Tsunami Corpse Turf Wars Break Out In Phuket
by Richard S. Ehrlich
PHUKET, Thailand -- An embarrassing turf war
has erupted between Thailand's respected,
forensic expert and angry police about the
thousands of corpses of foreigners and Thais
being examined for identification, where they
are kept, and who is issuing death certificates.
In an unrelated announcement, the U.S.
Embassy has advised Americans who want to
help victims of the tsunami, not to travel to
Thailand's devastated region unless they have
advance confirmation that their assistance is
needed.
"Organizations and government agencies
from around the world are conducting
extensive recovery operations in the disaster
area," the U.S. Embassy said on Friday (Jan. 14)
in a "public" announcement.
"So that these operations can function as
smoothly as possible, Americans are urged
not to travel to the area in hope of
volunteering their services unless they have
been informed in advance that their skills can
be put to use," the embassy said.
American survivors, tourists and residents
have joined hundreds of people of other
nationalities and volunteered to help Thais
deal with the aftermath of the tsunamis.
American volunteers and other foreigners
have helped carry corpses at forensic centers,
provided medical relief to victims, delivered
food and other aid, cleared rubble, and
provided free consultation to businesses and
other groups crippled by the huge waves
which slammed Thailand's west coast on Dec.
26.
The Thai government has benefited from the
foreign volunteers' generosity because Thai
rescue and relief teams were short-staffed,
poorly coordinated, suffered translation
difficulties and faced other woes, especially
during the first two weeks.
At least 5,291 people died when tsunamis
hammered Thailand. Thai officials said about
half of those deaths may be foreign tourists.
Thailand's top forensic expert, Dr. Porntip
Rojanasunan, is deputy director of the Justice
Ministry's Central Institute for Forensic
Science, and has worked round-the-clock
amid the stench and chaos of makeshift
mortuaries, to identify and preserve about
4,000 corpses.
International forensic teams, plus foreign and
Thai volunteers, the media and others have
praised her tireless efforts to coordinate DNA
sampling, refrigeration of cadavers,
databases of names, and other work which Dr.
Porntip began soon after the tsunamis hit.
In the past few days, however, Police General
Nopadol Somoonsub, a "police legal adviser",
has publicly blasted Dr. Porntip's role, and said
police should be overseeing the forensic
work, not her.
An international Disaster Victim Identification
(DVI) center opened a few days ago in Phuket,
run by Europe-based Interpol, and was now
coordinating foreign and Thai police, and all
forensic information.
Police Gen. Nopadol has demanded Dr. Porntip
turn over all her information to Thai police,
Interpol, and the DVI.
"I don't know why she does not give us the
information," Police Gen. Nopadol was quoted
by the Bangkok Post as saying.
"If we have to start things all over again, it
will be time-consuming," Gen. Nopadol said.
"It is a police job by law. Other agencies
[handling corpses] do not understand the
protocols...they have also confused the public
with their incorrect information through the
media," the police general said.
Dr. Porntip is an extremely popular forensic
expert and has impressed Thais in the past
with her fearless criticism of police.
"If they want to do the job, let them come and
take the corpses themselves," Dr. Porntip said.
"I just want to send those bodies home, not to
fight with any people in power."
She claimed her forensic work at outdoor
mortuaries at three Buddhist temples in Phang
Nga province, just north of Phuket, was
efficient and providing information.
Some foreign volunteers, however, expressed
shock and dismay at the lack of proper
refrigeration of thousands of corpses at the
temples, and the poorly trained Thai medical
staff who were desperately trying to do DNA
tests during the first two weeks.
"DNA, dental tests or even [Caesarian and
other] surgical marks on some corpses need
to be re-examined thoroughly to ensure that
the right human remains are returned to
relatives," Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra
said on Wednesday (Jan. 12) when squabbling
first surfaced between Dr. Porntip and the
police.
The prime minister recently visited Dr. Porntip
at the mortuaries, however, and publicly
extended his blessings to her for working
under such grisly conditions.
Hundreds of bodies of foreigners and Thais
were packed in dry ice, outdoors, to cool
them in the tropical heat at the Buddhist
temples while DNA was extracted.
Hundreds of bodies which could not be
immediately identified were then buried in
temporary graves at the temples to slow their
decomposition, because not enough
refrigerated containers were available.
Those bodies are currently being exhumed
and examined again, under the auspices of the
DVI's foreign forensic teams.
Foreign governments recently agreed how to
extract and identify DNA at the sites in
Thailand, evaluate dental records, and
analyze fingerprints, so the forensic work will
be faster but still take several months to
complete, according to DVI officials.
Interpol has provided a professional standard
of "forensic identifiers", to confirm the
identity of corpses recovered from the
tsunamis.
"There are three identifiers: fingerprints, DNA
or dental records. For a death certificate to
be issued, you need two of those. Any
combination, but two-out-of-three," a British
diplomat said in an interview.
Thai media reported police were feuding with
Dr. Porntip because some of them were angry
after she gained control over forensic work in
Bangkok in 2002, which police previously
ruled upon, and her repeated criticism of the
police's allegedly sloppy forensic work.
"The police were major opponents of the
setting up of the Central Institute for Forensic
Science at the Justice Ministry," where she
now works, said the Bangkok Post in a Friday
(Jan. 14) editorial.
Dr. Porntip "has also been outspoken in her
criticism of the police, alleging cover-ups of
extrajudicial killings after the war on drugs in
2003 multiplied such abuses and ruined
Thailand's credibility abroad," the editorial
added.
Copyright by Richard S. Ehrlich
email: animists *at* yahoo dot com
Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported news from Asia for the past 26 years, is co-author of the non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!" -- Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews.
His web page is
http://www.oocities.org/asia_correspondent
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