Secret mass grave for tourists
A Correspondent discovers a burial site for 10,000 bodies near a Buddhist temple in Thailand
Date: 2/5/2005 2:52:09 PM ( 19 y ) ... viewed 2221 times Secret mass grave for tourists
By Daniel McGrory
Our correspondent discovers a burial site for 10,000
bodies near a Buddhist temple in Thailand
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,18690-1425903_1,00.html
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Bodies of children and adults
share a grave in Thailand. They were buried with no ceremony (PETER
NICHOLLS) |
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THE bodies of British and other Western tourists are
being secretly buried in vast mass graves in an open field close to a busy road.
Families still searching for missing relatives were not told of the decision
to dispose hastily of hundreds of unidentified victims yesterday with no
ceremony or memorial in a mass burial site on scrubland owned by a nearby
Buddhist temple.
Local Red Cross officials told The Times that they were ordered to
prepare a site for 10,000 bodies, far more than the Thai Government says were
killed by the tsunami, raising doubts that a true count of victims will ever be
known.
Grieving relatives of all nationalities are banned from visiting this
sprawling site, which is hidden behind a line of banyan trees near the end of an
unmarked lane at Bang Muang, 80 miles north of Phuket.
As bodies wrapped in plastic sheets were carried in the bucket of a
mechanical digger to the edge of open trenches, Weiapol Pitcun, a Thai official,
said: “This may look insensitive but what else can we do? There are too many for
us to cope with, so this is the most efficient way to store the bodies.”
Mr Pitcun said that the authorities would deter visits by relatives to
prevent the site from becoming a place of pilgrimage. “Families should not come
here, it will only upset them,” he said. “Tell them there is not anything
worthwhile to see.”
The slow pace of identification, the red tape and now this tactless method of
dealing with the remains is certain to compound the grief of relatives who
arrive on every flight to Thailand, determined not to leave until they have
found what they came for.
Even if they discover this place and evade the security cordon there is
nothing on the long line of stakes stuck in mounds of earth to identify the
gender, the race or the age of those buried here.
From first light, construction teams had worked to gouge out 20 trenches,
each more than 150 yards long.
Armed police deterred local onlookers from investigating what was happening
in this rural backwater near the Yanyoa Buddhist temple in Phangnga province,
home to some of Thailand’s favourite resorts, and the worst-hit region in this
disaster.
Twenty yards from where weary teenage volunteers clad in white forensic
science suits and orange rubber gloves were laying bodies side by side in
shallow pits, there were half a dozen funeral pyres burning throughout the day
as Thai victims, identified by their families, were cremated in the open air.
With a shortage of fuel, workers threw bicycle inner tubes and car tyres on
top of the flimsy, white plywood coffins to make them burn faster. Columns of
acrid smoke carried on the sea breeze drifted across the country lane briefly
obliterating the sight of the open graves.
Monks from the temple occasionally appeared to say prayers over the funeral
pyres but paid no attention to the procession of burials across the narrow lane.
Shopowners less than a mile away were astounded to be told that Thailand’s most
miserable landmark was on their doorstep.
At one stage the volunteer undertakers were seen carrying a number of what
from their size were obviously very young children to the open pit.
Thai officials insist that the tsunami victims are not being dumped here and
forgotten. Mr Pitcun demonstrated how each body is given a serial number. He
untied one body bag, and slipped the first copy of this tag number in a sealed
plastic envelope under the decaying T-shirt of a man. A second tag is then
attached to the outside of each body bag, and the final label is tied to a stake
in the ground.
Part 2
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,18690-1425903_1,00.html
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