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<p>Military and police officers have reportedly intimidated leaders of the Thai Labour Solidarity Committee (TLSC) several days after the committee investigated the detention of labour union leaders of an electrical appliance company. &nbsp;&nbsp;</p> <p>Yesterday, on Thursday, 7 January 2016, Wilaiwan Saetia, president of the TLSC, reported that 4-5 military officers both in uniform and plainclothes followed her from the factory that she works to her house.</p> <p>She said that the authorities’ action intimidated her and the staff at her workplace.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Other inmates has reportedly beaten a suspect on a rape case to death. &nbsp;</p> <p>According to <a href="http://www.manager.co.th/Crime/ViewNews.aspx?NewsID=9590000001898">Manager Online News</a>, Wimon Preeprem, 37, a suspect of a rape case who had been detained at Nonthaburi Provincial Prison at Muang District of the province was found dead in prison at around 6:30 am on Tuesday, 5 January 2016.</p>
<p>Families of the victims of the military crackdown on the anti-establishment red-shirt protesters during the political violence in April-May 2010 have vowed to struggle for justice, branding as ‘shameful’ the recent ruling not prosecute those who authorised the crackdown.</p>
<div> <div>After a rare demonstration by Muslim Malays in the restive Deep South, the Thai military on Wednesday evening released a Muslim Malay youth detained on allegations related to the insurgency.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>The Internal Security Operations Command Region 4 released Abdul-rohim Roya shortly before 7 pm on Wednesday at ISOC’s Sirindhorn Camp in Yarang District, Pattani Province. </div></div>
<p>Families of victims of the military crackdown in April-May 2010 gathered in central Bangkok to demand justice and condemn the recent ruling by the authorities not to not prosecute those who authorised the crackdown.</p>
<p>The authorities have transferred a Bike for Dad plot suspect to a remand facility on a military base after the junta’s legal office filed charges against him under the lèse majesté law.</p>
<p>Hundreds of students in the restive Deep South gathered to visit an insurgent suspect who has been held for the last five days and reportedly faces ill treatment in custody. &nbsp;</p>
<p>The family of an insurgent suspect recently detained in the restive Deep South has alleged that the suspect might have suffered ill treatment in military custody. &nbsp;</p> <p>According to the&nbsp;<a href="https://www.facebook.com/1438146019820331/photos/a.1438169226484677.1073741828.1438146019820331/1502969196671346/?type=3&amp;theater">Federation of Patani Students and Youth (PerMas)</a>, on 31 December 2015, security officers from an unidentified unit seized Abdul-rohim Roya from his house in Ra-ngae District of the Deep South province of Narathiwat. &nbsp;</p>
<p>Despite warnings from the police, families of victims of the violent military crackdown during April-May 2010 political violence vow to go on with their rally to call for justice after the authorities ruled not prosecute those who authorized the crackdown.</p>
<p>Thai Military Court has extended the pre-trial detention of a man accused of creating a copycat Facebook profile under his friend’s name to take revenge by posting lèse majesté messages and images.</p>
<p>A former member of the National Health Security Office (NHSO) has warned that if the new proposal to restructure the national public health budget is implemented, it would be as if the nation’s healthcare scheme was scrapped.</p> <p>Nimit Tienudom, former commissioner of the NHSO, on Sunday, 3 January 2016, said that despite reassurances from the military government that the universal healthcare will remain intact, a new resolution by the Office of the Council of State on the national healthcare budget would severely degrade the public health system if it is implemented.</p>
<p>The Governor of Roi Et Province in Isan, the northeast, has barred civil servants and village chiefs from distributing Pheu Thai Party calendar with images of Yingluck and Thaksin Shinnawatra, the two ex-Prime Ministers, while the Thai junta said it is up to the Governor what to do.</p>
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