15,000 gather to decry Thaksin

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15,000 gather to decry Thaksin

Nine people injured in firecracker incident

  • Published: 16/11/2009 at 12:00 AM
  • Newspaper section: News

The People's Alliance for Democracy delivered a six-point statement attacking convicted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen at a major gathering in Bangkok yesterday.

A man injured in an explosion at the People’s Alliance for Democracy gathering at Sanam Luang is carried by rescue workers to hospital last night. SAROT MEKSOPHAWANNAKUL

Participants at the gathering, which drew about 15,000, were asked to pledge their loyalty to His Majesty the King, religion and the nation.

Most supporters wore their signature yellow shirts, while others were seen in a variety of colours, including red, the colour of the rival United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship movement.

More than 1,500 police were deployed to protect the crowd.

A minor disturbance was reported in the evening when an explosive, believed to be a giant firecracker, was thrown into the crowd by a man on a motorcycle near the Grand Palace.

Nine people, including a boy, were injured.

The victims were taken to Wachira Hospital.

The person suspected of throwing the cracker, whose name was not revealed, was later arrested by police.

Organisers said the event was "colourless" (without political stripes).

They urged people from all walks of life to put aside their political beliefs and unite behind the institution of the monarchy.

"The nation comes before colours," PAD co-leader Sondhi Limpthongkul told the crowd. He said the PAD would hold another gathering on Dec 5, His Majesty's birthday. Mr Sondhi later led a candlelight vigil in reaffirming allegiance to the King and the royal family and calling for the annihilation of "traitors". Phibhop Dhongchai, another PAD core leader, read out a six-point statement stressing that Thailand is indivisible and will always be governed by its constitutional monarchy.

The statement also fired a broadside at Thaksin and demanded the ousted former premier pay for damage he has inflicted on the country.

The alliance holds him accountable for acts of treason by conspiring with the enemy, understood to be Hun Sen, in undermining the country's stability.

The diplomatic spat with Cambodia could also divide the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean), making Thaksin a threat beyond Thai borders.

The PAD deflected criticism by Thaksin and Hun Sen against the justice system.

It charged that Thaksin, sentenced by the Supreme Court to two years in jail in the Ratchadaphisek land trial, decried the justice system but sought the court's action in filing defamation cases against his opponents.

Hun Sen, who describes himself as Thaksin's eternal friend, has declared that the Thai justice system is not worthy of respect.

The statement also insisted Hun Sen must stop colluding with Thaksin in inciting animosity in Thailand.

In Yala, there was a similar gathering in which more than 1,000 residents turned out in yellow shirts.

Wichian Iebsakul, who is chairman of a club devoted to Yala, said the gathering of local residents was motivated by their deep respect for the monarchy.

Nit Saksaengsopha, one of the demonstrators, said local residents considered Thaksin's conduct as an act of betrayal to the country.

In Satun, thousands converged on the provincial hall yesterday to protest against Hun Sen's attack against the Thai justice system.

The compound of the provincial hall was overflowing and those in attendance were waving national flags.

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About the author

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Writer: Aekarach Sattaburuth
Position: Reporter

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Report objectionable comments click here. Include: discussion #, commenter name, comment date / time as it looks on the page. Example: discussion 15: 09/01/2009 at 10:00 AM.

  • Bubba

    Discussion 37 : 16/11/2009 at 04:54 PM37

    democracy #25:


    What you are saying is:

    - Those that drink beer should not be allowed to vote;

    Those that drink wine, ok.

    - Those that drive old beat up pickup trucks no, but;

    people in a big, say mercedes should vote. Even the ones that run over and kill people waiting at a bus stop;

    - Those that roll their own cigarettes should not vote, but those tht smoke cigars ok.


    Are we beginning to see a pattern here in your way of thinking?

  • Bubba

    Discussion 36 : 16/11/2009 at 04:50 PM36

    Charlie #19 you are right, and the sooner khun Sondhi is tried and convicted the better!

  • Bubba

    Discussion 35 : 16/11/2009 at 04:47 PM35

    FONE #13: ALL farang will never understand Thais?

    But which ones? If some support the PAD, and other the UDD, they are both wrong?

    Maybe you should begin to realize that these days Thais do not understand Thais....

    In any case if you come and make vague statements how you be better understand? Would it not help to explain yourself? Where there's a will there's a way...

  • K. Chadok

    Discussion 34 : 16/11/2009 at 03:31 PM34

    Disc.@33
    The Charlie’s suggestion (2 groups should hold a summit at an undisclosed location) has well-meant, but this will never work.
    If you bring blatant evidences to some body to explain that he was wrong, he will change his stance only if he adheres to logical and honest principles.
    But if he adheres to another principles (As for example allegiance to the money from “somebody”),then he will never change his mind!

  • Charlie

    Discussion 33 : 16/11/2009 at 02:18 PM33

    Maybe red and yellow need to try and get along and find some common ground .They are both Thai and both want they feel is best for Thailand .Maybe the leaders of these 2 groups should hold a summit at an undisclosed location to avoid rallying and hammer out an understanding .If they dont have the maturity to do this on their own a mediator could be used from another country .The leaders can stay there until they find a way to get along .

  • Political maturity

    Discussion 32 : 16/11/2009 at 01:40 PM32

    For a so called "political leader" to call a neighbouring country the enemy is downright dangerous and irresponsible. For the so called intellectuals to echo that statement is worse.

    That's the leadership exhibited by the current government... I rest my case

    BTW, if Thailand and cambodia is at war and I don't know about it, I apologise to Thailand and Bangkok Post

  • Hun Sen

    Discussion 31 : 16/11/2009 at 01:04 PM31

    “Hun Sen is absolutely correct,” said Tom Fawthrop, co-author of “Getting away with Genocide? Elusive Justice and the Khmer Rouge Tribunal.” “In fact, after 1979, when the Khmer Rouge were driven out of Cambodia by Vietnam, [Khmer Rouge leader] Pol Pot and other leaders all fled to Thailand.”

    “The Khmer Rouge’s fight to regain power was aided by logistics and weapons that flowed through Thailand, even tanks,” Fawthrop, a regional expert who spends time in Phnom Penh, told IPS. “The Thais violated the international law after the 1991 Paris peace accord by letting the Khmer Rouge operate along its border, which was not the case along the Vietnamese and Laotian borders.”

    Hun Sen’s current anti-Abhisit rhetoric may not be the isolated views of Cambodia’s leader but may find resonance among its people, added Fawthrop. “The Thai-Cambodian relationship has to be looked at in a historical context. The Cambodians feel a huge sense of grievance.”

  • moonoi

    Discussion 30 : 16/11/2009 at 12:26 PM30

    ricefield, rare but here we are d'acord!
    democracy is not something given to you it's an achievement! you have to struggle for it. sometimes to fight. and you have to protect it, but you can't put democracy in a cage, you can't even touch it, it has no weight, no smell, NO PRICE. most of the time everybody is trampling on it. democracy is winding in pain, till somebody comes and puts it away. than suddenly you understand what democracy is, after it's gone.

  • Frustratedfalang

    Discussion 29 : 16/11/2009 at 12:18 PM29

    @#25

    You should be ashamed of your comments and so should all you self declared "elists and the aristocrats"
    I know the answer, but why don't you educate your fellow citizens? Shame on you.

  • ricefieldradio

    Discussion 28 : 16/11/2009 at 11:56 AM28

    democracy - My Doctor drinks, smokes and drives like a fool is he allowed to vote? To be able to determine the direction Thailand takes? To determine what is best for him - he is educated?

    The rural poor do need decent education, I won't argue with you there, but being educated does not mean you will always do the right thing or make the right decisions. The rural poor deserve to be able to educate their children it's their right, it's not a privilege to be awarded if they vote correctly.

    How many of the educated class actually stand up and do anything about it? Not many. It's one thing to give lip service to a cause it's quite another to actually get out there and do something constructive.

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