Both sides blamed for violence on Thailand's May 19, 2010 crackdown | Prachatai English
Pravit Rojanaphruk, The Natio, September 14, 2012
Commission says 'men in black' may have got cooperation from red shirts
The long-awaited final report from the Truth for Reconciliation
Commission of Thailand (TRCT) on the 2010 crackdown, which was obtained
in advance by The Nation, shows that the so-called "men in black" had
received cooperation from red-shirt guards. It also said that security
officers eventually used live bullets, deployed snipers and were likely
responsible for the six deaths at Wat Pathumwanaram on May 19, 2010.
The
515-page report appeared to hold both sides responsible for the 90-plus
deaths and said the clashes on April 10, 2010, where more than 20
people were killed including Army Colonel Romklao Thuwatham, were
seminal in creating a climate of animosity between the red shirts and
the Army. The report is scheduled to be made public next week.
The men in black and April 10, 2010
"Both
[sides] believe they were victims. The operation by the 'men in black'
were very instrumental in creating and elevating the violence with the
aim of provoking the Army to use weapons against protesters and wanting
to exact the loss of lives," page 184 of the report read.
The
TRCT explained that after the night of April 10, 2010, the Centre for
the Resolution of Emergency Situation (CRES) had started using the term
"terrorist" and had permitted security officials to use live bullets for
self-defence. Abhisit Vejjajiva's government created the commission
with chairman Kanit na Nakorn personally chosen by the premier.
When
Colonel Romklao was unexpectedly attacked and killed by a bomb and some
senior officers injured, "it led to the confusing and out-of-control
use of weapons by soldiers", the report said. It added that soldiers
then used rifles and fired "many" live bullets in the direction of the
red-shirt protesters. "Many protesters died from bullet wounds," the
report stated, without explicitly linking the deaths to soldiers.
The
report links at least one of the "men in black" to Army Maj-General
Khattiya "Seh Daeng" Sawasdipol, who would later end up being shot down
by an unknown sharp shooter on May 13. The report does not reveal the
name of the "man in black" believed to be a close aide of Khattiya. On
pages 163 and 164, the report says that somebody saw a group of men in
black step out of a white van at 7pm on April 10 near the Democracy
Monument only to be "surrounded" and escorted by red-shirt guards toward
the direction of the deadly confrontation. The guards "barred people
from taking photos and some protesters shouted 'a helping hand is here',
but were later prevented from speaking".
The report failed to
shed light on who might have killed Reuters photographer Hiroyuki
Muramoto that night, but it did point out that the first death on April
10 had taken place in front of the Education Ministry when a red-shirt
protester was killed by a bullet from an unknown assailant. This was
well before the men in black showed up.
Death of Maj-General Khattiya
The
TRCT report said that Khattiya, a key red-shirt ally, was shot in the
head by a "high-velocity" but unspecified gun on the night of May 13
with bullets that "probably" came from the Silom Plaza Building, which
was "under the control of the authorities since April 18".
Six deaths at Wat Pathumwannaram
After
Khattiya was killed, violence escalated on both sides and the TRCT
report noted a photograph taken by Agence France-Presse, showing what
was later examined by weapon experts to be the shell of a live bullet
flying out of a soldier's rifle aiming his gun toward protesters. The
report noted on page 208 that security officers shot live bullets from
both rifles and handguns.
On May 19, at around 10.50am, the
report said that clashes occurred between soldiers and armed men in
black who were holed up inside Lumpini Park and stated that some
protesters may have been killed when bullets were fired from the park.
As
for the six killed at Wat Pathumwannaram on the evening of May 19 after
demonstrators had been dispersed, TRCT said that on May 19, some 4,000
people had entered the temple, which had been declared a sanctuary area.
A sign stating temple's sanctuary status had been posted since May 17,
after peace advocates had managed to have the government agree to the
idea. The report noted an eyewitness account saying men in black had
been spotted inside the temple compound on May 15.
The report
noted that: "At around 6pm [of May 19, 2010] seven soldiers were
deployed on the first floor of [BTS] Skytrain track in front of Wat
Pathumwannaram and five [soldiers] at the Siam Centre BTS Station. All
of them were armed with M16 rifles and live bullets.
"It was discovered that officers aimed at and shot in the direction of Wat Pathumwannaram.
On the first-floor Skytrain track, two .223 bullet shells were discovered and they had been fired from the same gun.
What's
more, a senior monk at the temple said he had seen a number of soldiers
on the Skytrain track and had heard my gunshots fired around the front
of the temple at dusk.
"It is highly likely that this was the
cause of the deaths and injuries around Wat Pathumwananram," the report
concluded, adding that one soldier told the TRCT that he had fired into
the temple because there was an armed man in black on a tree inside the
temple.
An M16 was later discovered inside the temple, the report added.
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