Red shirts to protest every week

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Red shirts to protest every week

NEW PLAN TO OVERTURN GOVERNMENT

  • Published: 26/04/2009 at 12:00 AM
  • Newspaper section: News

The red shirt protesters of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship will hold weekly demonstrations and set up an assembly in a fresh effort to topple the Democrat-led government.


FAKING IT: A red shirt protester points a toy rifle at fellow demonstrators at their rally at Sanam Luang yesterday to mock the military crackdown on red shirt protests on April 13 and 14.

The strategy was unveiled by UDD leaders in front of 5,000 protesters gathering at Sanam Luang yesterday.

It was the first rally by the supporters of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra since the Songkran melee and the lifting of the state of emergency.

"We have to think about a new strategy to fight for our causes because we were unable to achieve political change simply by holding mass demonstrations," said UDD leader Jaran Dithapichai.

The UDD will rally every Saturday in one of 15 provinces, including Lop Buri, Ayutthaya, Chiang Mai, Udon Thani, Nakhon Si Thammarat and Phatthalung, said another leader Somyos Prueksakasemsuk.

Another major demonstration will be held on May 17 in Bangkok to commemorate the 17th anniversary of the Black May incident in 1992, he added.

The assembly will comprise red shirt representatives from every province.

Yesterday's rally, which ended about 11pm, was broadcast live via websites run by overseas red shirt supporters. The three UDD leaders - Veera Musikaphong, Natthawut Saikua and Weng Tojirakarn - who were released on bail of 500,000 baht each on Friday, did not show up. There was no phone-in from Thaksin.

The organisers showed a video clip of soldiers cracking down on the red shirts in Din Daeng on April 13. Demonstrators at Sanam Luang showed anger at the army.

Mr Jaran demanded the government immediately release all red shirt leaders and demonstrators and set up an independent panel to investigate the clampdown on red shirt demonstrators during the Songkran riots.

He also called on the government to unblock the signal of UDD's television broadcaster, DStation, and allow all pro-UDD community radio stations to resume broadcasting.

Pongthep Thepkanchana, who appeared on stage but did not make any statement to the protesters, told reporters that the government, opposition bloc, People's Alliance for Democracy, UDD and media should be allowed to submit a list of their representatives to sit on the probe committee to ensure fairness and neutrality. About half of the demonstrators opted not to wear red shirts to the rally yesterday, for safety reasons.

Prathum Wangklan, a 51-year-old Bangkok vendor, said he joined the rally because he did not believe media reports about the political situation.

"I have to come here to listen to the truth," said Mr Prathum. "The harder the government tries to suppress the red shirt movement, the more people will join the demonstration," he added.

Jittima Fuksa-ard, 45, from Prachin Buri, said she attended the rally because she was still upset with the violent crackdown on red shirts at Din Daeng.

"I was there [at the pre-dawn raid] and my friend was badly hurt by authorities," she said.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has instructed security officers to monitor the UDD movement and ask the demonstrators to make sure their rallies stay within the law.

Metropolitan police chief Pol Lt Gen Vorapong Chiewpreecha has set up 40 checkpoints, manned by police and soldiers, in inner Bangkok. A special checkpoint was also set up in each area to search for weapons and explosives among those wanting to join the UDD rally at Sanam Luang.

Another rally was in Udon Thani where 300 members showed up at Thung Si Muang. The rally was held to allow red shirts taking part during April 8-11 rallies in Bangkok to talk about what happened.

About the author

Writer: MONGKOL BANGPRAPA

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  • VITS

    Discussion 19 : 27/04/2009 at 04:48 AM19

    Hi friends,
    I love visiting your country but recent political turmoils made me think twice before coming back to Thailand. I far as I am concerned you red or yellow shirt protesters are just innocent tools being used by millionaire politicians! They promise to give you a paradise that never exists. By-stander

  • Leif

    Discussion 18 : 27/04/2009 at 03:17 AM18

    The red shirts can not be dismissed as a "Thaksin thing". The red shirts represent the majority of Thai voters whose election has been stolen from them twice. The army did not intervene when the yellow shirts wreaked havoc. No wonder since the armed branch of the yellows were in fact from army fractions. No judge could find the yellow camp guilty of anything. Some earned important positions in the appointed government after the elected party was sidelined on vote fraud. Yes, I'm sure there was some amount of vote buying since no Thai election has ever been totally clean. Corruption? Everywhere, including all parties all the time! Most importantly, the landslide election would have had the same outcome anyway. The only way to block the will of the majority of Thais is by army intervention these days. How long will it take until a vote is a vote and Thais get the government that most Thais favoured? That will be the day when you won't be bothered by the sight of red shirts.

  • jp

    Discussion 17 : 27/04/2009 at 02:41 AM17

    I Think it time for my lao E-sarn people to figth for thier freedom,and Remember who they are !!

  • Neon

    Discussion 16 : 27/04/2009 at 12:38 AM16

    It should be safe, just avoid any areas where protests are occurring. I will still be going in 3 weeks!

  • Kiepie

    Discussion 15 : 27/04/2009 at 12:01 AM15

    You seem to forget how easy the Yellow Shirts have it.

  • Sam

    Discussion 14 : 26/04/2009 at 10:54 PM14

    Is this going to end in 10 years? It would be very sad for Thai people if the situation like this is going on and on. (It has been nearly 5 years already) -_-!

  • Mark

    Discussion 13 : 26/04/2009 at 08:43 PM13

    Demonstrating for democracy always benefits a Nation as a tool, however, once this tool fulls into wrong hand, things are going to be different. In the most recent Red-shirt's movement, we have seen how majority red -shirt remain as peaceful as they can while other Red - shirts push government's bottom line again and again. I am very happy with the result, as we all agreed, a nation is ran by rules, which are required to be maintained through hard ways once demonstrators cross the line of law.

  • Timjack

    Discussion 12 : 26/04/2009 at 08:43 PM12

    TO: Mavis,
    Sure Thailand is safe, Thais keep their problems to themselves, it's business as usual and you will always get a warm smile.

    The foreign press sometimes overstate the safety issue regarding Thailand, mainly because the Thai media only tell the bad side and not the good things that happen here daily.

    At present there are many good deals regarding good quality hotels/resorts which all have security guards 24 hours a day.

  • Paul

    Discussion 11 : 26/04/2009 at 08:10 PM11

    Feel deeply sad to see that Thais fights agains Thais. Thailand is so beautifull without this!

  • Joshu

    Discussion 10 : 26/04/2009 at 05:44 PM10

    It is very safe for foreigners to visit Thailand and you do not need to worry about these protests and political issues affecting you. Just stay away from the protest areas and you will have nothing to worry about. It has nothing to do with foreigners.

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