After a conspiracy of silence Thai political prisoner, Ah Kong, is dead

I woke up this morning to terrible news. The 62 year old Thai political prisoner  Ampon "Ah Kong" Tangnoppakul is dead. Three days ago, on the 5th of May, it was his 44th wedding anniversary and he leaves behind his wife, Pa Ou, and a large loving family.

We had had reports over the last couple of days that he had a bad stomach and wasn’t feeling well. Apparently he has had this condition for a month and was trying to secure bail to get it treated but bail was continually refused.  We’re being told now his sickness got increasingly worse and that no doctor was available to see him. Ah Kong was likely left to die in a filthy prison hospital, alone. At the moment our information is that an autopsy is being performed on his body. This could point to some other causes, rather than natural, that led to his death. Many people in the Red Shirt community we have spoken to today are deeply suspicious as to the cause of his death.


Ah Kong and his wife, Pa Ou, on their wedding day.

Ah Kong was arrested after the intervention of an aide to the former Democrat Party Prime Minister, Mark Abhisit, decided to press charges after this aide received a number of private and personal SMS messages defaming the Thai queen. A court decided, despite very flimsy and weak evidence, that the SMS messages could be traced back to Ah Kong and he received a 20year prison sentence. Why Abhisit’s toadying lickspittle aide couldn’t just delete the messages and forget them is beyond my understanding. I am also convinced that the aide would not have proceeded with such a prosecution without Abhisit’s blessing. I have also seen some evidence that Ah Kong was badly treated whilst awaiting trial and that his mistreatment was directly ordered by the Abhisit government.

I met Ah Kong three times. Each time these meetings took place in the Bangkok Remand Prison. He was obviously frail yet, despite his terrible ordeal, his eyes shone and his smile was broad. He also looked tearful. At that point almost no foreigners had ever been to meet him – not Bangkok’s huge foreign media corps and not the so-called human rights’ NGOs such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty. A foreigner visiting him was a surprise. Likely it let him know at least someone in the wider world knew of his ordeal I asked him about how he was being treated. “Things are getting better now,” he said, with a quiet smile.

I was also lucky enough to meet Ah Kong’s wife, Pa Ou, on a couple of occasions. The last time I saw her we had lunch at MK in Big C in Samrong, just outside Bangkok. There was something indomitable, charismatic and bright about her. She combined this with an easy beauty and an obvious intelligence. Another thing that was very obvious was her love for her husband. Today my thoughts are with her and the rest of Ah Kong’s family

The international community have been pathetically lacking in response to dealing with lese majeste. The USA Embassy continually claim there are no political prisoners in Thailand. The British Embassy – a mission whose foreign minister made recent pronouncements about human rights being at the centre of its policy – gave interviews about flood preventions, yet has remained resolutely quiet on Thai human rights, its former Ambassador taking up work with a huge Thai conglomerate after years of abject silence. Human Rights Watch refused to visit any lese majeste prisoners for years and refused to take up lese majeste cases, their supine Thai researcher once stating that dealing with lese majeste would "damage his ability to work as a human rights defender". When I met Ah Kong in February of this year I asked him if he had any visits from either Amnesty or HRW. "Who and what are Amnesty and HRW," he responded, quizzically. Of course Amnesty International previously stated their tacit support for lese majeste saying “we can see why” such a law needs to exist. As far as I’m aware Western journalists in Bangkok never go to the prison to visit lese majeste prisoners, their silence part of a conspiracy that can only be described as evil.

This evil and the conspiracy of silence that surrounds it led to the death of Ah Kong.  His death can be laid at the door of those who participated and the door of the wretched and malicious Thai elite and the present Thai government who perpetuate the malignant lese majeste law.

Comments

See my earlier comments on

See my earlier comments on this sad development.
I did shed a resigned tear over the news, even though I was not able to go to visit him while he was still alive.
The name of the game is a degree of utter meanness that is unique in the Land of Smiles. Force people to crawl and beg and cry for forgiveness, totally ignoring any genuine Buddhist teachings, and then show the wayward souls mercy by being painfully instructive about their terrible wrongdoing and how glad Thai society is that they have shown regret for their "crimes."
Sickening, reprehensible, and damnable.
It would be nice to know when and where the rites will be held.

Oh Amphon. Oh the family of

Oh Amphon. Oh the family of Amphon. What a truly vile collection of human beings make up the Royalist Thai 'elite'. The lives of all the Thai people are so cheap to them.

I wonder how HM King Bhumipol feels now. Does he even know, or care?

A commentator recently

A commentator recently observed that this case was not unlike sending drones over the skies of Pakistan and Afghanistan and not even apologizing when they happen to blow away an innocent family. Police might be, he said, compared to drones and of course, we know who put them into the skies.
Interesting perspective. Not likely to be shared by those involved in this tremendous monstrosity.

Let's see how heartless Manager Online readers are. Well, guess what? Just went over there and it has not taken them long to be as vile and insulting as we expected. Comment #19: more or less saying that "similar ilk" will probably dig up the body and use it for promotional purposes. #28: Praise the God of Death for taking his life before he had the audacity to ask for royal pardon. #53 suggests that Dr. Pornthip perform the autopsy so that Red Shirt sympathizers are not able to goad the public into wrongful thoughts. #104 says "He got what he deserved. good that he was damned...for having the nerve to insult the high institution." # 100, "I don't forgive you." all in diminutive terms. #98: Goodbye world following bad karma. #94: Cut off his head and sent it to the Pasteur Institute for analysis. #72: I didn't know him personally but let him to to the deepest Hell and never be reborn. #2: We have to ask - did he realize the error of his ways before he died? #8: Will they be given seven million? #26: I don't want to keep repeating but can't resist - those who do harm to the nation and to the person of the king will fall.

There is more, and certain to be more in other places, but it is all sad and sickening. Such a promising society so full of pretentious BS.

I rarely use the word evil -

I rarely use the word evil - it is too obvious, too clumsy a term.

But today it is apt.

The death of Ah Kong is as a result of evil.

And that evil is now so deeply entrenched in the Thai mind set it may be impossible to remove.

Why is it necessary to ad

Why is it necessary to ad even more " fuel to the fire", Amnesty international have made Ah Kong "prisoner of conscience" that is probably the most they could do now. And i don"t see any difference between Thaksin and Abisith parties in this case.

May you rest in peace
Dear innocent Uncle.