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Foreign nationals living in Thailand go to the Special Branch office to secure a Thai police clearance certificate. [5] [6] Other cases such as lèse majesté, terrorism, and anything that endangers Thai national security are also handled by the Thai SBB. [7] [8] [9] The SBB worked with the Malaysian Special Branch during the Cold War. [10]
The Royal Thai Police (RTP) (Thai: สำนักงานตำรวจแห่งชาติ; RTGS: samnakngan tamruat haeng chat) is the national police force of Thailand. The RTP employs between 210,700 and 230,000 officers, roughly 17 percent of all civil servants (excluding the military and the employees of state-owned enterprises).
Gun violence is relatively common in Thailand. An ex-police officer killed 22 children in a nursery last year during a gun-and-knife rampage, while in 2020 a soldier shot and killed at least 29 ...
On 24 August 1948 a royal command re-established the Metropolitan Police Bureau as a police force, in line with the re-organisation of other police forces under the Ministry of the Interior. Since 1961 the Bureau had its offices adjacent to the Phan Fa Lilat Bridge , however on the 14 October 1973 a student uprising led to the destruction and ...
Thai police have broken up a large network that illegally helped foreigners, mostly Russians, to stay in Thailand long-term through the use of company nominees or shell companies, officials said ...
Prosecutors in Thailand on Thursday indicted a former national police chief in connection with an alleged cover-up of a 2012 traffic accident involving the Thai heir to the Red Bull energy drink ...
The Department of Special Investigation (DSI) is a department of the Ministry of Justice of Thailand. It operates independently of the Royal Thai Police and is tasked with the investigation of certain "special cases". These include complex criminal cases, those affecting national security, those involving organised criminal organisations and ...
The 2013 report stated that Thai police and immigration officials "extorted money or sex" from detainees or "sold Burmese migrants unable to pay labor brokers or sex traffickers,". [38] According to officials from the International Labour Organization (ILO), Thailand was the only government to vote against the United Nations Forced Labour ...