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Suicide of Khanakorn Pianchana

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Khanakorn Pianchana
คณากร เพียรชนะ
Born(1969-12-18)18 December 1969
Bangkok, Thailand
Died7 March 2020(2020-03-07) (aged 50)
Chiang Mai, Thailand
Alma materRamkhamhaeng University (LLB)
Thai Bar Association (BL)
Occupation
  • Judge
Years active2004–2020
Known forAltruistic suicide to protest Thai justice system
Children1
A mourner at Chiang Mai University holding a sign portraying Khanakorn's selfie and his quote reading “Bring back the judge his verdict. Bring back the citizens their justice.”

Khanakorn Pianchana (18 December 1969 – 7 March 2020)[1] was a Thai judge who made a suicide attempt in October 2019 in order to protest against interference in the justice system, and died in a second, fatal suicide attempt in March 2020, after being subject to investigations following his actions.[2] At the time of his first suicide attempt, he was a senior judge in the Yala Provincial Court in south Thailand.[3]

Early life and career

Khanakorn Pianchana born on 18 December 1969 in Bangkok. He studied for secondary education at Phuyai Tepleela School. After he graduated with a law degree from Ramkhamhaeng University, he started his career at the Central Bankruptcy Court in 2004 as a judge. He was transferred to Pattani and subsequently Yala in 2019. He was a Vice Presiding Judge of the Yala Provincial Court at the time, a province that located in South Thailand insurgency region.[4]

First suicide attempt

"At this moment, other fellow judges in Courts of First Instance across the country are being treated the same way as I was. [If] I cannot keep my oath of office, I’d rather die than live without honour,"

-Khanakorn, 2019[5]

At first, Khanakorn was supposed to release his verdict in August 2019. Khanakorn told the accused, that he was being forced from above to convict.[6]

On 4 October 2019, in the Yala province court in the area of South Thailand insurgency, the defendants were waiting for the verdict from judge Khanakorn, on murder and firearms charges. He then began to give a speech and broadcast it to social media via cell phones. One phone began making a sound of calls. Khanakorn ignored every one and people began banging the locked doors from the outside.[6]

Khanakorn continued loudly speaking for almost an hour, reading a 25-page manifesto which was interpreted by local media as being a protest against standards in the Thai legal system. He claimed senior judges tried to rewrite a ruling with a case he was presiding over. He said "I will not alter my verdict because giving death sentences would be too much bad karma."[6]

Khanakorn turned back then recited a judicial oath and shot himself in the chest with a pistol, after he acquitted the defendants' charges due to lack of evidence. He undertook surgery following the incident and later survived because the injuries were not life-threatening.[5][7] He was afterwards transferred to the Court of Appeal Region 5 in Chiang Mai in his family's reside city.[8]

Second suicide attempt

Before the suicide, Judge Khanakorn uploaded a two-page letter on his Facebook page. He claimed that he had been questioned to disciplinary measure and had criminal charge brought on Firearms Act against him after he had expressed his concerns about the interference into certain rulings. He later committed suicide and died on 7 March 2020 at his home in Chiang Mai.[8] Later, Pheu Thai Party called for a government investigation to establish if there were irregularities at the court.[9]

Personal life

Before Khanakorn moved to Yala, he lived in Chiang Mai with his family. He was a piano teacher in a leading private music school.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ ฌาปนกิจ 'คณากร เพียรชนะ' ผู้เรียกร้อง #คืนความยุติธรรมให้ประชาชน
  2. ^ "Senior judge dies in second suicide bid". Bangkok Post. 7 March 2020. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  3. ^ Outpouring of public support for Thai judge who shot himself in Yala court. The Thaiger, 7 October 2019. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  4. ^ a b "เปิดประวัติ คณากร เพียรชนะ ผู้พิพากษายะลา" [Khanakorn Pianchana biography] (in Thai). 5 October 2019. Archived from the original on 4 January 2020.
  5. ^ a b Fullerton, Jamie (5 October 2019). "Thai judge shoots himself in court in apparent suicide bid". the Guardian.
  6. ^ a b c Beech, Hannah; Jirenuwat, Ryn (15 October 2019). "He Acquitted 5 Men of Murder, Then Shot Himself". The New York Times.
  7. ^ His claimed of an interference was not recognized by the government but he was charged on Firearms Act violation in the Yala court instead."ตร.ขออนุญาตปธ.ศาลฎีกา ดำเนินคดีความผิดพ.ร.บ.อาวุธปืน 'ผู้พิพากษาคณากร'" [Police charges Khanakorn on Gun Act]. มติชนออนไลน์ (in Thai). 19 January 2020.
  8. ^ a b "Thailand: ICJ mourns the passing of Judge Khanakorn Pianchana". International Commission of Jurists. 9 March 2020.
  9. ^ Pheu Thai calls on government to probe alleged meddling in judicial affairs. Thai PBS World, 5 October 2019. Retrieved 1 March 2020.