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Search Result for “Thanapat Pekanan”

Showing 1 - 5 of 5

OPINION

Act to end torture, disappearance

Oped, Piyanut Kotsan, Published on 10/02/2022

» In 2004, Somchai Neelapaijit, a lawyer and human rights activist, disappeared. He was last seen being dragged out of his car by four men. His whereabouts are unknown to this day. Last year, Jiraphong Thanapat, a drug suspect, died after being tortured at Muang Nakhon Sawan police station. Video evidence showed police suffocating the man with plastic bags until he collapsed and stopped breathing.

OPINION

Why no women?

Oped, Postbag, Published on 22/01/2022

» Re: "PPRP renegades unveil party: Sang Anakot Thai aims to heal economy", (BP, Jan 20). Your front-page photograph illustrating the formation of the new Palang Pracharath Party (Building Thailand's Future) is a line-up of old and bold politicians from the past -- all of them men.

OPINION

Afghanistan a litmus test for this Korean dream

Oped, Thanapat Pekanan, Published on 21/10/2021

» How countries react to human rights issues in Afghanistan speaks volumes about their real commitment towards the principles of democracy and civil liberties.

OPINION

Sitting on fence no real option

Oped, Thanapat Pekanan, Published on 26/08/2021

» Within days of the Taliban taking over Kabul on Aug 15, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hua Chunying came out to express China's seeming endorsement of the Taliban's success when he stated, "We respect the will and choice of the Afghan people." While the tone of the message is suitably diplomatic, the clear implication is that the Taliban's aggression in recent days is welcomed by the national consensus of the Afghan people.

OPINION

South Korea: an example for Asean

Oped, Thanapat Pekanan, Published on 12/08/2021

» In late January 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced the outbreak of a new and deadly form of coronavirus in China, marking the pandemic as a global health emergency. Because of its close proximity to China and the contiguous nature of the regional landscape, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) was among the first regions of the world to be affected by the freely-moving virus.