‘Somewhere in this life there must be a place, an experience, an encounter, that changes everything!’
FLYING SPORRAN’S WEEKEND DIARY
These are the opening titles to the film trailer for ‘The Beach’ from the novel by Alex Garland, at one time a backpacker's bible.
‘The Beach’ in question chosen for the film was ‘Maya Beach’ in Koh Phi Phi Ley but it could have been any of the more remote beaches in the Samui Archipelago of Thailand and in particularly Sairee Beach on Koh Tao.
And once against those words echo in a wry way in Thailand as they have done so many times before as the bodies of two more Britons whose only guilt it now seems was just being here were found brutally hacked to death with a garden hoe while one was raped by two men.
There is little evidence to show they were doing nothing more than chatting and looking up at the stars.
'I feel like I want to do something different but I end up doing the same thing' (as everyone else) - character played by Leonardo di Caprio as he ends up on The Beach;.
I am the only journalist in Thailand to have covered all the worst murders of Britons in Thailand over the last 20 plus years and my heart sank again this week in that ‘not again’ feeling.
Thailand does not learn and it is not going to learn. So we have to. People are again deceived by its seductive beaches, palms and smiles….all of which are wonderful but all of which can hide something quite different.
First in 1996 there was Joanne Masheder,23, from the Wincle, Cheshire, murdered by a monk Yodchat Suaphu in the grounds of Wat Tham Khao Poon in Kanchanaburi, where she was thrown into a cave. The monk, it was later discovered had previously been jailed for rape and confessed to raping an Australian woman, but was never charged.
It was some time before her body was found and in the hue and cry the media were deflecting the fault away from Thailand. “Insurance Scam Suspected’ ran a headline in the Thai Rath, suggested she was not dead at all, but foreigners wanted to collect the insurance on her demise.
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Narong - tortured |
Then in 2001 there was Kirsty Jones, also 23, from Brecon, Wales, murdered and brutally raped and sodomised in the Aree Guest House in Chiang Mai in 2001.
Thai Police rounded on the Burmese, picking out a tour guide called Narong taking him to a safe house where they tortured him but failed to gain a confession.
Amazingly I was led to the guide by a Thai journalist who said: ‘We can’t report this until you do.” I did. Then the Thai press did.
Police also arrested a variety of foreigners from the guest house and had to let them go. The Police detective at the time said that, although the semen samples were Asian, the killer could easily have bought the sperm off a male sex worker.
There was no result to this investigation even though it was eventually taken over by the DSI.
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Somchai with Vanessa before he ran he ran her down and executed her in Kanchanburi |
First Adam was shot by the roadside and Somchai turned his car on Vanessa who was running away. He ran her down crippling her then executed her as she held on to a police supporting electricity cables and shot her three times, once in the forehead, once in the face and once in the neck. Somchai claimed in his trial he hardly know Vanessa and had not talked to her. But our picture proved otherwise.
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The Times 'Her faith in her fellow man let her down' |
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A father signs 'Evil Man from Krabi'. |
They found the culprits. They were Thai fisherman who had even gone back to their boat and boasted of their deed to their colleagues. Katherine, they said, was ‘roi’ – (aroi) Thai for ‘delicious’. None had thought to tell police.
There of course have also been many other attacks and rapes which were not fatal, such as the rape of a 19-year-old Dutch model in Krabi after which her father composed the song ‘Evil Man of Krabi’ – and of course there have been many murders of British men.
There is a common denominator amongst all the young British women murdered. They all fit the demographic, pretty, intelligent, middle class and all had close loving families.
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A shocked Aussie Nathan Foley - detained in the Kirsty Jones case |
All these were sensible level headed young women with great prospects ahead.
And each time their names were dragged through the mud by the Thai press and officialdom.
A policeman in the Kirsty Jones case announced that she probably had ‘consensual sex with her killer but the scene turned ugly when he demanded anal sex’, and here in Thailand the Thai press have depicted Hannah and David Miller couple as promiscuous, and that they were attacked by a mad and jealous gay boyfriend of David Miller.
Not only that but some foreigners on the island have been putting out the same story. It’s been appearing on the forum Thaivisa.com.
The BBC’s Jonathan Head has been doing an excellent job and at times I think he has had to hide his frustration as the blame has been put on the Burmese then on David Miller’s British friends, back to the Burmese, then back to the Brits…to the Burmese and a final admission that police still did not have a clue.
But when, in the interests of balance Jonathan produced a Brit who told us all that this was an isolated incident and that Koh Tao was a wonderful, peaceful , serene..choose your word, idyllic island, I almost choked as I had to listen to him prior to broadcasting on the Today Show on BBC Radio 4. My reply was tweeted extensively.
“It’s not an isolated incident,” I said. “We have had quite a few people murdered here over the last 20 years,’ I replied and then listed them – and there is more to that island than palms and beaches.
Later on I told BBC Good Morning Scotland the same. And then on came BBC Radio 5 Live who wanted to talk about the ‘outrageous’ remarks made by Prime Minister General Prayuth about women wearing bikinis.
Here’s a quick reminder: The General said:
"Tourists think that Thailand is beautiful, safe and that they can do anything they want here. That they can put on their bikinis and go anywhere they want. I ask, can you get away with wearing bikinis in Thailand? Unless you are not beautiful?"
The British media, led by the Daily Mail (banned in Thailand) went berserk.
The General apologized:
“I am sorry with what I said and if it has caused any ill-feelings. I just wanted to warn tourists that we have different traditions and they have to stay on their toes."
I duly replied that yes in the normal context those remarks could be considered outrageous but in the Thai context not so much. In Bangkok for instance Thai women will be reluctant to get into a taxi alone late at night. My Thai friends for instance, book drivers they know when going home late.
I said I was sure nobody had a problem in Thailand wearing a bikini on a beach during the daytime when many other people were there but that might be foolish at night alone.
Again the interviewer rounded on me asking how could I not consider it scandalous. I said that while I did not necessarily agree with the way General Prayuth put it I could see it from his point of view – the real scandal was the investigation.
And then along comes LBC ‘Well of course we know this is an isolated incident Andrew…..’ now by this time I am really fired up…..No it is not that isolated!….I said reeling off the murders.
My host ended with the final line: ‘Well I guess it cannot help having a military junta……’ The audio line was cut before I could say: ‘Well actually it does help…have you lived under democracy here?’
All in all a helter-skelter week. I know personally several of the parents of kids murdered in Thailand and we sort of keep in touch. One who has been very infrequently in touch because she has followed every step the FCO has told her (and got nowhere) is Kirsty Jones' mother Sue.
Readers will have seen that she has recently been in touch through Facebook. I am angry. I am angry that lessons are never learned; that the message does not get through that while Thailand is safe, it can be very dangerous and can and will continue to catch people off guard unless they act very cautiously.
And I am angry at Britain’s Foreign Office officials, whom while they put up advisories on their website, bury the emotional realities in rather dry statistics published each year.
Andrew Drummond has been contributing to ITN News, Sky News, London Evening Standard, The Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail, Daily Mirror, Daily Express, The Sun, BBC Today Programme, BBC Scotland, on the recent murders in Koh Tao.