Thai teen in mall shooting spree charged with murder
AUTHORITIES in Thailand charged a 14-year-old boy with premeditated murder and illegal possession of a firearm on Wednesday (Oct 4), following a shooting spree in a Bangkok mall. He had used what police said was a modified pistol intended to fire blanks.
Two people were killed and five wounded in the shooting at Siam Paragon shopping centre on Tuesday, the latest gun violence to shock Thailand in the past three years.
Police said that the suspect had suffered a psychological breakdown in the run-up to the shooting. But a court turned down a police request to detain the suspect in a mental health facility and ordered him into juvenile detention instead, said a court document seen by Reuters.
The suspect faces five charges, including the illegal possession of a firearm, the illegal carrying of a firearm in public, and illegal discharge of a firearm in public, Major-General Nakarin Sukhontawit told Reuters.
The shooting spree erupted late on Tuesday afternoon at the mall in Bangkok’s bustling commercial heart, sending hundreds of panicked shoppers racing to the exits, some screaming as gunshots rang out. A Chinese and Myanmar national were killed. The suspect surrendered after police cornered him in a designer furniture shop. Mass shootings are rare in Thailand, but gun violence and gun ownership are common. Ownership rules are strict, but firearms can be modified and obtained illegally, many smuggled from abroad.
Police said the boy had adapted a widely sold gun meant to fire blanks.
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Voice ‘told him to shoot’
The violence occurred three days before the first anniversary of Thailand’s worst massacre, in which 35 people were murdered, including 22 children at a nursery in a north-east Thai town. That hours-long gun-and-knife attack was carried out by a former policeman who later shot himself dead.
In 2020, a soldier shot and killed at least 29 people and wounded 57 in a rampage that spanned four locations around the north-eastern city of Nakhon Ratchasima.
Siam Paragon is Thailand’s most famous mall, drawing throngs of domestic and foreign shoppers daily to its high-end stores, aquarium, cinema and food court. It was Instagram’s most photographed place in 2013.
On Wednesday, flowers were left in front of the mall as it reopened for business, and workers were seen replacing the shattered facade of a Louis Vuitton store.
Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin attended a technology event at the mall and told reporters that access to guns, including ones that can be modified, was something his government would address with the police.
“They can buy guns online. Therefore, we need to be more restrictive with young people’s access to these dangerous things,” he said. “We will work through the policy process by controlling guns and making them harder to access.”
The shooting came as Srettha’s new government is trying to stimulate a stuttering economy by boosting tourist arrivals in what is one of Asia’s most popular travel spots, including by offering visa-free entry to citizens of China, a crucial market for Thailand.
China’s embassy in Bangkok said Srettha had called its ambassador and pledged to “strengthen public safety management to offer a reliable and safe environment for Chinese people travelling to Thailand”.
National police chief Torsak Sukvimol said the suspected gunman had been receiving psychological treatment and had not taken his prescribed medication when he embarked on the shooting.
Investigators were looking into his background and were going to speak to his friends, including some online gamers, about his mental state.
“We will have to investigate the suspect regarding whether he had violent and aggressive conduct before,” said Torsak, who met the boy soon after the shooting.
“Initially, I spoke to him to calm him down... he appeared to hear someone speaking to him, he was hearing things, a noise he said told him to shoot,” he told media. REUTERS
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