The original article may no longer be on the Bangkok Post website. The URL can 
be found at Google News, 
http://news.google.com/news?q=%22Thaksin+must+be+tried+for+deaths%22
but the URL doesn't currently work:
 http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/20Nov2006_news01.php
 
 But many others are forwarding the article around:
  http://www.google.com/search?q=%22Thaksin+must+be+tried+for+deaths%22
  
  There are newer articles on the issue:
  http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/23Nov2006_news13.php
  http://www.bangkokpost.com/231106_News/23Nov2006_news99.php
  
Keep looking around that site. Things may be in flux. People protecting 
elements in the police, etc.. So save the articles in case they disappear later.
 
 For photos and more info:
 http://gallery.marihemp.com/akha
http://www.akha.org 
 
 Please forward widely.
 
 -----


--------article begins-----------
 

 From Nov 20, 2006 Bangkok Post

 Thaksin 'must be tried for deaths'

 Govt urged to ratify convention on court


 PRADIT RUANGDIT


 The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and the Lawyers Council of 
Thailand are pressing the government to ratify the convention on the 
International Criminal Court so deposed prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra could 
be tried for crimes against humanity over his controversial anti-drugs campaign.


 The council and former lawmakers accused the Thaksin administration of having 
blood on its hands for waging its so-called war on drugs which killed more than 
2,000 people, most of them drug traders and traffickers. The government must 
bring Mr Thaksin to justice or the Sept 19 military coup which swept it to 
power would amount to nothing but a public deception, they said.


 Somchai Hom-laor, chairman of the council's human rights committee, said 
evidence came to light supporting the belief that state officials were 
responsible for the deaths of 2,500 people in the anti-drugs campaign. The 
death toll was recorded from two phases of the campaign, the first from 
February to April 2003 and the second in 2005.


 Officials were obeying a Thaksin policy which included a well-organised plan 
to issue a "licence to kill" with approval from Mr Thaksin, the then interior 
minister Wan Muhamad Nor Matha, and the then interior permanent secretary 
Sermsak Pongpanich.


 "They all signalled policy approval for the killing," Mr Somchai said at a 
discussion yesterday organised by the Press Association of Thailand.


 The government and the coup engineers, the Council for National Security 
(CNS), had no choice but get to the bottom of the drug-related killings and 
punish officials who perpetrated them, both for disciplinary and criminal 
violations, he said. The policy-makers, including Mr Thaksin, could end up 
facing charges of crimes against humanity.


 "Saddam Hussein [the former president of Iraq] was charged with committing 
crimes against humanity for the killing of 170 people. In that case, the 2,500 
deaths we witnessed here must constitute crimes against humanity," he said.


 The Attorney-General's Office should handle the issue should it become a case, 
as that agency answers to obligations governed by an international court 
agreement. But first, the government must ratify the convention on the 
International Criminal Court. Thai courts of justice must then formally 
acknowledge the legal interpretation of the definition of crimes against 
humanity for the admissibility and adjudication of such an offence to be 
established in Thailand. Without acknowledgment by the court, there was no 
chance of prosecuting Mr Thaksin.


 Mr Somchai said the Thaksin administration did not bother to ratify the 
convention. If the present government went ahead with the ratification, it 
would effectively restrict Mr Thaksin's mobility.


 The former prime minister, in self-imposed political exile overseas since the 
coup, has travelled from China to Indonesia on a diplomatic passport he has 
used since he was in power. "Signing the convention would prevent Mr Thaksin 
from popping up here and there, especially in European countries which are 
signatories to the convention," he said.


 Mr Thaksin could be brought to trial if he landed in the wrong country.


 Mr Somchai said restoring the rule of law required reforming the police force 
and subjecting police criminal investigations to scrutiny by the court.


 Wasant Panich of the NHRC said the drugs war policy was clearly a mistake, for 
which Mr Thaksin must be held to account. He cited the discovery of an official 
letter sent to people in Samut Sakhon's Ban Phaeo district at the height of the 
campaign, warning them to report to a local drugs war centre or their "safety 
could not be guaranteed".


 Mr Wasant added that a letter allegedly signed by an interior permanent 
secretary at the time was distributed to provincial governors outlining three 
ways to cut the number of drugs traders and producers. The suspects could be 
"arrested, face extra-judicial killings, or lose their lives for any reason".


 He said the blacklist of drug suspects took only 15 days to compile. The 
perceived haste raised concerns that some may have been wrongly targeted.


 The NHRC received 40 complaints related to the drugs war deaths. Not a single 
culprit in those cases was ever caught.


 Former senator Kraisak Choonhavan said the campaign was the most blatant form 
of human rights violation. He was surprised the government and the CNS did not 
feel compelled to highlight the issue as one of the reasons for toppling the 
previous administration.


 "We can't possibly create a new society if the coup-backed government doesn't 
lift a finger to deal with the drugs war killings of the Thaksin era," he said.


 ---------end of article------


--------------


MMM (Global Million Marijuana March):
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cannabisaction
Newsweek, Nov. 14, 2005, page 36:
"The most recent evidence comes from autopsies of 44 prisoners who have died in 
Iraq and Afghanistan in U.S. custody. Most died under circumstances that 
suggest torture. The reports use words like 'strangulation,' 'asphyxiation' and 
'blunt force injuries.' ... A few months before the [Abu Ghraib] scandal broke 
[spring 2004], Coalition Provisional Authority polls showed Iraqi support at 63 
percent. A month after Abu Ghraib, the number was 9 percent. Polls showed that 
71 percent of Iraqis were surprised by the revelations."




 
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