News (Media Awareness Project) - Thailand: Slaughter In The Name Of A Drug War |
Title: | Thailand: Slaughter In The Name Of A Drug War |
Published On: | 2003-05-24 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 06:41:47 |
SLAUGHTER IN THE NAME OF A DRUG WAR
BANGKOK - For the last three months, the Thai government has been engaged
in a war on drugs, with the goal of ridding the country of
methamphetamines. The result, however, has been 2,275 deaths -- and the
sacrifice of human rights, freedom of the press and Thailand's reputation
as a democratic country.
Drugs are indisputably a problem in Thailand. Methamphetamines have been
surging in popularity since the mid-1990's. According to official figures,
700 million pills are sold annually, 3 million people take them, and
300,000 people in a population of 62 million are considered addicts. The
country has been smothered with antidrug slogans. Everyone from pop stars
to retired generals has urged Thais to stop using drugs.
But such efforts have been failures. So the current government, which takes
pride in tackling problems where its predecessors dallied, tried a new
strategy. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a rich businessman elected in
2001, says corporate management principles are superior to bureaucracy, and
has applied them to a crackdown on the methamphetamine trade.
Provinces are given targets for arrests and for drug seizures. Police
officers are rewarded with a bounty per pill found, and a percentage of the
assets seized. Officials who fail to meet these goals face dismissal. The
result has been a drug campaign in which the rule of law is less important
than targets met.
The government's approach has been particularly lethal because Thailand has
many professional gunmen. During the Vietnam War, the authorities recruited
and armed irregular forces and vigilante groups. They have never
disappeared. They are used to settle personal quarrels, inheritance feuds
and especially business conflicts. They are hired during elections, when
canvassers routinely die. The police are reported to use them to fight
gangs that smuggle cars into Cambodia.
The killings in this antidrug campaign look exactly the same as these
professional hits. After the government said that drug dealers should
surrender or die, the killings started right on cue. Many victims were on
secret, but official, "black lists." Several were shot by masked men soon
after visiting a police station. The police made little effort to establish
whether the victims were indeed drug dealers, or to chase down who killed
them. The government insists only a handful were killed by the police, and
those in self-defense. The rest are described as "pre-emptive killings" by
drug dealers who want to silence drug dealers who might inform on them. But
whoever pulled the trigger, the result is what the government wants.
The government has also managed the news media's coverage of the campaign.
News anchors announce the numbers "killed by other drug dealers" without
skepticism. Foreign ambassadors at a meeting here expressed concern about
the killings, but the leading daily newspaper's headline said they had
given the campaign full support. Protests by scholars, human rights groups,
and senior public figures went unreported.
Criticism has been met with abuse and intimidation. When a member of
Thailand's National Human Rights Commission spoke to a United Nations group
about the campaign, the prime minister called the action a "sickening"
betrayal. Critics are accused of being in the pay of the drug lords.
International bodies have been told not to interfere. Not surprisingly, no
investigative journalist has dared to look closely at the killings.
At the same time, the real powers behind the drug trade have gotten away.
So many officials are involved in the trade that the government a few years
ago made a television commercial intended to shame them. Enough politicians
are involved in organized crime groups that the prime minister publicly
warned them last month to quit. When a special unit raided the house of the
one big drug dealer arrested during the current campaign, two police
officers were found inside.
Thailand had 50 years of dictatorial rule that nurtured the abuse of power.
Over the past decade, advocacy groups have promoted human rights, press
freedom and the rule of law in an effort to eradicate such abuse. Even if
this campaign succeeds in getting rid of methamphetamines in Thailand, it
is still a failure, because it has revived the bad old ways.
BANGKOK - For the last three months, the Thai government has been engaged
in a war on drugs, with the goal of ridding the country of
methamphetamines. The result, however, has been 2,275 deaths -- and the
sacrifice of human rights, freedom of the press and Thailand's reputation
as a democratic country.
Drugs are indisputably a problem in Thailand. Methamphetamines have been
surging in popularity since the mid-1990's. According to official figures,
700 million pills are sold annually, 3 million people take them, and
300,000 people in a population of 62 million are considered addicts. The
country has been smothered with antidrug slogans. Everyone from pop stars
to retired generals has urged Thais to stop using drugs.
But such efforts have been failures. So the current government, which takes
pride in tackling problems where its predecessors dallied, tried a new
strategy. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a rich businessman elected in
2001, says corporate management principles are superior to bureaucracy, and
has applied them to a crackdown on the methamphetamine trade.
Provinces are given targets for arrests and for drug seizures. Police
officers are rewarded with a bounty per pill found, and a percentage of the
assets seized. Officials who fail to meet these goals face dismissal. The
result has been a drug campaign in which the rule of law is less important
than targets met.
The government's approach has been particularly lethal because Thailand has
many professional gunmen. During the Vietnam War, the authorities recruited
and armed irregular forces and vigilante groups. They have never
disappeared. They are used to settle personal quarrels, inheritance feuds
and especially business conflicts. They are hired during elections, when
canvassers routinely die. The police are reported to use them to fight
gangs that smuggle cars into Cambodia.
The killings in this antidrug campaign look exactly the same as these
professional hits. After the government said that drug dealers should
surrender or die, the killings started right on cue. Many victims were on
secret, but official, "black lists." Several were shot by masked men soon
after visiting a police station. The police made little effort to establish
whether the victims were indeed drug dealers, or to chase down who killed
them. The government insists only a handful were killed by the police, and
those in self-defense. The rest are described as "pre-emptive killings" by
drug dealers who want to silence drug dealers who might inform on them. But
whoever pulled the trigger, the result is what the government wants.
The government has also managed the news media's coverage of the campaign.
News anchors announce the numbers "killed by other drug dealers" without
skepticism. Foreign ambassadors at a meeting here expressed concern about
the killings, but the leading daily newspaper's headline said they had
given the campaign full support. Protests by scholars, human rights groups,
and senior public figures went unreported.
Criticism has been met with abuse and intimidation. When a member of
Thailand's National Human Rights Commission spoke to a United Nations group
about the campaign, the prime minister called the action a "sickening"
betrayal. Critics are accused of being in the pay of the drug lords.
International bodies have been told not to interfere. Not surprisingly, no
investigative journalist has dared to look closely at the killings.
At the same time, the real powers behind the drug trade have gotten away.
So many officials are involved in the trade that the government a few years
ago made a television commercial intended to shame them. Enough politicians
are involved in organized crime groups that the prime minister publicly
warned them last month to quit. When a special unit raided the house of the
one big drug dealer arrested during the current campaign, two police
officers were found inside.
Thailand had 50 years of dictatorial rule that nurtured the abuse of power.
Over the past decade, advocacy groups have promoted human rights, press
freedom and the rule of law in an effort to eradicate such abuse. Even if
this campaign succeeds in getting rid of methamphetamines in Thailand, it
is still a failure, because it has revived the bad old ways.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...