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Thailand’s Gun Murder Rate on a Par with United States

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34,350 seized guns at an ironworks factory near Bangkok, Thailand, July 15, 2014

34,350 seized guns at an ironworks factory near Bangkok, Thailand, July 15, 2014

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KOH SAMUI – Rungrat Rungsuwan was manning her small shop selling trinkets on a main tourist drag on the Thai resort island of Koh Samui when she heard a series of loud bangs.

“At first I thought they were firecrackers,” she said, as tourists in flip-flops and singlets filed past her storefront in the island’s Fisherman’s Village district.

“Once people realized it was gunfire everyone panicked and started running. Some people came into my shop to hide.”

It was early March and just meters away influential local businessmen Panas Khao-uthai lay dead, six bullets fired into his body at close range by two assassins who calmly unloaded their pistols in broad daylight.

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Thai police continued their hunt for two gunmen who shot dead Koh Samui estate businessman Panas Khao-uthai, 42,

For the holiday-makers forced to dive for cover that evening, the murder — which police say was over a commercial dispute — was a glimpse into a reality familiar to locals: the country’s deadly enthusiasm for guns.

Renowned to outsiders for its laid-back, welcoming vibe, Thailand is also a country awash with firearms where disputes are all too frequently settled with a bullet and a body.

Barely a week goes by without a new headline-grabbing killing, usually stemming from a humiliation — or loss of face — over a personal or business dispute.

In one recent case, a woman was shot in the neck by an angry lover in a mall, while another saw a man gunned down outside his Bangkok apartment block after arguing with a security guard.

In a third, a bus driver shot a passenger in the chest because his victim had repeatedly criticized his road skills.

As one western police officer stationed at an embassy in Bangkok told reporters: “There is a real culture of guns in Thailand, it’s a military-style culture, a place of uniforms and male power.”

Assessing the precise fallout of the kingdom’s enthusiasm for weaponry is difficult.

The Thai government does not provide a specific breakdown for annual gun murders outside of the country’s deep south, where a Muslim insurgency has killed more than 6,400 in the last decade.

A Thai man looks at weapons displayed at a gun shop in Bangkok. Some 6.1 million firearms are registered in Thailand with its 67 million-strong population

A Thai man looks at weapons displayed at a gun shop in Bangkok. Some 6.1 million firearms are registered in Thailand with its 67 million-strong population

Gunpolicy.org, an online database of global gun statistics run by the University of Sydney’s School of Public Health, believes Thailand has one of the highest gun homicide rates in Asia.

It estimates 3.48 murders per 100,000 people in Thailand, three times the rate of neighboring Cambodia and on a par with the United States.

What is much clearer is the sheer number of weapons in civilian hands.

According to the Interior Ministry, there are 6.1 million registered firearms in Thailand, a country with 67 million people.

GunPolicy.org puts the total number of firearms at closer to 10 million, once the thriving black market trade is counted.

As the U.S. State Department’s Bureau for Diplomatic Security wrote in its safety report for overseas staff: “Thailand has a fervent gun culture on par with the United States and has become a world leader in firearms-related homicides.”

Thai police officers examine seized weapons

Thai police officers examine seized weapons

But while the U.S. has long experienced a passionate debate on gun control, Thailand largely greets the human toll of its firearms obsession with a collective shrug.

“No one has taken responsibility, no one has really taken up the issue,” lamented Kasit Piromya, a former foreign minister who believes tighter gun controls are needed, as well as an amnesty for illegal weapons.

The lack of outrage shown over gun murders, he believes is down to the concept of a karma.

“When you die, you die. It’s acceptance and resignation. We take death calmly as part of life,” said Kasit, who owns two registered pistols.

On paper Thailand has strict gun controls but the law is easily circumnavigated.

The sheer availability of weaponry concerns Police Colonel Akaradet Pimolsri, the head of Thailand’s police commando unit, each time his officers hit the streets.

“I want every gun to be registered,” Akaradet of the elite Crime Suppression Division, told reporters at the unit’s Bangkok headquarters.

A key step would be for the government to set up a database containing the “ballistic fingerprints” of all over-the-counter weapons.

In late July, reporters accompanied Akaradet and 200 of his commandos on a dawn raid in Uthai Thani, a central province renowned for its crime syndicates.

Their target were two suspects in a 2011 gun murder in which a policeman was killed.

His officers took no chances, arming themselves with assault rifles, shotguns and body armor.

By the time the convoy reached a series of mansions on the outskirts of town there was no sign of the main suspects — although 20 guns, ammunition and bullet proof vests were seized.

The killers are still on the loose, ready to be hired once more for a hit.

Back on Samui, an island where tourism is a crucial mainstay, police also responded forcefully to the killing of Panas, arresting the alleged gunmen and conducting a series of raids that netted almost 100 weapons, Akaradet said.

At the restaurant where the killing took place, the tables are filled once more with tourists oblivious to the violence three months ago.

Laurent Haroutinian, the French manager of the restaurant where the shooting took place, said they reopened after just two days.

“It was the first time I saw anything like this,” he said. “And I hope it is the last”

“Once people realized it was gunfire everyone panicked and started running. Some people came into my shop to hide.”

It was early March and just meters away influential local businessmen Panas Khao-uthai lay dead, six bullets fired into his body at close range by two assassins who calmly unloaded their pistols in broad daylight.

For the holiday-makers forced to dive for cover that evening, the murder — which police say was over a commercial dispute — was a glimpse into a reality familiar to locals: the country’s deadly enthusiasm for guns.

Renowned to outsiders for its laid-back, welcoming vibe, Thailand is also a country awash with firearms where disputes are all too frequently settled with a bullet and a body.

Barely a week goes by without a new headline-grabbing killing, usually stemming from a humiliation — or loss of face — over a personal or business dispute.

In one recent case, a woman was shot in the neck by an angry lover in a mall, while another saw a man gunned down outside his Bangkok apartment block after arguing with a security guard.

In a third, a bus driver shot a passenger in the chest because his victim had repeatedly criticized his road skills.

As one western police officer stationed at an embassy in Bangkok told reporters: “There is a real culture of guns in Thailand, it’s a military-style culture, a place of uniforms and male power.”

Assessing the precise fallout of the kingdom’s enthusiasm for weaponry is difficult.

The Thai government does not provide a specific breakdown for annual gun murders outside of the country’s deep south, where a Muslim insurgency has killed more than 6,400 in the last decade.

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