Phuket Gazette Thailand News: Tourists escape bus crash; ISA invoked in Bangkok; Suspect arrested for Brit murder; ATM attacks in South

PHUKET MEDIA WATCH
– Thailand news compiled by Gazette editors for Phuket’s international community

ISA invoked ahead of visit by Premier Li
The Nation / Phuket Gazette
PHUKET: The government yesterday decided to impose the Internal Security Act (ISA) on Dusit, Pomprap Sattru Phai and Phra Nakhon districts of Bangkok until October 18 as 200-300 protesters continued to rally outside Government House.

The People’s Army to Overthrow the Thaksin Regime shifted their demonstration to Government House on Monday after rallying at Lumpini Park for over two months.

The security guard around the seat of government has been beefed up to more than 1,000 police to keep the peace.

Deputy Prime Minister Pracha Promnok said he had informed Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who was attending the Asean Summit in Brunei, of the invocation of the decree.

The government took action after talks failed to persuade protesters to evacuate their rally site ahead of Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s visit tomorrow.

Interior Minister Charupong Ruangsuwan said the government had to enforce the ISA because Thailand was hosting a foreign dignitary but a group of people were trying to disgrace the administration.

The protest was expected to escalate into a mass rally because the participants were determined to topple the administration and disrupt the work of Parliament, he said.

“They chose this timing because we are receiving a state guest. They intend to embarrass the government,” he said.

“Parliament is also deliberating a bill to amend Article 190 of the Constitution and several other important bills. We will not allow them to disrupt the work.”

Paradorn Pattanathabutr, secretary-general of the National Security Council, admitted that the decision had something to do with the warning by former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra that there would be a conspiracy to overthrow the government this month.

Security agencies had assessed the situation and believed that the government opponents would prolong their demonstrations, he said.

Suriyasai Katasila, coordinator of the Green Politics Group, said the government enforced the ISA even though the protesters were few in number because of Thaksin’s belief that efforts would be stepped up to oust the government.

The government would probably extend the ISA until the end of the month to prevent other groups from joining the protest, he said.

Senator Paibul Nititawan said the government should not have resorted to the ISA because the demonstrators were exercising their constitutional right to gather peacefully. He and other senators might file a petition against the Cabinet with the Constitutional Court, he said.

Sunisa Lertpakawat, deputy government spokeswoman, said the government had to implement the ISA even though the number of protesters was not high because it feared that they would try to break into government offices.

“Security agencies have assessed the past behaviour of the protesters and decided that there must be a measure to prevent them from intruding into important places, such as Government House, Parliament and the Royal Palace,” she said.

Chaiyan Chaiyaporn, a political-science lecturer at Chulalongkorn University, said the government was too paranoid and activating the ISA while the number of protesters was little would cause the special law to lose efficiency in containing uprisings.

The government felt the ISA was needed because it feared that more protesters would join the rally over the weekend and many more might show up on October 14, which marks the 40th anniversary of the student uprising, he said.

Tourists escape as bus roof ripped back
The Nation / Phuket Gazette
PHUKET: A double-decker tour bus smashed into an overhead metal beam at Bangkok’s Asoke intersection overpass on Tuesday night, wounding 12 German tourists.

After a report at 10pm of an accident involving a tour bus near Don Bosco School on Phetchaburi Road, Makkasan police found the Pongprasert Tour Co double-decker stuck under the overpass’s metal beam with its roof ripped open. Five male and seven female tourists who were on the bus’s upper deck were hit by broken glass and taken to Praram 9 Hospital.

Pol Lieutenant Chakkapop Chimpeungpanao said driver Prapan Phantaeng, 62, had been taking the tourists from Sanam Luang to the Amari Atrium Hotel but failed to see the height-limit warning on the metal beam.

Suspect in Briton’s murder arrested
The Nation / Phuket Gazette
PHUKET: Tourist Police yesterday announced the arrest in Songkhla of 30-year-old Khomkrit Imnoey for his alleged role in the murder of English businessman Raymond John Hyde, 68, in Prachuap Khiri Khan’s Hua Hin district in 2010.

Khomkrit allegedly conspired with his older sister Bunnak Hyde and her lover Thanakorn Budsaba to murder the Briton on July 26, 2010, disguising the crime as a robbery and break-in. While Bunnak and Thanakorn, who were arrested shortly after the murder, confessed to the crime, Khomkrit had been on the run until his arrest Tuesday in Songkhla’s Chana district.

Khomkrit maintained his innocence in the murder, claiming he was delivering milk on the day and only went to the scene after his sister called him about what had happened. After learning that the court had issued an arrest warrant for him, he said he decided to flee because he was already wanted for the rape of minor.

Teacher, two rangers killed in attacks in South; ATMs bombed
The Nation / Phuket Gazette
PHUKET: Insurgents launched a series of coordinated arson and bomb attacks in the deep South late on Tuesday, mostly targeting banks to damage their automatic teller machines.

In two other attacks, one in Pattani fatally wounded a teacher, and the other in Narathiwat killed two Army paramilitary rangers and wounded five others.

Officials said 34 locations were under attack, damaging or gutting a large number of ATM machines belonging to various private and government banks or those attached to convenience stores.

Deputy Prime Minister Pracha Promnog said the attacks were symbolic and marked the anniversaries of two insurgent groups – Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN), which was established on October 10, and Patani United Liberation Organization (Pulo) on October 11.

Three attacks were conducted in the Yawi-speaking district of Saba Yoi in Songkhla, while the remainder, involving either small-sized incendiary bombs or the torching of car tyres to block roads, took place in Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat, said Colonel Pramote Phrome-in, of the Internal Security Operations Centre’s forward base.

The military viewed the attacks as attempts to destabilise the region economically apart from demoralising the local public, said the spokesman. The colonel also called on residents to condemn the attacks.

There were no prior warnings from security agencies about the attacks, which are traditionally given at national level and from local offices in charge of security in the deep South.

The death of Waena Munoh, a teacher at Ban Johkeuyae in the Pattani attack on Tuesday night, brought the death toll of

— Phuket Gazette Editors

Thailand News

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