The 20 kids and three professors killed in Tuesday’s vehicle fire horror at their school in Uthai Thani’s Lan Sak area will receive a mercilessly sponsored death after the bodies were found and returned to their home state on Wednesday.
Before being taken to Wat Khao Praya Sangkharam School in Uthai Thani, the body were identified in Bangkok.
Their Majesties, the King and Queen, have lavished royally-sponsored funeral services on the subjects. The communities decided it would be best if the funeral services were held at the church.
The university’s multi-purpose house, where the rites did take place over the course of seven weeks, was inspected by Deputy Interior Minister Sabeeda Thaised and Uthai Thani government Teerapat Kutchamath. The royally-sponsored ritual will take place on the last day of the death.
Mr. Teerapat claimed that DNA samples from family members were delivered on Tuesday to help with the identification of the bodies at Police General Hospital ( PGH) in Bangkok. According to reports, the verification procedure was finished and the body were returned to Uthai Thani on Wednesday.
The PGH’s Institute of Forensic Medicine received DNA from the people of all 23 patients, according to Pol Lt Gen Kornchai Klayklueng, associate federal police commander, and it was scheduled to take no more than 48 hours to identify the suspects.
He claimed that police also spoke with the people of the passengers on board the bus to find out what had transpired prior to the tragedy.
However, authorities have pressed costs against Samarn Chankut, 48, the drivers of the ill-fated vehicle.
He fled the scene and spent the night at a friend’s house in Ang Thong before turning himself in to the police after telling them he was terrified of the fire.
He is accused of reckless driving that poses a risk to people or property, reckless driving that leaves a person dead, negligent driving that leaves others injured, and failing to offer aid after an accident.
Mr. Samarn was taking a field trip on one of the three cars that came from the school.
Before fleeing, he ran to a nearby van with a fire extinguisher and tried to extinguish the flames but was unsuccessful due to the intense heat.
His vehicle was the next in a three-bus fleet. Around noon, it crashed and blew up on Vibhavadi Rangsit Road’s email street, close to the Zeer Rangsit shopping center in Lam Luk Ka area.
Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said banning class excursions, which some people called for on social media, was not the answer.
Field trips “open up new possibilities for our boys.” They do n’t hurt the children.
The elite claimed that the accident was caused by the vehicle’s poor maintenance or inadequate inspection.