"Suomalaisten DX-lista" <[email protected]>
Heips,
Lähes puolitoista vuotta on tullut seurailtua Thaimaan eloa paikanpäällä.
Ei oikein hyvältä näytä.Sisällissodan alkaminen on hiuskarvan varassa.
 Thaimaalaiset tv-asemat näkyvät kohtalaisesti internetin kautta,joten 
tilanteen seuraaminen on helppoa kauempaakin.
Itse tulin Suomeen pari viikkoa sitten ja mm edellisenä iltana Grenada-pommit 
heitettiin mm TV5 ja NBT-asemille.Verilöyly seurasikin ,kun hallitus sulki 
punapaitojen tv-aseman.Se on nyt välillä toiminnassa,välllä suljettuna.
Sekavaa menoa.....
Tuossa jotain....

Defiant red shirts put new radio station on air
By PRAVIT ROJANAPHRUK
THE NATION ON SUNDAY

BANGKOK: -- A new red-shirt radio station went on air yesterday in the 
Rajprasong intersection protest-site area, in a move to counter the continued 
shutting down of red-shirt media by the government under emergency rule.

"They should allow us to criticise [the government], but instead they shut our 
ears and eyes," Chinawat Haboonpak, a red-shirt leader told the crowd at the 
intersection yesterday morning.

"We ask for just one television channel, but they have taken it away from us 
and shut our ears and eyes again."

The new station - on FM 106.80 - broadcasts from a new tower installed near 
Lumpini Park and calls itself Rajprasong Community Radio. Its reception can be 
received all the way to Bang Na area, in eastern Bangkok.

Chinawat admitted he decided to shut down Taxi Radio on Friday after the 
government had succeeded in jamming it to the point where its reception was so 
limited as to be inconsequential.

Chinawat, who was behind Taxi Radio, said it was not worth the Bt30,000 cost of 
electricity per month. "There are 5,000 to 6,000 stations, but they won't allow 
one [red-shirt] radio station to exist," he complained.

Two directors of red-shirt community radio stations were summoned by the 
government's state of emergency operations centre on Friday. On the Internet, 
190 websites are now blocked or shut down by the government.

One of the few remaining red-shirt radio stations, broadcasting from a suburban 
area of Bangkok, heavily denounced the government yesterday for shutting down 
PTV, community radio stations and websites.

The continued censorship of red-shirt media has turned the government of Prime 
Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva into a "tyrannical regime", it said, while 
denouncing the censorship as "illegal".

"He's a liar," said Wood Model, a red-shirt radio host yesterday, in reference 
to Abhisit. "Thailand has become a country of lies.

This government can order the media around and shut down media and infringe on 
people's rights and liberty - truly a dictatorship. He's shameless."


-- The Nation 2010-04-18






      
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