_http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/nov/08/thailand-rural-urban-sp
lit/print_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/nov/08/thailand-rural-urban-split/print)
 
 
   

  
 
 
 (http://www.guardian.co.uk/) 
Thailand's urban-rural split

 
 
 
The nation is divided and in deadlock.  Nothing is likely to be resolved 
until the ailing king is succeeded
    *   The recent _hospitalisation of King Bhumibol Adulyadej_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/02/AR2009110201230.html)
  
has  brought Thailand's most daunting question to the fore. The country's 
wrenching  political struggle over the past several years has, at bottom, 
concerned what  will happen after the ailing 81-year-old king's reign, now at 
63 years, comes  to an end.


 
 
Thailand's endgame is being shaped by several key  events: the _military 
coup of September 2006_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/sep/20/thailand) 
, the current  military-supported constitution and election in 2007, street 
protests and  seizures of Government House and Bangkok's airports in 2008, 
the army-brokered  coalition government of the prime minister, _Abhisit  
Vejjajiva_ (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/7780309.stm) , that has ruled since 
January this year, and the Bangkok  riots in April. At stake is the soul of an 
emerging Thailand, with far-reaching  ramifications for developing 
democracies elsewhere as well as the broader  international community. 
Thailand's colour-coated crisis pits largely urban,  conservative, and 
royalist "yellow" shirts against the predominantly rural "red"  columns of 
former prime minister _Thaksin Shinawatra_ 
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/1108114.stm) . For much of 
Thailand's long  economic boom of the 
past two decades, wealth resided mostly in the Bangkok  metropolitan area, a 
boon to the burgeoning urban middle class, but deeply  resented by the rural 
majority. 
While the rural population had more than enough to eat, their economic  
opportunities and upward mobility were limited by a shoddy education system and 
 docile state-run media that fed them soap operas and official messages. 
For a  nobody to become a somebody, all roads led to Bangkok and its 
prestigious prep  schools and universities. Thailand's farms became 
increasingly 
alienated from  the urban elite. Thaksin recognised this urban-rural divide and 
shrewdly  exploited it, upending the elite consensus that had long 
prevailed. 
That consensus rested on a nexus of the military, the monarchy, and the  
bureaucracy. Military rule and putsches stemming from factional infighting 
among  generals were the norm until the early 1970s, when university students 
overthrew  a military dictatorship and opened up democratic space. 
Parliament, political  parties, and politicians then came and went alternately 
with 
military coups,  which invariably suppressed the maturation of democratic 
institutions. 
The rural-urban divide wedded the grassroots rural population to upcountry  
patronage networks and vote-buying, while elected politicians reaped their  
rewards through corruption and graft. In turn, the military stepped in from 
time  to time – once every four years on average since 1932 – ostensibly 
to suppress  corruption, but retarding democratic rule in the process. 
All this changed when Thailand promulgated a constitution in 1997 that  
promoted political transparency and accountability and government stability and 
 effectiveness. Its logical but flawed outcome was the triumph of Thaksin 
and his  once-invincible Thai Rak Thai party, which became the first to 
complete a full  term and be re-elected – by a landslide in 2005. 
Thai Rak Thai's populism featured income redistribution, cheap healthcare,  
microcredit schemes, and a dazzling array of policy innovations that 
ushered  Thailand into 21st-century globalisation. The direct connection of 
Thaksin and  his party to the electorate bypassed and threatened the 
established 
trinity of  institutions that had long called the shots in Thailand. 
Thaksin and his cronies handed the establishment an opportunity to strike  
back by abusing power and profiting personally from it. A billionaire  
telecommunications tycoon, Thaksin presided over the trebling of his family's  
assets in the stockmarket. He also engineered an extrajudicial 
drug-suppression  campaign that claimed many lives. 
Thaksin's sins are voluminous, and became the basis of the rise of his  
yellow-shirted opponents, the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), which  
entered the electoral arena as the New Politics Party. The PAD spent much of  
last year demonstrating against the two successive Thaksin-nominated 
governments  that arose from the December 2007 election, reinvigorating Thai 
Rak 
Thai's  anti-PAD red-shirted allies, the National United Front of Democracy 
against  Dictatorship (UDD). 
After more than three years, Thailand's crisis has become a knotty saga.  
Abhisit's pledges of reform and reconciliation in the wake of April's riots h
ave  made little headway. The PAD wants to maintain the 2007 charter. The 
UDD favours  reinstatement of the 1997 constitution. Enraged by a sense of 
social injustice,  the reds rail against the establishment's double standards, 
while the  pro-establishment yellows have hunkered down for a battle of 
attrition. 
In the process, what had been a pro- and anti-Thaksin fight has gradually  
become a pro- and anti-monarchy struggle. The rigidly hierarchical forces of 
the  establishment are insecure and fearful of what will happen after the 
king dies.  Lèse majesté cases alleging insults against the immediate royal 
family are on  the rise. Many thousands of websites challenging establishment 
interests and  deploring post-coup machinations have been blocked. 
Thaksin's appeal splits the reds. Many repudiate his corruption but, in  
challenging the post-coup status quo, have no recourse except to use him as a  
rallying symbol. Likewise, all yellows find Thaksin's misrule intolerable, 
but  not all are fanatical royalists. A stalemate has taken hold, with the 
denouement  likely to be reached only after the royal succession. 
A new consensus is imperative if Thailand is to regain its footing. That  
consensus would have to be based on mutual recognition and accommodation. The 
 reds will need to distance themselves from Thaksin's abuses of power as 
much as  the yellows will have to accept some of Thaksin's policy legacy, 
particularly  grassroots opportunities for jobs, education, and upward 
mobility. 
Thitinan Pongsudhirak is professor and director of the institute of  
security and international studies, faculty of political science, Chulalongkorn 
 
University, Bangkok 
Copyright: _Project  Syndicate_ (http://www.project-syndicate.org/) , 2009



 

 






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