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Santika Pub owner to be charged after body of a minor was found
The deputy national police chief says the burnt-down Santika Pub owner will be charged for allowing people under 20 years of age to enter the pub after a body of a 17-year-old person was found.
Deputy Police Chief Pol.Gen.Jongrak Juthanont (จงรัภจุฑานนท์) said that police were preparing to take legal action against the owner of Santika Pub for allowing a minor to enter the place. 25 witnesses have been interrogated and a major share holder of the pub Wisuk Setsawat (วิสุข เสร็จสวัสดิ์) was contacted for an interrogation today (January 2nd). DJs who were in the blaze incident and gave interviews to the media were also asked to contact police officer as well.
21 bodies are still unable to be identified. 24 of 27 cars parked at the area have been brought back by cousins of the victims. The rest three cars are still parked at the area. . Their cousins can bring the cars back by contacting Thong Lor Police Station.
Santika Pub open on Administrative Court's injunction: deputy police chief
Deputy Police Commissioner-General Pol Gen Jongrak Juthanon said the Metropolitan Police was opposed to the operation of Santika Pub but the pub was allowed to operate by an injunction of the Administrative Court.
Jongrak said.
He said the Metropolitan Police did not allow the pub to be open in 2004 on grounds that the place did not conform to standard but the injunction allowed the pub to operate pending a ruling in the case.
The Nation
I agree, the World isn't going to see any high profile court cases coming out of this. I hope I'm proved wrong though.wazza wrote:Lots of the patrons involved arethe kids of well to do influential people and I imagine they might be asking a few questions at high up levels of authority.
As always, it will eventually be settled out of court and saving face.
After all, you can shoot a guy in a pub and still get away with it, if your Dad's got the right connections.
Harrowing
accounts emerged of the scenes of panic and fear inside the Santika
nightclub in the Thai capital's popular Ekkamai district, where more
than 200 people were also injured in the blaze just early Thursday.
Mourners
-- some with victims' coffins in the back of trucks -- trickled to the
club to pray and to give offerings to the dead, while scores of people,
some of them foreigners, remained in hospital after the tragic night.
"The place was crowded and the incident was caused by reckless people," interior minister Chavarat Charnvirakul told reporters.
"We do not know yet whose wrongdoing caused the accident -- police are still investigating."
Thanawut
Santhong, who lost three friends, told the Bangkok Post newspaper that
each guest was given a sparkler to light during the countdown to 2009,
but suddenly smoke engulfed the club and all the lights went out.
"People were in panic after the blackout," he said. "The situation became worse as people screamed 'fire' and tried to escape."
He
recalled party-goers crying, screaming, pushing and stepping on top of
one another as they struggled to steer a way through the few doors out
of the club, while flames rained down on people's hair and clothes from
the ceiling.
Local resident Tenawat Komolripart told AFP: "I saw
people trying to get out of the nightclub. Some were burned on about 10
percent of their bodies. They sat down and tried calling their friends."
Early
reports by police suggested the inferno might have been caused by a
pyrotechnics display on stage soon after the New Year countdown, but
officials said they were also investigating the wiring in the club and
the sparklers.
Police General Jongrak Jutanont, deputy national
police commissioner, said police had since 2004 refused Santika an
operational licence because of safety concerns.
The club management had been seeking an injunction from the
administrative court, and was allowed to remain open while the case
progressed.
Jongrak said they were still waiting for the major shareholder of the club to present himself to police for questioning.
"Initially
police will file charges against him for allowing people in who were
under 20 years old, because police investigations found people who were
17 inside the Santika on that night," he said.
Emergency services
headquarters secretary Chatree Charoencheewakul said the latest death
toll was 59, with 86 of the injured still in hospital, 38 of them in
intensive care.
A Singaporean national was among those killed and
41 foreigners, including citizens of Australia, France, Japan and
Britain, were injured.
Twelve
women and four men remain unidentified, a forensic official said, and
police have tacked graphic photos of their charred remains at a police
station in the hope of finding out their identities.
Outside the gutted club, families of the dead and Buddhist monks gave offerings and said prayers.
People placed incense, flowers, fruit and even a flashlight for the dead on a table in front of the barricaded building.
"I
want to express my condolences to the families of the dead and I hope
their souls rest in peace," said 22-year-old Achara Porn, whose husband
died.
Many of the trapped party-goers died of smoke inhalation,
while others were crushed to death in the stampede to get out of the
front exit.
There was a back exit as well, but that was known only to staff members.
Fire
brigade officials have said the death toll was so high because there
were few exits and the windows on the upper floors had iron bars across
them. Some victims were also trapped in the basement of the club.
The
club, popular with Bangkok's elite, has a capacity of 1,000 people, and
witnesses said it was heaving when the fire broke out.
bkkpost