Current:Home > ScamsSenior Thai national park official, 3 others, acquitted in 9-year-old case of missing activist -InvestPioneer
Senior Thai national park official, 3 others, acquitted in 9-year-old case of missing activist
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-09 02:48:56
BANGKOK (AP) — A court in Thailand on Thursday acquitted four national park employees, including a senior official, of the kidnapping and murder of an Indigenous rights activist who disappeared under suspicious circumstances more than nine years ago.
The activist, Porlajee Rakchongcharoen, was last seen in the custody of Kaeng Krachan National Park officials in western Thailand’s Phetchaburi province on April 17, 2014.
The killing or disappearance of community and environmental activists is a persistent but overlooked problem in Thailand and many developing countries. Porlajee’s is one of 76 cases of enforced disappearances in recent decades in Thailand that the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights last year listed as unresolved.
Chaiwat Limlikitaksorn, the former chief of Kaeng Krachan National Park, and the three other defendants were arrested in 2019 after Thailand’s Department of Special Investigation uncovered partial remains they identified though DNA analysis as matching that of Porlajee’s mother. The remains were found in a burned oil drum that had been sunken in a reservoir in the park.
Porlajee, better known as Billy, had been leading the local Karen ethnic minority community in a lawsuit against Chaiwat over his efforts to forcibly evict them by burning their homes inside the park — where they had lived for generations — along with their possessions.
Chaiwat, who is now director of the Office of National Parks in the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation, acknowledged that Porlajee had been detained the day he disappeared for illegally collecting wild honey but said he had been released with a warning before disappearing.
Although all the defendants were acquitted of abduction and murder, Chaiwat was sentenced to three years imprisonment for failing to notify police of Porlajee’s actions after detaining him for allegedly possessing the illegally harvested honey.
Porlajee was 30 years old when he went missing.
The Central Criminal Court of Corruption and Misconduct, which oversees cases of government officials that involve charges related to corruption or misconduct, ruled Thursday that the pieces of bones found and tested were not enough to show they belonged to Porlajee, so there was not enough forensic evidence to determine he is dead. It said the circumstantial evidence was also not credible enough to say that the defendants committed the crime.
“I just want to know the truth, where Billy has been missing. But from 2014 until today, we still don’t have any answer. I don’t know what to believe,” Porlajee’s wife, Phinnapha Phrueksaphan, said after the verdict was issued.
Lawyer Preeda Nakpiuw, who is representing the family — who were the plaintiffs — said they will appeal because they believe there is still a way to contest the verdict and move the case forward.
Ahead of the court’s ruling, the human rights group Amnesty International had described “the upcoming and long-overdue verdict (as) an important test for the Thai judicial system, which has failed victims of enforced disappearances for far too long.”
“The judiciary has now an opportunity to set a new standard when addressing enforced disappearances to ensure they align with international human rights law,” the group said in a statement issued Tuesday. “Thai authorities also have a chance to show leadership by sending a message to officials working all over the country: that the culture of impunity ends now and enforced disappearances will no longer be tolerated.”
veryGood! (8644)
Related
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Chiefs receiver Rashee Rice won’t face charges from person over alleged assault, Dallas police say
- U.S. troops will complete their withdrawal from Niger by mid-September, the Pentagon says
- Louisville Mayor: Scottie Scheffler arrest to be investigated for police policy violations
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Significant Environmental and Climate Impacts Are Impinging on Human Rights in Every Country, a New Report Finds
- Inside Carolyn Bessette's Final Days: Heartbreaking Revelations About Her Life With John F. Kennedy Jr.
- 49-year-old California man collapses, dies while hiking on Mount Shasta, police say
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck's daughter Violet graduates: See the emotional reaction
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange can appeal against U.S. extradition, U.K. court rules
- Cam'ron slams CNN during live Diddy interview with Abby Phillip: 'Who booked me for this?'
- Horoscopes Today, May 20, 2024
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- They couldn't move their hands for years. A new device offers the promise of mobility.
- NRA names new leadership to replace former CEO found liable for wrongly spending millions
- Authorities Hint at CNN Commentator Alice Stewart’s Cause of Death
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Ivan Boesky, notorious trader who served time for insider trading, dead at 87
A billionaire gave college grads $1000 each at commencement - but they can only keep half
Attorneys stop representing a Utah mom and children’s grief author accused of killing her husband
Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
Climber's body found on Mount Denali in Alaska, North America's tallest
Simone Biles calls out 'disrespectful' comments about husband Jonathan Owens, marriage
Cristiano Ronaldo, 39, to play for Portugal in his sixth UEFA Euro Championship