Still No Justice for
Somchai Neelapaijit and Other Victims.
Fifteen years ago this
week, I received a phone call in the middle of the night with the news that
Somchai Neelapaijit had gone missing. At the time, Somchai was chair of
Thailand’s Muslim Lawyers Association and vice-chair of the Human Rights
Committee of the Lawyers Council of Thailand.
Official investigations
have at least established that Somchai was abducted on March 12, 2004 and later
murdered, though his body has never been found. His alleged assailants are a
group of police officers who sought retaliation for Somchai’s involvement in
lawsuits alleging widespread police torture of Muslim suspects in Thailand’s insurgency-ridden
southern border provinces.
But over the past
decade and a half, seven prime ministers, including current Prime Minister Gen.
Prayut Chan-ocha, have failed to bring Somchai’s killers to justice.
A key reason is that
Thailand’s penal code does not recognize enforced disappearance as a criminal
offense. Without the body, prosecutors could only file charges of robbery and
coercion against the five police officers implicated in the case. Their trial,
hampered by official cover-ups, ended in their acquittal in December 2015.
Efforts by Somchai’s
family to obtain justice have been hampered by a 2015 Supreme Court ruling that
the family cannot act as a co-plaintiff, because there is no concrete evidence
showing he is dead or otherwise incapable of bringing the case himself. The
ruling placed the impossible burden on disappeared people of proving they had
been disappeared.
Somchai’s case is the
only one ever brought before a Thai court, even though the United Nations has
recorded 82 enforced disappearance cases in Thailand since 1980. None have been
resolved, and no one has ever been punished.
The Prayut government
has repeatedly pledged to ratify the international convention on enforced
disappearance, which Thailand signed in 2012.
But as we mark 15 years
since Somchai disappeared, that promise has still not been kept.
Even today, Thai
authorities are creating conditions conducive to enforced disappearance, such
as the use of secret detention by anti-narcotics units and in national security
cases.
Thailand’s victims of
enforced disappearance and their families deserve better.
Another year should not
pass without justice for Somchai and so many others.
Sumber : hrw.org, 11 Maret
2019.
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar