Friday, October 30, 2009

Thailand and Cambodia Argue About Thaksin & the Coup

Friday, 30 October 2009
By Richard S. Ehrlich
Scoop (New Zealand)

Thai and Cambodian politicians have been fleeing to each other's country for the past 50 years, seeking sanctuary from coups, arrest warrants, and other threats.

In 1957, when Thai dictator Field Marshall Sarit Thanarat unleashed a military coup against Prime Minister Phibun Songkram, the toppled leader fled Thailand for Cambodia in his Ford Thunderbird car.
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Thailand and Cambodia have descended into a loud political feud about Bangkok's 2006 coup, and Thailand's current threat to demand the extradition of its fugitive former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

The rift between the two Buddhist-majority nations in the heart of Southeast Asia was expected to worsen if Mr. Thaksin accepts Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen's surprise offer of a temporary house.

"There is an extradition process," warned Thailand's powerful Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban on Tuesday (October 27).

"The turmoil following Cambodian leader Hun Sen's remarks, about ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra being welcome in his country, has thrown the government into a spin," the Bangkok Post newspaper, which opposes Mr. Thaksin, reported on Tuesday (October 27).

Ratcheting up his rhetoric, Mr. Hun Sen compared Mr. Thaksin to Burma's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who has languished under house arrest in Rangoon for 14 years.

"Many people are talking about Mrs. Suu Kyi of Burma. Why can't I talk about the victim, Thaksin?" Mr. Hun Sen said on October 23.

"That cannot be regarded as interference by Cambodia into Thai internal affairs. Without the coup d'etat in 2006, such a thing would not have happened," Hun Sen said.

Soft-spoken Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva lashed out Mr. Hun Sen's remarks.

"There are few people in the world who believe Thaksin is similar to that of Mr. Suu Kyi," Mr. Abhisit said later that day.

"I hope Prime Minister Hun Sen will receive the right information and change his mind on the matter."

Cambodia's government spokesman Phay Siphan said on October 23: "Cambodia has a right to offer Thaksin to visit Cambodia, and we have no obligation to send him back to Thailand."

If "former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra wishes to travel to Cambodia anytime...the Cambodian prime minister is ready to prepare a residence for [his] stay in Cambodia," reported Cambodia's government-run TVK television on October 22, according to Agence-France Presse.

Mr. Thaksin has been an international fugitive, based mostly in Dubai, dodging a two-year prison sentence for a conflict of interest.

That conviction involved a Bangkok real estate deal -- for his now divorced wife -- which was arranged when he was prime minister.

Mr. Thaksin became prime minister in 2001 when most voters elected the billionaire telecommunications tycoon, hoping he would boost the economy and modernize Thailand.

Mr. Thaksin was removed in September 2006 by Thailand's U.S.-trained military in a bloodless coup when they used tanks, armored personnel carriers, Humvees and other weapons to seize power.

He has unsuccessfully tried to return to power with the help of allied politicians, and get back his two billion U.S. dollars worth of assets which the coup leaders froze.

International human rights groups, however, want Mr. Thaksin investigated for his role in the alleged extrajudicial murder of more than 2,000 people during his government's "war on drugs."

Mr. Thaksin remains politically active in self-exile.

He helps lead a mass movement of so-called "Red Shirts" who claim to represent Thailand's majority lower classes, especially in the countryside.

Together they demand an immediate election, expecting Mr. Thaksin's allies to win.

They are opposed by the "Yellow Shirts" who claim to support Thailand's urban middle class and constitutional monarchy.

Led by Sondhi Limthongkul, the Yellow Shirts blockaded Bangkok's international and domestic airports in November 2008 for eight days, stranding more than 300,000 people worldwide.

Their blockade helped weaken a government allied to Mr. Thaksin, and paved the way for Parliament to elect Mr. Abhisit.

Mr. Abhisit's fragile coalition government enjoys the military's support, and much of his personal security is handled by the military.

Thailand's wealthy elite have mostly thrown their weight behind Mr. Abhisit as well, and appear nervous about Mr. Thaksin and the Red Shirts plotting to destabilize Bangkok.

Cambodia's prime minister has thrown a wild card into this dangerous mix, apparently hoping to attract big investments by Mr. Thaksin and weaken Bangkok's strategy over a smoldering border dispute, according to some analysts.

"It is true that I would invite former Prime Minister Thaksin to visit Cambodia anytime, and to be my economic advisor," Mr. Hun Sen said on October 22.

Thailand and Cambodia are former war-time enemies -- and current investment partners -- so the stakes are high for all sides to quell their public sniping.

Occasional killings on both sides have continued in and around the ancient stone ruins of Preah Vihear, a Hindu temple on the Thai-Cambodian border.

That dispute dates back to the 1950s, and continued even after the International Court in the Hague, Netherlands, confirmed Cambodia's ownership in 1962.

The conflict flared again after the ruins were declared a World Heritage Site in July 2008 by the World Heritage Committee, based on Cambodia's proposal to cash in on its tourism potential.

Thailand and Cambodia have suffered much worse relations in the past.

After Richard Nixon became president of the United States in 1969, he used Thailand as one of several military staging areas for heavy aerial bombing raids against communists in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, until America's wars ended in 1975 -- one year after Nixon's presidency -- with the U.S. defeated in all three countries.

Washington and Bangkok later indirectly backed Cambodia's communist Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, when his jungle-based guerrillas were in a loose alliance with other Cambodian rebels fighting against Vietnam's 1979-1989 occupation of Cambodia.

Thai and Cambodian politicians have been fleeing to each other's country for the past 50 years, seeking sanctuary from coups, arrest warrants, and other threats.

In 1957, when Thai dictator Field Marshall Sarit Thanarat unleashed a military coup against Prime Minister Phibun Songkram, the toppled leader fled Thailand for Cambodia in his Ford Thunderbird car.
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Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist who has reported news from Asia since 1978. He is co-author of "Hello My Big Big Honey!", a non-fiction book of investigative journalism. His web page is http://www.asia-correspondent.110mb.com

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

ពុទ្ធទំនាយៈ​១)​បាងកក​រលំ​(ពិតហើយគឺបាងកកកំពុងឆ្ពោះទៅរកការរលំឆាប់ៗនេះហើយ​អាចនឹងរលំរបបរាជានិយម​ឬប្រទេសត្រូវបែកចេញជា២ដោយភាគខាងត្បូង​ត្រូវបំបែកខ្លួនជារដ្ឋឯករាជ្យមួយ)​
២)​ភ្នំពេញ​រលាយ​(បានរលាយរួចហើយ​គឺកម្ពុជាឆ្នាំសូន្យ​ចាប់ពី១៩៧៩​ដោយប៉ុលពត​បានបំផ្លាញខ្ទេចម៉ត់)
៣)​ព្រៃនគរបែកខ្ចាយ​(ក៏បានបែកខ្ចាយរួចហើយដែរនៅឆ្នាំ១៩៧៥​ពួកកុម្មុនិស្តវាយបណ្តេញពួកយួនសាធារណរដ្ឋ​ហើយប្តូរឈ្មោះព្រៃនគរពីសាយហ្គងទៅជាហូជីមិញវិញ)
៤)​សប្បាយអង្គរវត្ត​(ខេត្តសៀមរាបកំពុងតែអភិវឌ្ឍន៏ឆ្ពោះទៅរកទីក្រុង១ដ៏សប្បាយរុងរឿង)
ហេហេយើងចាំអ៊ុតមើលបាងកកសិនក្រែងដូចពុទ្ឋទំនាយមែន។

Buddha predition:
1) "Bangkok will collapse": Bangkok now is in the situation of collapse because it political instablility within the country. Bangkok could be turned from royalist to capitalist of republic of Thailand as soon as possible or the country could be broken down into 2 parts of which the south part will be slipt as independent state.
2) "Phnom Penh was disolved": Phnom Penh was already destroyed by KR and stated it year of zero from 1979.
3) "Prey Nokor was scattered": It was already happened since 1975 by the communist occupied and disolved the South Vietnam Republic and turned the city of Saigon ("Prey Nokor" in Khmer) to be Hochiminh city.
4) "Angkor Watt is the place of happiness": It is ongoing developping the town of Siem Reap province.

Let see if the Buddha predition is correct. There will be only one term that remains in following up by all people that is "Bangkok will collapse".

Anonymous said...

It's time for King Bhumibol to leave Siriraj hospital and head to Khemarin Palace in Phnom Penh. As a devout buddhist, he can join King Sihamoni in the numerous ceremony at Wat Preah Keo Morokot in the Royal Palace compound in Phnom Penh.

Anonymous said...

Why don't Bang-Cock ask Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan of UAE in Dubai to extradite Thanksin...maybe Abhisit is a coward (Pussy-llanimous) when dealing with a wealthy country as the UAE. Go ahead and try to apply international law in Dubai first before turning your donkey arses to Phnom Penh!

Anonymous said...

The key resolution of the Thai political instability is the king Bhumibul Adulyadet. If the king still keeps quiet as a deaf and mute person his country will collapse as soon as possible because he is the one who supports the coup in 2006 and yellow shirt group in removing Thaksin out off from his rule. Bhumibul also looks down his royalty in term of signing on a thai illegal map that include the area of 4.6km² around Khmer Preas Vihear temple and ignored a legal map of French-Siam in 1904 and 1907 of which acknowledged by the Siam King Chulalong Korn and later the prince Damrong.

Anonymous said...

2:23 PM

Buddha has nothing to do with these predictions. You should refer these predictions to those fortune tellers; not Buddha.

Anonymous said...

Because the prediction is called the Pudth Tomneay many people think it may actually be the Buddha's own prediction.

But the term Pudth Tomneay may refer to the name of the person. The sage who make the prediction could be name Pudh, or he was likely a buddhist monk.

It's not a regular fortune teller thing that people come up with recent.

This is old time saying before Pol Pot, Before Saigon Fall.

So there is quite a parallel truth to the prediction in real world.


Everything that falls rebound. Saigon fell but it is alive again. Phnom Penh was destroyed, but it is populated again.

They're all just cycle, a prediction of new era.

When Bangkok fall, it will rebound also with a new society.


Let's hope Angkor's resurrection comes with stability of Phnom Penh. Angkor cannot be happy if Phnom Penh will remain corrupt to take all its happiness away.

Anonymous said...

Kingdom of wonder is a friendly country. We invite everybody, who want, love and protect our country Cambodia.

Anonymous said...

Perhaps, the ancesters of siam king want to meet and punish him for ignoring their endorsement of the french-siam maps.

Anonymous said...

It does not make sense at all to say that the prediction was made by Buddha because the well-known thief just emerged yesterday. However, i just hope the prediction will be true true for this shameless nation

Anonymous said...

Budha has nothing to do with politic.

Too nationalist may bring the nation down. Think resonably.

Anonymous said...

To 2:38

You are right.

Hun Sen and his friend are criminals.