The politics of the streets | Bangkok Post: opinion

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The politics of the streets

By imposing the Internal Security Act ahead of today's planned rally by Pitak Siam, the government has shown that it takes this misguided political movement with its old-fashioned ideas far more seriously than many had realised. The obvious assumption is that the administration knows something that the rest of the country does not and has proof of wrongdoing or ill intent beyond the serious accusations it has already made. If that is the case and some sort of "insurrection" is planned under the guise of a rally, then arrests of suspects and a detailed public briefing are presumably imminent. Democracy does grant many rights but these do not include the right to cause chaos or instigate the violent overthrow of governments.

Then again, perhaps the government is aware of just how quickly matters got out of hand in 2008 and 2010 and has opted to err on the side of caution and public order. It was careful to wait until the Constitution Court had issued its ruling stating it had found no grounds to believe the rally was aimed at overthrowing the country's democratic system of government before it invoked the act, which allows the administration and its security forces to suspend normal law enforcement in three districts. This covers the Royal Plaza which has a rich heritage as the site of democratic rallies and loyal gatherings in the past; a role it will no doubt repeat in the future, whether or not the Pitak Siam rally, with its confusing and dictatorial agenda of pushing for an appointed government, goes ahead. If it does, as seems likely, police will need to take extra care in dealing with demonstrators to avoid any flare-ups or injuries. The art is to control the crowds without provoking confrontation.

Hopes that security forces and onlookers would outnumber the demonstrators in the wake of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's nationwide plea for people to stay away might well rebound because they fail to take into account the enormous advance publicity the government has inadvertently given the rally. There has already been a flurry of fanciful conspiracy theories on social media sites and this scaremongering has hyped what should have been a day-long gathering by a misguided pressure group trying to turn the clock back into something far more menacing. Such rumours and panic attacks are needless. It is time to let cool heads and common sense prevail. The days of coups and appointed governments are over.

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Your comments

  • Discussion 3 : 24 Nov 2012 at 08.383

    A friend said he drove to Bangkok from Petchabun last night. He saw 12 police roadblocks along the way and was stopped himself several times! I don't recall such roadblocks to keep out the red shirts in 2010.

  • nui

    ThailandPost : 532

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    Discussion 2 : 24 Nov 2012 at 05.002

    People have the urge to express their frustration and disappointment with this government and they want to show it with this public gathering. I would not call these people a misguided political movement but people who like to express their opinion in public. Same like the editor of this article, except that these people have no way in expressing their opinions in long articles in newspapers.

  • Discussion 1 : 24 Nov 2012 at 03.331

    "That does not mean that the democracy we have is perfect". You either have a democracy or you don't. In Thailands case,I'd say you don't. You just have the right to vote. That's all.

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