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US activists want justice for dead imam

By: AFP
Published: 8/01/2009 at 04:37 PM

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva must ensure that troops who tortured and killed a Muslim cleric in the far south face justice, a US rights group said Thursday.

Imam Yapa Koseng, a 56-year-old religious leader, was arrested in March last year and died days later in military custody in the Muslim-majority deep south, where a deadly separatist insurgency is raging.

"Prosecuting the soldiers who killed an imam in army detention will be a test of the administration of new prime minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva," New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a statement.

Abhisit was elected by parliament on December 15, and has vowed to quell the five-year long rebellion, which has left more than 3,500 people dead.

An inquest in Narathiwat province last month ruled that Yapa died after beatings by soldiers during interrogation, an army spokesman said, adding that they planned to begin the process to prosecute five soldiers.

HRW said the imam's death highlighted broader human rights violations in the south, including illegal and arbitrary detention and torture including beatings, electric shocks and strangulation.

"The new government needs to overhaul the counter-insurgency strategy that encourages abuses, impose effective civilian control over the army, and provide efficient redress for victims of abuses," said HRW Asia Director Brad Adams.

"By relying on repressive measures and restrictions on fundamental human rights, Thai authorities have created a fertile ground for the insurgency to expand."

The southern region was once an autonomous Malay sultanate until Buddhist Thailand annexed it a century ago, provoking decades of tension. Successive governments have failed to curb the unrest.

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  • monk

    Discussion 2 : 10/01/2009 at 01:33 PM2

    I can see that many Thais have the common answer when they are asked for responsibilities. They usually will say, "Oh, it's not my responsibility, as I was not there, or this is the responsibility of my processor." So as usual no one is responsible. Your excuse only shown that you're incapable. Every matters concern in government policies, judicial or extra-judicial from the pass or present, are the responsibilities of the Thai Government.
    Beside, I don't think the present Prime Minister or any member of the cabinet have the balls to question the legitimacy policies of the army.

    The army are the king maker of this country and are the real ones that are governing Thailand.

  • Mill

    Discussion 1 : 09/01/2009 at 08:28 AM1

    Mr.Abhisit ansfer for this mater.We not dit this Taksin dit.

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