The Borneo Post

Thai junta deny involvemen­t in dissident’s Laos ‘abduction’

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s junta yesterday denied involvemen­t in the alleged disappeara­nce of an outspoken monarchy critic from neighbouri­ng Laos after reports emerged he was abducted by a group of armed men.

Wuthipong Kachathama­kul, better known by his nickname Ko Tee, is a firebrand self- styled militant leader of the anti-junta ‘Red Shirt’ movement and a vocal critic of Thailand’s monarchy.

He f led after arch- royalist generals seized power in 2014, kicking out the Red Shirt-backed elected government of Yingluck Shinawatra, and settled in Laos from where he berated the junta in a series of videos and radio broadcasts, often dressed in camouflage outfits.

Over the weekend, reports emerged via supporters that Ko Tee was abducted by a group of Thaispeaki­ng armed men from his home in Vientiane last Thursday.

The reports quoted his wife and a friend who said they were tied up, blindfolde­d, beaten and attacked with stun guns. Ko Tee was allegedly driven away while they were left behind.

The claims have not been independen­t ly veri f ied and reporters have yet to speak to Ko Tee’s wife or the friend to confirm their account.

But in a statement yesterday Human Rights Watch said the reports “raised grave concerns for his ( Ko Tee’s) safety” as they called on the Laos authoritie­s to investigat­e.

As local media coverage of the abduction intensifie­d, Thailand’s military authoritie­s yesterday denied any involvemen­t and accused Ko Tee’s network of spreading rumours.

“We have to investigat­e further as there are several reasons why he ( Ko Tee) might just slip away to create news,” General Thawip Netniyom, secretary- general of Thailand’s National Security Council, told reporters.

He added that Thai authoritie­s had “monitored” Ko Tee and his network in Laos and pushed for the communist authoritie­s to extradite him. “But we haven’t implemente­d any other measures than that,” he said.

It is not the first time a junta critic has gone missing from Laos.

In June 2016 Ittipon Sukpaen, a less well-known dissident, disappeare­d from the outskirts of Vientiane and has not been seen since. His family have since said they believe he is dead.

The Laos capital lies just a few dozen metres from Thailand, on the opposite side of the Mekong river.

The communist nation has a complicate­d relationsh­ip with its southern neighbour, fuelled by decades of bad blood during the Cold War years when the two countries were on opposite sides of the ideologica­l divide.

While there is some cooperatio­n between law enforcemen­t, Vientiane has so far resisted Bangkok’s frequent calls to return dissidents and critics of the monarchy. — AFP

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