want to put pressure on the government,” he added.
Last night at Suvarnabhumi airport yellow shirted anti-government protesters jeered the speech by, the brother-in-law of ousted Prime Thaksin Shinawatra, and looked to all purposes as if they had dug in for a fight to the end.
A police operation to move thousands of them from the country’s new showcase international airport could cost millions of dollars and cause massive collateral damage.
After a night and day in which four bombs were set off , then tourists witnessed running fights at the airport,  while outside anti-government shot at supporters of deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, Thailand’s army chief General Anupong presented a possible solution  which had been decided by an army monitoring panel, the General said.
Just hours before the General’s pronouncement, some 3,000 tourists trapped inside Suvarnabhumi airport were evacuated and taken on buses to hotels in Bangkok and the surrounding area, but some as far away as the resort of Pattaya 100 miles away. They were not told in advance where they were being taken, but assured that they would be found rooms.
Then the Airports Authority of Thailand began evacuating their own staff.  Currently thousands of supporters of the People’s Alliance for Democracy are staying put and several tons of water and foodstuffs has been brought in.
Early yesterday several flights managed to land and take off from Suvarnabhumi before the airport was completely closed at 4.am.   One of those was the British Airways Sydney-London flight, which had been diverted to Singapore.
On that flight was Geraldine an Investment Consultant from London who said: “I was amazed. People played down the troubles so much that all I expected was a couple of old men waving a stick. It was a shock to arrive to see thousands upon thousands of demonstrators.”
No sooner had the British Airways flight departed than bombs went off in several places, one outside Suvarnabhumi airport, one outside the former international airport at Don Muang, where the Thai Cabinet has been meeting since being ousted from Government House, and two in Bangkok city.
Some 18 people were injured but this fortunately there were no fatalities.
Overnight some 3,000 people slept over inside the airport’s departure and arrival halls: many making beds out of luggage trays.
Peter Pomfret, from Ealing, said: “All in all it was a good natured evening but not something I would like to repeat. I guess they know what they are protesting about.”
And in the morning an almost carnival atmosphere dominated the departure halls.  Scores of PAD protesters wearing yellow shirts and ‘We Love the King’ baseball caps, weaved among the tourists distributing food,( rice, omelettes, soya bean milk) and water.
They also distributed leaflets apologising for the inconvenience to foreigners. ‘We’re sorry. We just need to bring down this corrupt government,” read one.
Tourists were told that the protesters planned only to be at the airport for one day
Said  Don Lancaster, 63, from Clitheroe, Lancashire: “Its all been very pleasant, well for a protest that is. They have given me food, explained what they are complaining about, and even given me a plastic handclapper.  They told me to clap it if I ever had any problems.  Can’t get nicer than that.
“But this is no place for families. I have seen some families here with young children and they are getting pretty desperate.  The worst thing of all is that nobody, no authorities, no airlines, has been telling us what is going on.”
John Taylor, 44, from Southampton, stuck with his wife and daughter said: “They have asked us to be patient. But how patient can you be with a two year old girl in tow. These people are causing real hurt. I don’t care what they are protesting about.  Why take it out on us.”
PAD demonstrators who want an end to the current government led by Somchai Wongsawat, brother-in-law of disgraced former P.M. Thaksin Shinawatra, still a very popular figure among the rural poor, looked last night like they were prepared for a long siege, even though they claimed they just wanted to ‘greet’, or rather protest when Somchai returned from an Asia Pacific summit in Peru.
If they do not withdraw however, said General Anupong, they could be subject to ‘social action’ – and for that many people are reading military force.
Anupong has repeatedly said he will not initiate a coup against the current Thai government which was elected democratically and mainly on the vote of the rural poor.
But he is believed to be widely critical of a government which seems to be unable to come to any decision and has to meet in secret and now in Chiang Mai for fear of a PAD blockade.

 

 

 

Thai police shooting case abandoned. Policeman freed

globe-and-mail-police-killer-released 

 

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok

 

November 22 2008

 

Shock as Thai policeman who gunned down Canadians in Thailand is released and case halted.

 

The Thai policeman who gunned down two Canadian tourists in the Northern Thai village of Pai in January this year has been released without charge by a court in Bangkok.

And the case against the police sergeant who killed Leo Del Pinto, 24, from Calgary, and Carly Reisig, 23, from Chilliwack B.C., has been brought to an abrupt halt because of ‘procedural errors.”

The case against police sergeant Uthai Dechawiwat had earlier been taken out of the hands of local police and placed in the hands of the Department of Special Investigations, Thailand’s FBI,  by former Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej.

The Canadian Ambassador in Bangkok, David Sproule, who has expressed the Canadian government’s ‘serious concern’ was told by SDI officials , that they had been told by the Public Prosecutor that the procedural errors were made in the early stages of the investigation.

But those errors, the DSI claimed, were not by made by them but by colleagues of the policeman, Sergeant Uthai Dechawiwat in Pai Police,  whose chief has already been reported to the National Counter Corruption Commission by Commissioner Dr. Surasee Kosolnavin of the Thai National Human Rights Commission.

A DSI official said: “ The clock has stopped, but we can start it again and bring the case to court in Bangkok.”

The case has again raised concerns about the difficulty in Thailand getting police to accept culpability for their own actions.

 Leo’s father Ernie Del Pinto said in Calgary: “We all know there was a cover up in Pai.  That is why I believe the DSI was ordered to take over the case. They should be above all this.  This is very worrying. How long does it take to get any sort of justice in Thailand.”

 

 

The latest development is all the more surprising because a another Public Prosecutor was in the National Commission for Human Rights team which investigated the case in the vanguard of DSI officials.

Dr. Surasee Kosolnavin said  that he would rather not comment, as it was now a DSI matter, other than that he was disappointed with the development.

After the shootings Pai in January Police claimed that Uthai was shooting upwards in self defence as he fell to the ground.  An investigation by Thai forensic expert Pornthip Rojanansund, found the policeman had shot down into Del Pinto’s head.

The local police chief’s  claim that Sergeant Uthai (pictured) was attacked by the couple was also disputed by witnesses who are under DSI protection.

Canadian officials were told that it was a prosecutor in the Office of Thailand’s Attorney General, who claimed the investigation had not followed proper procedures.  Dechachiwat had to be released under a ruling which required  that he go to trial within 84 days or be discharged.  If they did not release him ,said the DSI, they would have difficulty recharging him.  This could be done after the procedural errors were corrected.

Meanwhile Ernie Del Pinto, whose campaign in Canada includes posters on Calgary city buses reading ‘Canadian Murdered in Thailand. When will justice be served?’, says he is planning to fly to Thailand to push for justice.

In a previous case, that of Police Sergeant Somchai Wisetsingh , who gunned down British backpackers Vanessa Arscott and Adam Lloyd in Kanchanaburi in 2004 , no witnesses would give evidence at his trial to say they saw the shooting, although they would admit as such to newspaper reporters.  Wisetsingh was convicted on forensic evidence after the parents of both victims, accompanied by British Embassy officials, who had voiced Britain’s concern, met with officials of the Office of Attorney General, Tourist Authority of Thailand, and the Provincial Court.

 

 

Gary Glitter - where they went wrong

(originally published September 2008)

When the disgraced former glam-rock star was released from jail in Vietnam, Bangkok based journalists Andrew Drummond and Andrew Chant made sure the convicted paedophile went back to the U.K., despite a Hong Kong diversion which was billed in the UK as Glitter’s Asian Tour 2008.

It was fitting as both Drummond and Chant were the journalists who had originally tracked him down to Vietnam and exposed his activities in Vung Tau after first finding his home in Cambodia.

But as Andrew Drummond reports he could easily have slipped away.   He also illustrates the role journalists are playing in this controversial issue of child sex abusers and the problems they encounter and the criticisms, some justified, they face.

 

“Look here. This is their card. On it, it says ‘Protecting Children Everywhere’  - but they are clearly not.  Had we left it up to Scotland Yard’s CEOP (Scotland Yard’s Exploitation and Online Protection unit) Gary Glitter would now be roaming free in Thailand.

“Once in Bangkok he could have got a false passport, changed his appearance, and quite literally disappeared.”

I’m talking to Sudarat Sereewat, a member of Thailand’s National Committee on Child Protection, and as Secretary General of FACE  (Fight Against Child Exploitation) the foreign paedophile’s worst enemy in Thailand.

Gary Glitter, real name Paul Francis Gadd, had finally been put on Flight TG901 to London after 48 hours of screaming, feigning illness, and balling out British Embassy officials and police.

But, as Sudarat intimated, he was within a hair’s breadth of freedom in Thailand. He just needed to escape a posse of reporters.

She adds: “It appears Scotland Yard was busily telling the world they were waiting to meet this man in London but they failed to tell Thailand’s Immigration department he was coming here.

In the ‘No Man’s land’ of Suvarnabhumi airport earlier this year I watched  as Scotland Yard’s  CEOP tried to get their man.

Because indirectly I, who was the person, who told Thai police what they were about to face, and initiated his Asian tour.

There has been considerable debate about the ‘Glitter’ story.  On the one hand its quite clear that there something quite appalling in the massive coverage Glitter’s latest tour and his subsequent hounding merely because Glitter is a ‘celebrity paedophile’.

The News of the World and SUN were leading the ‘Hang em high’ brigade, but there was, nevertheless, a pretty clear consensus that having served 2 years nine months in a Vietnamese jail for offences against Vietnamese children – his lawyers paid compensation to two families to avoid rape charges – he should be returned to regulators in Britain in all possible haste.

That’s what the British Government had planned,  but on August 19th at Tan Son Nhat international airport in Ho Chi Minh City as I waited to join Glitter, on his 8.50 p.m. flight,  there were already signs that something would go wrong with this particular deportation.

In London, Scotland Yard had leaked information to journalists that the convicted paedophile would be met by police on his arrival in Britain, specifically at Gatwick airport. He could not travel anywhere.

Scotland Yard even leaked to favoured and trusted journalists that he was flying to London via Doha by Qatar Airways. One TV crew actually went leaving my colleague Andy Chant holding the ITN card, myself running for Sky TV, and Jonathan Head and Andrew Harding alternating for the BBC.

Meanwhile Britain’s Home Secretary Jacqui Smith selected August 19th as the day she would announce new legislation which would stop convicted paedophiles  - ‘people like Gary Glitter’ - from travelling abroad.  This would be announced shortly before Glitter was led ignominiously off from Heathrow airport.

In Ho Chi Minh City Glitter’s lawyer , Le Kinh Tanh was also publicly saying his client was being deported to London, which was odd, as he had told my colleague Andrew Chant the week before; that Glitter was free a free man as soon as he left Vietnam.

I already had the print-out for Glitter’s reservation in ‘tourist class’ in seat 63K on the Thai Airways flight to Bangkok so I booked the seat beside him.

The Vietnamese authorities had announced that Glitter would have to travel tourist class.

So when a local Vietnamese took the seat next to me and Glitter took his seat in Business Class I knew that a local Asian deal had been done and pretty sure Le Than Kinh had done his client a last favour.

I immediately called Sudarat Sereewat in Bangkok.  We had discussed Glitter previously. We both knew that,  as he had no convictions in Thailand, no alert would go up if he tried to go through immigration unless someone took action.  She assumed the British Government had everything under control.  Scotland Yard had paid enough visits to Vietnam.

She quickly established however that Thai Immigration had no inkling of his arrival or for that matter who on earth he was, and had less than two hours to go to work on the case.

A fax was immediately sent to Police General  Chatchawal  Suksomjit,  Head of Thailand’s Immigration Police together with a copy of  Glitter’s full indictment in Vietnam,  which I had passed on earlier.  In it also were the details I had sent including Glitter’s passport number, and date of birth.

Sudarat made it to Bangkok’s just ten minutes before the plane arrived on the night of Tuesday the 19th.  Police there, led by Colonel ‘Pop’ Putiporn,  had been ordered to work closely with her.

 Thai Immigration Police were waiting at the aircraft door together with hospitality staff of Thai Airways. Glitter had told the cabin crew he was a star who wished to avoid the press.  

For the next 24 hours there ensued what Fleet Street concluded was an ‘oriental farce’ which began almost immediately as Glitter, first feigning illness, locked himself in a room airside at Louis Tavern, as a CEOP officer Martin Joss tried to coax him to go home. 

Flight TG901 was getting close to boarding.  Joss was failing, what’s more the Scotland Yard officer was in an unenviable position as he was there ‘unofficially’ and not accompanied, as is normal, by a Thai Police officer. 

Nor at first did he get a warm welcome from Sudarat.  His boss, Jim Warnock, Director of Operations at CEOP, had been particularly difficult, she felt, in helping secure the arrest of another British paedophile in Bangkok earlier in the year.

But if Martin Joss could quickly persuade Glitter that Britain was his only option then perhaps the problem would go away.

There was little Thai authorities could do, as the Vietnamese police had not given Thai Airways any documentation that Glitter was being deported.

But when Joss was asked whether he had any paper work showing Glitter’s convictions in the U.K.,” he said: “No,”  adding, a little timidly, that as this was not his jurisdiction he wished to keep a low profile.

He was however given time with Glitter, with Thai Police and Sudarat witnessing the interview.

Glitter remained rigid: “I am a British citizen. I am entitled to full rights. I have served my time and now I am a first class passenger.”

He now wanted to see a British Embassy official.

 Stephen Buckley, an Attaché representing Britain’s Department of Trade & Industry, whose duty that night was to answer calls from Brits in life or death situations,  arrived at 12.40 – just a few minutes before Glitter’s onward flight was due for boarding.

Glitter again demanded his rights.

“I’ll need to speak to the Ambassador,” said Buckley, diplomatically.

But flight TG901 pulled out before Ambassador Quinton Quayle could be contacted, or at least before he could give a reply.

The next morning Glitter spent some frustrating hours waiting for a ‘promised ticket to Singapore’ to arrive from Thai Airlines and the CEOP officer snuck up to Glitter’s room for some last minute persuasion.

 Perhaps as Jacqui Smith had already made her ‘Glitter is going nowhere’ proclamation broadcast , which could be picked up in Thailand this was again fruitless. He left telling Glitter ‘I am not missing tonights flight to London. If you are not on it I cannot help you anymore.”

And Thai Police were still in a pickle.  Although they now had a fax from Jim Warnock CEOP’s Head of Operations, saying that Glitter should sent back to London, there were still no details of his British conviction.

All they could do however, was, having warned Glitter not to attempt to go through Immigration, arrest him for being in breach of a police order if he did, and throw him into Bangkok’s Immigration Jail.  When that happened, they felt, it would not be long before he demanded deportation.

Not surprisingly, as he had a police escort, he did not attempt to get through immigration.

They chose the much simpler course.  They allowed him to fly on to Hong Kong, while telling the Hong Kong authorities to expect him and send him back with deportation papers.

I joined him on the flight in the seat behind. We spoke briefly.

He simply replied that he was going to Hong Kong from medical treatment. He was either feigning or had a lot of trouble hearing my questions.  Lots of shrugging and pointing to his ears. Then he spent time on his phone calling his lawyers in London and trying to fix his Hong Kong accommodation whom he seemed to hear perfectly.

Glitter was of course detained by the authorities in Hong Kong then sent back to Bangkok.  Glitter would now be on Thursday’s TG109 by hook or by crook. By now he was too tired to fight.

By the time he got to London however the British Government, and CEOP, and The Home Office had received a minor roasting by the press and by the public on internet forums.

The exception may have been the The Sun, who were happy with their report by Virginia Wheeler under the headline ‘Glitter stroke my arm and called me sweetie!” from the Vietnam –Bangkok leg.

CEOP will say of course that they notified the Thai authorities. They no doubt did. But their warning must have still been sitting in an in-tray in Police HQ.

Christine Beddoe of the charity ECPAT(End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and the Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) said that the British authorities tended to “turn a blind eye” to British nationals indulging in child sex tourism.

Sexual offences prevention orders were already in place, she said, which would compel registered paedophiles to tell the police when they intended to travel abroad, and allow the police to share that information with their colleagues at the destination country, if it is decided that the journey should even be allowed.

“But only five such orders were issued between 2004 and 2007 even though during that time some 15 British nationals have been charged in Thailand alone for sexual offence involving children”.

In the Independent newspaper, under the headline ‘The Real Scandal of Gary Glitter’,   Deborah Orr wrote: “Tabloid pursuit of Glitter may well be uncivilised and distasteful. …. But at least his lamentable tale has the potential to draw attention to a much more widespread horror. If the tabloids don’t track British paedophiles abroad, then no one tends to at all.”

And there Deborah Orr has it.  A British child sexual abuser in Thailand is much more likely to be identified by a member of the British public. And the public are much more inclined to call a British tabloid newspaper than Thai police, or even CEOP.

For two years now there has not been a Police Liaison officer at the British Embassy.  There is a member of the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) but calls about sex offenders in my experience will all be referred to London. It’s not serious enough under SOCA’s rules of engagement.

When people tip off civil servants things can go badly wrong.

Earlier this year a member of the British public living up in north east Thailand sent an email to the British Embassy notifying them that his neighbour a registered paedophile from Accrington, Northern England, had not only been cheating the British Social Security system, by illegally claiming British government benefits while in Thailand, but had also had secured a job teaching at a school in Bangkok.

The reply he got from the British Embassy was classic.

In the case of the benefits fraud the informant was told to contact the Department of Work and Pensions.  In the case of the Brit being a registered paedophile who was teaching Thai children in Bangkok,  the Embassy told the man to contact his local police station in Isaan!

No wonder he called the London SUN who subsequently called me.

On this occasion I also contacted Sudarat, who notified Bangkok Metropolitan Police’s Women and Children’s Investigation Branch.   I also notified a very senior policeman in the UK and through him CEOP.

The CEOP call turned out to be a totally pointless exercise. All  calls were immediately diverted to the press office. Calls to the Embassy were also re-routed to the Press Office.  I did not want any press information.

Besides waiting for an answer from the Embassy’s press department can often take days and the answer is not usually worth waiting for, in the sort of enquiries I tend to make.

Andy Chant and I investigated the Accrington man, Alan Smith, (right)and we came to the conclusion that in any of these cases it really was not worth telling the proper authorities first.

 We found the paedophile,  verified the case,  and the man was removed from the school and deported without CEOP’s help.

Sudarat told us she had much more problems with CEOP than even we had.

Earlier this year the CEOP’ chose as their Liaison Officer on one of their publicised training courses  a political secretary at the Embassy, famous for describing a journalist from a respected Sunday newspaper, as being ‘scum of the earth’ during the 2004 Tsunami.

A short while later this young man was back in London.  He had taken to writing a blog in ‘The Nation’ newspaper which had to be stopped after two days, after it was described as ,well at best ‘patronising’, and bloggers reported him (no doubt falsely) as having been seen in Soi Cowboy, a red light area,  with a $5 whore!”

There are hundreds of ‘angry Brits’ in Thailand, out of sorts possibly because they have failed to get a Thai girlfriend back to the UK, so its open season when a British diplomat puts himself on the net, especially if he likes telling people how he sings karaoke with Thai generals.

Many people are grateful for the British Embassy’s help and I know of many such cases.

But the culture of ‘If you say nothing or do nothing you can’t get into trouble’  (a British official’s off the record comment to me, referring to calls from the Press) can sometimes seem all pervasive.  

The Foreign  & Commonwealth Office, however  can and does look after itself and itself.

After the 2004 Tsunami an independent report carried out by the National Audit Office in the United Kingdom was scathing in its criticism of The British Embassy anf FCO effort.

The British Embassy were duly congratulated by a Junior Foreign Office Minister for doing a good job and published a complete but unconvincing rebuttal,  which you can still find on the internet.

(Picture left: British Embassy Tsunami Desk Phuket!)

This year the British Foreign Office are again being condemned for obstruction and deceipt in the case of a Briton Julie Ward, 28, who was murdered in the Masai Game Reserve in Kenya 20 years ago.

The independent report compiled by Jon Stoddart, now the Chief Constable of Durham in Northern England, accused the British authorities of ‘inconsistency, falsehoods and downright lies’.  The Foreign office has already issued a denial.

The above reports are not criticisms by newspapers. They are from British Government departments written by government officers.

The FCO I am glad to say did not however go to the aid of a retired diplomat who was caught in Pattaya by a British Sunday newspaper and exposed under the headline ’Her Majesty’s Vice-Consul and child pervert ring’ for dealing in naked pictures of under-aged boys.

He ran a coffee shop as part of the ‘Boyz Boyz Boyz’ complex in Pattaya - see Fighting for Justice

But the whole point here is that If CEOP want to operate in Thailand to protect children from Britain’s child sex predators they should be talking to people here who actually know the business, who the predators are, and how they evade the law.  In short they need to get down and dirty.

The British government, and others, have spent hundreds of thousands of pounds, on courses to train people, especially police, how to deal with child sex offenders.

Cash would be better spent on individual cases to ensure justice. Because the cash paedophiles have enables them to elude justice. This is the reality.

I have been in Thailand for 20 years and have seen scores of paedophiles walk. British, Germans, Dutch, French, Swiss,  American, the lot.

A whole series of foreigners, among them three Britons, were arrested in Pattaya earlier this year, for offences against children.  Not many of them are still in the system.  One Briton in particular, known to the kids as ‘The Ghost’ has been bailed again, even though his latest offence was committed, while on bail appealing a 14 year jail sentence for the rape of two under-aged girls.

Only high profile paedophiles, such as ‘Mr.Swirly’ or Gary Glitter , appear to be unable to beat  the system, and usually only after an international furore. This is a basic fact of life here.

British law enforcement officers such as those from CEOP, have to go through the Royal Thai Police Foreign Affairs Division.  All well and good. But there they have to join the queue along with the world’s other police forces and the RTP often have bigger and more lucrative fish to fry.

It is at this point that a lot of back scratching, the ritual exchange of police divisional and departmental shields and plaques ,  the dinners, the Embassy socials, all come in to play.

Their job would be best served in the middle of the action rather than just familiarity tours of Pattaya’s Sunee Plaza.

Until then their motto, ‘Protecting Children Everywhere’, may just be a slogan and we’ll just have to leave it to those who are actually reeling in paedophiles abroad.  The international and tabloid press.

Tracking down Gary Glitter

 

 

 

 

Ousted Thai Premier banned from Briton - Mail on Sunday

From Andrew Drummond,
Bangkok,

Link to Mail on Sunday story

November 8 2008
Millionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, the ousted Thai Prime Minister who went on to buy Manchester City football club has been banned from Britain.
The visas for both he and his wife Pojaman were yesterday cancelled by the United Kingdom Border Agency rendering them fugitive from justice.
Today (Saturday) the couple, who have both been jailed in their absence from Thailand on fraud and corruption charges were believed to be in the Philippines.
They are expected to seek a new home in Hong Kong, or China, where their ancestors came from.
The UK Border Agency’s office in the British Embassy in Bangkok circulated a memorandum to all airlines, some of which were being displayed in offices in yesterday.
Quoting Thai passport numbers D215862 and D206635 for Shinawatra and his wife the memorandum stated: “The UK visas contained in the passports of the individuals listed above are no longer valid for travel.  Airlines are advised not to carry these passengers to the U.K.” The memo was signed by Immigration Liaison Manager Andy Grey.
The British Embassy made no further comment.
The Shinawatra’s have affectively been banned from returning to their mansion in Weybridge, Surrey, or their West London apartment.
No such ban has been placed on their children who do not have any criminal convictions in Thailand.
The ban is in affect an assurance by the British Government that they respect judgments in the Thai justice system which found the couple guilty of corruption and fraud in a deal which allowed them to buy a 16 acre site from the Thai government in the centre of Bangkok at a third of its market price.  Pojoman was jailed for three years for fraud. Thaksin was jailed for two years for corruption.
The couple fled to England while on bail where Thaksin praised Britain’s ‘mature approach’ to democracy.
Last week Thaksin Shinawatra said that many countries had offered him honorary citizenship but he preferred to live in exile in England.
He said he could only return to Thailand by popular demand or by Royal consent.
Meanwhile in Thailand tens of thousand of Thais wearing yellow in support of Thailand’s King Bhumipol Adulyadej  who have for the last three months occupied government house cheered the news in the middle of a tropical downpour.
Members of the People’s Alliance for Democracy had previously demonstrated outside the British Embassy in Bangkok demanding Britain send Thaksin home to face his jail sentence.
Last week some 25,000 supporters of Thaksin Shinawatra wearing read and some calling themselves  ‘Thaksin’sWarriors’  took over the city’s Rajamangala stadium to show support for the exiled Prime Minister.
Thaksin Shinawatra sold Manchester City Football Club at a profit before it was expected that the Football Association would finally have to declare him unfit to own a football club after his convictions in Thailand.
To Manchester City fans, who could not get around to pronouncing his name, he was known simply as ‘Frank’ – as in Frank Sinatra.

 

 

Ex Thai PM linked to corruption with Burma junta Times 15 Sep 08

Link to The Times story

From Times OnlineSeptember 16, 2008

Andrew Drummond in Bangkok

Thailand’s Supreme Court has issued another arrest warrant for Thaksin Shinawatra, the ousted premier, this time for cashing in on Burma’s military junta while offering himself as a mediator with the repressive regime.

While Mr Thaksin, until recently owner of Manchester City F.C., offered Thailand as host country for talks with Burma, he was secretly cashing in on his relationship and offering his own government’s money to clinch the deal, it is alleged.

This is the second warrant issued for the arrest of Mr Thaksin for corruption as the exiled Prime Minister continues his political career from his home in Weybridge, Surrey.

He is accused of instructing Thailand’s Import-Export Bank to offer the Burmese junta a soft loan for the equivalent of £65 million to enable the government to buy products from his communications company Shin Satellite, which was then totally owned by his family.
He also allegedly told the junta he could reduce the interest rate without consulting his Cabinet.

Mr Thaksin, who was ousted in a military coup in 2006, fled Thailand with his wife Pojama to evade a charge of corruption over a deal in which she was able to buy a 16 acre site in central Bangkok at a third of its price from a Thai government department.

Thailand is currently in a state of political deadlock. Mr Thaksin’s successor Samak Sundaravej was forced last week to step down for hosting a television cookery programme while in office. He also faces charges of corruption and libel, and the first court date has been set for later this month.

Yesterday the majority Peoples Power Party (PPP) nominated Somchai Wongsawat, Mr Thaksin’s brother-in-law, to lead the country - a move which has further angered protesters from the People’s Alliance for Democracy, who seized Government House in Bangkok three weeks ago and who plan to step up their protest.

A spokesman for the PPP, which is widely seen as Mr Thaksin’s nominated government while he is in exile, confirmed that he had been in touch by phone to make his personal recommendation as to who should be P.M.

 

Thaksin Shinawatra’s brother-in-law voted in as PM candidate- The Times 15-08-08

Link to Times story

Link to Australian story

Andrew Drummond in Bangkok

 
Thailand’s government party the People’s Power Party (PPP) today nominated a brother-in-law of exiled Premier Thaksin Shinawatra as the country’s Prime Minister, a move which could send the country spiralling into further chaos.

The PPP’s choice of Somchai Wongsawat is certain to antagonise the protesters who have occupied Government House for three weeks, accusing the government of being a puppet of the ousted premier.

Mr Somchai has been acting prime minister since last week, when Premier Samak Sundaravej was forced to step down by the Constitution Court, for breaking parliamentary rules by hosting a cookery programme on commercial television while P.M.

The People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD), whose protests have disrupted travel across the country, describing Mr Somchai, a former Minister of Education, as “Thaksin Number Three” vowed to continue in its bid to unseat the PPP.

Sathien Viriyapanpongsa, co-ordinator for the protesters in the People’s Alliance for Democracy said: “In 2006, we fought only to free the country from the grip of Thaksin [Shinawatra] without laying out long-term measures. Eventually, we got Thaksin episode 2 in the form of a proxy government led by Samak Sundaravej.

“Now we are being presented with Thaskin Episode 3. Our protests will continue. We cannot stop now. We can win.”

“We all know who Somchai is. Samak was just a nominee but Somchai is the real actor linked to Thaksin’s family,” PAD leader Somsak Kosaisuk told reporters. “We will not give him the benefit of the doubt or give him a honeymoon period.”

Mr Somchai’s ties to Mr Thaksin - his wife is Mr Thaksin’s younger sister - led to frequent cries of nepotism during his time as the top civil servant at the Justice Ministry. He denies the accusation, noting he got the job before Mr Thaksin came to power.

Somsak Kosaisook had already publicly stated that none of the PPP cabinet would be suitable as a Prime Minister.

The Thai Army is closely monitoring the situation and the end of the State of Emergency which was declared yesterday – even though the government are now planning to meet, not in government house, but at Bangkok’s old international airport at Don Muang.

But senior generals have repeatedly been quoted as saying they would not initiate a military coup.

Mr Samak had hoped to be voted back to power but last week Parliament could not find a quorum to vote him back in.

Mr Somchai is a barrister by profession and a former Chief Justice of Phang-Nga province in South Thailand. He also served in the Ministries of Labour and Justice.

The other possible contenders, Finance Minister Somporn Amornvivat and PPP Secretary Genereal Surapong Suebwonglee were also staunch allies of Mr Thaksin, who fled to London with his wife Pojaman, while on corruption charges. But they were not related to him by blood.

MR Somchai still has to be confirmed by Parliamentary vote on Wednesday, and with a large faction of the PPP now split, his appointment is by no means a forgone conclusion.

 

 

 

Thailand in political deadlock over new Prime Minister - The Times 12 08 08

Andrew Drummond in Bangkok
 
Thailand was in a political deadlock today after the country’s parliament could not find a quorum to vote in a new Prime Minister.

Deposed Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, who was forced to resign for breaking conflict of interest laws by going on a television show called Cooking and Grumbling, had hoped coalition government members, who have a massive parliamentary majority, would vote him back into power.

But most of the MPs boycotted the session, in what was seen as a time-buying move, while several different parties were in negotiation over the country’s leadership. The vote has now been delayed until next Wednesday.

Meanwhile thousands of supporters of Mr Sundaravej have arrived in Bangkok from the provinces, and exiled Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra is reported to have conveyed by phone his choice as new Prime Minister of Thailand.
 
The ‘Democracy against Dictatorship’ supporters have been bussed into the capital to counter demonstrations by the People’s Alliance for Democracy supporters who have taken over Government House, and last week paralysed airports in the country’s tourist hotspots.

PAD leader Chamlong Srimuang cancelled a planned protest by Young PAD, saying: “We do not want violence”.

The political turmoil has caused international tourist arrivals in Bangkok to drop by 70 per cent according to Charoen Wang-ananont, President of the Thai Tourist Services Association.

Holiday bookings to Thailand were being cancelled “right across the board” from Asia to Europe and already hotel occupancy was down 40 per cent for the time of the year, he said, calling for the state of emergency to be lifted.

Some 800,000 Britons travel to Thailand each year.