Bangkok Post

WEMOVE CALLS FOR POLICE RESTRUCTUR­E

- PENCHAN CHAROENSUT­HIPAN

>> A women’s group has joined the call for the separation of the police’s investigat­ion work from the Royal Thai Police (RTP) in the ongoing reform of the police force, saying police investigat­ors need real independen­ce to maintain transparen­cy and efficiency.

The Thai Women’s Movement for Reform (WeMove) previously submitted to Lt Gen Jerdwut Kraprayoon, secretary to a sub-committee overseeing public hearings on the government’s police reform, a list of proposed changes to the police organisati­onal reform.

The group urges the RTP to adopt a civilian-style organisati­onal structure as its current decentrali­sed structure and military-style management is unsuitable for ensuring justice in the judicial process.

Under the current organisati­onal structure and management, the RTP is found to lack independen­ce, said the group, adding that one major factor leading to this problem is the appointmen­t of high-level police officials who are required to be approved by people in power such as politician­s.

Such politicall­y-influenced officials can interfere in the criminal investigat­ion process which can end up with innocent people being made scapegoats, double standards and delays in the judicial procedure, said WeMove.

The police’s investigat­ion section should be separated from the RTP and become an independen­t and non-hierarchic­al division under an independen­t organisati­on, while capacity building is fully supported for the investigat­ors with thorough training and technologi­cal support, said the group.

Under this proposed restructur­ing of the police organisati­on, independen­t investigat­ors will work closely with public prosecutor­s to ensure justice from the investigat­ion to the indictment process, said the group.

At a previous seminar held by WeMove to brainstorm police from women’s perspectiv­es yesterday, Lt Gen Jerdwut said the public hearing on police reform had only begun and is scheduled to end in March next year. All sectors are encouraged to have their opinions heard as to what changes they expect to see in police reform, he said.

A recent survey on national reconcilia­tion found that one major factor blamed for exacerbati­ng conflicts in the nation is the lack of justice in the judicial procedure which is blamed on the police’s investigat­ion work, he said. This underlined the need to reform the police’s investigat­ion work, he added.

Pol Lt Col Monchai Bunsak, a retired police investigat­or, said the fact that the superiors of police investigat­ors are actually the ones with the authority to decide whether a case should be forwarded to the prosecutio­n is wrong.

The criminal investigat­ion authority should be taken away from the RTP so police officials will no longer be able to interfere with the crime investigat­ion, he said.

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