Saturday, October 11, 2008

Thai political crisis at fever pitch

Emotions are raw on each side of the political divide

Friday, 10 October 2008
By Jonathan Head
BBC News, Bangkok

When doctors decide to violate their Hippocratic Oaths, and refuse to treat injured police officers, you know things are bad.

That is what's happening in Thailand right now, so much so that the world financial meltdown, which will surely affect Thailand just as badly as any other export-dependent Asian economy, is scarcely being noticed.

The deadlock between the government, still led by close allies of one-time Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and its opponents, spearheaded by the well-funded People's Alliance for Democracy protest movement, has been going on for months.

It is actually a continuation of a political crisis that began two years into Mr Thaksin's second term of office, in early 2006, when the hugely profitable sale of his family's business empire sparked mass demonstrations, which eventually led to the coup that forced him from power in September that year.

Events over the past three years have only hardened the positions of both sides.

Mr Thaksin's supporters, most of them in the rural north and north-east, still see him as a champion who pushed through policies that made real improvements to their lives. They felt robbed by the coup, and insulted by the PAD protesters who say their votes for Mr Thaksin were bought.

Mr Thaksin's opponents still see him, even in exile, as a dangerous politician of overreaching ambition, a man who used his wealth to concentrate power in his hands, and who had a hidden republican agenda.

But emotions have never been as raw as they are now.

The violent clashes on Tuesday - the worst since 1992 - have prompted furious accusations from the PAD and its many sympathisers that the police used excessive force, and that the government was being deliberately provocative in sending them in to clear the protesters who had surrounded parliament.

Thai websites are running gruesome video clips showing horrific injuries. These, say the PAD, could not have been caused by just teargas; the police must have been firing other explosives as well, they say.

Media quiet

There is little doubt that the police were reckless in the way they moved against the protesters.

But there has been surprisingly little condemnation in the Thai media of the PAD's own tactics: the construction of tyre-and-barbed-wire barricades to blockade MPs inside parliament, the use of guns by some PAD supporters against the police, video showing a PAD truck ploughing into a line of police then reversing over the injured body of one officer.
The protesters' tactics have been subject to little scrutiny

There has been no attempt by the Thai papers to trace the source of the PAD's very substantial funding, or of the obviously expert paramilitary training given to some its followers.

It is true there is little public affection for Thailand's corrupt police force, and even less, in Bangkok, for the members of the new cabinet, who astonishingly seems even less convincing than their inept predecessors.

Fence

Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, who won some praise for his conciliatory statements after being appointed last month, has appeared weak and indecisive in his response to the violent events around parliament.

The fact that he had to climb over a fence to escape from the PAD protesters around the parliament building did not help his image much.

But there is something else afoot here.

Thais now have so little faith in their politicians and institutions that a substantial number are willing to overlook the PAD's brazenly illegal activities.
"No one expects this government to last long. Nor has anyone come up with a scenario which would be substantially different"
Conspiracy theories and wild rumours abound, with each side willing to believe the most outlandish stories about its opponents. This is worrying, in what is normally one of the world's more peaceful societies.

Most worrying is the absence of any obvious way out of the deadlock.

And there is one figure conspicuous by his silence.

In times past King Bhumibol Adulyadej has used his unrivalled moral authority to settle such crises. There are many Thais who wish he would intervene now.

But the 80-year-old monarch has said nothing. His only recent public statements have been an expression of concern over coastal erosion, and a reminder to a new crop of judges to be honest. So little is seen or heard of the king these days that it is impossible to guess what his thoughts are on this crisis.

But his silence makes the prospect of a royally endorsed government of national unity under an appointed prime minister - one possible solution touted by some - more remote.

A military coup seems unlikely too, although in Thailand it can never be ruled out.

Army stands back

There have been several occasions over the past few weeks when rumours of military intervention have swirled around Bangkok; Gen Anupong Paochinda, the army commander, has squashed them all.
Army chief Gen Anupong has seen his standing improve in the crisis

He argues persuasively that the military did not resolve the political rifts by intervening with its coup two years ago, and that it cannot solve the problem now. There are believed to be senior officers who think otherwise, but their views have not prevailed.

Besides, while Gen Anupong stays out of the fray, occasionally sending his men in, unarmed, to clean up where the police have lost control, his image and that of the army is further burnished. He has also been able to bargain for a hugely increased budget for the military. No government now would dare refuse him.

No one expects this government to last long, but no one has come up with a workable alternative.

Another election would almost certainly lead to little change. The People Power Party, the reincarnation of Thaksin Shinawatra's Thai Rak Thai, still commands sufficient loyalty in the rural north and north-east to beat the opposition Democrats. Even the Democrats admit this.

So Mr Somchai will soldier on in the job.

And however hard he tries, he remains hopelessly bound by his unappealing cabinet, and the fact that he is Mr Thaksin's brother-in-law and is therefore widely assumed to be working to protect the exiled former prime minister and engineer his eventual return to Thailand.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

TIME FOR THAI TO CRY !

Anonymous said...

It is time for them to feel the PAIN.

Khmer will watch THAI with a smile.

Khmer Sra-lunch Khmer!

Anonymous said...

Junp to the sea brother Grut!

Anonymous said...

Wait a minute, isn't THAI our brother?

I mean Khmer's brother.
What should we do to help them?

I don't want them to dissolve in pieces.

Bangkok rolom, Phnom Pehn Kjat Kjay, Sub-bye Angkor Wat.

Lets make some correction for the THAI. The name Bangkok is not Bangkok, it is Boeungkok in Khmer.

Stop change names around.
Like right now about the situation of Prasat Preah Vihear, it is not Prasat Prah Vihan. Ta Krabey not Ta Kwai etc.,

Khmer PP,

Anonymous said...

We love to see the crises going on.Keep on doing THAI brothers. Use weapons if you have to.Oh! what a wonderful feeling.

Anonymous said...

It looks like inhumane to say all the above, but in that case I trully support what you said. ;) It's time for them to feel PAIN, to watch their nation tear down, but for me I prefer to see their FLAG burning and THAI PEOPLE fight each other till death.

Anonymous said...

Correction KhmerPP, you have Puth Tomniay backward.

It is "Prei Nokor Rolom, Phnom Penh Rolieay, Bankok Chat Chay, Sabay Angkor (Wat).

The two prior already Happen, Prei Nokor Rolom refers to the Fall of Saigon, I believe this refer to 1975 When Viet Cong overtook Saigon City, the Capital of a Republic South Vietnam.

At the same time in Cambodia, we saw Pol Pot coming to power and forcing a total of 2 million populations from Phnom Penh City complete into the country side. "Phnom Penh Rolieay" meaning Pnhom Penh is destroy or annihilated.

And now, we see as much as 1 million tourist a year coming into Cambodia to visit Angkor. this with the backdrop of Bangkok's very worrying political crisis. "Bankok Chat Chai" meaning Bangkok becomes disarray with chaos, or Bangkok dispersed and scattered to pieces.

Many parts of the Put Tom Nia refer to very specific things that happen during the Khmer suffering of the seventies. Such as the following saying: All streets are empties and houses with ladder but no one remain inside.

Its a pretty scary, by that i mean accurate prophecy. You should read into the whole of it from beginning to end.

But we should be careful not to let prophesy be self-fulling by our own needs.

Anonymous said...

when the pattani r going to start too

Anonymous said...

4:25am, Thank u for sharing the Puth Tomniay with us. It is indeed scary. Where can I read more about it? I'm very curious of how accurate the prophecy is.

Anonymous said...

4:25 AM it is true and I just want to add something that I always heard from the tale - tales during my childhood. During UNTAC time, the put tumneay said "Peal Na Pnek Meas Pnek Pras chol srok, srok khmer neung ban phot pi sangkream, and now in Cambodia is "keub meas keub prak tonle boun mouk" becomes a reality. Bangkok is on its way to Kchat Kchay and Cambodia will be prosperous. I still doubt the " Muy Cham En Kro Peus" whether it referred to the 1997 coup d'etat or the one we are facing now with Thailand on the border issue. God bless Cambodia!