He was responding to a fresh violent incident in which a highway patrol officer was gunned down and another injured at a dinner party at the home of a highly influential local leader in Nakhon Pathom’s Muang district late on Wednesday night, which was attended by at least 25 other police officers, reports the Bangkok Post.
The murdered officer was Pol Maj Siwakorn Saibua, chief of Highway Police Station 1 of the Highway Police Sub-division 2. Pol Lt Col Wasin Wanpee, the deputy commander of the Highway Police Sub-division 2, was seriously injured.
Thananchai Manmak, who was wanted on a court warrant for allegedly shooting Pol Maj Siwakorn and injuring Pol Lt Col Wasin, was shot and killed in an exchange of gunfire with police in Tha Rua district, Kanchanaburi province, early Friday morning.
Praween Chankhlai, alias Kamnan Nok, the local leader and host of the fateful dinner party, turned himself in to Nakhon Pathom police on Thursday afternoon, shortly after an arrest warrant was issued. The Criminal Court yesterday approved a police request to detain him.
Police have also sought court approval to issue arrest warrants for four officers who were at the party, after evidence showed that the gun used in the killing belonged to a policeman, said a highly placed source.
A witness who lived in Mr Praween’s house reportedly confessed that he took the gun used by the shooter and buried it near the reservoir of a waterworks agency in Muang district.
Police took the worker to the spot yesterday, where they found the gun wrapped in a piece of tablecloth fabric from the dinner party. Forensic officers will examine the weapon.
The investigation team said the gun had been acquired by an officer in Nakhon Pathom under a police welfare gun scheme. Last month, the officer sold the gun to Kamnan Nok, who reportedly gave it to Thananchai.
Eyewitnesses told investigators that the shooting took place after a request by Mr Praween for the transfer of his nephew, who is a policeman, was rebuffed, said Pol Lt Gen Jirabhop Bhuridej, commissioner of the Central Investigation Bureau.
‘Bad’ local leaders
The screening and blacklisting of local leaders who have a history of involvement in mafia-style gangs is now very much necessary, said Anutin.
“This kind of person should no longer be active in society nor allowed to continue hurting and killing people,” he said.
The Nakhon Pathom tragedy is a perfect example of why “bad” local leaders must be blacklisted for public safety, said Anutin.
Anutin also ordered tougher regulations to control those allowed to own or carry guns, saying that being allowed to own a gun does not permit the owner to carry it around in public whenever he wants.
There are many restrictions that gun licence owners must follow, he said.
Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapas ordered the transfer of the 25 police officers seen at the Nakhon Pathom party to inactive posts at the Royal Thai Police Operation Centre while a fact-finding committee looked into why they were there.
The Metropolitan Police Bureau also launched a separate fact-finding probe to find out why the gunman wasn’t apprehended at the scene where a high number of police officers were present.
Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, meanwhile, vowed to ensure justice for the highway police officer who was killed, saying it was absolutely shocking to learn that the officer was shot dead because he refused to cooperate in an attempt by gangsters to interfere with a local police reshuffle.
As for a suggestion that the tragedy might have something to do with bribe payments linked with lobbying for a promotion in the police reshuffle, Mr Srettha said that Pol Gen Torsak Sukvimol, the deputy national police chief, is already questioning all the police officers who were at the Nakhon Pathom dinner party.


