Dec 4th 2008
From The Economist print edition
The untold story of the palace’s role behind the collapse of Thai democracy
THAILAND’S tourism business, its export industries and its reputation have been wrecked by recent events. Crowds of royalists have occupied the government’s offices for months and then seized Bangkok’s airports. The police refused to evict them. The army refused to help. This week the siege was ended after the courts disbanded three parties in the ruling coalition. But the parties plan to re-form under new names and continue governing, so fresh strife threatens. It is as if a thin veneer of modernity, applied during the boom of the 1980s and early 1990s, has peeled away. Until recently a beacon of Asian pluralism, Thailand is sliding into anarchy.
The conflict began three years ago as peaceful rallies against corruption and abuse of power in the government of Thaksin Shinawatra. The protesters, wearing royal-yellow shirts and accusing Mr Thaksin of being a closet republican, got their way when royalist generals removed him in the coup of 2006. But on democracy’s restoration last year, Thais elected a coalition led by Mr Thaksin’s allies. The yellow-shirts of the inaptly named People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) revived their protests and adopted increasingly thuggish tactics, prompting Mr Thaksin’s supporters to don red shirts and fight back.
Speak it not
Throughout this conflict, the great unmentionable, not just for the Thai press but also for most foreign reporters, has been the role of King Bhumibol, his family and their closest courtiers. The world’s most ferociously enforced law against lèse-majesté (offending the crown) prevents even the mildest discussion of the palace’s role in Thai public life. Such laws are mostly in disuse elsewhere, but Thailand’s was harshened in the 1970s. Absurdly, anyone can bring a lèse-majesté suit. The police have to take seriously the most trivial complaints. All this makes the law a useful tool for politicians and others seeking a way to damage their foes. Often, the press is not allowed to explain the nature of any supposed offence against the crown, so Thais have no way to tell whether it really was so disrespectful.
The lèse-majesté law is an outrage in itself. It should not be enforced in any country with democratic pretensions. Worse is that the law hides from Thais some of the reasons for their chronic political woes. For what the king himself calls the “mess” Thailand is in stems in many ways from his own meddling in politics during his 62-year reign (see article). In part, the strife also reflects jockeying for power ahead of the succession. With the king celebrating his 81st birthday on December 5th, that event looms ever larger.
Much of the story of how the king’s actions have hurt his country’s politics is unfamiliar because Thais have not been allowed to hear it. Some may find our criticisms upsetting, but we do not make them gratuitously. Thailand needs open debate if it is to prepare for the time when a less revered monarch ascends the throne. It cannot be good for a country to subscribe to a fairy-tale version of its own history in which the king never does wrong, stays above politics and only ever intervenes on the side of democracy. None of that is true.
The official version of Thai history dwells on episodes such as the events of 1992, when Bhumibol forced the resignation of a bloodstained dictator and set his country on course for democracy. But many less creditable royal interventions have gone underreported and are seldom discussed. In 1976, paranoid about the communist threat, the king appeared to condone the growth of the right-wing vigilante movement whose members later took part in the slaughter of unarmed student protesters. In the cold war America saw Bhumibol as a staunch ally and helped finance his image-making machine. This long-standing alliance and the fierce lèse-majesté law have led Western diplomats, academics and journalists to bite their tongues and refrain from criticism.
After the 2006 coup, the 15th in Bhumibol’s reign, officials tried to tell foreigners that protocol obliged the king to accept the generals’ seizure of power. Thais got the opposite message. The king quickly granted the coupmakers an audience, and newspapers splashed pictures of it, sending Thais the message that he approved of them. In truth the king has always been capable of showing his displeasure at coups when it suited him, by rallying troops or by dragging his feet in accepting their outcome. And he exerts power in other ways. Since 2006, when he told judges to take action on the political crisis, the courts seem to have interpreted his wishes by pushing through cases against Mr Thaksin and his allies—most recently with this week’s banning of the parties in the government.
No fairy-tale future
In the imagination of Thai royalists their country is like Bhutan, whose charismatic new king is adored by a tiny population that prefers royal rule to democracy. In reality, with public anger at the queen’s support for the thuggish PAD and the unsuitability of Bhumibol’s heir simmering, Thailand risks the recent fate of Nepal, which has suffered a bitter civil war and whose meddling king is now a commoner in a republic. The PAD was nurtured by the palace and now threatens to engulf it. An enduring image of the past few days is that of PAD toughs shooting at government supporters while holding up the king’s portrait. The monarchy is now, more clearly than ever, part of the problem. It sits at the apex of a horrendously hierarchical and unequal society. You do not have to be a republican to agree that this needs to be discussed.
As The Economist went to press, on the eve of the king's birthday, he was reported to be unwell, and unable to deliver his usual annual speech to the nation. So he had still not repudiated the yellow-shirts' claims to be acting in his name. His long silence has done great damage to the rule of law in Thailand. He could still help, by demanding, as no one else can, the abolition of the archaic lèse-majesté law and the language in the current charter that supports it, and so enable Thais to have a proper debate about their future. He made a half-hearted stab at this in 2005, saying he should not be above criticism. But nothing short of the law’s complete repeal will do. Thailand’s friends should tell it so.
THAILAND’S tourism business, its export industries and its reputation have been wrecked by recent events. Crowds of royalists have occupied the government’s offices for months and then seized Bangkok’s airports. The police refused to evict them. The army refused to help. This week the siege was ended after the courts disbanded three parties in the ruling coalition. But the parties plan to re-form under new names and continue governing, so fresh strife threatens. It is as if a thin veneer of modernity, applied during the boom of the 1980s and early 1990s, has peeled away. Until recently a beacon of Asian pluralism, Thailand is sliding into anarchy.
The conflict began three years ago as peaceful rallies against corruption and abuse of power in the government of Thaksin Shinawatra. The protesters, wearing royal-yellow shirts and accusing Mr Thaksin of being a closet republican, got their way when royalist generals removed him in the coup of 2006. But on democracy’s restoration last year, Thais elected a coalition led by Mr Thaksin’s allies. The yellow-shirts of the inaptly named People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) revived their protests and adopted increasingly thuggish tactics, prompting Mr Thaksin’s supporters to don red shirts and fight back.
Speak it not
Throughout this conflict, the great unmentionable, not just for the Thai press but also for most foreign reporters, has been the role of King Bhumibol, his family and their closest courtiers. The world’s most ferociously enforced law against lèse-majesté (offending the crown) prevents even the mildest discussion of the palace’s role in Thai public life. Such laws are mostly in disuse elsewhere, but Thailand’s was harshened in the 1970s. Absurdly, anyone can bring a lèse-majesté suit. The police have to take seriously the most trivial complaints. All this makes the law a useful tool for politicians and others seeking a way to damage their foes. Often, the press is not allowed to explain the nature of any supposed offence against the crown, so Thais have no way to tell whether it really was so disrespectful.
The lèse-majesté law is an outrage in itself. It should not be enforced in any country with democratic pretensions. Worse is that the law hides from Thais some of the reasons for their chronic political woes. For what the king himself calls the “mess” Thailand is in stems in many ways from his own meddling in politics during his 62-year reign (see article). In part, the strife also reflects jockeying for power ahead of the succession. With the king celebrating his 81st birthday on December 5th, that event looms ever larger.
Much of the story of how the king’s actions have hurt his country’s politics is unfamiliar because Thais have not been allowed to hear it. Some may find our criticisms upsetting, but we do not make them gratuitously. Thailand needs open debate if it is to prepare for the time when a less revered monarch ascends the throne. It cannot be good for a country to subscribe to a fairy-tale version of its own history in which the king never does wrong, stays above politics and only ever intervenes on the side of democracy. None of that is true.
The official version of Thai history dwells on episodes such as the events of 1992, when Bhumibol forced the resignation of a bloodstained dictator and set his country on course for democracy. But many less creditable royal interventions have gone underreported and are seldom discussed. In 1976, paranoid about the communist threat, the king appeared to condone the growth of the right-wing vigilante movement whose members later took part in the slaughter of unarmed student protesters. In the cold war America saw Bhumibol as a staunch ally and helped finance his image-making machine. This long-standing alliance and the fierce lèse-majesté law have led Western diplomats, academics and journalists to bite their tongues and refrain from criticism.
After the 2006 coup, the 15th in Bhumibol’s reign, officials tried to tell foreigners that protocol obliged the king to accept the generals’ seizure of power. Thais got the opposite message. The king quickly granted the coupmakers an audience, and newspapers splashed pictures of it, sending Thais the message that he approved of them. In truth the king has always been capable of showing his displeasure at coups when it suited him, by rallying troops or by dragging his feet in accepting their outcome. And he exerts power in other ways. Since 2006, when he told judges to take action on the political crisis, the courts seem to have interpreted his wishes by pushing through cases against Mr Thaksin and his allies—most recently with this week’s banning of the parties in the government.
No fairy-tale future
In the imagination of Thai royalists their country is like Bhutan, whose charismatic new king is adored by a tiny population that prefers royal rule to democracy. In reality, with public anger at the queen’s support for the thuggish PAD and the unsuitability of Bhumibol’s heir simmering, Thailand risks the recent fate of Nepal, which has suffered a bitter civil war and whose meddling king is now a commoner in a republic. The PAD was nurtured by the palace and now threatens to engulf it. An enduring image of the past few days is that of PAD toughs shooting at government supporters while holding up the king’s portrait. The monarchy is now, more clearly than ever, part of the problem. It sits at the apex of a horrendously hierarchical and unequal society. You do not have to be a republican to agree that this needs to be discussed.
As The Economist went to press, on the eve of the king's birthday, he was reported to be unwell, and unable to deliver his usual annual speech to the nation. So he had still not repudiated the yellow-shirts' claims to be acting in his name. His long silence has done great damage to the rule of law in Thailand. He could still help, by demanding, as no one else can, the abolition of the archaic lèse-majesté law and the language in the current charter that supports it, and so enable Thais to have a proper debate about their future. He made a half-hearted stab at this in 2005, saying he should not be above criticism. But nothing short of the law’s complete repeal will do. Thailand’s friends should tell it so.
12 comments:
Why dumb and moreon people follow and respect the same human being that so called the King and Queen? They shit and smell bad as we do, but why respect them and honor them?. If one king or queen do best for the country, that's fine. But, As Sihanouk or Bhumibol rule the country, there's nonething good to her people and her country. We all should abolish these two monarchies for good. Republican should be honored for these two countries: Cambodia and Thai. Get rid of these stupid Royal families. Nonething is gain for the country. Only waste tax payer's money. They live in the good life where ordinary people live in the poor life. Is it fair or unfair to the people? If it's not fair, so why people still respect them? Only uneducated and stupid people follow them. But the conscious people like myself won't bow or kneel under their ass.
The full article can be found at
http://www.economist.com/world/asia/displayStory.cfm?story_id=12724800&source=most_commented
The thai power struggle can have ramifications on relations with its neighbors especially cambodia.
Hopefully it does not lead to a nationalistic right wing army dominayed government.
KF
Regardless of what other people may think of my comment on Thais problem, I have diiferent ideas to other comments in this forum.
I found that Thailand Monarch has done very well for his people. THe Monarchy of Thailand has guarantee the freedom of all his citizen to freely participate all kind of sectors of their economy. THe sufering of recent protest to their economy in Bangkok is nothing to compare for their country to have a dictatorship. Thaksin popularity has almost turned Thailand into a Dictatorship regime like in Cambodia. At present, only Hun Sen family members can operated all lucratives businesses in Cambodia and most of them didn't have to pay any taxes. THe suffering of economy is far better than for the country to be ruled by a dictatorship. During Thaksin tenure as Prime Minister, he has almost turned Thailand into a dictatorship country by arresting all of those who have protested against him. He used countryside people for his support to rule others with ion grips. Areak Prey
They used to have a party called "Thais Love Thais". Thai Rak Thai (Thai: ไทยรักไทย, lit. Thais Love Thais)
Now, they should create a new party call "Thais kill Thais".
Thaksin was ousted indirectly by Bhumibol...Thaksin will make a come back to oust Lese Majeste law then Bhumibol...soon the Kingdom of Thailand will become the Republic of Thailand.
Chaiyo Satharanarath Thai!
The Thais should have another party call:
"Thais kill Thais" party = พรรค"ไทยฆ่าไทย"
ให้พวกมันฆ่ากันตายทั้งประเทศไปเลย!
Since these slimy people migrated from
Southern China and settled on Khmer
land...they bring nothing but missery to
our people...it's time that we unite and push
them back to Nan Chao.
To 11:45 am
What a dumb! There has never been a proof to prove that the Thais have migrated from southern China. That part of Thailand's history was written by Luang Vichit Matra, nationalist who tried to alert "Chinese treat" during the pre-Cold War period -- by telling lies. So ,go back to our modern history. The Thais, whatever name mightbe addressed, have been in the Suvarnabhumi, the Golden Land, for ages. The ancient Ban Chieng civilization at least helps prove this part of history. So the Thais have been on their homeland for at leat 4,000 years. OK? If you still feel like pushing someone back to Nan Chow, where you could belong to, PLS just come. Be my guest.
To อ้ายชั่วสัตว์เดรัจฉาน 3:34 PM
Here is an exerpt from Wikipedia of "Thai people"
The earliest mention of the Thai, as a nation in south China called NAN-JOA (Nanzhao or Nanman), comes from Chinese records dating back to the sixth century BCE. These early Thai emanated out of the Yunnan region and dispersed into the general area of what is today Thailand. These Thai peoples arrived in various waves and displaced the earlier native Mon and Khmer populations as they settled the region with a large group settling in Thailand during the Sung period of China roughly around 960 CE. The related Lao people split off from the early Tai-Kadai peoples and moved into Southeast Asia, mainly Laos, while another kindred people, the Shan, made their way into Myanmar.
Stop being so dumb and accept the FACT that Khmer people are the owner of the Golden Land..."Suvannaphumi" , not the Siamese.
Ban Chieng was a relic of Khmer people, not Thais!
The fact that your Luang Vichit wrote that history has some truth to it. After all, he is of the Siamese royal blood.
I suggest the Thais should pack up and move back to Nan Chao!
2:32 well verse! I am pretty much pretty in the same page with you. Thailand is tribal people (gypsies?) from China. They do not belong in the Suvannaphum, which means Golden Village in Khmer. The writers of Thai history are all liars. They lied to their Thai children, in school, to believe Thailand is all that; in fact it's all made up history to glorify their kingship. However, the world historians have a different written history about the land and people in the area. Thai people are trapped in their own flaw history and their mindset reflects so in their arrogant attitude toward their neighbors.
i don't think thai or viet people are any better than cambodian people, they just lucky because they escaped war, suffering, etc... when they have the same problems as cambodia, then their people will suffer the same like cambodia. the same is true for cambodian country and people, if we don't have war and suffering we will be strong economically like thailand. so, it just happened that they were lucky to escape suffering, that's all! god bless cambodia.
My beloved 2:32 AM and 5:23 AM,
I am impressed with the way you spoke the true history. I do agree with both of you to all facts you mentioned.
After all, the fact is still factual. Believing it or not is up to individual judgements and their nature.
I am not surprised that this psycho siamese 3:34 PM does not accept the fact because this is a true nature of thieves. It is extremely hard to get criminal to confess their crimes, greediness ...
One obvious reference is siamese had even drawn their own country border without consent with the neighbors. Then what is the big deal of not accepting the factuality of the history?
Thanks compatriots 2:32AM, 5:23AM, and 9:16AM for your efforts in trying to help educating this ultra.
The Siamese (or Thais whatever it is) are at birth dumb and robbers.
It is a pity in fact for them to be wrongly educated the whole life and die without knowing of being cheated by their own ancestors, and thus become in turn cheaters unknowingly.
Raja
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