Family Holds Ceremony at Wreckage of Bus 206 to Summon Spirit of 'Nam L' Before Taking Body Home to Chiang Mai
The family of 34-year-old Suphap held a Buddhist ceremony at the bus depot to retrieve her body following the fatal Bus 206 collision, with her brother calling for stricter transportation safety standards to prevent similar tragedies.
The family of 34-year-old Suphap, known as 'Nam L', held a spiritual ceremony at the bus depot where the collision vehicle was stored before retrieving her body from the Police Medical Institute. Buddhist monks performed a spirit-summoning ritual and cloth-draping ceremony as relatives gathered in grief, with her brother calling out tender farewells as he promised to take her home to Chiang Mai. Inspections of the charred bus 206 revealed extensive fire damage throughout the entire vehicle, with passenger seats completely burned and white cloth from the day of the incident still remaining inside.
Police are accelerating their investigation following a reconstruction of the incident yesterday morning, with a briefing scheduled after witness interviews. Phuripath, the 37-year-old brother of the victim, expressed that the accident reflected critical failures in public transportation safety standards and called for stricter enforcement of driver discipline, safety inspections, and training protocols. He revealed the family is waiting for final clearance from the Police Medical Institute, expecting to receive the body by afternoon today before returning home to Chiang Mai to conduct funeral rites.
Phuripath described the emotional toll of seeing the completely destroyed bus, stating that no compensation could replace his sister's life or heal the psychological damage to the family. He appealed to relevant authorities to strengthen safety regulations and enforcement to prevent similar tragedies. He remembered his sister as the family's pillar—a hardworking, kind-hearted woman who was deeply devoted to improving her family's wellbeing and often sought his guidance on life matters.