Thailand: Recommendations On The Justice System
Thailand: Recommendations On The Justice System In The Trial Of Security Related Cases In The Southern Border Provinces
November 17, 2009
Since three special laws have been enforced in the three Southern border provinces including the Martial Law Act B.E.2457 (1914) and the Emergency Decree on Government Administration in States of Emergency B.E. 2548 (2005) covering the provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat and the Internal Security Act B.E. 2551 (2008)1 covering the districts of Chana, Thepha, Nathawee, and Sabayoy in Songkhla, almost all of cases related to insurgency2 are related to the enforcement of special laws.
The special laws have circumscribed many basic human rights and fair trial of the persons held in custody should enjoy including having someone he trusts or his chosen lawyer present during the inquiry, etc. Therefore, the judge needs to be strictly following laws and regulations when taking evidence derived from the enforcement of special laws that the confession and evident retrieved from unlawful act shall not be admissible. The judiciary is the only body to review the power. The following recommendations are therefore concerned with human rights abuse as a result of the enforcement of the special laws and how the roles of the judge should be in order to uphold human dignity, and people’s rights and liberties.
Martial Law Act B.E.
2457 (A.D.1914)
The power to have a person held in
custody for not more than seven days according to Section 15
bis intends to provide for the inquiry according to the
necessity of the military purpose. But in reality, such
detention power has been misused and the person held in
custody has been subject to torture and being forced to make
confession or to incriminate other persons or to tell where
he obtained the firearm used in the insurgency.
Recommendation
When a habeas corpus case is filed
with the Court, the Court should exercise its power in full
to review the executive power. It should set to adduce
evidence to be examined in the Court and arrange for
remedies should the torture of the person held in custody
did happen as per Section 32 of the 2007 Constitution.
Emergency Decree on Government Administration in States of Emergency B.E. 2548 (A.D.2005)
Sections 11(1) and 12 provide for judicial review. The provisions allow mutatis mutandis the application of the Criminal Procedure Code concerning the issuance of warrants and ISOC Regulation3. The two laws can be applied when a warrant is to be issued and when the Court is asked to extend the detention.
Recommendation
1. The issuance of Emergency Decree warrant
1.1 Regarding the evidence submitted by the official seeking the arrest warrant, the Court should call on them to provide the evidence and review the reasons cited for the request for the warrant. It should review if the evidence was derived from an incriminating statement made by another accomplice, or from other sources. It has been found in several cases that after the case has been submitted by the public prosecutor to the Court, the facts concerning the reasons for the arrest differ from those mentioned in the request for the Emergency Decree warrant.
1.2 Measures should be meted out and the officials holding a person in custody should be required to make a report showing the current condition of the person held in custody. The information can then be keyed into the Court’s database and it shall help to prevent issuing the same warrant repeatedly for the same person and helps in terminating the warrant.
2. Extension of the detention
2.1 Concerning the extension of the detention, the Supreme Court’s Regulation on the criteria and procedure concerning the issuance of court writ or criminal warrants B.E. 2548 (2005) should be applied. It should be required that the person held in custody be brought to the Court so that the judge may ask if the person held in custody objects to the extension or not. Currently, the Court held on to paragraph 2, Article 3.7 of ISOC Regulation which does not require the official to bring the person held in custody to the Court.
2.2 Regarding the report made by the official and submitted to the Court, an emphasis should be placed on how efforts have been made to change the attitude of the person held in custody. It has often been found that the official making the report simply cite phrases from Article 3.7 of ISOC Regulation without giving detail.4
2.3 The Court should arrange for the review of the termination of the Emergency Decree warrant, since it happens that the official requesting for the warrant has failed to delete the warrant record of a person, even though he has been arrested and released after having gone through the detention invoking the Emergency Decree. As a result, the person may be intercepted in a checkpoint while travelling, and may be barred from traveling abroad. Otherwise, the old warrant is used as a threat to coerce a person to participate in a state project and the person may be promised that the warrant shall be revoked if he cooperates.
The Criminal Procedure Code
1. In reviewing the request for the extension of the detention, the Court should abide by strictly Article 47 and 48 of the Supreme Court’s Regulation, particularly, when the request is for transferring the person to be held custody in another place which is not in a prison. It is necessary to have a hearing of such a request. In security related cases, it happens that the inquiry officials bring the suspect for inquiry at some inquiry center and the suspect is not given the chance to have a chosen lawyer to be present during the inquiry.
2. The practice of video conferencing should be stopped when the Court reviews the request for the extension of the detention. The Court should require that the person held in custody be brought to the Court in person and allowed to say in front of the Court if he objects the detention.
3. The Court should strictly review the taking of evidence since evidence in security cases has often stemmed from the enforcement of special laws. It happens that the evidence derived at the inquiry level is simply hearsay evidence or an incriminating statement made by another accomplice. It may also come from the obscure procedure of asking the alleged offender to identify a person from a photo.
4. The Court should not allow examination in other Court. The amendment of Section 230 of the Criminal Procedure Code has been made to prevent the examination of evidence in another court except when it is really necessary (according to Judge Charan Bhaktithanakul, “necessary” means when the witness is sick or becomes disabled only). It also complies with the Constitution that the Court has to examine the witness at the courtroom and Section 256 of the Criminal Procedure Code has therefore been amended to require that the Court shall pay the necessary and reasonable travelling expenses, allowances and lodging house rent to the witness appearing in court.
5. The Court should give special attention to the review of evidence since at this level the Court may discover who the witnesses of prosecution are, who the eyewitnesses are, etc. In security-related cases, it happens that there have not been many eyewitnesses, but hearsay evidence. The Court should review the circumstance and uses it to consider if a temporary release should be granted to allow the accused to prepare effectively for his defence.
6. In motions submitted to the Court including the habeas corpus complaints, objection to the extension of the detention, preliminary examination of the file of prosecution submitted by the public prosecutor, and the post mortem inquest, the Court should exercise its power more actively to call in oral, material or documentary evidence in order to acquire the fact as much as possible. It will help the Court to deliver the most impartial and factual order especially if the defendant has no legal representation.
The Internal Security Act B.E. 2551 (A.D.2008)
According to Section 215 , the Court should assign the roles in the inquiry of the alleged offenders to various competent officials including the inquiry official, ISOC Director, and public prosecutor and the lawyer should be given a chance to be present during the inquiry. According to the ISA, none of the civil society organizations or the lawyers can take part in the inquiry process and may not help to ensure if the execution of power complies with the rule of law.
General recommendations
• There should be more senior judges or judges with
extensive experience to hear security related cases and the
number of judges should be in balance with the number of
cases. At present, there are over 545 security related cases
with 548 persons held in custody in prison and have not been
granted temporary release, as of August 2009.
• The
Court should be provided with the chance to try to come to
terms with basic issues in the Court and to listen to the
views of civil society organizations and people, in addition
to the views from the state and security agencies.
• The justice process in security related cases should
be non-discriminatory, i.e., the public prosecutor should
apply the laws strictly equally between the official and
people. There have been cases where the officials were able
to claim they were engaged with governmental duties and
asked to postpone the hearing many times.
• The
hearing schedule should be allowed for flexibility and
successive hearing. It happens that the hearing can be
postponed if the witness of prosecution is not available.
The witness may claim he has been transferred to somewhere
else, or has to return to his domicile. All the
postponements have caused redundancy of the trial. And the
accused may have to be subject to prolonged detention.
• The public prosecutors should help to screen the
cases. They should be courageous to stop short of
prosecuting a case with weak evidence. They should also heed
to statistics of cases concerning the charges of being a
member of secret society or a member of a criminal
association which have often been dismissed by the Court.
The statistic showed the high percentage of acquitted cases
that prosecuted by public prosecutors at the criminal court
(the court of first instance and the appeal court) and the
number of weak prosecution files seemed to reaffirm the
policy of preventive detention of suspects rather than
prosecuting the accused persons with reasonable ground of
evidences.
• There should be more public prosecutors
to cope with a large number of cases. With insufficient
number of public prosecutors, the cases might have to be
often postponed.
More Detail Contact:
Lawyer Somchai
Homlaor, Chairperson of Cross Cultural Foundation Tel.
081-8995476
Lawyer Sitipong Chantarawiroj, Secretary
General of Muslim Attorney Center Tel. 089-8731626
1 The
cabinet approved in principle the enforcement of the
Internal Security Act B.E. 2551 (2008) beginning in late
November 2009 onward.
2 Interview with Mr. Sittipong
Chantraraviroj, Secretary General, Muslim Attorney Centre
(MAC)
3 ISOC Regulation is “Regulation of Internal
Security Operations Command Region 4 concerning Guidelines
of Practice for Competent Official as per Section 11 of the
Emergency Decree on Government Administration in States of
Emergency B.E. 2548 (2005)”.
4 Paragraph 2 of Article
3.7 of ISOC Regulation states that “To apply for an
extension of detention, it is not necessary to bring forth
the person held in custody to the court, but the necessities
for the extension must be proven to the court explaining how
the extension is related to the response to states of
emergency.....”
5 Section 21 states that “...should
it appear that a person is accused of committing a threat to
national security as described by the cabinet, and he wants
to defect and agrees to turn himself in. After the inquiry,
the inquiry official is of the opinion that the person had
been misled or had acted prematurely and he should be given
a chance to correct himself which will be beneficial to the
maintenance of national security. In such a case, the
inquiry official may submit the inquiry report of the
alleged offender to the ISOC Director.
Should the
Director concur with the inquiry official, the inquiry
report with the Director’s opinion shall be submitted to
the public prosecutor and to be forwarded to the Court.
Should the Court deem it fit, it may order the sending of
the alleged offender to the Director and to participate in a
training not longer than six months and to follow any
requirement set forth by the Court....”
About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984. The above statement has only been forwarded by the AHRC.
ENDS