The man responsible for pushing through an anti-terrorism measure in Thailand at the behest of the US was later charged under the very same law.
Former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, under pressure from the administration of former US president George W. Bush after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, adopted the Southeast Asian nation’s first counterterrorism legislation by executive decree in 2003.
After being ousted in a bloodless military coup in 2006, the former telecommunications billionaire fled overseas to escape a two-year prison sentence for graft, after having been charged with corruption, abuse of power and disrespect to Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
A sharp split between Thaksin’s rural “Red Shirt” supporters and his “Yellow Shirt” opponents left Thailand in political turmoil. The Yellow Shirts seized the prime minister’s office for months and closed Bangkok’s two airports for nearly a week in 2008 to help bring down a Thaksin-friendly government. Months-long Red Shirt demonstrations last year in Bangkok then culminated in violence that left 91 people dead and more than 1,800 injured.
Leaders of the demonstrators are now facing terrorism charges. Thaksin was charged in abstentia with inciting the demonstrations via videos shown on large screens before a sea of Red Shirt supporters.
Fifty-four people have been charged with terrorism and could face from three years to life in prison, according to figures obtained by the Associated Press through Thailand’s Official Information Act of 1997. Thirty-nine suspects are pro-Thaksin and 15 are Yellow Shirts, dedicated to preserving the monarchy’s power.
Yet in southern Thailand, where more than 4,700 people have been killed since an Islamist insurgency flared in 2004, no one has been charged with terrorism. This has led human rights activists to declare the law has been used to thwart political dissent, not actual terrorism in the mostly Muslim south.
Karom Poltaklang, the defense lawyer for pro-Thaksin leaders charged with terrorism, said the law is purely political, adding that: “Political demonstrators cannot be terrorists.”
Thailand has been an ally of Washington in the “war on terror,” allegedly allowing the CIA to use waterboarding techniques on al-Qaeda suspect Abu Zubaydah at a secret prison in its territory in 2002. CIA contractors also waterboarded USS Cole bombing plotter Abd al-Nashiri twice in Thailand, according to former intelligence officials.
Thai security forces and the CIA worked together to catch terror suspect Hambali in August 2003, in the ancient Thai city of Ayutthaya, 80km north of Bangkok. He is now being held in the US detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Hambali, an Indonesian whose real name is Riduan Isamuddin, was allegedly operations chief of the Islamic militant group Jemaah Islamiyah, accused of carrying out the Bali bombings that killed 202 people in 2002.
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