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Reuters cameraman’s chilling last picture show

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by Nick Macfie
Bangkok
(Reuters) – Seven minutes of film taken by Reuters cameraman Hiro Muramoto illustrate how a scrappy street protest turned deadly on a balmy Bangkok night.
Hiro Muramoto
It is some of the last video Muramoto, 43, a father of two young children, ever took. He died on Saturday from a gunshot wound to the chest, his killer unknown.

The film encapsulates the fear, the tension and the sudden, chilling bloodshed after a month of protests by Thailand’s “red shirts” whose anti-government protests had largely been festive and peaceful until then.

Muramoto, a Japanese national who had worked for Reuters in Tokyo for more than 15 years, arrived in Thailand on Thursday. He was taken to hospital two days later without a pulse. The bullet had entered his chest and exited the body through the back.

His camera was returned to Reuters by the protesters. It is not known if the footage was his very last.


The red shirts are demanding the immediate downfall of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and fresh elections. Troops fired rubber bullets and tear gas at the demonstrators who retaliated with petrol bombs and other weapons.

Explosion near cameraman

Muramoto’s footage starts behind army lines, with soldiers framed by the Democracy Monument, the scene of the city’s worst street violence in 1992 near the Phan Fah Bridge in Bangkok’s old quarter.

Soldiers in full riot gear are standing with their rifles pointing in the air. There is the continuous sound of gunfire. One soldier glances at Muramoto twice in a nervous but unthreatening way.

Then an explosion just yards in front of where Muramoto is standing sends at least four soldiers to the ground in a spray of sparks and smoke. Two get up and limp away.

Another television cameraman runs frantically into Muramoto and past him. Soldiers carrying riot shields jostle into him as they, too, get away. Muramoto somehow keeps filming, retreating by walking slowly backwards.

The camera focuses on a soldier lying on the ground, starry eyed but alive with a bloody wound to the neck. Colleagues undo a flak jacket from around his neck.

In the next frame, troops drag a soldier, obviously in pain, by the arms, his rifle scuffling along the road surface alongside him. Another motionless body is dragged away.

The camera focuses on a trail of blood on the tarmac that shines in the street lights under the banners celebrating this week’s Songkran festival, one of the happiest holidays in the Thai calendar.

The soldiers retreat and suddenly the camera angle changes to show the red shirt ranks. Most are carrying sticks and some are wielding shields apparently taken from the soldiers. Many are waving, beckoning someone from behind the camera.

Some are frantically talking to soldiers, others are throwing objects in the air, one of which feebly catches the bunting overhead and falls harmlessly to the ground.

No one in sight is paying any attention to the camera, which keeps rolling.

But it is around this point, at an intersection, that TV footage from other sources show gunmen on the run, dressed not in red shirts or green army fatigues, but in black and dark, civilian clothes.

The government has talked of a “third force” involved in the protests and has promised to investigate the circumstances surrounding Muramoto’s death.

(Editing by Jason Szep and Bill Tarrant)

Inday Varona, who credited Manny Mogato of Reuters in her Facebook wall led me to this story. Thank you.

Published inMedia

5 Comments

  1. christian christian

    the third force was probably funded and instigated by the ousted corrupt premier Thaksin to take advantage of the rally and fan the flame of violence, Thaksin is funding , using and fooling the Red Shirts for his personal agenda….

  2. norpil norpil

    hope this is not a mirror of things to come in pinas. gma like thaksin is corrupt with a lot of money. what if arroyo comes back and use a lot money to destabilise pinas after some years.only solution is to confiscate things owned by this family and put them all in jail after election.

  3. rose rose

    kung mayroon mang protest rally sa ating halalan I hope something like this will not happen sa Phil..it will take daw three days to know the election results sabi ng Comelec..I dread to think of the tension that would create…sa tatlong araw maraming dayaan ang puedeng mangyari..I hope and I pray that on the third day a new Phil. will come to be…ang pagbabago na ating pinapangarap and on the third it would be victory for the people..and they will come victorious in their quest for an “impossible dream”..and they can sing “this is our quest to follow that star, no matter how hopeless, no matter how far…”

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