Army vows to probe what happened to detained Thai suspect

Children hold a banner that reads “Stop hurting one another” during a march for peace in the restive southern province of Narathiwat on March 3, 2017. Photo: AFP
Children hold a banner that reads “Stop hurting one another” during a march for peace in the restive southern province of Narathiwat on March 3, 2017. Photo: AFP

The army said today it is investigating how a suspected insurgent in the Muslim-majority south was left unconscious hours after being taken to a notorious military camp.

The Malay-Muslim south has been in the grip of a bloody insurgency that has killed nearly 7,000 people over the last 15 years, and allegations of abuse and impunity against the Buddhist-majority state are rife.

The conflict garners little global attention although the majority of the dead are civilians — both Muslims and Buddhists.

ThaiGov orders all phone users in Deep South to submit photos

On Saturday afternoon, authorities arrested suspected rebel Abdulah Esormusor, 34, and took him to the infamous Inkayuth detention center in Pattani province.

He was found unconscious less than 12 hours later after questioning and taken to hospital with severe brain swelling, southern army spokesman Pramote Prom-In said in a statement.

The army is investigating the incident and “if it is found it was a mistake by authorities, those responsible will face severe punishment”, he said, before adding there was “no evidence” yet that interrogators caused the injuries.

Inkayuth camp is the Thai army’s biggest detention center in the south, where rebel suspects are taken for questioning and held under the emergency laws governing the conflict-scarred region.

Shadowy insurgents carry out near-daily bomb attacks and shootings in their battle for greater autonomy.

But suspects have died in custody, and rights groups have documented extensive allegations of torture and extrajudicial killings, although prosecutions of soldiers fighting in the south are virtually unheard of.

The army vehemently denies allegations of systematic detainee abuse and torture at the Inkayuth camp.

Thailand’s army can detain suspected rebels for weeks without charge under special powers governing the Deep South.

Critics say the situation worsened under the junta that ruled Thailand from 2014, while peace talks have stalled for years.

A new government with the same junta leader Prayut Chan-o-cha as prime minister and defense minister was sworn in this month.

Several rights groups in 2016 released a report documenting allegations of systematic torture in the Deep South that the military dismissed as a work of fiction. More than 7,000 people have been killed and nearly 14,000 injured since violence spread in 2004, according to Deep South Watch.

Additional reporting: Coconuts Bangkok



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