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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
National

King tells massacre victims' families 'I share your grief'

Their Majesties the King and Queen met the families of the victims of the mass shooting at Nong Bua Lamphu Hospital in Muang district of Nong Bua Lamphu on Friday night. (Photo: Royal Household Bureau)

His Majesty the King has told bereaved families he "shares their grief" following a nursery massacre that killed dozens in Nong Bua Lamphu.

The king met survivors and relatives at Nong Bua Lamphu Hospital in Nong Bua Laphu late on Friday, a day after an ex-policeman murdered 24 children and 12 adults on a three-hour gun and knife rampage in a sleepy rural area in Na Klang district.

Funeral rites and prayers for the dead were expected to begin later Saturday, starting three days of mourning for the victims of one of the country's worst ever mass killings.

"I come here to give you support. I am extremely sad for what has happened. I share your sorrow, your grief," the king said in video footage filmed at Nong Bua Lamphu Hospital and published online on Saturday.

"There are no words that can express the sorrow. I support you all and wish you to be strong, so the spirits of the children can be at ease."

The king, with Her Majesty the Queen at his side, said he would pray for the dead.

"We have to do our best, the best that we can," he said.

Flowers, grief

The royal visit came after a day of grief at the small yellow-walled nursery on the edge of tambon Uthai Sawan in the district.

Heartbroken parents placed white roses one by one on steps of the nursery where their young children's lives were brutally cut short on Thursday afternoon by sacked Pol Sgt Panya Khamrab.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-Cha joined the mourners on Friday, laying flowers and handing out compensation cheques to grieving families.

Some, struggling to comprehend the atrocity, wept inconsolably, clutching their children's favourite toys or blankets -- and in one case a half-full bottle of milk.

The dead include pregnant teacher Supaporn Pramongmuk, whose husband posted a poignant tribute on Facebook.

"I would like to say thank you for all the support for me and my family. My wife has fulfilled her every duty as a teacher," Seksan Srirach wrote.

"Please be a teacher in heaven, and my child please take care of your mother in heaven."

The attacker forced his way into the childcare centre at about 12.10pm on Thursday to begin his murderous spree, opening fire with his own legally owned 9mm pistol and slashing with a knife.

Afterwards the 34-year-old went home to murder his wife and son before taking his own life, police said, ending the rampage at about 3 pm.

In total, he killed 24 children -- 21 boys and three girls -- and 12 adults. Most died from a combination of knife wounds and gunshots, according to police investigators.

Gen Prayut has ordered a swift probe into the massacre, and it has emerged that Panya was sacked from the police for drug abuse.

Several people in the close-knit community have told AFP he was known in the area as a methamphetamine addict.

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