Suthep's chicanery

Re: "Suthep's fall from grace gathers pace", (Opinion, Nov 13).

Whilst Atiya Achakulwisut's informative opinion piece on former deputy prime minister Suthep Thaugsuban was an enjoyable morning read, she might also have reminded readers that Mr Suthep was so allegedly corrupt as a Democrat Party politician that his own party colleagues complained about him to the US ambassador, according to the WikiLeaks cable from the US embassy dated Dec 22, 2008. But this was back in 2008, when Mr Abhisit was forming his first government courtesy of an earlier coup against democracy. Worse was to come.

According to his own boasting shortly after it, Mr Suthep was working from 2010 to destroy Thailand's civil constitution, an aim he and his allies achieved with the coup in May 2014. After blabbing a few truths about the antecedents to their overthrow of Thailand's supreme legal pillar and the foundation of Thailand's political system, he suddenly disappeared into a convenient but most un-Suthepian monastic silence for some reason.

It is hard to credit that this was from any commitment to such Buddhist ideals as right understanding, which ideal called for more elucidation of the background to the events from late 2013 that led to its overthrow shortly after of the Thai democracy which had proved itself to be evolving to serve as an effective solution to political problems: Pheu Thai's sleazy amnesty bill had, after all, been halted in response to the outraged voice of the Thai nation. What followed demonstrated that the amnesty bill was merely a pretext for a deeper plot against Thai democracy.

Also interesting in the ugly story of the People's Democratic Reform Committee's (PDRC) well-plotted shutting down of a burgeoning democracy in Thailand is the mob psychology that so easily whipped to a zealous frenzy so many supporters, who appeared in all sincerity to believe that the bad they were aiding and abetting was actually good.

Of course, this moral blindness that leads basically good people down the path to evil is not uncommon. The history of Christianity shows the same moral errors with its blasphemy trials, witch hunts, inquisitions, pogroms and other evils committed by those deluded by blind faith, by wrong understanding, to commit the most appalling atrocities, such as the Christian mob stripping the flesh from Hypatia before destroying the great library of Alexandria, the treasure house of Western culture, in 415 AD.

Your typical jihadi terrorist today is equally convinced under blind, uncritical faith supporting evil that they are doing what is right.

There was not only a moral failure on the part of Mr Suthep's adulating street mobs as they actively worked to undermine the rule of law by smashing Thailand's form of democratic constitutional monarchy to replace it with a dictatorship, but a failure to understand, to reason critically. With a view to preventing such outbreaks in future, it is worth pondering what went wrong in the heads of those so boastfully determined to "shut down" civil society.

Felix Qui
Thaksin the real threat

Re: "Suthep's fall from grace gathers pace", (Opinion, Nov 13).

I agree one 100% with Atiya Achakulwisut, that the recent behaviour of veteran politician Suthep Thaugsuban in his campaign-style walkabout to garner support for Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha -- despite his promise not to get involved in politics again -- was truly deplorable.

However, it seems most of us Thais are ignoring the bigger menace than Mr Suthep: Thaksin Shinawatra.

Thaksin escaped punishment from Thai law on a corruption charge while he was in power. That has made him an outlaw of this country.

Despite this, Thaksin is living lavishly abroad while at the same time dictating on every elected Thai government during the past decade.

I am not saying that Mr Suthep is a good man or politician. But I think Thaksin is much worse in terms of what he is doing to Thailand politically: He is ushering us to kleptocracy, not democracy.

Hence, isn't Thaksin a much bigger threat than Mr Suthep?

Vint Chavala

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