- Tanong Po-arn
Tanong Po-arn was a Thai labor union leader who disappeared following the National Peace Keeping Council's 1991 military
coup against the elected government.Leader of the Thai labor movement
Tanong Po-arn was President of the
Labour Congress of Thailand . Tanong played an important role in negotiating with the government of Prime MinisterChatichai Choonhavan to secure the creation of a comprehensive nationalsocial security system.Amnesty International, [http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGASA390072001?open&of=ENG-394 Thailand: The "disappearance" of labour leader Tanong Pho-arn, 19 June 1991] , AI Index: ASA 39/007/2001, released 18 June 2001]He was also a Thai Senator and the Vice-President of the
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions - Asia Pacific Regional Organization (ICFTU-APRO).The 1991 Coup
In 1991, the military
National Peace Keeping Council (NPKC) overthrew the government, declaredmartial law , and abrogated the constitution. Soon after the coup, the NPKC abolished labour unions in state enterprises, leaving over 270,000 union members without trade union rights. Tanong was publicly critical of the NPKC.Disappearance
Tanong was scheduled to appear at the
International Labor Organization (ILO) annual meeting inSwitzerland in June 1991 to speak about the restrictions placed on Thai trade union activity. The NPKC denied Tanong permission to attend the conference. Tanong reported that he was followed everywhere and received numerous anonymous death threats. He told his family: "If for three days I don't contact you, that means I have been arrested; if it's more than seven days, that means I have already died".On
19 June 1991 Tanong's empty car was found near his office inRat Burana district, Bangkok. After his "disappearance" his family feared for his health, as Tanong, age 55, was aninsulin -dependentdiabetic who did not have his medication with him when he was last seen. His wife said; "I sent letters to every government organization to ask for information on his disappearance, but received only silence from them."Investigations and protests
Two committees were established to investigate Tanong Pho-arn's whereabouts, one in the Ministry of the Interior in 1992 and the other in parliament. However reports of these investigations have never been made public.
Amnesty International , theICFTU , and numerous otherlabor unions have called on the Thai Government to make these reports public and to initiate new investigations if necessary.In January 2003, Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra allowed the Tanong Po-arn case to be included with the cases of the missing protestors of "Bloody May," the bloody 1992 popular uprising that led to the downfall of the NPKC. [International Confederation of Free Trade Unions - Asia Pacific Regional Organization [http://www.icftu-apro.org/flash/flash1084.html ICFTU-APRO Labor Flash Issue No. 1084, 31 January 2003] ] It was hoped that Thaksin's decision would open up the possibility that more information may be found regarding Tanong's fate.His whereabouts are still unknown as of 2006, and he is feared dead.
During
May Day celebrations, rallying workers can sometimes be seen wearing shirts with Tanong's photograph.References
ee also
*
Labour Congress of Thailand
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