The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Tue Sep 30 2008
Departments
International Issues

Thailand's anxious election
by Richard S. Ehrlich
November 29, 2007

BANGKOK, Thailand -- This Buddhist-majority nation is gearing up to elect a new prime minister and restore some democracy after last year's coup, but the mood is cynical, anxious and unsatisfied because of the choices available.

Leading candidates include a tough-talking, "ultra right-wing" former Bangkok governor, People Power Party (PPP) leader Samak Sundaravej.

"I do not drink, smoke or visit brothels," Mr. Samak told an influential Buddhist abbot, Phra Phayom Kalayano, on Sunday (November 25).

Mr. Samak promises to restore many of the controversial policies of Thaksin Shinawatra, the disgraced, thrice-elected prime minister who was overthrown in a bloodless coup on September 19, 2006.

If Mr. Samak's PPP is victorious at the polls scheduled for Dec. 23, the party may cancel some of the tribunal decisions, arrest warrants and other declarations by the junta's administration against Mr. Thaksin, his relatives and colleagues.

Mr. Thaksin, a billionaire telecommunications tycoon, is currently residing in England, while Bangkok ponders how to convince London to extradite him.

He is one of 111 politicians banned from politics for five years by the junta.

A victorious PPP would be expected to push for lifting such restrictions -- a goal which lured many of the 111 politicians into supporting Mr. Samak by becoming "advisors" and other purported non-political players.

Mr. Samak is widely perceived as Mr. Thaksin's alleged "proxy".

But a possible post-election showdown between Mr. Samak and the junta leaders, about how to deal with Mr. Thaksin, could prolong the political and economic problems this Southeast Asian military ally of the U.S. has suffered since the coup.

"How will the military react in the event that the PPP emerges with a strong mandate to form the next government?" the Bangkok Post asked in a Nov. 18 editorial, reflecting common nervousness about the election.

Gen. Sonthi Boonyaratkalin staged the coup when he was about to be fired as Army Commander-in-Chief under Mr. Thaksin.

Gen. Sonthi recently retired from that post and became deputy prime minister, and chairs the government's poll fraud eradication committee.

The other main leading candidate is Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva, who does not use Mr. Samak's rough-and-ready style of speaking and bare-knuckles policies to tackle Thailand's woes.

Instead, Mr. Abhisit is a foreign-educated intellectual who presents a polished and refined image, who often appears as if he is more at home with foreign investors, the media and boardrooms than the rugged rural realities of struggling farmers who form the bulk of Mr. Samak's supporters, just as they did for Mr. Thaksin.

But Mr. Abhisit's lofty, polite and quiet style is popular among well-off Thais, who hope the soft-spoken, dignified politician can reconcile a coup-minded military with those seeking full democracy.

Mr. Abhisit is widely seen as the junta's preferred candidate, especially because he was expected to maintain various investigations into alleged massive corruption linked to Mr. Thaksin, his relatives and colleagues.

Mr. Abhisit was not expected to penalize military leaders who staged the coup and orchestrated the rewriting of the constitution -- a move some fear Mr. Samak's PPP would cherish considering.

Neither Mr. Samak nor Mr. Abhisit were expected to receive enough majority at the polls to govern, without depending on smaller parties, in a squabbling and stagnating coalition.

Mr. Samak was the first to cry fowl -- and then be hit for his foul language -- when questions into his party's advisors apparently hit too close to home.

While Thais watched in disbelief during a nationwide TV broadcast on Nov. 8, Mr. Samak blasted an inquiring Thai reporter by demanding: "Who did you fornicate with last night?"

Mr. Samak uttered the deflective question in the ancient language of Pali, which is used by Thai Buddhist priests during spiritual lectures.

He referred to sexual intercourse as "sayp may toon", which some Thai media interpreted as including a "sinful" judgment.

Mr. Samak brushed off widespread criticism the next day, but later tried to soften his image by claiming that his reputation as a hard-liner -- described in Thai media as "ultra right-wing" -- has mellowed over the years.

Mr. Samak will continue Mr. Thaksin's harsh "war on drugs" which resulted in 2,500 unexplained deaths in 2003.

Thai and international human rights groups said the murders could have resulted from alleged "extrajudicial killings" by security forces.

The coup leaders had promised to investigate the killings.

Some politicians recently began examining the alleged conduct of Mr. Thaksin and police in a handful of cases.

Mr. Thaksin denied ordering police to kill drug suspects, and blamed the deaths on rivalries among drug gangs.

Gritty details like that don't cluster around Mr. Abhisit.

But Mr. Abhisit's youthful, photogenic attractiveness, healthy, do-gooder expressions, and earnest gleam have done little to lessen his seemingly glowing, elitist, top-down style.

"Am I a 'farang'?" Mr. Abhisit asked rhetorically, using the popular Thai word to describe a Caucasian foreigner.

"I have always cherished Thai culture, even though I spent 10 years of my life abroad," Mr. Abhisit said during a "Siam This Morning" TV interview on Nov. 15.

"For an urgent issue like the southern insurgency, I should have mechanisms in place to tackle the problems," Mr. Abhisit said, referring to an Islamist insurgency by minority ethnic Malay-Thais which has killed more than 2,500 people on all sides since 2004.

---
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


Email this article to a friend




1240 Bryden Road Columbus, Ohio 43209 Ph/Fx 614.253.2571 Email truth@freepress.org
  

Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

International Issues

"Thai voters defy coup leaders"
  December 24, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Bush Administration trains members of Indonesian terrorist groups"
  December 20, 2007
  John M. Miller

"Thailand divides on election"
  December 20, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Italians block construction of U.S. Base"
  December 19, 2007
  David Swanson

"What is after Annapolis"
  December 17, 2007
  Ahmad Al-Akhras, Ph.D.

"Fear of Chavez is fear of democracy"
  December 4, 2007
  Greg Palast

"Same old, same old – Israel wins again"
  December 2, 2007
  Jim Miles

"Thailand's anxious election"
  November 29, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Nukes' seventh decade"
  November 23, 2007
  David Swanson

"The devalued currency of truth "
  November 22, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"The assassination of Hugo Chavez"
  November 15, 2007
  Greg Palast

"China's hedge strategy"
  November 7, 2007
  Qing Wang

"Banned from Canada for war protest"
  October 31, 2007
  Ann Wright, retired US Army Colonel and former US diplomat, AfterDowningStreet.org

"Torture claim is filed against Rumsfeld in France"
  October 29, 2007
  Doreen Carvajal

"U.S. will tip its hand before attacking Iran"
  October 19, 2007
  David Swanson

"Canada refuses entry to CODEPINK cofounder Medea Benjamin and retired Colonel Ann Wright"
  October 7, 2007
  Medea Benjamin

"Tiananmen Square, Burmese style"
  October 5, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Forgetting Gandhi on International Non-violence day"
  October 1, 2007
  Pablo Ouziel

"Airplane hijacker's flight for Burma's freedom"
  September 30, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Burma's bloggers"
  September 28, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"World War III"
  September 5, 2007
  David Swanson

"“Free trade” policy craze is crazy, like healthcare"
  September 1, 2007
  Stephen Crockett

"Profit of doom: of vampires, parasites, and the demise of capitalism"
  August 27, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Former enemies find new way forward"
  August 23, 2007
  Mike Ferner

"Thailand constitution"
  August 13, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"People's peace delegation to Iran reports back"
  August 1, 2007
  David Swanson

"British Ambassador"
  July 26, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Civil society lost in media sound bites"
  July 23, 2007
  Pablo Ouziel

"Homeland conspiracy"
  July 18, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"Gender savagery in Guatemala"
  July 15, 2007
  Michael Parenti and Lucia Muñoz

"Khmer Rouge trial"
  July 12, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"The Palestinian left: a lost opportunity for relevance"
  July 10, 2007
  Ramzy Baroud

"Northern Light: Tony Sutton of ColdType interviewed by Jason Miller"
  June 21, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Sudan’s reported acceptance of peacekeepers for Darfur must be followed by immediate deployment"
  June 15, 2007
  Diana Duarte

"U.S. terror Laos"
  June 8, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Conyers challenges Bush for G8 action on vultures, Palast reports from London on BBC Newsnight"
  June 7, 2007
  Greg Palast

"Executioner"
  June 4, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Recent attacks in Darfur demonstrate why UN protection force must be deployed"
  May 13, 2007
  Diana Duarte

"Bombing mystery"
  April 5, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Jesus Wouldn't Bomb Anyone: Why are we waging war on the poor and oppressed?"
  April 5, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Coup six months"
  March 19, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Bangkok bombs"
  March 17, 2007
  Richard S. Ehrlich

"Four years ago today"
  March 16, 2007
  Starhawk

"Iran in Congress's sights"
  March 7, 2007
  David Swanson

"How the world can stop Bush"
  February 18, 2007
  Paul Craig Roberts

"A pox upon Mr. Armstrong’s wonderful world: of illusory democracies, rogue states, and accelerating humanity’s demise"
  February 18, 2007
  Jason Miller

"Sorry about that"
  February 18, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"The Mecca agreement: what should we expect?"
  February 18, 2007
  Ramzy Baroud

"The great eight"
  February 18, 2007
  Marion Schneider

"Overblown threat and Islamophobia"
  February 11, 2007
  Abukar Arman

"Military explosions shake sections of Vieques"
  February 11, 2007
  Peace No War

"A new manifest destiny"
  February 1, 2007
  Robert C. Koehler

"The making of another Iraq"
  January 30, 2007
  Abukar Arman

"Bush's four anti-terror successes all fictional"
  January 27, 2007
  David Swanson

"Global food supply near the breaking point"
  January 26, 2007
  Stephen Leahy

"Oil and foreign policy after Bush"
  January 21, 2007
  Stephen Crockett

"If Beal Street Could Talk – Part 1"
  January 15, 2007
  David Swanson

"International delegation travels to Guantanamo, Cuba to protest infamous US prison"
  January 3, 2007
  Alejandro Beltran




Read Articles by Year:
2007 2006 2005 2004
2003 2002 2001 2000




All content © 1970-2008
The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer