BANGKOK: From cordial cups of coffee and football games with soldiers, to blindfolds and black site prisons, Thailand’s junta are employing a range of tactics in their so-called “attitude adjustment” campaign against critics.
Since seizing power last year, the military have summoned hundreds of politicians, journalists and ordinary citizens to attend what they described as attitude adjustment sessions — brief periods of involuntary incarceration that can last up to seven days.
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