Families traumatized by Thailand attack cling to slain children’s toys

Maneerat Tanonthong, mother of a three-year-old victim, offers prayers outside the nursery, where a mass shooting by a former police officer took place, in Na Klang in Thailand's northeastern Nong Bua Lam Phu province on Oct 8, 2022. (MANAN VATSYAYANA / AFP)

UTHAI SAWAN, Thailand – Grief-stricken relatives sobbed and clutched toys at a children's daycare center on Friday, a day after a former policeman killed 34 people, most of them young children, in a knife and gun rampage there that has horrified Thailand.

Government buildings flew flags at half mast to mourn victims – 23 of them children – of the carnage in Uthai Sawan, a town 500 km (310 miles) northeast of Bangkok, the capital of the largely Buddhist country.

On Friday, King Maha Vajiralongkorn visited the hospital where the injured were taken

After leaving the daycare centre filled with dead, dying and wounded, the ex-officer went home and shot dead his wife and son before turning his weapon on himself.

Police identified the attacker as Panya Khamrap, 34, a former police sergeant who had been discharged over drug allegations and who was facing trial on a drugs charge.

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It was not clear if Panya still used drugs. An autopsy report indicated he had not used them on the day of the attack, national police chief Damrongsak Kittipraphat said on Friday.

"The reasons are probably unemployment, no money, and family issues," he said, adding that the attacker and his wife had had "longstanding problems".

This frame grab from Royal Pool video footage made available via AFPTV on October 7, 2022 shows Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida meeting in hospital with survivors and relatives of victims of a mass shooting at a daycare center. (ROYAL POOL VIA AFPTV / AFP)

One witness, Kittisak Polprakan, said he saw the attacker calmly walking out of the daycare centre – a pink, one-storey building surrounded by a lawn and small palm trees – after the massacre "as if he was just taking a normal stroll".

"I don't know (why he did this), but he was under a lot of pressure," Panya's mother told Nation TV, citing debts her son had run up and his drug taking.

Most of the children, aged between two and five, were slashed to death, while adults were shot, police said in the aftermath of one of the world's worst child death tolls in a massacre by a single killer in recent history.

Police official Chakkraphat Wichitvaidya told Reuters autopsies showed the children had been slashed with a large knife, sometimes multiple times, and adults shot.

Three boys and a girl who survived were being treated in hospital, police said.

'I immediately knew'

The aunt of a three-year old boy who died in the slaughter held a stuffed dog and a toy tractor in her lap as she recounted how she had rushed to the scene when the news first spread.

"I came and I saw two bodies in front of the school and I immediately knew that the kid was already dead," said Suwimon Sudfanpitak, 40, who had been looking after her nephew, Techin, while his parents worked in Bangkok.

Another of the dead was Kritsana Sola, a chubby-cheeked two-year-old who loved dinosaurs and football and was nicknamed "captain". He had just got a new haircut and was proudly showing it off, said his aunt, Naliwan Duangket, 27.

In the late afternoon, relatives wailed in pain as funerals were set to be held at Wat Rat Sammakhi. Some collapsed and had to be laid on straw mats and fanned by medical workers.

Thailand's Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha (center right) speaks to relatives of victims of a mass shooting at a nursery in Na Klang in Thailand's northeastern Nong Bua Lam Phu province on Oct 7, 2022. (MANAN VATSYAYANA / AFP)

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha met victims' families after laying flowers and observing a moment of silence in front of the centre.

The government would try its best to take care of the families and the prime minister asked everyone to "be strong to get through this great loss," said government spokesperson Anucha Burapachaisri.

On Friday, King Maha Vajiralongkorn visited the hospital where the injured were taken, according to photographs posted by the government's public relations office.

Photographs taken at the centre by rescuers and provided to Reuters showed the tiny bodies of the killed laid out on blankets. Abandoned juice boxes were scattered across the floor.

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"He was heading towards me and I begged him for mercy, I didn’t know what to do," one distraught woman told ThaiPBS, fighting back tears.

"He didn’t say anything, he shot at the door while the kids were sleeping," said another woman, becoming distraught.

About 24 children were at the centre when the attack began, fewer than usual as heavy rain had kept many people away, said district official Jidapa Boonsom.

Hundreds of people posted condolences on the Facebook page of the Uthai Sawan Child Development Centre under its last post before the massacre, an account of a visit the children made to a Buddhist temple in September.

In a message, the Vatican said Pope Francis had been deeply saddened by the "horrific attack", which he condemned as an "act of unspeakable violence against innocent children".

The massacre was among the worst involving children killed by one person.

In Norway in 2011, Anders Breivik killed 69 people, mostly teenagers, at a summer camp, while the death toll in other cases includes 20 children at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown Connecticut in 2012, 16 at Dunblane in Scotland in 1996 and 19 at a school in Uvalde, Texas, this year.