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  1. #1
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    thailazer's Avatar
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    Join the Thai military and lose a few

    This is a bit creepy.

    Organs Missing From Military Academy Cadet's Body

    BANGKOK — The family of Pakapong Tanyakan was told last month that the 19-year-old military academy cadet had died abruptly. They were told his death was caused by “sudden heart failure,” but a detailed autopsy report never came.
    Suspicious of the delay, his family secreted his body away on the day it was to be cremated and took it to a private hospital. That’s when they were told that many organs including Pakapong’s brain, heart, stomach and bladder were missing.
    “I was curious why the brain of my brother was so mushy. What did they do to it?” Supicha Tanyakan said at a Tuesday news conference. “No. It turns out, when they opened up his skull, there was only tissue paper to soak up his blood.”
    Pakapong’s family is now demanding to know the truth of what happened to him and his organs. Military officials today declined to comment on Pakapong’s death, the latest in a string of suspicious deaths to take place inside the secretive realm of military training and conscription.

    “I haven’t received a report about this yet,” defense minister Prawit Wongsuwan told reporters, looking visibly surprised at the news.
    Defense spokesman Kongcheep Tantravanich referred questions to the director of the Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School in Nakhon Nayok province, where Pakapong was enrolled. Someone answering phone said the academy’s director, Maj. Gen. Kanokpong Channual, was driving to Bangkok and unavailable for comment.
    Supicha said no one from the military has contacted her to explain what happened.
    She added that Pakapong’s body is now undergoing an autopsy at the national forensic science institute, and that she’s waiting for the results before taking any action.
    “We are not making any accusations about what caused his death yet,” Supicha said. “We are not forcing the forensic doctors to hurry up at all, because we want precise and accurate results.”
    However, the inquiry is being hampered by the fact that his organs are missing.
    “There’s a delay because they have not returned the organs of my brother yet,” Supicha said.
    Pakapong died on Oct. 17, just two days after he returned to the academy from leave. An army-organized autopsy ruled he died of sudden heart failure without further explanation.
    On the day Pakapong was to be cremated, his classmates performed a fancy drill in his honor, and academy director Kanokpong said an investigation was underway to find out whether the cadet died of foul play, promising to notify the family when the results were available.
    “We are not delaying our work. It’s proceeding,” Maj. Gen. Kanokpong said Oct. 24.
    But the cremation never happened. While the undertaker pretended to set the ritual in progress, Pakapong’s family took his body in secret to a private hospital for an autopsy where they made the gruesome discovery.
    On Monday, Supicha said doctors also found that Pakapong’s ribs were broken in some places, possibly due to blunt trauma.
    In a TV interview aired Monday night, his family displayed a diary kept by Pakapong which mentioned being punched in the belly and disciplined in late May.
    Academies such as the Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School are considered elite colleges for cadets entering military careers on officer tracks. Admission to the school, whose alumni count many heads of government, is done through rigorous exams that require months, if not years, of preparation.
    “I am very proud to pass the exam into armed forces school, both in academic and physical rounds. For me, I prove what I committed to do for three years,” Pakapong wrote in another entry. “I had to fight through insults from other people and myself. I insulted myself that I’m ‘a pig in the real field, a lion in the practice field,’ because when I practice, I do well, but when I have to do it for real, I often fail.”
    The armed forces have a long history of physically abusing recruits and cadets, with occasional deaths resulting. These deaths are rarely explained, and families who seek the truth have been met with silence from the authorities or even prosecution.
    You Make Your Own Luck

  2. #2
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  3. #3
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    1st article khaosod news.
    However, the inquiry is being hampered by the fact that his organs are missing.
    “There’s a delay because they have not returned the organs of my brother yet,” Supicha said.
    2nd article by Bangkok Jack
    His organs, which were removed in the first autopsy at the military-run Phramongkutklao Hospital, were later sent for a second autopsy at the institute. The institute announced that the family did not want to reveal the result of the autopsy on the internal organs.

    The family said at the time that they thought Phakhapong might have been killed by senior students administering punishment, and not by cardiac arrest as the academy had claimed.
    And 3rd article I saw on the Bangkok Post.
    Chawarat Marungruang, the chairman of a fact-finding agency of the Supreme Command, said he plans to invite representatives of the Central Institute of Forensic Science to testify about the autopsy results and plans to also assess the validity of the information that Pakapong’s parents have received.

    “If possible, we want to invite Pakapong’s parents for questioning on how they received information [about the cadet’s death] and if anyone has given them distorted information,” Marungruang said.

    The agency explained that the next stage of the autopsy is expected to revolve around the inspection of the internal organs that were finally given back to the family after initially being removed and withheld in the first autopsy.

    The results of the fact-finding enquiry will be based on the interviews of 40 witnesses, which will include testimonies from teachers and students who attended the Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School with Pakapong. These results will be revealed to the Supreme Commander General Tharnchaiyan Srisuwan on 14 December.
    Last edited by Wilsonandson; 11-12-2017 at 09:07 PM.

  4. #4
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    GracelessFawn's Avatar
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    To go out like that at 19..... Its horrible. I feel for the family. They have to deal/live with that for the rest of their lives.

    Justice for Pakanong Tanyakan! Hopefully, he has a better reincarnated life.

  5. #5
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    This is a bit creepy.
    More than a bit. Even creepier was the response of some Army spokesman, who basically shrugged it off and said 'it happens'.

    Is there a correlation, I wonder, between what appears to be a substantially increased death rate via physical abuse in the Thai military these days- and the fact Thailand has been under military rule in the same period? One could add unexplained deaths in custody too. Anyway, sheer speculation- the only thing that is certain is that the Thai military will not be held accountable, and that is as much the case under civilian rule as military.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by thailazer View Post

    From the link:

    The Central Institute of Forensic Science has found that a cadet of the Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School [AFAPS] was killed by a physical assault.

    Phakhapong “Meay” Tanyakan, a first-year student of the AFAPS, died on October 17. The school and Phra Mongkutklao Hospital stated in his initial death certificate, and in the hospital autopsy report, that he died of heart failure.
    But the institute carried out a new autopsy at the request of the family, and it found that the cadet died because he was physically attacked. His body showed several signs of blunt force trauma.


    More – Thai military suspected of organ trafficking
    The institute also insisted that the cadet’s four broken ribs were not caused by CPR, as claimed by the school and the hospital.
    The death of the cadet captured national attention after Phakhapong’s family came forward last month to demand a transparent inquiry into his death.
    His organs, which were removed in the first autopsy at the military-run Phramongkutklao Hospital, were later sent for a second autopsy at the institute. The institute announced that the family did not want to reveal the result of the autopsy on the internal organs.
    The family said at the time that they thought Phakhapong might have been killed by senior students administering punishment, and not by cardiac arrest as the academy had claimed.
    The family said on Saturday that the results of the autopsy by the institute would be used for filing lawsuits against those involved in the death.

  7. #7
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    Farang Ky Ay's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by sabang View Post
    More than a bit. Even creepier was the response of some Army spokesman, who basically shrugged it off and said 'it happens'.

    Is there a correlation, I wonder, between what appears to be a substantially increased death rate via physical abuse in the Thai military these days- and the fact Thailand has been under military rule in the same period? One could add unexplained deaths in custody too. Anyway, sheer speculation- the only thing that is certain is that the Thai military will not be held accountable, and that is as much the case under civilian rule as military.
    Indeed, the Army's attempt to cover up the death with their fake autopsy report and missing organs sound creepy. The Junta members, usually so prone to pose as corruption/foul play crushers, are at best mutes, some seemed to shrug the story off , finding excuse (when I was a young soldier it was worst, army is for the tough guy like us, shit happens...)

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by sabang View Post
    More than a bit. Even creepier was the response of some Army spokesman, who basically shrugged it off and said 'it happens'.
    Quote Originally Posted by Farang Ky Ay View Post
    Indeed, the Army's attempt to cover up the death with their fake autopsy report and missing organs sound creepy. The Junta members, usually so prone to pose as corruption/foul play crushers, are at best mutes, some seemed to shrug the story off , finding excuse (when I was a young soldier it was worst, army is for the tough guy like us, shit happens...)
    Yeah, an army spokesman said the victim was not tough enough and Prayut supported and endorsed that statement.
    That was with regard to the apparent "heart attack", but seems as if it was actually WRT the cadet not being tough enough to handle a beating.

  9. #9
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    I'm sure that since the country is governed by a military dictatorship we will learn the truth and those responsible will face justice.........

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