Thu Feb 09 2012
Departments
International Issues

Yellow-shirt mob seizes Bangkok's International Airport
by Richard S. Ehrlich
November 29, 2008

BANGKOK, Thailand -- The victory by mobs wearing royalist yellow shirts, who easily seized Bangkok's glistening international airport and blocked thousands of arriving and departing passengers, is a calculated gamble to see who can provoke the most bloodshed or misery.

If Bangkok's Buddhist-dominated, elected government responds with violence, the protestors can continue to falsely portray themselves as non-violent martyrs suffering under a brutal regime.

If Thailand's U.S.-trained army unleashes another coup, the military would be cheered by the anti-government protestors, but condemned by many others for reviving the goals of a September 2006 coup which installed a stumbling junta for 15 months, wrecked the economy, and failed to obliterate their elected enemies.

The mobs have been looking for valuable, life-supporting targets to strangle, hoping their quasi-insurrection will cause mild-mannered Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat's government to implode.

For the past few months, the government reluctantly allowed the mobs enough rope, expecting they would hang themselves by irritating the public, after scaring investors, tourists and ordinary Thais who prefer polite obedience.

"The anti-government protesters could be making the same mistake as Napoleon, who decided to invade Russia and suffered a devastating defeat," said Thanong Khanthong, editor of the Nation newspaper.

"Napoleon's armies could seize the territories, but they could not occupy them for long. If the situation continues, the protesters could run out of steam."

A leading Marxist at Chulalongkorn University, Associate Political Science Professor Giles Ji Ungpakorn, was more blunt:

"Bangkok International Airport has now been closed by Fascist thugs," Giles said.

"Thai airports are controlled by the Thai military. It is obvious that the Thai military, who staged an illegal coup in 2006, have quietly supported" the protests.

The mobs "want a dictatorship to replace democracy, because they deem that the majority of the Thai electorate are too ignorant to deserve the right to vote."

Prime Minister Somchai may be inhibited from cracking down on the protests after Army Chief Gen Anupong Paojinda advised in October: "No government can survive after the spilling of people's blood, because society can never accept this."

On Wednesday (November 26), Anupong vainly suggested the government hold fresh elections, and the protesters simultaneously disband.

Virtually every day, Anupong vowed he will not lead the military to stage another coup.

"The term 'the military' does not only mean the army chief," First Army Chief Lt Gen Khanit Sapitak ominously warned on Tuesday (November 25), prompting speculation that the armed forces could launch a coup without Anupong.

"The First Army commands the forces that can most easily be used to stage a coup in Bangkok," noted Wassana Nanuam, a reporter and author on military intrigue.

One government loyalist, much-feared army specialist Maj Gen Khattiya "Seh Daeng" Sawadipol, meanwhile taught vigilantes to secretly tackle the yellow-shirted mobs.

Seh Daeng even warned his daughter about her rebellious support for the protestors, because he advocated attacking them.

"I told her if she was there, she had to take care of herself. I can't help it if she is hit by a bomb or an RPG," Seh Daeng said, referring to scattered explosions and rocket-propelled grenades which have bloodied protestors this month, including 12 people on Wednesday (November 26).

"The nation is more important than a daughter. I can reproduce another child, but the country cannot be reproduced," Seh Daeng told the Bangkok Post.

The men, women and children who protest are sometimes gleeful, dancing, or pedestrian.

But their tough young men occasionally use guns, knives, clubs, slingshots and other weapons to assault police and civilian opponents.

They have occupied Government House since August, prompting the prime minister to meet his cabinet elsewhere.

The international airport was seized on Tuesday (November 25) initially to prevent Somchai's arrival from a conference in Peru.

When Somchai veered in mid-air to land in Chiang Mai, in Thailand's north, the protestors kept the international airport, to globalize their complaints and cause maximum havoc.

"We will gather at the airport until Prime Minister Somchai resigns," said Panthep Wongpuapan, a spokesman for the deceptively named People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) protestors, who do not want elections.

The PAD demands politicians be appointed instead.

They have been supported by elements among Bangkok's wealthy elite, middle class, academia, monarchists, media, armed forces, and business community, and opposition Democrat Party.

The PAD also wants to root out all political allies of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, because he won three elections empowering his five-year administration until the coup.

Much of Thaksin's support comes from the countryside, where poor people enjoyed his cheap health care, easy credit and other give-aways.

Thaksin is currently an international fugitive, after a court sentenced him and his helmet-haired wife, Pojaman, to three years in prison for corruption.

When England recently stripped the billionaire couple of their visas, because of their prison sentences, Thaksin said London "forgot about democratic values," though his three adult children were allowed to stay.

--
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, and his web page is http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent


Recent International Issues Articles

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee condemns Gaza attacks
  December 30, 2008
  Marvin Wingfield

Witnessing the decay of Western hegemony and the role of the organic
  December 28, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

Iraq's US security charade
  December 4, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Yellow-shirt mob seizes Bangkok's International Airport
  November 29, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Gaza: salvation in a news broadcast
  November 28, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

A funny thing happened to me on my way to the Damascus Conference
  November 23, 2008
  Cynthia McKinney

Bangkok dangerous: bombs, sleaze and paralysis
  November 21, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Will the young rescue unions?
  November 16, 2008
  Dick Meister

What does Iran have to do with your town? Here's what it has to do with mine
  November 13, 2008
  David Swanson

Playgrounds for Palestine: one marathon at a time
  November 6, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

World food day: global crises’ double standards
  October 24, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Unofficial referendum in Vicenza, Italy: 95% opposed to new U.S. base
  October 8, 2008
  Enzo Ciscato

Grassroots movements, global elites and political economy in times of panic
  October 7, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

The war to promote terror
  October 4, 2008
  Robert C. Koehler

Palestinian economy: from bad to wretched
  September 29, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Predator and prey
  August 21, 2008
  Robert C. Koehler

Family politics and the new Gaza crisis
  August 20, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Harper again serves as Bush's mouthpiece in Canada.
  August 19, 2008
  Jim Miles

Thaksin is the world's newest international fugitive
  August 19, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Global trends that will shape the next decade
  August 12, 2008
  Muqtedar Khan

Obama joins the club
  August 3, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Revealing a massacre, or stating the obvious
  July 22, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Rabbi Lerner invited by Saudi King to International Interfaith Conference
  July 15, 2008
  Tikkun

On Iran And Mideast peace: Who is Obama trying to please?
  June 16, 2008
  Jalal Alavi

Burma blames Suu Kyi & fake donors for cyclone riots
  June 2, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Suu Kyi amid Burma's cyclone
  May 27, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Coexistence, not Apartheid
  May 27, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

60 years of denial
  May 17, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

Enemies Burma & America meet over cyclone aid
  May 14, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Burma stages a vote while cyclone victims suffer
  May 11, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

The grim reality of economic truths
  May 10, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

Burma blocks aid, fearing subversive foreigners
  May 9, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

USAID team
  May 9, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Burma not thankful for U.S. warships offering cyclone aid
  May 7, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Cyclone help for Irrawaddy Delta survivors
  May 6, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Coups & superstitions
  May 6, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Trip report by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter to Israel, Palestine, Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan
  May 4, 2008
  President Jimmy Carter

As Italy’s elections go from bad to worse, Vicenza remains the silver lining
  May 3, 2008
  Stephanie Westbrook

National Lawyers Guild urges Israel to permit Richard Falk to enter Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories
  April 26, 2008
  David Gespass, NLG

America's secret plan to nuke Vietnam & Laos
  April 15, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

The Spanish 'adios'
  April 6, 2008
  Pablo Ouziel

What else is on?
  March 17, 2008
  Tim Buchholz

Dayton stands (and rocks) for Darfur
  March 13, 2008
  Christina Dendy

The day after the bombing of Iran
  March 13, 2008
  David Swanson

Kosovo Brief
  March 12, 2008
  Ivan Simic

Kathmandu blackout
  March 4, 2008
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Inequality, not identity, fuels violence in Kenya
  February 10, 2008
  Diana Duarte

Gandhism is alive and expanding
  February 4, 2008
  Jesse Jackson

Guantanamo as a symbol
  January 20, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud

The eternal underdog
  January 19, 2008
  Robert C. Koehler

A perspective on relations with Somalia
  January 4, 2008
  IGC

Let’s toast to ten good things about 2007
  January 1, 2008
  Madea Benjamin

Machiavellian Musharraf
  January 1, 2008
  Ramzy Baroud




Read International Issues Articles by Year:
2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000



FREE PRESS EMAIL UPDATE


Donate to The Free Press The Free Press Store

FOLLOW US ON
twitter
facebook


SEARCH THE FREEPRESS




1021 E. Broad St. Columbus, OH 43205 | 614.253.2571 | truth@freepress.org
All content © 1970-2012 The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer