Royal Thai Police
Official name of the
Thai Police Force, which has roughly 200,000 officers in many
division nationwide, such as the Tourist Police, Railway Police,
Highway Police,
Traffic Police,
Marine Police (fig.),
Aviation Police,
Immigration Police,
Forestry Police,
Border Patrol Police,
Provincial Police,
Consumer Protection Police, Metropolitan Police, and some
special police branches such as 191, crime and narcotics suppression
units, and a royal protective unit called the
Royal Guard Police, whose
officers are the only ones
with weapons on their bodies that are
allowed to access the royal court.
All police officers operate under the direct command of the
police commissioner-general, who reports directly to the prime
minister and a twenty-member police commission. The Tourist Police (fig.),
whose officers all speak English but lack real police powers, is
also connected to the
Tourism Authority of Thailand.
The police commissioner-general is appointed by the prime minister,
subject to cabinet and royal approval. Thai police are civil servants
and work a schedule of six hours a day, four days a
week. To increase their rather low salaries many officers have extra
jobs, often as security guards. Besides this they usually get support
from their local communities as well, such as fees from the gold shops they
protect, commissions on fines for traffic violations,
bribes from entertainment venues, etc. Fresh police officers (fig.)
are trained at the Police
Cadet Academy (map
-
fig.), which was founded in 1901 (fig.)
during the reign of King
Chulalongkorn,
and which is currently located in
Nakhon Pathom.
The former unofficial coat of
arms of the Kingdom of
Siam (fig.),
known in Thai as
trah phaen din and used until the
Garuda or
Krut (fig.)
was introduced as the national
state symbol and arms of Thailand in 1911, is
today still used as the coat of arms of the
Royal Thai Police
and appears on the hats (fig.)
and helmets
(fig.)
of all police officers
in its full form (fig.).
The
official seal of the Royal Thai Police is
known as
trah lohkhen tamruat (fig.).
Besides the Royal Thai Police
each branch of the armed forces also has its own military police
force (fig.) called
Sarawat Thahaan,
abbreviated SH (fig.).
Wang Parutsakawan
(map
-
fig.),
the
former
royal residence of Prince
Chakraphong Phuwanaht
(fig.),
now houses the Police Museum (fig.),
divided into several zones, both inside the former palace and in a
new building in the back of the palace's garden (map
- fig.).
The museum displays an exhibition on the evolution of the Royal Thai
Police, both socially and politically, from the 13th century onward.
At the get go, before
the police department improved its
model to follow that of the West, police affairs were set up to act
only in limited circles and its administration didn't extend much
throughout the rest of the country. In that time, police candidates were
selected solely from people who were
descendants from families who had
done good for the nation, religion, or the
monarchy, and the highest police command was in the hands of
the monarch himself. By 1862, King
Mongkut
(fig.)
initiated major reforms to the police force and styled it after the
European model, naming the corps Kong Polis (กองโปลิศ), while employing Malays and
Indians as officers within
Rattanakosin
(fig.).
This police force was administered by
the
Krasuang Nakhonbahn
(fig.),
i.e. the former government department in charge of the
security in the capital and its surrounding area,
formerly known as Wiang (เวียง) and later as Krom Meuang (กรมเมือง),
which
is now
referred to as Krom Phra Nakhonbahn (กรมพระนครบาล).
Then, after
a 1890 visit to Singapore with his brother King
Chulalongkorn
(fig.),
Prince
Naret Worarit
(fig.),
the 8th son of
King
Mongkut,
reorganized the
police after the Singaporean model and
in 1897,
the
Danish
Lieutenant Colonel
Gustave Schau (fig.) was hired in order
to set up the
Tamruat
Phuthon
(ตำรวจภูธร), i.e.
a
‘Provincial
Police’ force, which
was established as a branch of the armed
forces responsible for internal security, i.e. a military component
with jurisdiction in civil law enforcement, in order to make the
police a more national force, beyond the capital, akin to the
gendarmerie. Hence,
two
departments of police came into existence, that operated under two
ministries, i.e. Krom Phon Trawaen (กรมพลตระเวน)
or
Tamruat
Nakhonbahn
(ตำรวจนครบาล), meaning
‘Department
of Patrolmen’ and ‘Metropolitan
Police’, respectively, which operated under the
Krasuang Nakhonbahn;
and Krom Tamruat
Phuthon
(กรมตำรวจภูธร),
i.e. the
‘Provincial
Police Department’, which
operated under
Krasuang Mahathai,
while Gustave Shau became its first
Commander-in-Chief and was later appointed to the fifth Chief of
Police, serving as Major General from 1913 to 1915, under his Thai
name and
bandasak or
title
Phraya
Wasuthep
(fig.),
a
Thai designation
also used for
Phra Narai (fig.),
i.e.
Vishnu.
Then, on 13 October 1915, in the
reign of King
Rama VI
(fig.),
the two police
departments were merged
into one and 13 October
was declared
National Police Day, known in Thai as
Wan Tamruat
Haeng Chaht.
Phra Nirantarai,
the legendary so-called
crime-busting
Buddha image
(fig.)
is revered by the Royal
Thai Police as its own spiritual idol.
See
also
Ranks of the Royal Thai Police,
History of Thai Police Uniforms,
Samnakngaan Tamruat Haeng Chaat,
Anusawarih Phu Phitak Rab Chai
Prachachon, and
Phleng Kiat Tamruat Khong Thai.
See also TRAVEL PICTURES
(1),
(2) and
(3).
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