Motive unclear: Thailand mourns after daycare bloody crime with 37 dead – and the world takes part

After the massacre at a day care center in north-east Thailand, the authorities are still looking for the perpetrator's motive.

Motive unclear: Thailand mourns after daycare bloody crime with 37 dead – and the world takes part

After the massacre at a day care center in north-east Thailand, the authorities are still looking for the perpetrator's motive. A former police officer stormed the daycare center in Nong Bua Lamphu province on Thursday, killing 37 people. According to police, 24 children are among the victims. Nearly a dozen people were injured, some seriously. The man was armed with a gun and a knife.

The 34-year-old suspect was fired from police service in June for possession of methamphetamine pills. A case was initiated against him. The verdict was to be announced on Friday, the Bangkok Post newspaper reported.

According to Deputy Police Chief Torsak Sukwimol, a hearing on the case was held on Thursday. After the accused left the court, he seemed stressed and took some sedatives, Sukwimol quoted the perpetrator's mother as saying. Then he developed paranoia. He grabbed his gun and drove to the daycare center. Why he chose this as a target was still unclear. The building is near his own home, police said. Whether anger at his dismissal was the motive for the bloodbath has also yet to be clarified.

After the attack, the perpetrator initially fled in a white pick-up and apparently killed other people. The emergency services issued a manhunt. As they surrounded his house, he first shot his wife and son, 3, and then himself, the Central Investigation Bureau said on Facebook.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-Cha spoke in a statement of a "shocking incident" and promised help for the affected families. He also wanted to travel personally to the site of the bloody crime 500 kilometers northeast of Bangkok on Friday. Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn has also announced help for the relatives and sent a representative to the province, said the chief of the national police, Damrongsak Kittiprapas. The government in Bangkok announced that all flags in the country would be at half-mast.

The massacre caused grief and horror around the world. Leading politicians from all over the world and international organizations expressed their condolences to the Southeast Asian country and the affected families. British Prime Minister Liz Truss tweeted that she was shocked by the terrible events in Thailand. "My thoughts are with all those affected and the first responders." The UK stand by the Thai people at this terrible time.

"It is impossible to understand the sorrow of this terrible news from Thailand. All Australians send their love and condolences," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese wrote on social media. UN Secretary-General António Guterres spoke on Twitter of an "abhorrent" act and emphasized: "Learning centers should be places where children feel safe and are never attacked."

The children's charity Unicef ​​wrote that no child should ever be the target or witness of violence. "UNICEF condemns all forms of violence against children." Early childhood development centers, schools and all learning spaces must be safe havens where children can learn, play and grow.

The massacre is one of the worst acts of violence in the recent history of the Buddhist country. In February 2020, a soldier killed 29 people in a shooting spree at a shopping center in Nakhon Ratchasima in the north-east of the country. He was later shot dead by security forces.

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