BULLETS FLY AS TWO PRISONERS SHOT DEAD
The morning of the 20th will be remembered by us, more for a highly charged though unrelated event that took place just yards away, rather than the military takeover unfolding outside.
Nonthaburi prison is the local equivalent of a county jail and serves the
At around 9.30am on the first full day of the Coup we were sitting in the yard on our side of the wall sipping bitter coffee and discussing the events unfolding in Bangkok and across the country when our attention was drawn by loud voices and some sort of disturbance coming from the other side. The shouting slowly increased in intensity until it became obvious that something quite serious was going on although we couldn’t see what. After ten minutes or so the noise was that of an angry mob or demonstration. There was jeering and shouting and by this time a few of the guards from our building had moved up towards the wall ordering us to move back and nervously scanning the razor wire on the walls upper edge 20 feet above the ground.
Suddenly the shouts were punctuated by several loud and intermittent reports which caused hundreds of pigeons on the building rooftops to flap alarmingly into the air and fly off. My fellow prisoners looked at each other somewhat perplexed but my blood had already run cold in the certainty that what I’d just heard was gunfire. The shots continued and we could hear the sudden panic and chaos amongst those on the other side of the wall. I jumped up on a bench to try and get a look at what was going on but the wall was just to high and instead all I saw was a couple of ricochets off of the top, the bullets making a loud smacking sound and throwing up little puffs of concrete dust as they were deflected some 5 meters from where we stood.
We backed away from the wall and looked around for anyone who looked as though they knew what was going on but it was impossible for anyone around us to know for sure because of the wall blocking the view. Only the group of guards gathered atop Bangkwangs infamous Landmark, the central tower could have seen events unfolding over the wall. The sunlight glinted off the lenses of their infra-red binoculars as they were joined by two snipers kneeling and aiming their high powered rifles with telescopic sights down toward our position, preparing incase the violence spilled over into our side of the wall.
The intermittent gunfire continued on and off for several more minutes as did the panicked cries of those trying to dodge the bullets, eventually subsiding until all that could be heard were individual screams as people were subdued and beaten with batons. Then there was silence.
Later that day we learned what happened. The whole thing was started as a peaceful protest by prisoners over their ill treatment by one of the guards. Only the week before a similar protest by prisoners in Nakon Thammarat Provincial Prison complaining over violent beatings by some of the guards ended peacefully when the prisoners demands to have the officers responsible for the brutality relieved of their positions was met by order of the Director General, department of corrections. Perhaps it was this incident, reported nationally in the media that had encouraged inmates in Nonthaburi Prison to try to address some of their own concerns. It is hard to find out exactly what had triggered their protest that morning, but the day was to end entirely differently from that of those prisoners in the South a week before.
The protest had become heated and angry when the authorities refused to listen to their concerns and guards had been ordered in to break up the gathering. In the ensuing scuffle one of the guards had been roughed up by some of the prisoners. It is understood that this particular guard was one of those that had been accused of ill treatment and violence toward the prisoners which had caused the protest in the first place. In a huge over reaction to this incident the other guards had re-grouped at the gatehouse, drawn weapons and begun to fire indiscriminately into the assembled prisoners. Panic had immediately taken hold and chaos ensued as prisoners had darted in every direction to try to avoid being shot by the ill trained and poorly disciplined guards.
Two prisoners were shot dead and another twenty or more wounded. Many more were hospitalized by beatings as the guards, their numbers now strengthened by a large group of colleagues sent from Bangkwang, re-established control over the unarmed prisoners.
The official press release from the Director of Nonthaburi Prison was a classic cover –up as is always the case in
If they’d have escaped the only people roaming the streets outside would have been camouflage clad soldiers with itchy fingers on the triggers of their M16’s and tanks on every other street corner. Not the best time, you’d have thought to be mooching the streets in shackles and prison duds!
Then, there is the actual shooting. If the two dead men were ‘attempting to escape’, what in gods name were the 20 plus wounded trying to do? Give the first two blocks a ‘leg up’ perhaps? Or maybe they were trying to dig a last minute tunnel? Convenient was it not that none of the wounded were mentioned in the official press release.
Furthermore, anyone with an even cursory knowledge of firearms will know that it would take a marksman of exceptional skill and nerve, with a very high quality weapon at his fingertips to shoot dead two particular individuals amongst a group of perhaps many hundred (Nonthaburi houses one thousand inmates) exchange the marksman’s rifle for a standard issue, department of corrections 38 police automatic and the task becomes impossible. Replace the marksman with an undisciplined rabble of Thai prison guards and you’ve got yourself a ‘Turkey Shoot’ for that is what happened here. A poorly trained, ill disciplined and highly excited number of glorified caretakers opened fire on a group of unarmed prisoners running for their lives. The only things the two unfortunate bastards who were killed were escaping from were the bullets that ultimately cut them down. The next morning in this building we were walking the yard, we came across a guard surrounded by a group of ‘Arse- kissing’ prisoners who were hanging on his every word, and we stopped to see what all the fuss was about. Maybe he had news of the Coup of which we were anxious to hear details. Imagine our utter disgust when we realized what was going on. It turns out that this particular guard had been one of those sent over to assist in the disturbance in Nonthaburi prison the day before. Here he was relating his tales of ‘Daring- Do’ to the assembled group of enraptured Thai inmates. It was all they could do to stop themselves giving this animal a round of applause as he proudly described and acted out how he had so bravely waded in and smashed the skulls of fleeing prisoners using his baton already suitably impressed it seems by his excited descriptions of his courageous attack on a bunch of their fellow inmates, the attendant bunch of slimy arsewipes were then given an extra special treat. The ‘Superhero’ guard reached into his fatigues pocket, pulled out a Polaroid snap and passed it around waiting for appraisal. I managed to catch a quick glimpse and was suddenly never closer to violence towards this scum than I was right then.
The photo showed the guard, smiling for the camera, arms folded with one booted foot resting on the back of a blood soaked prisoner lying on his front, his wrists held behind him with cable ties and a face who’s features were unrecognizable having been crushed under the blows of a guards baton.
A cold can of Pepsi was hastily brought for the guard and his cigarette was lit for him as he gloated over the crowd of Thai inmates who were smiling and looking at this pig with genuine admiration. As his sick trophy was passed amongst them and they nodded their approval.
We walked on in astounded, disgusted silence. Our thoughts going into overtime with sheer dismay. Didn’t they realize that the sorry looking horror story in the photograph could quite easily have been one of them?





bravenet.com