News (Media Awareness Project) - Thailand: Thaksin Issues Warning To Police |
Title: | Thailand: Thaksin Issues Warning To Police |
Published On: | 2004-10-05 |
Source: | Nation, The (Thailand) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 22:33:32 |
THAKSIN ISSUES WARNING TO POLICE
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra yesterday threatened to transfer
officials who fail to prevent a resurgence of drug use and trafficking, a
day after he announced another round in his war on drugs.
"I am serious about taking action against drug traffickers. Government
officials, police in particular, must take action too as these traffickers
destroy youths' lives, ruin the economy and damage the country," he said.
The premier cited Bangkok's Klong Toei district as needing extra attention
from the Metropolitan Police Bureau as well as the Narcotics Control Board
(NCB).
"Klong Toei has never been drugfree," he said.
He called on officials or officers to complain directly to him if they were
abused for cracking down on drugs.
Tipsters with useful information on drug trafficking would also receive
rewards, Thaksin promised.
The drug trade has been coming back with ketamine from Cambodia, ecstasy
from Malaysia, heroin from Burma, and marijuana in Thailand's Northeast, he
said. Last year Thaksin declared the country free of drugs after a 10month
operation that saw more than 2,000 people killed, prompting outrage from
governments and human rights organisations around the world.
Thaksin said some African travellers smuggled in cocaine when they boarded
flights to Bangkok, but it was difficult for officials to detect because
they carried the illicit drug in small amounts.
"Every government agency must join forces in cracking down on drugs," he said.
He also told the Education Ministry to ask schools to look for students
suspected of sniffing glue or drug addiction.
"These children must be sent to receive treatment immediately before others
follow their examples," he said, adding that the Public Health Ministry
must provide treatment for drug abusers and other agencies must use
information from these children to trace drug traffickers.
Pol LtGeneral Krissana Pholanan, NCB secretarygeneral, said his agency
would reexamine areas suspected to be drug routes or drugstorage areas,
especially Klong Toei and adjacent provinces to Bangkok.
Krissana said the drug crackdown this time would focus on strengthening
communities and closely watching movements that could be involved with the
drug trade.
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra yesterday threatened to transfer
officials who fail to prevent a resurgence of drug use and trafficking, a
day after he announced another round in his war on drugs.
"I am serious about taking action against drug traffickers. Government
officials, police in particular, must take action too as these traffickers
destroy youths' lives, ruin the economy and damage the country," he said.
The premier cited Bangkok's Klong Toei district as needing extra attention
from the Metropolitan Police Bureau as well as the Narcotics Control Board
(NCB).
"Klong Toei has never been drugfree," he said.
He called on officials or officers to complain directly to him if they were
abused for cracking down on drugs.
Tipsters with useful information on drug trafficking would also receive
rewards, Thaksin promised.
The drug trade has been coming back with ketamine from Cambodia, ecstasy
from Malaysia, heroin from Burma, and marijuana in Thailand's Northeast, he
said. Last year Thaksin declared the country free of drugs after a 10month
operation that saw more than 2,000 people killed, prompting outrage from
governments and human rights organisations around the world.
Thaksin said some African travellers smuggled in cocaine when they boarded
flights to Bangkok, but it was difficult for officials to detect because
they carried the illicit drug in small amounts.
"Every government agency must join forces in cracking down on drugs," he said.
He also told the Education Ministry to ask schools to look for students
suspected of sniffing glue or drug addiction.
"These children must be sent to receive treatment immediately before others
follow their examples," he said, adding that the Public Health Ministry
must provide treatment for drug abusers and other agencies must use
information from these children to trace drug traffickers.
Pol LtGeneral Krissana Pholanan, NCB secretarygeneral, said his agency
would reexamine areas suspected to be drug routes or drugstorage areas,
especially Klong Toei and adjacent provinces to Bangkok.
Krissana said the drug crackdown this time would focus on strengthening
communities and closely watching movements that could be involved with the
drug trade.
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