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Jiranuch Trirat cradles the body of her 11-month-old daughter at a hospital in Phuket, Thailand.
Jiranuch Trirat cradles the body of her 11-month-old daughter at a hospital in Phuket, Thailand. Photograph: Reuters
Jiranuch Trirat cradles the body of her 11-month-old daughter at a hospital in Phuket, Thailand. Photograph: Reuters

Thai mother saw daughter being killed on Facebook Live

This article is more than 7 years old

Jiranuch Trirat stumbled across the footage of her 11-month-old child being killed by her boyfriend

The distraught Thai mother of a baby girl killed by her boyfriend in a murder he broadcast on Facebook Live has described the harrowing moment she stumbled across the video and rushed to alert police.

The killing on Monday caused revulsion in Thailand and around the world, sparking renewed debate about what can be done by social media companies to more quickly remove live broadcasts of violent crimes, suicides and murders.

Jiranuch Trirat, a 22-year-old from Phuket, was left devastated after her boyfriend, Wuttisan Wongtalay, hanged their 11-month old daughter Natalie from the side of an abandoned building before taking his own life.

He broadcast Natalie’s murder on Facebook Live, a video that Jiranuch came across that evening.

“I was with my older brother and he was logging onto his Facebook,” she told Agence France-Presse on Thursday from a temple in Phuket where daily prayers were being held for Natalie ahead of her cremation on Saturday.

“He was scrolling down and suddenly we saw the live broadcast. I turned to take a look and saw him [Wuttisan] drop my daughter with the rope and I couldn’t continue to watch.”

The horrifying realisation of what was unfolding sparked a search by relatives and police, with the bodies of Wuttisan and Natalie found just a few hours later.

The video remained on Facebook for around 24 hours, prompting calls for the social network to move more swiftly to take down clips of grisly crimes and killings.

But Jiranuch said she harboured no ill will towards Facebook.

“I don’t blame Facebook. They are not part of the problem, we can choose to broadcast happiness or sadness,” she said.

What prompted Wuttisan to take such a horrifying step remains a mystery.

Jiranuch said the two frequently argued, particularly over her ex-husband with whom she has a son nicknamed Sanook – the Thai word for fun.

“He often abused my son Sanook,” she said.

But Wuttisan had always been kind to their daughter Natalie, she added, looking after her in the day while she took classes at a nearby school.

As for what her boyfriend did, Jiranuch said: “I forgive him because holding onto anger for a long time will not get my daughter back.”

The killing was the latest gruesome act to be filmed and published on Facebook.

Last week Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg vowed to address the issue after a man in Ohio broadcast footage of himself shooting a stranger dead.

The killer went on to fatally shoot himself after a manhunt and police chase.

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