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Home » News from Thailand » Thai boy (12) drowns two girls
Thai boy (12) drowns two girls
A 12-year-old boy thought it necessary to throw two girls, aged 11 and 12, into the canal, who then drowned. The incident took place on Thursday at the Prawet Burirom canal in Bangkok.
According to the father of one of the victims, his daughter, her two younger brothers and the other girl were playing on a pier near their school. A classmate arrived on a bicycle and pushed his daughter into the water. When the other girl tried to help her, she was also pushed into the water. So stated his sons who witnessed the incident. The girls had tried to cling to the shore, but the perpetrator put his foot on their fingers, causing them to disappear below the surface of the water and drown. Both girls could not swim.
Police are investigating the case and are reviewing CCTV footage. The young perpetrator and his parents must report to the police station for questioning.
A very sad story, but the fact that children around the age of 12 drown in stagnant water with a temperature of more than 20 degrees from the side also says a lot about the level of swimming lessons in Thailand. Perhaps the Thai government should make that mandatory in schools again, just like in the past with us in a water-rich country like Thailand. Because most Thai apparently have no money or money left for swimming lessons.
Very very and very very sad. But just like the moped without a helmet discussed here earlier, the government also has a duty to protect citizens, especially when it comes to children. Teach them to swim! But in Thailand, when you look closely, that is indeed just as much a water country as the Netherlands, only reserved for…..the rich! And they do not care about the rest, otherwise they would not have become so rich.
I heard from a swimming teacher friend of mine in the Randstad, of Thai descent, that a few people still drown every year in the Netherlands, to be counted on one hand, and mostly immigrant children. In Thailand, 2500 people drown every year, most of them children! My friend the swimming teacher never received an answer to a neat letter to the Thai Minister of Sports with a well-considered proposal to change that. That's all I say.
I think most Thai people barely have enough money to make ends meet, so there is not enough money for the swimming pool.