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‘Death threats’ in Thailand for UK whistleblower

<榴莲视频 class="standfirst">Wyn Ellis, who made a plagiarism claim against an official, has received menacing calls
八月 22, 2013

Source: YouTube

Caught on camera: image of an attack on Wyn Ellis’ car by unknown assailants

A British scientist who accused a Thai government official of plagiarism has reported receiving death and kidnapping threats.

Wyn Ellis, a consultant with the United Nations Environmental Programme who has lived and worked in Thailand for 28 years, has claimed that beginning on 8?August he was subjected to 250 calls from two unknown men over four days.

The agricultural consultant told Times Higher Education that in the first call a man said he was waiting outside Dr Ellis’ home to kidnap him and his wife and to kill them both.

“He said ‘You know what you’ve done – you’ve caused a lot of trouble and you know what you’ve got to do to stop it’, but he would not give details,” Dr Ellis said.

The researcher, who said he was being protected by a Thai police unit, has since filed reports with a local police station and the Thai police Crime Suppression Division.

Dr Ellis was the original source of allegations that Supachai Lorlowhakarn, director of Thailand’s National Innovation Agency, plagiarised material that appeared in his 2008 PhD thesis.

Mr Lorlowhakarn’s doctorate was rescinded by Chulalongkorn University last year after an earlier investigation by the institution concluded that 80?per cent of Mr Lorlowhakarn’s thesis had been plagiarised from various sources, including a UN report co-authored by Dr Ellis.

Dr Ellis said that over the past five years he had been subject to several civil and criminal libel lawsuits and police complaint actions filed by Mr Lorlowhakarn and public prosecutors. To date, all the legal actions have been withdrawn or dismissed, or Dr Ellis has been found not guilty. However, four remain subject to appeal, he said.

Meanwhile, Mr Lorlowhakarn, who remains in post at the agency, was last year found guilty of criminal forgery, a ruling he is appealing against.

Dr Ellis told THE that the death threats were the latest escalation in years of surveillance and harassment that had included an investigation of his tax affairs and raids of his home by immigration officials. He was also bombarded with rocks by motorcycle-riding assailants as he drove to a court hearing in 2011, an incident captured by CCTV cameras.

There is no evidence to connect Mr Lorlowhakarn with any of the threats or attacks.

Given his success to date in court cases, and having recently obtained his own PhD, Dr Ellis said that life should now be good.

“But for some reason, after continuing surveillance of my home over the past few months, things have taken a sinister turn,” he said.

elizabeth.gibney@tsleducation.com

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