Los Angeles Times

Sister of missing Thai dissident seeks justice

- By Shashank Bengali

SINGAPORE — Sitanan Satsaksit knelt outside her brother’s apartment building, her eyes lowered in prayer beneath a widebrimme­d hat. As she tried to reconstruc­t the events of that evening six months earlier, she heard his distressed voice in her head.

They had been chatting on the phone, she back in their native Thailand and he in his adopted home of Cambodia. An outspoken democracy activist and satirist, 38- year- old Wanchalear­m Satsaksit was among more than 100 Thai dissidents who had f led into exile after a 2014 military coup.

He told her he was buying meatballs outside his highrise in Phnom Penh, the capital, when she heard a commotion, a series of bangs and shouts. Then came his plaintive cry, repeated again and again: “I can’t breathe.”

They were his last words before the line went dead.

Witnesses told local journalist­s they saw Cambodian- speaking men bundle the slight, bespectacl­ed Wanchalear­m into a dark blue Toyota Highlander and drive off along the riverside road. But authoritie­s in Cambodia and Thailand have reported no progress in the investigat­ion.

Human rights groups believe his kidnapping was part of a pattern of politicall­y motivated disappeara­nces in Southeast Asia, where authoritar­ian government­s have often helped one another target dissidents in exile.

And so Sitanan found herself on a street corner outside the Mekong Gardens apartment building in early December, holding a basket of offerings as a trio of Buddhist monks scattered sacred water and prayed for

Wanchalear­m. She had traveled to Phnom Penh to conduct her own investigat­ion, meet with her brother’s associates, press police for answers and testify before a judge in a desperate and lonely search for justice.

“I was waiting for this opportunit­y for six months,” she said. “So as difficult as it was, it was also a relief, and happiness, to come to Phnom Penh.”

The abduction has taken on added significan­ce amid seismic political events in Thailand this year. Prodemocra­cy protests have called not only for an end to the military- dominated government but also for limits on the powers of the monarchy, an astonishin­g display of defiance in a country where the king is supposed to be revered, and criticizin­g him is a criminal offense.

A popular activist who campaigned for gender and LGBTQ rights with sharp and sometimes bawdy humor, Wanchalear­m joined the “red shirt” political movement allied with former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. After the military ousted Yingluck in 2014, the junta issued a warrant for Wanchalear­m’s arrest.

He f led to neighborin­g Cambodia, where for the next six years he continued to denounce the military online — most recently in a Facebook video mocking the former army chief and current prime minister, Prayuth Chan- ocha. It was posted June 3, the day before his abduction.

Throughout the summer and into the fall, demonstrat­ors held up posters of Wanchalear­m, making him a symbol of the military’s failure to ensure political rights. His name was spraypaint­ed on Bangkok street corners and trended on social media, bringing the issue of missing dissidents into the national conversati­on for the first time.

Since 2016, eight Thai activists have disappeare­d from exile in Laos or Vietnam. In December 2018, two were found f loating in the Mekong River along the Laotian border, their faces mashed and bodies stuffed with concrete.

All were wanted in Thailand on criminal charges related to criticism of the government or monarchy. In each case, including Wanchalear­m’s, Thai authoritie­s have denied involvemen­t.

“This is a spine- chilling message that there is no safe place for critics of the monarchy,” said Sunai Phasuk, a Bangkok- based researcher for Human Rights Watch. “Even those who escape from Thailand to other countries are still within the reach of brutal repression.”

But what was different about Wanchalear­m’s abduction is it took place in broad daylight, in view of witnesses and security cameras, offering a sliver of hope that he could be found — or his captors brought to justice.

“Thailand has a very good operation with disappeara­nces — you never f ind anything, anything at all,” said Pornpen Khongkacho­nkiet, who heads the Cross Cultural Foundation advocacy group and accompanie­d Sitanan to Cambodia. “This time, there is a lot of evidence if the authoritie­s want to look at it.”

It remains unclear if they will.

The day after Wanchalear­m went missing, a Cambodian police spokesman said he believed the reports to be “fake news.” Weeks later, the Cambodian government told a United Nations working group on enforced disappeara­nces that it had no knowledge of the abduction and no record that Wanchalear­m was even in the country.

In August, the government reported that the police investigat­ion was coming up empty. Wanchalear­m wasn’t listed as a resident at his apartment building, so authoritie­s continued to question whether he’d lived there. The license plate of the Toyota SUV seen in security video was missing from official records, and interviews with three people “confirmed that there were no reports of abduction in the said area.”

The Thai government maintained that it had no jurisdicti­on over the incident and would wait for Cambodia to finish its investigat­ion. The U. N. working group said it was “alarmed” by Thailand’s position.

At her home in the northern Thai province of Ubon Ratchathan­i, Sitanan grew increasing­ly frustrated.

She had helped raise her brother, nine years her junior, although she avoided politics and had long pleaded with him to tone down his commentary. From time to time he’d send Sitanan pictures of men he believed were watching him in Phnom Penh.

In mid- May, police visited his mother at her rural home to discuss his activities, prompting him to curse the officers in his next video.

Yet he refused to seek asylum in the West like other prominent Thai dissidents, and seemed determined to make a life in Cambodia.

He launched a series of small businesses, including a stall selling Thai papaya salad, but each failed. At one point, he and Sitanan traveled to Africa in the hope of starting a commercial banana farm in Cambodia, but that fizzled too.

“He never knew about money,” Sitanan said. “He was always focused on activism.”

She hired a Cambodian lawyer to file a lawsuit in Phnom Penh, then pushed for the opportunit­y to submit evidence.

In October, the judge issued her with a summons, and on Nov. 10, Sitanan, Pornpen and two Thai lawyers f lew to Cambodia.

After two weeks in COVID- 19 quarantine, the group hit the streets, hoping to collect more informatio­n to jump- start the case. They found that Thais who knew Wanchalear­m were reluctant to meet in person, fearful for their safety. Police denied their request to enter his apartment. Witnesses refused to talk.

But the team managed to track down Wanchalear­m’s roommate, a Cambodian who went by “Ricky,” who said he and Wanchalear­m were both at home June 4. That morning, a pale- looking Wanchalear­m turned to his roommate and said, without explanatio­n: “Ricky, I am gonna die. I am gonna die.”

Pornpen, a veteran advocate in missing persons and torture cases, said their research made it clear that Wanchalear­m was targeted for his political views.

“He had no other enemies, no one was after him in Cambodia,” she said. “He didn’t borrow money to go to the casinos. He had no personal conflict at all.”

Sitanan compiled the roommate’s account, Wanchalear­m’s bank details, photograph­s and other documents demonstrat­ing his presence in Cambodia into a 177- page dossier and carried it into the Phnom Penh Municipal Court on the morning of Dec. 8. For an hour and a half, Judge Sin Sovannroth heard her testimony and asked questions through her Cambodian lawyer and a translator.

Afterward, she told reporters that her evidence should be more than enough for the judge to forward the case to a trial court.

In private, she was less confident. A day earlier she had met a senior police official involved in the case who said he had still seen no evidence that Wanchalear­m was kidnapped.

“My conclusion was that these two institutio­ns — the courts and the police — have still done almost nothing on the investigat­ion,” she said.

Amnesty Internatio­nal sharply criticized Cambodian authoritie­s for “glaring inadequaci­es” that raised doubts “about whether they are acting in good faith.” The government’s treatment of its own critics offers little hope that the inquiry will suddenly pick up steam.

Prime Minister Hun Sen, in power for 35 years, has locked up dozens of political prisoners and hounded opposition leaders with criminal charges. Last year, a Cambodian opposition politician living in Thailand was attacked with a stun gun in an attempted abduction in suburban Bangkok.

The Thai and Cambodian government­s have also collaborat­ed in the forcible return of exiled dissidents, in likely violation of internatio­nal laws. In 2018 Thailand secretly extradited an exiled Cambodian, Rath Rott Mony, who served a two- year prison term for involvemen­t in a documentar­y on child sex traffickin­g that angered Hun Sen’s government.

“We fear that the authoritar­ian government­s of Southeast Asia are exchanging opposition activists with each other,” said Somchai Homlaor, one of the lawyers who traveled with Sitanan. “For Wanchalear­m’s case, I don’t think it’s an issue of capability in Cambodia, but of willingnes­s to bring the perpetrato­rs to justice.”

Back in Thailand, Sitanan said she would continue to press for justice, once she concludes another 14day quarantine at the end of December.

“I don’t know what I will do next, except that I will keep going forward,” she said. “I will keep working to f ind the truth of what happened to my brother.”

 ?? Heng Sinith Associated Press ?? SITANAN SATSAKSIT, center, leaves court Dec. 8 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where she is investigat­ing the June 4 abduction of her brother, an exiled dissident.
Heng Sinith Associated Press SITANAN SATSAKSIT, center, leaves court Dec. 8 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where she is investigat­ing the June 4 abduction of her brother, an exiled dissident.
 ?? SITANAN SATSAKSIT, Chor Sokunthea AFP/ Getty I mages ?? right, gives an offering to a monk during a Buddhist ceremony this month at the site where her brother Wanchalear­m, a democracy activist in self- exile, was kidnapped in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
SITANAN SATSAKSIT, Chor Sokunthea AFP/ Getty I mages right, gives an offering to a monk during a Buddhist ceremony this month at the site where her brother Wanchalear­m, a democracy activist in self- exile, was kidnapped in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
 ?? Sakchai Lalit Associated Press ?? A FLIER with the activist’s last known words is seen at a protest outside Cambodia’s embassy in Thailand.
Sakchai Lalit Associated Press A FLIER with the activist’s last known words is seen at a protest outside Cambodia’s embassy in Thailand.

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