Human rights activists and relatives have urged the government of Thailand to investigate the death of a suspected rebel who went into a coma after interrogation at an army camp.
Abdulloh Esormusor, 34, was arrested on July 20 on suspicion of being a separatist rebel and was found unconscious the next day in his cell at the Ingkhayut army base.
He died on Sunday from severe pneumonia and septic shock, the Songklanagarind Hospital said in a statement.
Thailand's Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan said on Monday that his death was not caused by the government.The military said it appointed an inquiry panel to investigate accusations of torture in the case, which has stoked widespread anger.
However, Abdulloh's family has voiced doubt over the investigation.
"There has been no progress in the inquiry so far and we want transparency about what happened," Abdulloh's cousin, Mohammatrahamat Mamu, told Reuters news agency.
In a letter to Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha earlier this month, the family pleaded for justice and denied that Abdulloh had any links to armed groups, Mohammatrahamat added.
The military has rejected allegations of torture and urged the public to wait for the result of the official inquiry.
The armed campaign in the Malay-speaking region of the predominantly Buddhist country has killed some 7,000 people over the past 15 years and has flared on and off for decades.
Earlier this month, the main separatist rebel group fighting in the south said it met officials from the Thai government and set out conditions for taking part in any peace talks. The government has not confirmed whether the alleged meeting took place.
Calls to investigate
Opposition parties have said they plan to ask the government to clarify the facts regarding Abdulloh's cause of death in parliament this week.
The Germany director of advocacy group Human Rights Watch (HRW), Wenzel Michalski, took to Twitter calling on the Thai government to "conduct an independent investigation" into the death.
Abdulloh's funeral on Sunday, which took place in Pattani, one of several Muslim-majority provinces in southern Thailand, was attended by hundreds of people.HRW's Asia director Brad Adams said in a statement it was an "important test case for the government on whether it is willing to address rights violations in military detention".
"The Thai government has repeatedly pledged to get serious about tackling torture, but it repeatedly fails to do anything about it," Adams said.Relatives of a Muslim man who died after interrogation in Thai army custody say they’ll pursue justice in his case to see if his death was caused by torture.
Abdulloh Esomuso was arrested July 20 on suspicion of being a Muslim separatist insurgent and was found unconscious the next day in his cell at the Ingkhayut army base in the southern province of Pattani. He died in a hospital on Sunday.
A hospital statement said the cause of death was pneumonia, and Deputy Prime Minister Gen. Prawit Wongsuwan said Monday that Abdulloh’s death wasn’t caused by the government. The army has been accused repeatedly of using torture to combat an insurgency in the area.
Abdulloh’s cousin Mohammad Rahmap Mame said his family won’t give up on finding out what happened.