Monday, September 26, 2011

Arisman calls for changes

Fugitive red shirt leaders Arisman Pongruangrong (in pink) and Daranee Kritboonyalai at the Lucky Star Hotel in Phnom Penh during a party which followed Saturday’s friendly football game featuring Pheu Thai MPs, red shirts and Cambodian officials. AEKARACH SATTABURUTH

Red shirt leader urges end to anti-monarchy rhetoric

26/09/2011
Aekarach Sattaburuth
Bangkok Post

More than a year after fleeing Thailand in the wake of the deadly May 19 crackdown on anti-government protesters, Arisman Pongruangrong showed up at a Phnom Penh hotel and called for an end to anti-monarchist allegations against red shirts.

Mr Arisman spoke to reporters at a post-match party that followed a friendly football game between red-shirt leaders, Pheu Thai Party members and Cambodian authorities on Saturday.

At the Lucky Star Hotel in Phnom Penh, Mr Arisman complained of accusations that he was not loyal to the royal institution.


"Claims that red shirts are seeking to topple the monarchy must stop," he said. "We should not involve the higher institution in politics."

It hurt to be accused of disloyalty to the monarchy, Mr Arisman said, adding that he only wanted democracy, justice, fair elections and public participation in the judiciary.

He said Thais had been deceived for decades and had not had power at all.

See also: Surapong praises Cambodian relations

Related: Red shirts' bus crashes on way home

Mr Arisman said he had talked with deposed prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and they agreed that they had to embolden the public so that they could change national systems.

"Today it is necessary for people to take part in each of the three powers - the legislature, the executive and the judiciary," he said.

"I would like members of the public to participate in the judiciary instead of having only appointed people in it."

He and Thaksin are fugitives. While Thaksin left Thailand in 2008 following a corruption conviction, Mr Arisman has been charged with terrorism after outbreaks of violence and arson during last year's red-shirt protests, of which he was a leader, seeking to overthrow the Abhisit Vejjajiva administration.

Mr Arisman said the Abhisit-led coalition, which was chosen in a parliamentary vote in 2008, had done nothing for the people and the July 3 general election, which Pheu Thai won in a landslide, clearly showed that people backed democratic politics.

Although Pheu Thai now leads the government, Mr Arisman said he had no plans to return to Thailand in the near future. He said he is uncertain about his safety in the country and will wait for proposals from the Truth for Reconciliation Commission, which has been tasked with ascertaining the facts of the past political crisis, before deciding on his next move.

"If political cases are finalised and a committee is formed to investigate both sides, then I will return to Thailand to live the life of Mr Arisman, driving a sports car, touring on a motorcycle sometimes, and staying with the family," he said.

Mr Arisman appeared much slimmer than when he was last seen in public in Thailand. He said he has lost 16 kilogrammes since the moment he evaded arrest by soldiers in the May 19 crackdown.

On that day, he recalled, before walking from the protest headquarters at Ratchaprasong intersection, he sat in front of the Erawan shrine for a long while. A garment vendor gave him a pair of sandals. He put them on, changed into ragged clothes and started to walk.

Soldiers ran past him. He then stopped to buy some candy and cigarettes. He smoked and walked as more soldiers ran past him.

He said he saw a dozen Humvees, some 100,000 rounds of ammunition and hundreds of snipers on buildings and heard endless gunfire and shouts.

In Pratunam, he took a motorcycle taxi through the Makkasan area and then changed cars several times as he left Bangkok through Pathum Thani and Suphan Buri provinces and headed for the Northeast.

Mr Arisman said he had passed a number of soldiers' checkpoints en route. He exited Thailand through Nong Khai province, where he boarded a boat to travel by river from Laos to Cambodia.

Once safely clear of his homeland, Mr Arisman said he spent his exile travelling around Africa and Europe before returning to Cambodia. He said he had even made occasionally fleeting visits to Thailand and some soldiers and policemen had recognised him but none arrested him.

"Many people love me. They know it is of no use to arrest me and cause trouble," Mr Arisman said.

It is not known where he has made his base since leaving Thailand.

At the party in Phnom Penh on Saturday, he urged his fellow red shirts to note the favour that Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen and the Cambodian nation as a whole had done for him, for Thaksin and for the red shirts.

Mr Arisman said they should return the favour when appropriate.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Did Hun Sen helps to hid Thai fugitive such as Arisman in Cambodia?

Anonymous said...

With a good relation he established with Vietnam and now the help he gave to the red shirt movement supporters and Thaksin, Mr. Hun Sen is set to rule Cambodia unchallengedly for a long time to come.

He is now friendly to both countries. Whether one likes it or not, he certainly plays very smart politics not necessarily benefiting Cambodia and Cambodians, but certainly benefiting himself and his CPP tremendously.

With billions of dollars pouring into the country every year and the prospect of oil and gas extraction in the near future, he is set to rule Cambodia with arrogance and toughness.

He will rule as a corrupt and selfish dictator providing just barely enough to the poor and divide them through clever strategies, also taking advantage of the passiveness and fear of instability among the Cambodians and drop some left-over wealth for the middle class then he can keep the large chunk of money to himself and his cronies and revolution or uprising won't start in Cambodia.

What an unfair world!

Pissed off

Anonymous said...

This is a new revolution of Cambodia. We all sure not agree, but we have to live with. In case we want to walk on the same trace of our former Khmer ancestors (Khmer Empire), therefore we all have to unit and learn to respect each other.

The Cambodian society is very fragile, still braking different corners. It is hard to renovate it, misunderstanding each other for this and that, because they did not have the same educational systems, have different view of the ways of life.

The Cambodian live outside of Cambodia wanted, that Cambodia has to be developed fast like the neighbourhood Singapore, but most of us lacked of experiences, we did not know the general problem in our society, not agree with all problems, including the slow developing of infrastructure and the political situation in our country.

Anonymous said...

1:00 PM, good point. We have to develop our country moderately, not too fast. At this point, it is moving way too slowly with this regime. I don't advocate a revolution, I do want a peaceful change in regime. Just like in Thailand. The losing party just walked a way and gave the floor to the winner.
The main problem, in my observation, is money. People in our country put money before everything including family, religion, and even our land before the interest of a nation as a whole. If people have money, every perks come with it including power, influence, corruptions, and injutice. I would hope that the college graduates numbering over 250,000 every year, find ways to guide our country in the right path. Obviously, these old ancient politicians, have no leadership to take our country in the right direction.

Anonymous said...

This red shirt party was created to get rid off dictator in their own country, but they befriend with a dictator in Cambodia. Don't they think that Hun Sen is a dictator?

Anonymous said...

Was ah Kwack lie about the fugitive or he just came back from Laos or Vietname?????