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Thai author seeks to reopen investigation into 1946 death of King Ananda Mahidol

  • According to official investigations, the monarch, who was found lying face up in bed with a gunshot wound on his head, was murdered
  • Writer Kungwal Buddhivanid is attempting to revive the probe, telling a court that he has evidence proving Ananda died by suicide

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Thai King Ananda Mahidol at a ceremony in Bangkok after his return from Switzerland to Thailand in 1946. Photo: AFP

A Thai court is holding hearings on a petition seeking to reopen one of the most controversial cases in the country’s modern history, the death of King Ananda Mahidol who was found shot dead in his bedroom in 1946 at the age of 20.

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King Ananda, also known as Rama VIII, reigned from 1935 to 1946, and was the uncle of the present Thai monarch Maha Vajiralongkorn and the elder brother of the last King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Ananda, who was found lying face up in bed with a gunshot wound on his head on June 9, 1946, was murdered, according to official investigations and three court verdicts that concluded in 1954.

Three palace officials were found guilty of being accessories to the king’s murder and were executed in 1955. The three men pleaded not guilty and no one else stood trial.

Initial investigations by police blamed a conspiracy plot led by Pridi Banomyong, who was the prime minister when the king died. Pridi went into exile and died in France in 1983, but he was later essentially exonerated by the government, which nominated him in 1997 to the Unesco millennium list of great personalities of the 20th century.

Hearings on the petition to reopen the case were held at the Bangkok criminal court on Thursday and were due to continue on Friday. It is the first time an attempt is being made to revive the investigation directly through a court order.

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