Thailand Catching Fire as Anti-Government Protests Intensify

Thousands of anti-government protesters continued to hold rallies and marches across Bangkok. Photo by George Henton, Copyright @Demotix (11/26/2013)

Thousands of anti-government protesters continued to hold rallies and marches across Bangkok. Photo by George Henton, Copyright @Demotix (11/26/2013)

More than 100,000 anti-government protesters stormed the streets of Bangkok which has further intensified political tension in Thailand. There are 13 protest sites which included several government buildings and media stations. Siam Voices summarizes the impact of the rally in the nation’s capital:

…anti-government protests in Bangkok, Thailand began again after crowds estimated at crowds estimated at 100,000-plus rallied in the city on Sunday. The protesters marched to 13 separate protests across the city early Monday with the situation has become increasingly tense in the early afternoon.

Among the 13 rally sites, the protesters have targeted various free-TV stations – including the army-owned Channel 5, state-owned NBT (aka Ch 11) and Channel 3 – as they think that their rallies have been underreported or flat out ignored in the last few days and demand media to report “truthfully”.

Protesters occupied the Budget Bureau and the Finance Ministry compound, the Foreign Ministry and the Public Relations Department. In response, the government expanded the scope of the Internal Security Act as protesters vowed to hold more protests across the country in the next few days.

This video shows the size of the rally in Bangkok last Sunday, the biggest anti-government rally so far.

Protesters wanted the dissolution of the government headed by Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra whom they accused of being a puppet of her elder brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Thaksin was removed from power in the 2006 coup. He is in exile after being found guilty of plunder by a local court.

Protest actions have been organized in the past few weeks after the passage of the controversial Amnesty Bill which would allow Thaksin to return home. Due to public pressure, the measure was voted down by the senate.

But the ongoing protests in Thailand indicate the continuing deep political divisions in the country. The situation is reminiscent of the 2008 crisis when protesters occupied the airport, and other key facilities of Bangkok.

On Twitter, protesters were accused of spreading misinformation and using terror tactics

Tourists are advised to avoid protest sites:

This Google Map shows the major protest venues in Bangkok:


View Protest Areas in Bangkok in November 2013 in a larger map

Police are deployed in many parts of the city while protesters continue to occupy some government buildings:

Thorn Pitidol thinks Suthep Thaugsuban, the opposition leader who is organizing the protest actions, has not made clear his political demands:

As many others have noted, what’s odd about this protest is that, despite the number it has managed to gather, the protest has not really spelled out any clear objectives

As far as I can understand, the blank rhetoric he threw out was not to propose any solution, he just wants to mobilise those who hate the government.

Meanwhile, media groups denounced the reported assault made by some protesters against a foreign journalist. The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand issued this statement:

The Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand deplores this in the strongest possible terms, and calls upon protest leaders to unequivocally and publicly state that the rights of journalists, foreign or Thai, should be respected.

The Southeast Asian Press Alliance interpreted the protests around media stations as a threat to media freedom:

…the protests in front of TV stations can be interpreted as a direct coercion for media to report matters according to protesters’ views. These are no different from pressures faced by journalists from media owners and the state to slant news in their favour. It really does not matter from which group the pressure is coming, what is important is that these acts ultimately harm the professional media from keeping the public informed and channeling diverse political views.

Brad Adams, Asia director of Human Rights Watch, urged both government forces and protest groups to avoid violence:

Opposition groups have a right to protest peacefully, but that doesn’t mean assaulting journalists or anyone else. At the same time, the Thai authorities need to allow antigovernment demonstrations that are secure and don’t degenerate into violent confrontations.

Prime Minister Yingluck explained why she expanded the Internal Security Act:

I ask my fellow citizens not to provide support for protests that violate the law and not to believe rumours. Please cooperate with officials in operations to maintain the law so that the situation may quickly return to normal. I ask those with opposing views to use the parliamentary means of a censure debate.

3 comments

  • […] Thousands of anti-government protesters continued to hold rallies and marches across Bangkok. Photo by George Henton, Copyright @Demotix (11/26/2013).  More than 100,000 anti-government protesters stormed the streets of Bangkok which has further intensified political tension in Thailand. There are 13 protest sites which included several government buildings and media stations. Siam Voices summarizes the impact of the rally in the nation’s capital:  …anti-government protests in Bangkok, Thailand began again after crowds estimated at crowds estimated at 100,000-plus rallied in the city on Sunday. The protesters marched to 13 separate protests across the city early Monday with the situation has become increasingly tense in the early afternoon.  Thailand Catching Fire as Anti-Government Protests Intensify […]

  • Roy Anderson

    The anti govt protests are really anti democratic attacks on the state. The main player is Suthep who faces murder charges along with the ex prime minister Abhisit for their actions which resulted in the murders of over 90 people in the crackdown in 2010. Suthep’s political career is mired in accusations of corruption. DON”T BE FOOLED BY HIS ACTIONS AS LEADER OF THE DEMONSTRATIONS. Suthep wants the democratically elected govt to dissolve and replaced by a dictatorship of the good and worthy corrupt elite. His black shirted paid security guards have already beaten up 3 policemen and the corrupt court would not even issue an arrest warrent although the assult on one policeman was captured on many video cameras and the assailants clearly identified. The assult on Nick, the foreign journalist, was actually orchestrated from senior figures from the platform openly identifying him.
    Do not be mistaken that this is just an anti govt demonstration as it is not. As a supporter of the UDD red shirts I strongly condemn the govt for their amnesty bill but from the point of view that murderers of innocent people would also be covered by the amnesty. This is usual practice when mass murders occur by the military in Thailand.
    Although the PTP is guilty of attempting to get this amnesty bill through I am forced with many others to defend democracy and as a consequence the PTP.

  • […] pode ter superado uma moção de censura no parlamento, mas as tensões [en] na capital estão longe de acabar. Os manifestantes querem que ela seja afastada do […]

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