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Pompui
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« on: January 04, 2010, 02:42:24 PM » |
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Pedal patrolman's life has its share of knocks, scrapes Even a policeman on a bike can be a deterrent against lawbreaking,
Published: 4/01/2010 at 12:00 AM Bangkok Post Newspaper section: News Wichai Jitsatjawong does not mind taking a few knocks and bumps in the interests of fighting crime.
Pol Sr Sgt Maj Wichai Jitsatjawong slows down to greet a group of students walking to school.
A bicycle patrolman from Thian Thalay police station in Bangkok, Pol Sr Sgt Maj Wichai has been known to chase criminals on his bike if they refuse his order to stop.
"I pedal my bike into their cars when they resist my order," said Pol Sr Sgt Maj Wichai, who cycles 30 kilometres a day on his patrol route between the station and Klong Pitayakorn school in Bang Khunthian district.
The bicycle, donated by a cycling club, has never been a hindrance to his work because he can squeeze into small and narrow alleyways which police motorcycles cannot reach.
The bicycle helps him reach the scene more quickly and, when occasion demands, can even be used to obstruct or slow criminal suspects who resist arrest.
The patrolman cycles on Thian Thalay Road in Bang Khunthian district.
Pol Sr Sgt Maj Wichai, 53, said his biggest reward, however, is making people happy.
"My reward is seeing people smile," he said.
A bicycle allows him to get closer to people, so now he would not be without one. He would like to patrol on his bicycle until the day he retires.
Pol Sr Sgt Maj Wichai turned to cycling on patrol after road workers built a cycle lane along Thian Thalay Road in 2008.
He puts the bicycle to diverse uses in his work, including patrolling, promoting energy conservation campaigns and keeping in good health.
"I suffer from heart disease. But since I started cycling, my health is much better," he said.
As a cycling patrolman, Pol Sr Sgt Maj Wichai encounters a few hazards of the trade.
He stops and tells a taxi driver to remove his car from the cycle lane or be given a ticket. SAROT MEKSOPHAWANNAKUL
Flower pots and telephone booths can be difficult to negotiate, especially when he finds them in the middle of his cycle lane.
He is also worried that when he leaves his bicycle unguarded, it might be stolen. Some thieves, he said, might just be bold or silly enough to steal a policeman's bike.
"This is what worries me the most," he said. "I have to chain it up every time I leave it."
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