‘I’m not an animal’: shackled Thailand bomb suspect calls out famous ‘Elephant Man’ line as he is lead to court in front of waiting cameras
Two Chinese Uygur suspects deny involvement in 2015 blast that killed 20 people in Bangkok
One of two ethnic Uygur Muslims from China accused of involvement in a deadly bombing at a Bangkok shrine last year broke down in front of cameras on Tuesday as he made his way into court.
Twenty people were killed and more than 120 injured in the bombing on August 17 at the Erawan Shrine, thronged by visitors to the Thai capital. Five of those who died were from China and two from Hong Kong.
Analysts, diplomats and even some officials suspected the attack was linked to sympathisers of the Uygur minority in western China angered by the Thai junta’s deportation of more than 100 Uygur to China the previous month.
But Thai police said the perpetrators were members of a network that trafficked Uygur Muslims and launched the attack in anger at Thailand’s crackdown on the trade.
“I’m not an animal,” the shaven, shackled and barefoot Adem Karadag told a crowd of waiting reporters on Tuesday, as two guards led him into a military court in Bangkok’s old town. “I’m human, I’m human.”
That outburst is reminiscent of a famous line from the 1980 classic film The Elephant Man, where the lead character, the severley-deformed John Merrick, screams out for empathy because he is treated as a sideshow freak by society.