黑料社

Military says it obtained location data from telecoms to fight COVID

The Ministry of Defense yesterday admitted to requesting location data from the nation鈥檚 mobile phone operators.聽

Saying it was meant to curb the spread of COVID-19 infections, Gen. Raksak Rojpimpan, director of the ministry鈥檚 policy and planning department, confirmed the authenticity of a leaked document detailing the order, which instructed telecoms to disclose the whereabouts of people known to be infected with COVID-19.

The document detailed an April 7 meeting at ministry headquarters attended by representatives from major public and private operators such as Advanced Wireless Network, DTAC Trinet, True Corp., TOT and CAT Telecom. The National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission, the state regulatory agency, was also represented.

Raksak responded Monday by saying there were 鈥済ood intentions鈥 to the meeting with the telecoms, as they wanted to prevent further COVID-19 infections in the kingdom, especially at venues where crowds gather, such as boxing stadiums or nightclubs.thai

鈥淚f we had the location logs of 2,800 people at the Lumpinee Boxing Stadium, we would have been able to send a text and warn them immediately,鈥 Raksak said.

The army-owned stadium was the source of a mid-March outbreak that saw more than 200 people contract COVID-19.聽

It鈥檚 unknown how many people鈥檚 records were obtained by the military.

Why the military was involved and why it was kept secret from the public was not explained.

Lt. Gen. Kongcheep Tantravanich, Defense Ministry spokesperson, denied that the military demanded the network operators surrender the private information, saying it doesn鈥檛 have that authority. None of the telecoms involved has addressed the matter publicly.

The meeting minutes were Monday morning by writer Sarinee Achavanuntakul. They were issued and signed by Raksak. The April meeting came one month before the government launched its controversial Thai Chana (Thailand Wins) tracking system.聽

Since Thai Chana launched, members of the public have been asked to 鈥渃heck in鈥 at most venues, including shopping malls, 7-Eleven convenience stores, shops and restaurants by scanning a QR code or signing into a log book.

Related

COVID team denies spammers exploiting 鈥楾hailand Wins鈥 tracker

鈥楾hailand Wins鈥 tracking app collects data but yet unable to issue alerts

Thailand Wins: Notify gov鈥檛 everywhere you go with new COVID tracking app




BECOME A COCO+ MEMBER

Support local news and join a community of like-minded
鈥淐oconauts鈥 across Southeast Asia and Hong Kong.

Join Now
黑料社 TV
Our latest and greatest original videos
YouTube video
Subscribe on