Families endure grief's 'open wound' a year after Thai nursery massacre
- Yupin Srithong, the grandmother of Paweenuch, is terrified of sending her back to school after a shooting incident. Paweenuch gets scared by loud bangs and seeks comfort from her grandmother.
- Yupin feels safer with the presence of CCTV cameras.
- Panya, the perpetrator of the shooting incident, was a methamphetamine user and got fired from the police for drug abuse.
5 Articles
5 Articles
Families endure grief's 'open wound' a year after Thai nursery massacre
NA KLANG: Clutching a well-worn teddy named "Little Bear", Paweenuch Supolwong fiddles with Buddhist amulets hanging heavy on her neck as her grandmother tells of the trauma still afflicting the four-year-old. Paweenuch, known by the nickname Ammy, was one of only two children to survive a
Families endure grief a year after Thai nursery massacre
Clutching a well-worn teddy named "Little Bear", Paweenuch Supolwong fiddles with Buddhist amulets hanging heavy on her neck as her grandmother tells of the trauma still afflicting the four-year-old. Paweenuch, known by the nickname Ammy, was one of only two children to survive a massacre at a Thai nursery a…
Families endure grief's 'open wound' a year after nursery massacre
NA KLANG, Nong Bua Lamphu - Clutching a well-worn teddy named "Little Bear", Paweenuch Supolwong fiddles with Buddhist amulets hanging heavy on her neck as her grandmother tells of the trauma still afflicting the four-year-old.
Families endure grief’s ‘open wound’ a year after Thai nursery massacre
Clutching a well-worn teddy named "Little Bear", Paweenuch Supolwong fiddles with Buddhist amulets hanging heavy on her neck as her grandmother tells of the trauma still afflicting the four-year-old.
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